RootsTech Connect 2021 may be over but I expect there will be a number of articles over the next few weeks that are follow-up to events that happened during the virtual conference. Here’s the latest announcement from FamilySearch:
The grand prize went to British artist Daisy Chute for her song “Music Is There.” Chute was rewarded with a Kawai MP11SE stage piano and Kawai headphones. Chute’s song is a tribute to music as a universal language that brings people together, helps them hear, and lifts them. Music “brings people together, and it consoles you when you are down and lifts you even higher when you are feeling really good,” she said. The music was written during the first pandemic lockdown in the United Kingdom, where Chute is based.
The winners of the Professional, Youth, Amateur, and People’s Choice categories will receive other Kawai piano models.
The People’s Choice award went to Nathália Freitas for her song “Conectar.” “Music is something special in my family. It is something that really connects us,” she said. She wrote the song with her family’s unity in mind. She says the music is very special to her and pays tribute to her family’s ties.
Zuriel Rubio, was the winner of the Professional Division with “Connect,” a reminder that “together we can conquer every day.” After losing a son to brain cancer, Rubio found solace among the people of his ministerial congregation who pulled together to lift and comfort one another. His music recognizes that social support is essential. “Now we are going through this [the COVID-19 pandemic] as humanity. There is no better way than together [for us to] get through this,” he said.
The winner of the Youth Division was Daniella Vega, who submitted “Live Our Long Ago.” “We are all under quarantine now. I was feeling sadness,” she commented. As a teenager in her second year of high school, Vega was upset that she was missing out on so much. “I wanted to make the most of these years—my teenage years—because when I am older and look back on these years, I want to be happy about it,” she said. She wrote the song as a salute to memories from long ago.
Matt Kirby took top honors in the Amateur Division with “Winding Road” a reminder that we are not alone on the winding roads of our lives. “We all go through the years—the same seasons in life—but one thing that really doesn’t change is that there will always be someone there for us and we can always be there for somebody,” Kirby said.
The other finalists were the following:
Anna Snow— “1961”
Cruz Wilson— “Getting By”
Sabrina Barreto— “I Hope you Know What You Meant to Me”
Amos Watene— “It Feels Like Home”
Neal Stucki— “Belong”
Terry Banks— “Family Tree”
Kristina Helen—“Somehow”
About Kawai
Kawai is a three-generation family-operated global company that began as Kawai Musical Instrument Research Laboratory in 1927 in Hamamatsu, Japan. Kawai has earned a reputation for outstanding quality, workmanship, and innovation in the crafting of world-class instruments. Kawai acoustic and digital pianos are a top choice of pianists, teachers, churches, students, and professional musicians around the globe. The skillful blending of traditional piano craftsmanship with state-of-the-art technology has made Kawai one of the most award-winning companies in the entire music products industry—having received over 50 major international awards for excellence.
RootsTech, hosted by FamilySearch, is a global conference celebrating families across generations, where people of all ages are inspired to discover and share their memories and connections. This annual event has become the largest of its kind in the world, attracting tens of thousands of participants worldwide.