UK: 'THE MASTER DRUMMERS OF AFRICA', A 15-PIECE BAND TAKE THEIR UNIQUE SOUND TO LONDON'S QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL
Record ID:
386667
UK: 'THE MASTER DRUMMERS OF AFRICA', A 15-PIECE BAND TAKE THEIR UNIQUE SOUND TO LONDON'S QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL
- Title: UK: 'THE MASTER DRUMMERS OF AFRICA', A 15-PIECE BAND TAKE THEIR UNIQUE SOUND TO LONDON'S QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL
- Date: 21st July 1999
- Summary: CLIP OF THE MASTER DRUMMERS OF AFRICA REHEARSING
- Embargoed: 5th August 1999 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Entertainment
- Reuters ID: LVA1NSAF6CFGRYWGNIEJPZ8L6U25
- Story Text: The drum comes into a league of its own at London's
Queen Elizabeth Hall as a 15-piece ensemble known as The
Master Drummers of Africa prepare to take their unique sound
around the world.
They've brought their instruments from countries as
diverse as Ghana, Egypt, Zimbabwe, Morocco, Ethiopia and
Sierra Leone.And one thing unites them all -- the drum.
Founded in 1979 by Ghanian drummer Lord Eric Sugumugu,
The Master Drummers of Africa are bringing a collection of
more than 3,000 tribal rhythms to London's Queen Elizabeth
Hall.It's the fourth time they're performing here - previous
shows have been with the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Georgie
Fame...the list really is endless.It's a reflection of the
brilliance of their art that leading musicians all over the
world are queuing up to work with them - and a reflection of
the fusion between the British music scene and African music
that reached its peak in the sixties.
The mix of sounds, from tribal, celebratory to hypnotic
and explosive reveals the huge mix of cultures within the
group as well as the binding force at the heart of all these
people.Lord Eric says that the place of the drum within
African society cannot be underestimated: 'The drum is very
important to us, especially coming from Ghana - home of drums
- the drum speaks before any ceremony, the drum speaks before
any celebration, so the drum is very, very powerful.' It's
also a healing force that works on a spiritual level as much
as a purely musical one.
Tawanda Mabere has come from Zimbabwe.He says that the
basic rhythm of the drum has resonance with every human being
all over the world: 'It comes from the heartbeat - but that is
interaction with the environment.People who live on the
hillside for example might be playing things as they run down
the hill, people in the valleys might have a different tempo
partly to do with the life that they live in - it's all to do
with the geography of the different parts of Africa.'
Watching the Master Drummers is in part an insight into
a very different culture, it's also a startling reminder of
how far the West has come from the core values at the root of
African music.Because it's the ancestry and values dating
back thousands of years that drive this ancient sound.And
it's this that gives it its unique power and makes it so
refreshing to Western ears. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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