zaterdag 27 december 2008

donderdag 4 december 2008

everywhere I go I hear music



all I can say is that there is music everywhere and in everything here.....just look and listen here:


Funeral celebration (because funerals in Africa really are parties) for a village elder in Danyi (on top of the mountain near Tsiko) with lots of spirited dancing. Oh man, those Togolese grannies really know how to shake it:)

Moussa and Bawa, the musicians form Burkina Faso who I met on the beach in Ghana where they are squatting making traditional instruments (check out the xylophone and the sitar) while playing in the Pan-African Orchestra (watch/listen to the videos). I was invited to their rehearsal and then their concert at the National Theater in Accra. Even though their house is on the verge of being bulldozed any day now (notice the 'Move Immediately' painted in red) musically they are actually doing really well and have been invited to England to play.


In a village on the Benin/Nigerian border reached by pirogue, I spontaneously met and stayed a couple days with a family who fabricates drums (in pic is the djembé they made me)










La Semaine de la Biodiversité Culturelle is a week of events and workshops that JVE organizes every year in Tsiko in September to make the link between traditional Togolese culture and environmental protection. One of the highlights is a dance/theater competition where groups coreograph performances that have a message about the importance of the forest in their community. (I'm looking for the pictures I have from this, but no luck at the moment)

And then there is the other 'music' of: the prayer call from the mosque at 4:30 every morning followed only shortly the singing and drumming for Jehovah from the christian churches, the calls of women for customers as they walk through the streets with baskets of bananas, the motos, tro-tro minibuses and taxis passing by, the rhythmic music from the street bar

Zebidjan Diaries










For miles and miles, forests and mountains and dirt trails dotted by villages; exploring all of it from the seat of a motorcycle, singing Christmas carols under the hot sun….back in Togo in the Plateaux region. Several weeks ago we got word that two of our project proposals that we submitted were accepted for financing by partner organizations, which makes me very excited. One is for the deforestation research on land disputes between neighboring villages in forests in the Plateaux region (one of the first projects I was researching/writing when arriving at JVE in July) and the other a solar energy project to transform kerosene lanterns into photovoltaic ones with the same women’s groups that we make solar ovens with. The ideas and plans can now be realized and that means that the real work begins... in the off time I get to shower in a beautiful huge waterfall and have been mastering how to drive motorcycle with lessons. I have decided it is the most fun vehicle and have already found my dream motorcycle in Ghana – (mom, if you're reading this: please don’t panic)


And for your amusement, the famous Too Fan 'taxi moto' song : it's kind of catchy and you gotta love African urban pop culture


Miaga Do Go. (=Until the next time)