• Watch More Street Stories
Rolling memorial for teen lost in crash
Rolling memorial for teen lost in crash

A North Kingstown student's senior project focuses on creating …

14 years of school without an absence
14 years of school without an absence

Carrington Henley was watching a television show a year or so …

A 'positive' pops up in Central Falls
A 'positive' pops up in Central Falls

An art museum might be one of the last things you’d expect to …

Victim's aunt turns grief into poetry
Victim's aunt turns grief into poetry

Last July, the poetry that Evelyn penned for her growing …

Local food cart serves positive flavor
Local food cart serves positive flavor

Lupe Aguilar has big dreams for his shining silver food cart …

Advertisement

A musical 'castle' rises in Olneyville

Teaching music skills to students and dropouts

Updated: Wednesday, 14 Nov 2012, 11:22 AM EST
Published : Friday, 09 Nov 2012, 10:29 PM EST

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WPRI) -- A couple of local businessmen have set up shop in a tough Providence neighborhood, and now they're welcoming some surprise customers; Students and dropouts.

It's a music class with a spin for 7th graders Community Prep. The students wrote the lyrics and are producing a song "based on their morals and ideals of the Community Prep school."

Some of them engineered the electronics, while their classmates performed in this Olneyville 'castle'.

Castle Entertainment is tucked away off Valley Street, which is known for being a high-crime, low-income neighborhood.

"There's a lot of stuff going on that's really negative," Castle Entertainment's Armande Milhouse said. "But there's got to be a beacon of light somewhere. Somebody's got to do something positive to show that it's not just all the bad stuff."

OTHER LYRICAL STREET STORIES

The Jazzman

Epoch Poets

Broadway For Brother

Castle makes records for Grammy winners and other professional musicians. They never expected to work with  the kids from Community Prep. But then came another surprise.

"We work with a lot of kids who aren't in school. You know, the kids who are just out there," Milhouse said. "14 and 15-year-old kids, saying, 'I don't want to be involved in drugs, I want to make music'."

Not being able pay, was not enough to shut the castle door on them.

"We let them push a broom around, run a vacuum, a little Windex here. You know, tying up some cables, and they work for a few hours, and we say 'alright, listen, you want to work on you music for a few hours?" Milhouse said.

Helping the kids who are part of the neighborhood was not part of Castle Entertainment's original business plan, but it is now.

Send story ideas to Walt at wbuteau@wpri.com and follow us on Twitter: @StreetStories12 and @wbuteau

Copyright WPRI 12


Ground rules for posting comments: No profanity or personal attacks. Please comment on the subject of the story itself. If you do not follow these rules, we will remove your post. Keep it civil, folks!

Our commenting section is powered by IntenseDebate. If you registered for an account but didn't receive a verification e-mail, check your spam folder or click here for more information. For additional technical help, click here.

 

Advertisement
Advertisement
  • Site Tools