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PerPan Brazil! by B. George

| What's a
desk jockey to do?
It's been five sedentary years since my last out-of-office experience (see Colombian stories;
Picolandia and Vallenato) -- much too long to go without nudging the
equator, swizzle-sticking fuzzy drinks and scooping up rare petroleum based audio product. So at
the end of March I took off for PercPan, the sixth annual Panorama Percussivo Mundial Festival in
Salvador, the capital of Bahia State, Brazil.
The good idea of PercPan is to showcase the great percussion traditions of the world over a four
day period. Free events include daily teaching workshops, as well as outdoor "encounters" where
with a little luck performers can learn from each other and perhaps perform together. The first
evening was staged in the public park opposite the Teatro Castro Alves, free to all, with bands
occupying makeshift stages on the quadrants, all playing at the same time. Over the next three
nights everyone moved inside the theater for more formal concerts charging admission. Thursday and
Friday featured different lineups, while the closing concert on Saturday sandwiched everyone into
shortened sets. This year eleven groups performed, highlighted by the focused cacophony of the
Tambours du Burundi.
PercPan is a relatively new event in a city gearing up for its 450th anniversary on the same
weekend. Begun and still run by anthropologist turned promoter Beth Cayres, in the second season
percussionist Naná Vasconcelos became the artistic director. The following year he was
joined by fellow Salvadorian Gilberto Gil. Since then the two artists have served as masters of
ceremony, performers and real-time musical bridges. This proved to be the genius of PercPan -- a
continuous stream of acts performing without interruption for about three hours -- Naná and
Gil suggesting that the difference between cultures is little more than a short walk across the
stage.
How goes it? PercPan dialy highlights
The first concert began with Naná stage right, shaking a cluster of small bell-like gourd
rattles, chanting, skating, hitting a large symbol taken form a mass of percussion instruments at
his feet. Out of the pit rose the stage front, with four Native North American Indians surrounding
a large drum about five feet in diameter. Each smacked the surface with a single drumstick that
looked a lot like a cat tail. Soon their chanting mixed with Naná's and Naná exited.
It was very dramatic -- a terrific beginning. But the Silvercloud Singers' repertoire was too
rigid and redundant. Towards the end of the set ears perked and genuine smiles. Without skipping a
beat the monotone sing-song evolved into a personal update; "Won't you come back to me? You're
the only one I ever loved..."
As applause subsided Egberto Gismonte was already set to go, behind and to the left of the
Amerindians. Gismonte, like the best known Brazilian musicians working in America and Europe, is
working in jazz. The set began by treating the grand piano as the percussion instrument it is,
rolling measured phrases alternating with hammered improvisations. Joining him were a restrained
electric organ and Spanish guitar. Next Gismonte performed solo on a stick thin flute. Blowing
across the breath hole, he adding lip smacks and mouth pops to keep the piece moving and emphasize
the percussive elements of the instrument.
Gilberto Gil then made his first appearance in stylized African robes (vs Nana's tee) playing an
electric glass guitar without a pegbox (his brand spanking new Roland VG-8 Guitarra Virtual). Like
Papa Wemba and Yousou N'dour, Gil possesses one of the great voices in pop music, but I believe is
a more aware and informed songwriter. The guitar was set to sound acoustic and Gil did a simple
and overwhelming solo version of, "Um Sonho" (A Dream). This impressionist tune, both anthem and
homage to the folk culture and indigenous peoples of Brazil, approaches the weight of, "We Shall
Overcome," for many Brazilians. Soon Gil was joined by the entire theater in a song that ends with
the repeated soaring line, "Long live the Xingu indian." Wild cheers greeted a hesitant, elderly
rainforest Amerindian as he walked onstage. I cheered, surprised at how effective this
orchestrated moment was.
Digression #1
Musicians have been in the forefront of raising the awareness of the plight of the rainforest
peoples. The hope is that Indian culture can flourish in traditional homelands. In truth South
Americans have treated their indigenous population much like the colonizers in the rest of the
Americas, yet in Brazil the romanticism, guilt and very real problem remains current. Time will
tell as increased contact, government 'control', and business interests peck away at the
protective forest canopy. You can hear "Um Sonho" on Gil's Parabolicamaraacute (Warner, Brazil,
176292, CD, 1991) or the US release, Parabolic (Tropical Storm, CD3210A, CD, 1992). The very
successful carnival hit, "Madalena," is also on this disc.
