Global Bonnaroo: New York’s globalFEST Curates Tent at America’s Biggest, Best-Loved Summer Music Festival

Since it began nine years ago, globalFEST (globalfest.org) has become North America’s most influential showcase and festival of global music, centered around its annual multi-stage event in New York each January.

But now it’s taking the show—and its distinctive curatorial vision—on the road to Bonnaroo on Saturday June 9, 2012. The first globalFEST tent will also host Spectrum Road, a supergroup tribute to Tony Williams with Vernon Reid, John Medeski, Jack Bruce and Cindy Blackman-Santana.

The not-for-profit globalFEST, co-founded and produced by Bill Bragin, Isabel Soffer, and Shanta Thake, has now expanded to include curating at other festivals in the US and globally (including Bonnaroo, SXSW, and Festival D’ Ile de France), and oversees the globalFEST Touring Fund, which provides much needed tour support for local and international artists to reach new markets throughout the US.

“globalFEST’s role in developing audiences for a wide variety of international music styles and to encourage artistic risk taking in the performing arts field has made significant strides for venues, audiences and artists alike,” explains Soffer. “We hope our mission to encourage cross-cultural exchange, support diverse programming, and develop meaningful cultural diplomacy relationships will create new opportunities within the performing arts field and beyond.”

“Part of our goal has been what I half-jokingly refer to as ‘infiltration.’ We’ve been successful in moving world music to the center of the conversation in the performing arts world,” Bragin notes. “In recognition that the touring ecology for global music moves between non-profit performing arts centers, festivals and commercial venues, we’ve now started to work on infiltrating the more commercial music field as well, especially targeting younger audiences.”

“Through globalFEST’s ‘infiltration’ success, we are acknowledging that a younger audience now exists for world music,” Thake adds. “Bringing globalFEST to these festivals is working to fill an actual desire of festival audiences to see these world music bands in venues and festivals that they frequent.”

“I’ve attended globalFEST in January in New York every year for many years now, and I’m always blown away by the music that I discover there,” enthuses Ashley Capps, Bonnaroo co-founder. “The curators behind globalFEST are deeply aware of the most exciting music being created throughout the world, and they’ll bring a strong vision and more than a little magic to the World Music Tent at Bonnaroo this year.”

“Bonnaroo represents a huge leap forward – to reach some of the most active, and open-minded indie-music audiences at one of the most beloved and best curated festivals in the country,” says Bragin.

Debo Band: Debo Band is not about recreating some mythical gilded age of Ethiopian pop. Taking cues from vintage and contemporary artists unsung in the West, they unleash rolling grooves, serpentine melody lines, and joyful vocals. A sound that won them a record deal on indie stalwart label SubPop/Next Ambiance, produced by Gogol Bordello’s Tommy T, which will come nationally in June.

“Though their music is steeped in 1960s Ethiopian music, to me, they’re a rock band first. That means the beat is hard, the guitar is blistering, the horns are lyrical and you don’t have to understand what is being said to understand the emotions behind the voice. Their appeal is universal.”–NPR Music

Janka Nabay & The Bubu Gang: Hard-hitting beats from the grand master of Sierra Leonean bubu, an age-old ritual music turned modern hybrid thanks to a Brooklyn-based gang of musicians.

“Nabay severely strips down this (traditional Bubu music) setup while preserving its teeming twitchiness, using keyboards and carburetor pipes to create a minimal but undeniably kinetic brand of music that he weds to socially conscious lyrics.”- Pitchfork

Khaira Arby: Arby’s music shifts seamlessly between the edgy and progressive and the traditional and deeply rooted. She turns to her mixed Berber and Songhai roots, blending ripping electric guitar with the forefather of the banjo and funky drum breaks with the traditional percussion of the scraper and the calabash.

“Shrouded in regal colors, she presides over a small army of brilliant African musicians, who create a hypnotic backdrop for her gloriously swooping vocals. On the live stage, she’s all showmanship and command.”–NPR Music

La-33: Colombia’s hottest salsa outfit is also its cleverest: on top of pitch-perfect originals, the band has won fans worldwide with its blazing, tongue-in-cheek shout out to the Pink Panther and Henry Mancini.

“The three lead singers of La-33, from Bogotá, Colombia, were also its dancers. Colombia has become a latter-day stronghold for the Cuban-rooted salsa that thrived 30 years ago in New York City….Its own music was sleekly kinetic.”—New York Times

Pedrito Martinez: The Thelonious Monk International Jazz competition-winning percussionist and former Yerba Buena member has won the hearts of rock stars like Eric Clapton and Roger Waters and honed his groups near-telepathic communication, in music that ranges from traditional batá-rumbato Cuban jazz, son, and timba

“A crowd-pleasing Cuban percussionist and singer now based in New York, who hybridizes his songs with touches of jazz, soul and hip-hop.”—New York Times

Red Baraat: An impossibly funky, New York-born mix of brass band-does-Bollywood extravaganza, bringing both Indian bhangrabeats and red-hot brass to the dancefloor—and more recently to the White House. 

“Imagine a New Orleans street band playing Indian Bollywood tunes with a go-go beat — you can’t? The group uses their improvisational sound to blend the dhol, a double-sided, barrel-shaped North Indian drum, with brass funk. It’s a crazy blast of fun.”—NPR

Because you needed to know the lyrics…you don’t want to miss any of the subtle metaphor.  

Here’s a mix of hipco and gbema music, put together by Chief Boima for Akwaaba music.  Thanks @conrazon.

lincolncenter:

White Light Festival 2011 opened last Thursday night with a capacity crowd at the David Rubenstein Atrium for an amazing concert by Mali’s Bassekou Kouyate and Ngoni Ba.

