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Fourth Annual globalFEST Moves to Bigger Venue & Announces
2007 Line-Up: Surf
Rock, Palestinian Ouds, Brazilian and Afro-Portuguese
Songs, African-American String Band Music, and More
Roots revival, surf rock, classical ouds, Brazilian
and Afro-Portuguese songs. Expect these and many more
styles on three diverse stages of the fourth annual globalFEST
2007 (www.globalfest-ny.com),
which takes place Sunday, January 21, 2007,
starting at 7 pm. This year the event moves to Webster
Hall (125 East 11th Street, NYC) to better
accommodate crowds that packed previous venues. The
event, which has sold out three years in a row, has
become one of America’s leading showcases of global sounds, demonstrating
the multiplicity of sounds and performance contexts that
fall under the ‘world music’ label. Tickets
are available from TicketWeb.com,
1-866-468-7619.
“globalFEST proved it's possible to respect the
past without being forced to preserve it forever unchanged,” reported
the Village Voice in globalFEST’s debut
year. “In terms of programming, fans can expect
the same mix of established names and new revelations
as in past years, that all address the unanswerable question
of ‘what is world music?’ in their own
way,” says Bill Bragin of The Public Theater,
who along with Maure Aronson of Boston’s World
Music, Inc., and Isabel Soffer of World
Music Institute, founded the festival. “We
launched the event in the wake of 9/11 when international
artists were struggling to tour because of the increasingly
restrictive American visa process, yet American audiences
were expressing more interest in global culture,” says
Soffer. Bowery Presents joins as a producer
in this fourth year as the event expands to a larger
venue.
Year after year, the globalFEST producers spotlight underexposed
hybrids, roots revivalists, and virtuosic performers
from all corners and this year will continue that tradition.
Compelling patterns emerge from the festival roster each
year.
Two themes recurring
from years past are remarkable vocalists and “stars
back home.” Lenine,
though deeply rooted in regional Brazilian forms, weaves
together both threads while embodying the Brazilian tendency
to reconstitute and fuse popular forms from rock to bossa
nova, from hip hop to MPB. Sara Tavares unites
her Cape Verdean and Portuguese roots into a more modern
songwriter aesthetic accessible to newcomers of world
music and with touches of folk and R&B.
This year fans might ponder the Lebanese roots of surf
guitarist Dick Dale, whose music influenced two festival
performers: Boom Pam, an Israeli guitar,
tuba, and drums outfit which reclaims surf rock’s
Mediterranean roots, and Los Angeles’s Dengue
Fever, which is as equally influenced by a Cambodian
garage rock and psychedelia craze of the 1960s.
The French connection continues as in previous years
spotlighting France as a gateway of musical immigrants.
Senegalese songstress Julia Sarr and
French guitarist Patrice Larose team
up to offer an internationalist and modern approach to
the singer-songwriter and guitar conventions. Paris-based Le
Trio Joubran, three young oud-toting
Palestinian brothers, reminds us that world music encompasses
classical styles, and classical music can include thrilling
improvisation. Babylon Circus plays
a Gallic/Mediterranean ska that inherits much from the
global punk and new wave movements of the ’80s.
Early twentieth century music gets a boost from Les
Primitifs du Futur, which blends world-musette and
Django-style guitar into old-fashion originals (and whose
founders include legendary cartoonist R. Crumb).
Roots music is also represented by the African-American
string band Carolina Chocolate Drops,
which plays an American traditional style that historically
created a bridge across between African and European
Americans. Meanwhile, Central American cultural ambassadors Andy
Palacio and the Garifuna Collective reignite
the traditions of a culture that emerged from escaped
slaves and whose modern-day descendants are dispersed
from Belize to Nicaragua. Vocalist Lucia Pulido
and Palenque take on the repertoire of the chirimía,
a type of Colombian street band, in their search for
a distinct, experimental style that is simultaneously
deeply rooted and contemporary.
Not only has the
event broadened and deepened participants’ appreciation
for the enormous breadth of global music, it has opened
new opportunities for international musicians in the
performing arts field. Scheduled to coincide with the
annual Arts Presenters conference (www.artspresenters.org),
globalFEST has introduced upcoming stars to hundreds
of concert presenters and the general public.
“For those of us located between the coasts, globalFEST
offers presenters an opportunity to see a good number
of artists in a suitable venue,” explains Cynthia
Quinn Patterson of the University of Texas (Austin),
Performing Arts Center. “We're able to observe
audiences as well as the artists, which can be very useful
for a presenter trying to understand a new form or culture.” Luis
Barros, North American manager for Lura (Cape Verde/Portugal),
who used last year’s festival to secure a major
booking agency, says “globalFEST is the artist's
ultimate entrée to be exposed to the leading talent
agents, influential critics, and talent buyers in North
America.”
For the fourth year in a row, globalFEST is sponsored
by The Cultural Services of the French Embassy,
with additional support from the French Music
Export Office and Cultures France,
recognizing France’s pre-eminent role as a hotbed
for world music activity. In addition to providing financial
support for the festival, artists who have French productions,
regardless of their national origin, are eligible for
subsidies to support their travel to participate in globalFEST. Emmanuel
Morlet, the director of the
music department of the French Embassy, says, “We
continue to see how globalFEST serves the vital dual
function of helping artists develop international careers
and introducing audiences to culturally diverse performers.”
Boom Pam's performance is presented with support from
the Office of Cultural Affairs, Consulate General
of Israel in New York. Visa services for globalFEST
have been provided by Tamizdat, a nonprofit
committed to fostering the free exchange of information
and ideas between artists, audiences, and industry, and
across cultures.
“globalFest is a vital point of connection between
artists and the cultural arts community,” explains
Scott Southard, president of booking agency International
Music Network. “It’s one of the few chances
to break past the media monopoly's blockade of information
exchange.”
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