Dressed in beads, paint, feathers and a speedo, the Xingu elder performed on a single reed flute
with foot-stamping accompaniment. Eventually he was joined by three, then five other musicians,
all playing long bamboo horns that produced a buzz like tone. Gismonte joined in for a while on a
cluster harmonica, and for the windup five Xingu women came onstage to dance and chant along. The
program notes explained that this was ritual music from the Alto Xingu tribe from the state of
Mato Grosso, and that this troupe has been touring with Gismonte as Indios Camaiurás.
As if to prove there's beauty without sentimentality or furrowed brow, Naná again took the
stage with his recently formed modern trio, Techno Suggestion. The group represented the only big
electric din heard at PercPan -- by sheer force the only sound to rival the upcoming Burundi's.
The beatific Naná, the impassive Leon Gruenbaum (in Devo-ish nuclear cleanout jumpsuit) and
the wild eyed Cyro Baptista occupy a musical plane halfway between the 3 Graces and the 3 Stooges.
Nana moved from large marching drum to his delicate tambourine tree -- a post with six small
tambourines, each side of three activated at once by the two hand levers. Leon looped elaborate
systems that were stored electronically and triggered by foot pedals and gentle, incremental
finger movements on a kalimba-like hand hewn keyboard. Ciro just (justly) whacked an assortment of
plastic products, à la NY street musicians, and delighted the crowd with a comic turn on
the exotic (to Brazil) 'frotoir' (Louisiana rubboard).
As this gigantic sound cut off abruptly, Dalga Larrondo replaced it with the quietest moments
heard at the festival. Perched like a bird and flanked by well positioned mikes, Dalga performed a
history of flight in sound. In each hand he held giant seed pods of the aptly named 'flamboyant'
tree. Through subtle shakes, rolls, flings, flicks, swirls, and slings the seeds moved inside the
pods and the sound rollercoastered through the auditorium. He finished with some silly xylophone
shtick and regained credibility with a subtle vessel drum solo on a former flower pot he called a
'morinja.'
Next up the twenty strong Evocação, featuring Naná's brother, Erasto. This is
the first performance by this recently formed pickup group uniting three troupes of professional
street musicians from the Brazilian state of Pernambuco.All eyes were on 'the twins,' part of the
powerhouse triad of surdo playing gals, whose slight frames made their large sound all the more
impressive. (soon to be pictured above: the real three graces photo : the twins Ana and Lourdes
Freire with Veronica Pessoa). This surdo in Pernambuco is called an 'alfaia,' traditionally used
for the dance rhythm 'maracatu.' The maracatu has strong African roots, performed with men and
women facing each other in a line and in a bunch. Associated with carnival it is similar to the
samba with a stronger emphasis on hand movements. The other two dance rhythms that
Evocação specializes in are the coco and the cavalo marinho. The coco (duple beat,
step-step, big-step forward (step-step, big-step backward, each big-step with a hard foot stamp)
originated in the state of Alagoas, presumably first performed by slaves as they broke open
coconuts. The cavalo marinho dance comes from Pernambuco, performed similarly to the coco, but
with a triple meter. One element of a cavalo marinho dance band is the relatively small sound of
the rabeca folk violin. All of these dances are joyous and very flirtatious. Proof that the
on-stage fun was not an act came every evening at the hotel bar, the band playing music late into
the night and doing their best to teach everyone the dances.
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Drummers of Burundi
Suddenly the exit doors at the foot of the stage swing open and in march the drummers from
Burundi. Barrage is a word invented for such occasions. With the conga shaped drums balanced
lengthwise on their heads, the 13 members hammered a solid rhythm as they walked up the stairs and
onto the stage. Placing the one slightly taller drum center stage, (inkiranya, the lead drum, the
kings drum) the rest of the troupe formed a semi-circle behind. For nearly an hour the
drummer-dancers rotated the pole position to play the inkiranya and showcase individual skills.