Video by Kevin Yatarola; copyright Lincoln Center 2011

   

Two innovative Malian artists, Bassekou Kouyate and Rokia Traore, both part of Lincoln Center’s White Light Festival, in today’s WSJ.

It’s not just the innovative virtuosity, but also Ballake Sissoko & Vincent Segal’s obvious affection for each other that made tonight’s Chamber Music concert so special. A fantastic beginning to Live Sound’s Live@365 Tuesday night series at CUNY Graduate Center’s Elebash Concert Hall

It’s not just the innovative virtuosity, but also Ballake Sissoko & Vincent Segal’s obvious affection for each other that made tonight’s Chamber Music concert so special. A fantastic beginning to Live Sound’s Live@365 Tuesday night series at CUNY Graduate Center’s Elebash Concert Hall

Bill Bragin: Ok Kidjo!

September 27, 2011 5:05 PMAngélique Kidjo in ConcertWhere: The Grace Rainey Auditorium at the Met Museum
When: Oct. 1, 7:00 p.m.
Price: $55

There are few artists in the world more charismatic onstage than the Benin-born, Brooklyn-based spitfire, Angélique Kidjo. A true global soul as a musician and activist, Kidjo has collaborated with artists from throughout Africa (Youssou N’dour,Gangbe Brass Band); Cuba (Buena Vista Social Club’s Omara Portuando); Brazil (Carlinhos Brown); Europe (BonoPeter Gabriel) and the U.S. (Alicia KeysJohn LegendJosh Groban). She serves as a UNICEF Goodwill ambassador and founded the Batonga Foundation to promote education for girls in Africa.

This Saturday night, inspired by the recently opened Metropolitan Museum’s exhibition “Heroic Africans: Legendary Leaders, Iconic Sculptures,“ she performs in an intimate acoustic collaboration at the Met’s Grace Rainey Auditorium with fellow Benin-born musician guitarist Lionel Loueke. Loueke is a brilliant instrumentalist whose unique fusion of West African and jazz styles has been heard in projects with Herbie HancockGretchen Parlato, and his own Gifelma Trio.

Blitz the Ambassador, Spoek Mathambo and Iyadede: Live from the Continent @LCOutofDoors tonight. Have a taste… 

via ablogworthvisiting:

Blitz the Ambassador ft.Rob Murat - Breathe (Official Video) 

(Source: youtube.com, via leshawntaylor)

lincolncenter:

La Casita, offering urban poetry, spoken word, and the music and dance expressions of traditional and contemporary cultures, takes place on August 6 this year at Lincoln Center Out of Doors. The program celebrates community and the voices of the people, young and old, male and female.  The marathon afternoon features more than a dozen artists including alumni of Russell Simmons’ Def Poetry Jam on Broadway Staceyann Chin and Mayda del Valle and the Deaf poetry exponents, Flying Words Project: Peter Cook & Kenny Lerner.   For the second year, the entire La Casita program will be sign-language interpreted, and will also travel once again to Teatro Pregones in the Bronx, (August 7).  Emceeing both dates is poet Rich Villar.
  

lincolncenter:

La Casita, offering urban poetry, spoken word, and the music and dance expressions of traditional and contemporary cultures, takes place on August 6 this year at Lincoln Center Out of Doors. The program celebrates community and the voices of the people, young and old, male and female.  The marathon afternoon features more than a dozen artists including alumni of Russell Simmons’ Def Poetry Jam on Broadway Staceyann Chin and Mayda del Valle and the Deaf poetry exponents, Flying Words Project: Peter Cook & Kenny Lerner.   For the second year, the entire La Casita program will be sign-language interpreted, and will also travel once again to Teatro Pregones in the Bronx, (August 7).  Emceeing both dates is poet Rich Villar.

  

Deep Mekong Delta blues from Cambodian Chapei master, Kong Nay (also spelled Kung Nai), who I just learned about from the Dengue Fever documentary Sleepwalking Through the Mekong.

Info from the youtube posting: When the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia in 1975, they killed nearly all of the country’s intellectuals, artists and musicians. One of the few to survive was Kong Nay, a master of the stringed instrument known as the chapei. He was forced to perform songs praising the Khmer Rouge, and only managed to survive being executed when the Vietnamese overthrew the regime. Blind and in his 60s, he is one of the last chapei masters. Here he makes a rare US appearance at the 2007 Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington DC.

Dengue Fever play at Lincoln Center Out of Doors on a bill with Indian bhangra legend Malkit Singh on Thursday, August 4.  Free.  

This is a great Baloji video (featuring Konono No1). The GlobeSonic gig with him, @RAMhaiti and Group Doueh is going to be a blast!

derekberes:

Am in love with this video. Can’t wait to DJ with these guys at Central Park Summerstage on July 3!

Blitz the Ambassador’s excellent new album Native Sun, streaming on youtube.  He plays @LCOutofDoors on Aug 7 with South Africa’s Spoek Mathambo and Rwanda via Brooklyn’s Iyadede.  FREE!

Live from the Continent, presented in collaboration with the Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute www.LCOutofDoors.org

Derek Beres and I will be djing with GlobeSonic Sound System (percussion by Duke Mushroom) at Central Park SummerStage on Sun, July 3 on a bill with RAM from Haiti, Group Doueh from Western Sahara, and Congolese rapper Baloji. I’ve been gone from SummerStage for 12 years. It will be fun to be back on that stage.