Robert Browning and Associates are back LIVE at Roulette, 509 Atlantic Ave, Brooklyn, NY Nov 6 & Nov 13!

The Golden Age of Arab Music & Song and Greek Rebetika

Full season 2021-22 schedule: https://www.robertbrowningassociates.com/

Belize Parranda with Ideal Castillo

Belize Parranda with Ideal Castillo

The Big Lazy Barbes reopen April 12th

The Big Lazy Barbes reopen April 12th

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On Friday, November 11th WMI hosts the NYC debut of The Bongo Hop, at Chelsea Music Hall. Tickets here:http://www.worldmusicinstitute.org/event/60d592293686c63b1281c6fd254b6f43After eight years in Colombia working as a DJ, promoter and music journal…

On Friday, November 11th WMI hosts the NYC debut of The Bongo Hop, at Chelsea Music Hall. Tickets here:

http://www.worldmusicinstitute.org/event/60d592293686c63b1281c6fd254b6f43

After eight years in Colombia working as a DJ, promoter and music journalist, trumpeter Etienne Sevet returned home to Lyon, France to form the Afro Caribbean band The Bongo Hop. The rich tone of their take on Afro-Caribbean dance music is the result of many influences including Sevet’s time in Cali where he met frequent collaborator and folkloric vocalist Nidia Góngora, and the African rhythms he encountered at home among the African diaspora, as well as his many travels around the world.

Nella is an exceptional young vocalist from the Venezuelan island of Margarita. She is a graduate of the prestigious Berklee School of Music in Boston, where she met Flamenco guitarist Javier Limón, with whom she has collaborated frequently. It was …

Nella is an exceptional young vocalist from the Venezuelan island of Margarita. She is a graduate of the prestigious Berklee School of Music in Boston, where she met Flamenco guitarist Javier Limón, with whom she has collaborated frequently. It was Limón who encouraged her exploration of the flamenco traditions of Andalusia, which she incorporates into the folkloric music of her homeland, giving her performance a unique and soulful quality.

Monday, October 21, 2019 at 7 PM – 11 PM (le) poisson rouge 158 Bleecker St, New York, New York 10012

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Tal National dates:

July 31 – Brooklyn, NY – The Sultan Room
August 02 Marlboro, NY – Live at The Falcon
August 03 New Haven, CT – Cafe Nine
August 04 Portland, ME – Space538
August 06 Hudson, NY – The Half Moon
August 07 Boston, MA – Museum of Fine Arts
August 08 East Hampton, MA – New City Brewery
August 09 Edmonton, AB – Edmonton Folk Festival
August 10 Edmonton, AB – Edmonton Folk Festival
August 16 Salmon Arm, BC – Salmon Arm Roots and Blues Festiva

Tal National

Tal National

Alpha Blondy resheduled November 6th 2019

Alpha Blondy resheduled November 6th 2019

Brasfest kicks off a weekend of carnival celebrations at the usual spot behind the Brooklyn Museum. Panortama follows saturday night with Diumnache Gras leading into Jouvert morning and the West Indian parade labor Day monday

Brasfest kicks off a weekend of carnival celebrations at the usual spot behind the Brooklyn Museum. Panortama follows saturday night with Diumnache Gras leading into Jouvert morning and the West Indian parade labor Day monday

Fado Festival NY and NJ 2019. Design and logo by Diogo Montes. About Fado Festival NY + NJ Fadofestival.net produced and founded by Isabel Soffer/ Livesounds.org The annual Fado Festival NY + NJ is a celebration of the iconic Portuguese musical tradition that has ancient roots, but is ever moving forward.
Boukman Eksperyans from Haiti returns to the Festival International in Lafayette LA . Full lineup here: https://festivalinternational.org/2019-artists/

Boukman Eksperyans from Haiti returns to the Festival International in Lafayette LA . Full lineup here: https://festivalinternational.org/2019-artists/

Agadir City Hip Hop Festival, South coast of Morocco June 26th-30th

Agadir City Hip Hop Festival, South coast of Morocco June 26th-30th

Noura Mint Seymali US tour March-April

Noura Mint Seymali US tour March-April

Tcheka at SOBs

Tcheka at SOBs


Tcheka bio:

Manuel Lopes Andrade, a.k.a. Tcheka, was born on the 20th July 1973 in the port of Ribeira Barca, Santa Catarina district, on Santiago, the most African island of the Cape Verde archipelago. At a very early age, he began to perform alongside his father, Nho Raul Andrade, a highly popular violinist at the island’s village dances and festivities. Tcheka was in good hands. Every wrong note brought a rap on the knuckles from his father’s bow, but he learned quickly and soon made his mark at dances, weddings, baptisms and so on.

