The U.S. capital is about to enter a new era. Janeese Lewis George, a 38-year-old member of the city council, won the Democratic mayoral primary. The newsworthy element of this is that the former prosecutor belongs to the partyβs most progressive wing and is all but certain to succeed Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, who declined to seek re-election after three terms. Her political rise pushes to the left a city that is not the nationβs largest but one of its most influential.
LeAna LΓ³pezβs hips cue the musician, who, in a direct and improvised exchange, mirrors her movements on the primo, the lead drum of Puerto Rican bomba. The rhythm β born on Puerto Ricoβs slave plantations in the 17th century β reverberates on this occasion inside a church in East Harlem, the Manhattan neighborhood known as El Barrio. The roar of the barrel drums builds, and, as the music reaches its peak, the scene seems to shift to the northeastern coast of the Caribbean island, to LoΓza, the cradle of AfroβPuerto Rican culture. But in an instant, the traffic on Lexington Avenue breaks the spell, serving as a reminder: this is New York.