The power of the ensemble comes from the precision of simple rhythms performed in unison. Each
performer uses hand hewn drumsticks to strike both the cow hide drumhead and the sides of the
waist-high wooden drums -- a dull thud, a sharp smack in various combination. Moves towards the
inkiranya involve showcasing dancing skill, one highly rated maneuver consisted of kicking the
legs straight out and parallel to the floor while trying to jump as high as possible. Each new
lead drummer then sets the drumming pace until his successor arrives. Sometimes the approaching
drummer enacts a pantomime of a bird sneaking up to steal some food, nervously bobbing his head,
starting forward and back. One really cool move consisted of comically rolling a drumstick round
and round the neck between beats.
The troupe had been invited to PercPan in both '97 & '98, and only a more stable political
environment allowed them to attend this year. (Since the early 90s Burundi has been rocked by the
same ethnic violence as Rwanda to the north, only to a lesser degree ( as yet no civil war, with
hundreds of thousands, not millions, dead.). This traveling version was 13 strong in a performing
troupe that can number 25 players. Historically the drummers were in the service of the King
designed to inspire awe, playing for ceremonial functions and traveling with him. Since
independence the drummers have been in the service of the Ministry of Culture. Ethnically a Hutu
(Bantu) people, drumming was a hereditary position of the farmers from Karuzi in the northern
portion of this Central African country. Their furious drumming earned them the designation as
"Warriors of the Drum" and (as various liner notes explain) "the calling out is a plea for them to
attack the instrument." On the Ocora release the drummers are from Bukirasazi, while WOMAD
releases say they hail from Makebuko. Nowadays even technical schools in the capital of Bujumbura
have drum ensembles.
Much folklore once enlivened the drummer's history and it's hard to say how much of it is an oft
told tale ( that each generation plants the trees to carve the drums for future drummers, and
that, "the drums are stored in sacred lairs, anointed with libations and guarded by a priestess
whose role included symbolic sexual union with the king at an annual ceremony"). That's what
drums do to people. By way of contrast the gentle 'inanga' (zither) is the national instrument of
Burundi, and probably the next best known sound to come out of the region is the soft hocketed
pygmy vocals.
But here in Bahia their thundering sound is overwhelming. Eyes shut, the irregular rhythms create
phycho-acoustic shenanigans similar to Latin horn attacks. Heaven.
Digression dos -- Burundi on record
The Royal Ingoma Drummers of Burundi were first recorded on the late 70s overview, Musique du
Burundi (Various Artists, Ocora, France, OCR 40, LP, 1967). This recording has been
repackaged and re-released many times, including, Burundi-Musiques Traditionelles (Various
Artists, Ocora, France, 558511, LP, 1982). Almost immediately the sound was incorporated into pop
music with a piano and guitar overdub on Burundi Black, (Barclay, France, ZXDR 646701, LP,
1971). Fear of authenticity led to the sound being mimicked as mere backbeat by proto new
romantics, Bow Wow Wow and Adam Ant. In the US more ethnographic material was released, The
Music From The Heart of Africa, Burundi, (Various Artists, Nonesuch, US, H-72057, LP, 1974)
that was licensed from Italy where it was released as, Musica del Burundi (Vedette, Italy,
VPA 8137, LP, 19??). The liner notes describe the players as the Hutu from Karuzi, and the yells
are the exhortations of the lead drummer for his "fellow warriors of the drum
to attack
their instruments." This college favorite prompted an old hat romantic tape foray by Joni
Mitchell on The Hissing of Summer Lawns (Asylum, 7E-1051, LP, 1975). In 1981 a real life
new romantic, Visage drummer Rusty Egan reworked the same French backing track, as the also
titled, Burundi Black, (our copy : Cachalot, US, BIG 3, 12"/33rpm/EP, 1981). The
drummer's first UK tour to attend the WOMAD Festival (July 1982) created interest anew, a few
drummers performing live with Echo & The Bunnymen and on the Bunny LP, Zimbo. (Korova,
UK, KOW 26T, LP, 1983). On this same trip the full troupe also opened for the Clash, playing
before an audience of 5,000 punters. Oddly enough, the peace-loving English press objected to the
troupes, "Warriors of the Drum," characterization and much spin was devoted to making
their motives cuddly. On this trip they were billed as the Drums of Makebuko and recorded slots
resulting from the WOMAD experience include the Various Artists LPs: Music and Rhythm: A
Benefit Double LP for a World of Music Arts and Dance (WEA International, UK, K68045, LP,
1982 / PVC, US, 201, LP, 1982), Raindrops Pattering on Banana Leaves and Other Tune,
(WOMAD, UK, 001, 1982), and WOMAD Talking Book, Volume One: An Introduction to Africa
(WOMAD, UK, 003, LP, 1985).
