Playing for the Planet: Warren Senders’ set

When I first got the idea for the “Playing for the Planet” concert, I knew instantly that I wanted to sing these three compositions in Raga Gorakh Kalyan. I will update later on with the complete text and meaning; tonight I just want to get this posted before I go to sleep.

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28 Oct 2009, 10:11pm
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  • Lying Liars…

    …turns out a lot of conservative “grassroots organizations” were just a bunch of temps in a phonebank, gettin’ paid a little over minimum wage to pretend they were real ‘murricans. Who would have guessed?

    Link

    I won’t be able to watch the hearings tomorrow; have to work. But it should be fun to see Jack Bonner and his flunkies try to spin their way out of this.

    Playing for the Planet: The Agbekor Drum and Dance Society

    In 1979, I was running the scheduling at “Cambridge Custom Percussion,” the Cambridgeport neighborhood drum shop. Selling the conga drums made by “Conga Jim” VanDenAkker and the ceramic dumbeqs of Betsy McGurk during the day, the shop changed into a small performance and teaching space. I was twenty-one; the youngest member of the ad hoc collective that supposedly ran the place. I was looking for teachers who were interested in giving classes in various styles of group drumming…and that’s how I met David Locke, recently returned from several years’ study in Ghana. He was already teaching at Tufts, but began a regular class at CCP. That class took off; people loved the repertoire, and David was (and is) an exceptional teacher.

    After a while, there was enough of a regular group that it became a repertory ensemble, the Agbekor Drum and Dance Society (eventually, if memory serves me right, incorporating as a 501(c)3 non-profit). I was never personally interested in learning the master drum parts; all I really wanted to do was play the kagan, the small high-pitched drum which fills in the offbeats in Ewe music.

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    Playing for the Planet: Beth Bahia Cohen’s set

    Beth Bahia Cohen and her accompanists opened the evening with a single twenty-five minute suite which included three separate melodies from different parts of the Middle East. The performance included lots of beautiful violin playing from Beth, a lovely oud solo from Mac Ritchey, and some great percussion from Todd Roach and Gabe Halberg. Rhythmically charged, passionate, lyrical…what a great way to start things off!

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    Playing For The Planet: Aparna Sindhoor’s Set

    The fifth ensemble to perform (starting at around 9:20 pm) was the Aparna Sindhoor Dance Theater. The room lighting was wretched; even with the videocam on “nightshot” setting there was a lot of detail lost. But nevertheless, the power and genius of Aparna and her ensemble are evident in this video. This is a 25-minute excerpt from their long piece, “The Story and The Song,” about a young woman who could turn herself into a flowering tree and the prince who fell in love with her. The fact that there was a giant painted tree as a backdrop was purely serendipitous.

    Here are four photographs (courtesy Hadley Langosey) and video (courtesy the Sony Cam mounted on a tripod, on top of the piano in the back of the room.). The first few seconds of the introduction were lost, but the rest of the performance is intact.

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    4 Oct 2009, 11:25pm
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  • What music will become extinct?

    Every day, more bad news on climate change.

    Fortunately, we’ve recently begun to initiate the process of agreeing on a framework for the development of a concept that will allow us to frame the discussion which will impact the structuring of a procedure for developing a methodology that makes it possible to begin to finally PAY SOME ATTENTION TO A GLOBAL CRISIS!

    I am not a climate scientist. I’m a scientifically literate musician. Climate change scares me for dozens of reasons. And it makes me deeply and terribly sad.

    With rising sea levels, many island nations will lose much of their land, or even cease to exist. Which brings me to tonight’s question:

    What music will become extinct?

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    Watch this video from 350.org…

    …they are doing important work!

    27 Aug 2009, 5:02pm
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  • Mostly, there is not much good news…

    350 days in the life of the retreating Mendenhall glacier near Juneau, Alaska.

    The Extreme Ice Survey is the most wide-ranging glacier study ever conducted using ground-based, real-time photography.

    Y’all should subscribe to 350.org’s YouTube channel.