However, the boy had other ambitions. At 15, he began to develop a more personal style, based on batuque. One of the first pieces he wrote, “Man’ba des bes kumida dâ”, gave a clear idea of the musical path he wished to follow. His aim was to widen the appeal of batuque, turning it into a beat that everyone would love.

In the meantime, a man must earn his living. Tcheka left his rural home and went to live in Praia, where he became a cameraman for national television, a job that involved travel and broadened his horizons. In Praia, Tcheka met journalist Julio Rodrigues and wrote a number of songs with him. The two played informally in the bars of the Cape Verdean capital. In one of these bars, José da Silva met him and proposed him to record an album…

On his second album, Nu Monda (which means “weeding”), singer-songwriter Tcheka brings us another harvest of musical stories grown in the rich soil of Cape Verdean tradition. With his alert commentator’s eye (perhaps the result of his former work as a cameraman?), he builds bridges that span different areas and periods of sound: tradition and youth, Santiago and music from all over the world…

His songs are like brushstrokes, redolent of the originality of his art, heir to “batuque” (1) – traditionally played with the tchabeta (2) – the beat of African resistance that even the prohibition of drums and the repression of the colonial period failed to stifle.

Moving on from his previous album, Tcheka revels in new audacities. He contracts and dilates – now slower, now faster, more impassioned or intimist – different beats of batuque, a genre the artist maintains “still holds many paths to be explored”. At times, morna chords blend in, at others, the style seems to lean towards funk influences, without ever ceasing to be purely Cape Verdean.

You might call Tcheka as a sort of pop griot, a storyteller whose chosen backcloth is Cape Verde’s rural lands, its animals and plants, its rocks, paths, droughts and rains. His central character is the people of the archipelago, with their saints, holidays, customs and expressions, as well as universal themes of love, friendship, passing time, tragedies, hopes and joys.

Tcheka is a key figure in the musical movement that has transposed the original beat of batuque to the strings of the guitar, and which – after breathing new life into Cape Verdean music – has established itself as a turning point in the evolution of the archipelago’s musical identity – a newborn infant, awaiting the recognition that baptism brings. Some call the movement “batuque do quintal”, because it appeared at the “Quintal da Musica” (an active cultural forum in the city of Praia) in this first decade of a new century. But writer Osvaldo Osório, specialist in Cape Verdean culture, prefers to refer to these musical genres as “narrative songs”, because they always tell a story.

Batuque & tchabeta For a long time, drums were banned by the Church and the Portuguese colonial authorities, but Cape Verdean women found a way to get around this prohibition. Batuque, a beat specific to the island of Santiago in the Cape Verde archipelago, conveys the collective memory and identity of a people. Batuque was first played after work in the fields, traditionally by women. Sitting in a circle, they tapped on a “tchabeta”, a bundle of cloth, normally made of piled loincloths that they rolled up and held between their legs. Depending on the thickness and compression of the fabric used, these cloth drums produced a variety of sounds. Batuque provided an accompaniment for “finaçon”, a vocal style that the women improvised to suit their audience and the occasion. Following African tradition, the singers commented on village events, celebrated farming festivals, births and marriages, and commemorated deaths. Sometimes one of them would enter the “terrero” (the inside of the circle) and dance. Today, these inflexible traditions have been radically updated. Firstly, the women – who hardly ever wear loincloths now – make their drums from plastic bags. Stacked and folded in the customary way, they produce a wide range of sounds (listen to the Terrero album). Secondly, young men like Tcheka are adopting these traditional styles, batuque and finaçon, their childhood lullaby, to assert their African identity more actively.

Looking forward......