Other appearances (although I have not seen these discs) include: Sacred Drums-Rukinzo Legacy.
(World Music Library, 5200, CD, 1995), Les Troubadours des Hauts-Plateaux. Musique African du
Burundi (Disques Vogues, France, LP, [1960s]), and Tambours du Burundi, Les Maitres Tambours
du Burundi (Arion, 64016, CD, 1994). I have also seen the same Arion release with the number ARN
33682 and Ronnie Graham's Sterns Guide, vol. 2 says that they are part of a Various Artists
CD on Realworld, from 1991/2.
After hours and daylight excursions
As all the performers stayed in the same hotel there was a lot of impromptu music making and
little get togethers after the concerts in the bar and around the pool. The Hotel Tropical da
Bahia was a champ in thinking 30 people with drums playing very loud 'til 4 am was an OK idea! It
was a cultural mix delightful in its improbabilities, like Amazonian Indians wearing Federal
Police T-shirts or finding out that Cyro Baptista lives in Tenafly, NJ. One night we were invited
to a twenty-something's birthday party and had a chance to visit a home and see what a local DJ
was up to. It was fun, heavy on Bob Marley and hard rock (Brazil is one of the largest markets in
the world for rock), with a local fave, Otto, getting heavy rotation. Otto mixes Bahian drums
(that surdo sound again) with rock and techno. His best stuff replaces samba snares with drum and
bass percussion, an oddly familiar danceable mix.
Opting for these late evenings I never made it to any daytime workshops, but did catch a few of
the encounters. These were held in a older colonial section of town, Pelourinho, that a few years
back had been swept clean of poor people and recolonized with picturesque shops. Pastel colored
and safe for outsiders, the area is patrolled by special Tourist Police. As many of the Afro
bloco's still reside and rehearse in the vicinity there is an outdoor performance area/plaza with
music scheduled regularly. With no blocos performing this year at the festival, it was nice to see
that an 'encounter' was scheduled between Olodum and the Burundi Drummers. While not ever managing
to perform together both groups provided stirring sets.
Olodum is one of the many Afro blocos who parade at carnival and are the big drum sound that we
associate with Brazil. They are best known for their appearances on record and in concert with
Paul Simon. Bloco's can be many thousands strong at Carnival, but split up into smaller groups for
concerts, often performing at many locations at the same time. Some like Olodum are veritable
institutions with souvenir shops offering a variety of commercial products. Most serve as social
clubs and cultural organizations, the music often the only outlet for creativity in a world that
offers few opportunities to Salvador's poor. Bloco's like Aru Ketu have moved full fledged into
the pop world, while others like Ilê Aiyê work to preserve the afoxé sound
--'traditional' African, only in Brazil this is a very fluid notion.
Most evenings before the concerts began we would visit Pelourinho for dinner or to sit outside at
one of the many cafés;'s/bars. (Did I mention it was moist and about 95 the entire time?)
Here we would sample them big strong beers and the national snack, 'acaraje'. This hand held item
consists of fried white bean paste formed in a sphere, fried in dende oil (palm oil). Then it's
cut, filled with vatapa' (a mash of dende, bread, ground cashew nuts, green peppers), hot chili
paste and mounds of dried shrimp, evoking the taste of New Orleans' crayfish. Acaraje' is always
served up by the Baianas, elder women of stature, status, girth and always dressed in lacy
voluminous white.
