2014 Lowell Folk Festival
Music Workshop
Global Voices: The Power of Song
at
Market Street
Before
our first performance in Lowell on Sunday, the last day of this year's festival,
a handful of us from Conjunto Guantánamo were asked to take part in one of the
several music workshops the festival offers. So, after breakfast, we got
shuttled off to one of the stages, a small one at Market Street. There were 12
participants in total arranged in a semi-circle facing an audience that braved
a good amount of rain that morning just to hear what we had to say and play.
Those who took part in the workshop on stage were, from stage left to right...
Seán
Keane - a renowned sean-nós (old style) singer (Ireland)
www.SeanKeanesinger.com
www.SeanKeanesinger.com
Samba
Mapangala and two members of his Orchestre Virunga singing vocals - East
African Rumba (Congo, Africa)
Joe
Mullins (three of his Blue Ramblers joined him later singing vocals) -
Bluegrass (Ohio, USA)
Myself
(Ulises) on one conga drum and three members of my Conjunto Guantanamo -
Afro-Cuban Son (Cuba)
Carlos
Mena - bass and vocals
Pepito
Gomez - lead vocals and guitar
Angel
Diaz - vocals and clave
Hassan
Hakmoun (and two of his bandmates) on a sintir (a three-stringed bass lute) -
Gnawa (Morroco) www.HassanHakmoun.com
The
workshop was moderated by Gregg Kimball, a multi-instrumentalist, music
lecturer, author, curator and scholar specializing in American roots music and
who is Director of Educational and Outreach Services at The Library of
Virginia.
Gregg
did a great job making all the panel members feel relaxed and he was great at
engaging and getting the panel to open up and discuss their experiences within
their own careers and musical genres.
As
far as our participation, at first, I was somewhat apprehensive about
participating because I didn't know what to expect and I wanted to make sure my
band-mates and I brought something worthwhile to the table. I knew we would be
asked to perform with the panel at least for a few minutes during the workshop
and I wanted to make sure our participation would be appropriate.
First,
Seán Keane, the folkloric singer from Ireland was asked about his musical
traditions and he discussed the origins of his music which was handed down
through the generations in his family. He explained that he learned
"sean-nós" (“old style”) singing from his mother and aunts, and by
the time he was in his teens, he had won thirteen All-Ireland medals in various
singing competitions.
He
sang an interesting Irish hymn that was characteristically melancholy and
utterly unforgettable. To my ears, it sounded very authentic.
Next,
Samba Mapangala, who is said to be East Africa's most beloved singer, and two
other musicians from his ensemble discussed their music which they described,
in part to be "rumba" and this immediately caught my attention.
Rumba, being an exclusively traditional Afro-Cuban form derived from more traditional
African forms brought to Cuba, developed as a genre around the mid-19th
century. I was curious when I heard this was the genre they were working in.
Samba
explained that the event, The Rumble in the Jungle, which was centered around
the historic Muhammad Ali vs. George Foreman boxing match held in Kinshasa,
Zaire in 1974 and which featured several musical acts including of course,
Celia Cruz, inspired them to explore their own version of "rumba"
which sounds markedly different yet similar from what they do in Cuba. That
genre eventually became the globally popular Souka we're all so familiar with
today.
In
1974, Celia Cruz was one of the top Cuban exports via the US and part of a
group of artists which also included BB King, James Brown, and Miriam Makeba
that performed in Kinshasa alongside some top Zairean groups like T.P.O.K. Jazz
and Tabu Ley Rochereau. The performance was part of a three-day festival called
ZAIRE ’74, the brainchild of South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela and his
producer Stewart Levine, who had come up with the idea of a music festival to
precede the boxing match between the reigning champions. Here's a link to part
of Celia's stellar performance.
Next
up was Joe Mullins from Ohio, who sang and played his banjo. The banjo and the
instrument that the musician to our right, Hassan Hakmoun had, a sintir which
is a three-stringed bass lute, were strikingly similar right down to their
first strings only reaching halfway up the neck as well as having their bridges
resting on a skin. The banjo had a synthetic skin whereas Hakmoun's, sintir
used a skin from a camel's neck.
By
the time the moderator's questions reached us, my head was loaded with idea's.
I was able to discuss how all of the elements everyone had already shared,
converged in Cuba, which became the glue that bound everything together, and
after a long period of development eventually developed into Son, rumba, mambo,
cha-cha-cha, guaracha, etc. and deeply influenced the rest of the world's music
until this day. The gentlemen from Africa all nodded in approval, which was
very reaffirming to me.
Now,
the questions turned to Pepito who chose to sing "El Carretero"
(written by Guillermo Portabales) which has been recently popularized by
Eliades Ochoa of Buena Vista Social Club. Afterward I explained that, as Joe
Mullin's music was the music of the mountain people of the Appalachians, so was
Pepito's song the music of the mountain people of Cuba.