Barbès, Multiflora and Electric Cowbell Present 
SECRET PLANET 2019January 5th, DROM, Avenue A
Featuring

7:30 - Toomai String Quintet with Miss YaYa
8:15 - Yeni Nostalji 
9:00 - Bil Afrah Project
9:45 - Mdou Moctar
10:30 - (secret planetary guest) 
11:15 - Yonatan Gat & the Eastern Medicine Singers
12:00 - La Mecánica Popular
12:45 - Greek Judas

Bil Afrah Project, will be appearing at DROM, Barbes/Electric Cowbell showcase event

Bil Afrah Project, will be appearing at DROM, Barbes/Electric Cowbell showcase event

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Complete lineup for the 16th edition of globalFEST 
B.C.U.C. - Bantu Continua Uhuru Consciousness (South Africa) Defiant and hypnotic Soweto sounds

Jeremy Dutcher (Tobique / Canada) Reinvented indigenous Wolastoqiyik songs
Magos Herrera & Brooklyn Rider: "Dreamers" (Mexico / USA) Sensuous Latin vocals set against dramatic strings
Orquesta Akokán (Cuba / USA) Powerhouse Cuban mambo supergroup
Debashish Bhattacharya (India) Calcutta’s Innovative Slide Guitar Master
Cha Wa (New Orleans / USA) New Orleans brass driving Mardi Gras Indian funk
Amythyst Kiah (Tennessee / USA) Southern Gothic, Alt-Country Blues
Dakh Daughters (Ukraine) Kyiv's Underground Punk Cabaret
Zouk Machine (Guadeloupe / France) The Grand Dame of French-Antillean Zouk
47 SOUL (Palestine / United Kingdom) Electro Dabke from the Palestinian 
Combo Chimbita (Colombia / USA) Psychedelic Cumbia-Inflected Tropical Futurism
Gato Preto (Mozambique / Ghana / Germany) Afrofuturist Global Bass

Annual three day concert that caps a week of celebrating the richness of the Caribbean Creole culture, food, dance, and the music: Cadence Lypso, Soca, Kompa, Zouk, Reggae. Plan early to experience this music in its place of origin

Annual three day concert that caps a week of celebrating the richness of the Caribbean Creole culture, food, dance, and the music: Cadence Lypso, Soca, Kompa, Zouk, Reggae. Plan early to experience this music in its place of origin

Local and International stars of Calypso grace Brooklyn stages for four nights

Local and International stars of Calypso grace Brooklyn stages for four nights

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The World Music Institiute is announcing the (New York City) Fall & Winter 2018/2019 Program, featuring 14 performances by masters and emerging stars in world music, including two New York premieres. We hope to see you soon as we celebrate and recognize the rich diversity of traditional as well as contemporary artistic expression in cultures from around the world. Please visit our website for more info & tickets >> worldmusicinstitute.org

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           Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto at Terraza 7

Los gaiteros de San Jacinto folkloric Afro Columbian music. The intergenerational band, was established in the 1940's will be performing at Terraza 7 in Elmhurst June 28th and 29th led by sons and family of the original members, with additional dates in the US and Canada this summer. 

Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto featuring Juan Alberto Fernández at Terraza 7 in 2012

Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto featuring Juan Alberto Fernández at Terraza 7 in 2012

 
Noura Mint Seymali will be at the Lincoln Center atrium on June 7th and at the Bonnaroo Festival, Manchester Tennessee June 10th. Noura’s vocals and Jeich Ould Chighaly’s guitar make this a must. Noura and Jeich, as do most musicians in Mauritania p…

Noura Mint Seymali will be at the Lincoln Center atrium on June 7th and at the Bonnaroo Festival, Manchester Tennessee June 10th. Noura’s vocals and Jeich Ould Chighaly’s guitar make this a must. Noura and Jeich, as do most musicians in Mauritania pracice their craft in traditional settings, weddings and ceremonies for the most part, both come from Moorish griot tradtional music backgrounds. What these two master musicians bring to the audiencein their quartet is their personal vison informed but not shackled by their backgrounds.Their interaction on stage is fascinating, with Noura’s vocals soar and set the scene for Jeich’s solos arecompletelyabsorbing and take unanticipated turns heighten by reverb pedals which lead back to Noura. They are backed by bassist Ousmane Touré,who toured with Noura’s mother, the legendary Dimi Mint Abba and drummer/producer Matthew Tinari.