The very next day
The second evening of performance was as uneven and the first was remarkable. Maybe it was the
fact that I was denied admission because I was wearing bermudas? Even though short shorts are a
national pastime and the Amazon Indians were practically naked, I had to rush back to the hotel to
change. When I returned 20 minutes after starting time all the gates were locked. The theater is
unique in that the ticket office, the seating area and the stage are all separate buildings.
Flying 500 miles to hear a concert means nothing to a man in uniform and none of the guards would
let me into the theater. But the one constant in any closed system is that you can't think of
everything and people only do what they're told to do. Consequently the gates going back stage
were unwatched, unlocked. So I saw day two from behind the scenes where the sound was worse, the
overview terrific.
Beginning the concert was Maria Bethånia. Maria is Caetano Veloso's sister and a big MPB
(Música Popular Brasileira) star. While her inclusion was good for filling seats (the
theater seldom sells out), she was a weak link to the percussion theme. When her long set ended at
least 20% of the audience left. It seemed that a set by Maria was reason enough for fans to buy a
ticket, as the big acts do not visit Salvador all that often. Maybe because the ticket price needs
to be high, and the region is poor. Gil pointed out another oddity; that many artists, because
they make people dance, are not allowed to perform at this venue. This was a problem Gil faced in
the US when he performed at Carnegie Hall, his show repeatedly interrupted to ask dancers to
return to their seats.
The few memorable highlights of the evening include Gil doing an acoustic version of, "Dos, Dos,
Dos," as well as the little interplays between Gil and Naná as acts entered and exited. Zeca
Baleiro & Tambores de Crioula do Maranhão also proved a delight.
Backed up by an all male choro and musicians with a distinctly Caribbean/Cuban feeling, the female
dancers wore headwraps, flowered skirts and latex bike shorts. I was nice to see the Samba de Roda
danced and the belly touch (semba) rumored to have inspired, or at least lent it's name, to the
Bahian samba. Within a circle one dancer would move towards the center where she was soon
challenged by another solo dancer. Moving towards each other, alternating their weight from hip to
hip, side to side, the challenge ends as belly's touch and they throw their hands in the air.
Sometimes the approach is a lazy shuffle, skirts swishing. At other times one of the dancers would
grab their opposites' shoulders and drag them forward authoritatively, and execute the touch. Over
the decades this modest beginning has evolved into an unrecognizable samba as performed in Rio.
Probably the most accomplished percussion ensemble this evening, and maybe of the whole event, was
that of Zakir Hussain. Arranged in a line of ghatam (jar drum), tabla, tambourine and dholak, they
gave a tourist show rather than perform a piece of music. The reasoning was probably sound -- that
most Brazilians were very unfamiliar with Indian music. In practice, the crowd was treated to a
series of incredibly virtuosic solos and a great deal of showboating.
Round-up
The final evening was as good as the first, and there were a few performers who worked out some
collaborative pieces. Notable was Gil improvising Eastern runs on the guitar and singing
melismatic vocal exchanges with Zakir Hussain's tabla. One real surprise, was Gismonte. After his
flute act this evening he apologized, explaining that all his finger movements and bent notes, and
even physically bending his twig thin flute was a sham. He had done it all with his lips. The
flute was just a stick.
Like each night before it, the show ended with Gil's composition, "Mama Africa." It was a joyous
finale with everyone on stage, singing and marching in a large. Like the audience the Burundi
drummers never wanted it to end, playing long after they had left the stage.
The following day I spent some time on the beach (Palm Sunday under the palms) gearing up for the
450th anniversary concert. The show was to feature Tom Ze and my favorite bloco, Filhos de Gandhy,
named after the Asian Indian leader. That afternoon we had visited Gandhy's enclave and saw the
men dressed in white sheets and having their heads wrapped in Sikh style turbans made of hotel
toweling. In the evening as we passed the concert site we realized the crowd could well reach
450,000! Instead we ended up at an expat's apartment, drinking beer and proposing that we should
be going to the concert soon.
Next stop Rio With the exchange rate nearly as exhilarating as the music, I
did some serious record hunting and book buyin' in Rio.Click below for some Rio recommendations of
where to shop and a list of the 40 kilos of product I purchased to add to the ARChive's 30,000
world music discs.
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