I was
asked by the moderator how the music of Santeria, from the Yoruba culture,
plays into the scheme of things, musically speaking. I sang a short verse of a
Yoruban orú (song) often sung to Elegua the child "saint" and
guardian of the crossroads in the pantheon of Santeria's deities...
"Barasuayo
omoni
alaguana o mamakeña irawo eeee
Barasuayo
ekue
echu ordara
Omoni
alaguana o mamakeña irawo eeee
Ache,
moyugba lorisa
moyugba,
moyugba lorisa
Ache
moyugba lorisa
moyugba,
moyugba lorisa"
They
asked me what the song meant and I explained that the Yoruba language in Santeria
is rather like Latin in the Catholic church. Not everyone knows the meaning of
what they're saying or singing. But, I explained, that, as I understood it, for
instance, aché means good fortune, orisha is the word for deity and moyugba is
the word for conversation. I also explained how the use of clave or a central,
syncopated rhythm that the rest of a Cuban song is built around (as in
the 3/2 clave in the 4/4 signature of Son or 6/8 clave predominant throughout the
different sacred forms of Cuba's, music), is inherently purely African. Samba
and his bandmates, again, smiled and nodded in agreement. I discussed how Joe
Mullin's banjo with its string configuration and having the bridge resting on
a skin is derived from instruments such as the African sintir Hassan Hakmoun
was playing which he had already mentioned originated some 3,000 years ago
(Before the guitar originated in Spain centuries ago, it's predecessor arrived
there from Africa).
I
also wanted to express some contrasts within these related things and so I
explained how in Cuban music, the base line is characteristically syncopated as
opposed to the "walking bass" style used in Bluegrass, Rock and Roll,
Jazz, and most other styles. This is also an African trait. I then asked Carlos
to demonstrate that for me so the audience could hear it in practice. This
building block that gives Cuban music its distinct "dancey"
sound". How the bass executes this in our music is a mystery to many
musicians so I wanted to illustrate it here.
At
this point the panel of musicians all started to improvise a jam that sounded
like we had all rehearsed previously but in reality, we had never met one
another. Hassan offered that this is because "music is like food. You set
the table and everyone comes to eat," offering their respective input in
harmony with the rest of those eating.
Hassan
also played from his Gnawa tradition which is trance-like and mystical. Gnawa
musicians often express their religious devotion through their music and
through dancing, using that to enter into spiritual trance states (a sign
of its West African roots). Hassan played his sintir, deftly plucking a
stuttering bass line along with the triple-time clatter of the metal castanets
call qraqeb played by his bandmate. His music was both ritualistic and
spectacular. His unique voice leaped above the instruments with an untamed cutting
edge.
In my
appreciation for his work, I offered the workshop audience information on Ned
Sublette's fine book no musician should go without reading (and neither should
you). The book is titled, Cuba and Its Music: From the First Drums to the
Mambo. It discusses musical history over the past 1000 years and traces its
development during the centuries as it was shaped by cultural and political
influences. This book will make anyone who reads it's 700+ hard-to-put-down
pages, quite the musicologist as it explains the roots of many different world
genres of today's music.
The
workshop lasted almost a full hour and it all flew by! It felt like it lasted
all of six minutes but all of the musicians really seemed to enjoy the time we
spent enjoying each other's art and history. I'm sure each participant got
shuttled off to the rest of their respective Sunday at the festival with a
happy heart and inspired to do their next concert at one of the many great
stages in the festival that afternoon.
As
far as Pepito Angel, Carlos, and I, we all agreed that it was a highlight of the
whole festival for each of us as musicians and music lovers. We all really
enjoyed the experience. It was the first time I had spoken to a large group
like that about the part of music history. After the workshop and throughout
the rest of the day I had many people congratulate me on the discussion saying
they really enjoyed it. Someone even said the workshop was
"Heavenly".
Many
thanks again to all those that made this enjoyable time possible.
Stay
tuned for an audio recording of this event which will be made available very
soon in the coming weeks. I will update this page with a link when it becomes
available.
Please
stay tuned. Please share this nice story with your music-loving friends and
with your Facebook community too. If you haven't already please like my band by
following this link...
Aché e iré para todos,
Ulises
--
See also...
Harry Belafonte's PBS documentary, Roots of Rhythm
And for all you friends that read till the end here's a special treat. Click her for a special preview of the video footage taken of Conjunto Guantanamo during our first performance at Boarding House Park playing La Negra Tomasa (Kikiribu Mandinga)
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#pepitogomez #conjuntoguantanamo #salsa #nyc #cuban #cuba #barquisimeto #venezuela #cubanmusic #livemusic #dance #salsero #piano #キューバ音楽 #latinmusic #percussions #キューバ #timba #afro-cuban #futbol #timessquare #ラテン #music #buenavistasocialclub #japan #サルサ #afrocuban #newyork #yamaha #latinpercussion #remo