Frank Horowitz is currently touring France to promote his latest jazz album "Family Means Shelter". You might not know, but beyond music and his own whiskey brand to manage, the man is deeply involved in charities and in the fight against poverty on a global scale.
[...] And how do you explain the impact of your lyrics on their motivation to strive? Oh I tell them simple things, for instance some things are more important than others, like they don't need to pour money down the drain for short-lived pleasures as long as they have someone who loves them as they are, or how to limit running expenditure like in my song "Revolving Debt is Like Malaria". For those who are willing to make an action but have little means, they can invest their time physically, by directly helping poor people. [...]
[...] Frank Horowitz is currently touring France to promote his latest jazz album "Family Means Shelter". You might not know, but beyond music and his own whiskey brand to manage, the man is deeply involved in charities and in the fight against poverty on a global scale. Hi Frank, thank you very much for accepting to answer questions to our media. After all these interviews, you must be fed up repeating the same things about your album, so why not telling us about a topic that means a lot to you, I mean poverty? [...]
[...] And in other countries some people are worse-off now than we were back then in Orleans, but I want to help every person with a low-income, all poors are equal to me. There we come to the point, what exactly do you do to improve their situation? Well I sing I actually went with my Jewish grandpa to all sorts of parties, religious ceremonies and market booths. Together we blended his native Lithuanian violin melodies with our local African-American beat, and this is where I have always drawn my inspiration. [...]
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