A study blog for the drum students of the Belly Dance Arabesque school in Adelaide, South Australia.
Friday, 27 March 2020
Communique #12: At Home Drum Lesson
It was weirder than I'd expected, making a drum lesson video, and so this first effort feels a bit awkward. However, here it is. In future videos, I plan to cover some of our other songs, and some particular techniques, but more importantly, I will cover topics that you guys ask for.
It would be cool if you shared your efforts on the Drum Arabesque Facebook group. Upload short videos, or even stories of your home practice. Let's keep the classroom happening.
Link to: Youtube Drum Class Video -
Link to: Youtube Frame Drum Lesson
I will share a rhythm story with you, to get things started.
I work as a gardener, (among other things...), and I spend a fair number of hours on a very noisy ride on lawn mower. With my ear-muffs on, the roar of the engine is reduced to a distorted bass tone, but it has a rhythmic aspect to it.
Quite often I feel it plays in a gypsy nine beat.
One two Three four Five six Seven Eight nine
So my practice continues as in my mind I rehearse solo patterns over this roaring rhythm of nine.
Rhythm is everywhere.
From my home in the borderlands,
Morgan.
Sunday, 1 March 2020
Communique #11: The Wind Up Drummer
This is the current version of the new song, as we played it on February 29th, 2020. The ending is incomplete at this stage, but I will update this file as we finish the song together.
The Wind Up Drummer
Solo
A (wind up)
(T T T T – KTK - ) Solo A
(T T T T – KTK - ) Solo A
Solo
A over Baladi A x 12
(D-D-ktkt-D-tkt---) Baladi A
(D-D-ktkt-D-tkt---) Baladi A
[Stop:
2 beats]
Baladi
B x4
(DD-TD-T-) Baladi B
(DD-TD-T-) Baladi B
Solo
B x2 over Baladi B
(D--kt---D--ktkt-D--kt---D-D-T---
(D--kt---D--ktkt-D--kt---D-D-T---
D—kt---D--ktkt-D--kt---D--D--T-)
Solo B
Malfuf
x16
D--D--T-
D--D--T-
D--D--T-
D--D--T-
D-D-T---
Baladi
B x4
Zaffa
group x2
D-tkt-t-D-T-T---
D-tkt-t-D-T-T---
D-tkt-t-D-T-D-T-
D-tkt-t-D-T-T---
D-D-D-D-tktktktk-
Monday, 7 October 2019
Communique #10: The Adelaide Belly Dance Festival, 2019
The Opening Concert.
October 4th, 2019.
Goodwood, South Australia.
In the dark comfort of the theatre I
sit, and as the music starts an absinthe green syncopation grips me,
syncopation slipping into chromatic synchrony as she takes the stage
by purple moonlight and we are taken along with her, drunk on a
single drop of pure ambrosia. With hands outstretched and palms held
aloft, she offers us with gentle gestures, a journey, should we wish
it, into a world where speaking is done with the body, and we,
silently, accept.
She is a Persian Pomegranate with fruit
stained lips, she is a pale moon-bride, promised and promising, with
draping sleeves caught on Etesian winds. With time-spanning steps,
centuries turn and spin, turn and point, pip toe, tip toe and leaves
fall unseen as invisible seasons pass and come again.
She is the Scythian Queen Tomyris. I
am Cyrus, and should I die now at your hands I shall have my fill of
this life and join you in whatever angelic hell you have fallen to
earth from. She is the red veil, the mask that reveals the spirit
beneath and those parts of her that are uncovered seem to conceal the
secrets too secret to show on stage, where a sword is just
another word for mind. My thoughts are cut, her warrior chestplate
shimmers starlight bright and her shimmy is the storm of Hades
breaking upon the shore of her thigh.
Everything starts in darkness, the
heartbeat, the clock tick, the tinsmith hammer stumbles only to
strike with ever more increasing precision, she clips and bends the
moonlight and through her skin is made visible the heart-blood which
cannot hide from us our eternal, communal humanity, naked as we are,
adorned as we are in glittering wonder. So like the water, the blood
has tides, sweeping away our sins, smoothing our broken bones and
mending scars. I say: can you hear the message in our silence? We
mean something when we listen like this, with our whole body, we
receive something, it is right there, at the tip of her
fingertip....I would cry to see such beauty, but my tears would cloud
my vision of you.
And then, in the rolling waves of
applause, my son says in my ear: Clapping makes my hands soft.
I agree with him,
and with all the metaphors that such softness, and such celebrating
sounds imply.
Moonlight pours in
through my ear again as without fingers you tingle the skin, you
shelter beneath your own wings, the opening and closing of which
becomes the window through which you let us in, pressed between
breaths, north and south wind, hot and cold, you are a siren song, a
lure with no catch, just the truth of your body, a truth that in the
open intimacy of the stage is the most natural thing of all.
Flattering us with bedroom eyes, and teasing with the supine curve of
your reclining form, you share something secretive, but not secret,
hiding, but not hidden behind your feather fans, and as you step away
into darkness, you wave goodbye, hello, goodbye, hello.
In
life, as in dance, there is always room for comedy, but I do not know
so well how to write about comedy (yet I shall try nonetheless...)
She tells a story of a good kind of pride, the best kind, full of
humility and humour, with a natural confidence bolstered by the
belief in the good things in life. I am not a comedian, certainly
not on stage, but I laugh with the crowd at every little joke, every
clever gesture. She shows us how costume is an act that we as adults
can play as well as our children do, and with equal delight we are
pulled along in her game of fighting trousers.
I ask,
do we pretend to be angels when we put on the wings of Isis and move
beneath an auroral halo of stage light? Is it play pretend, or is it
religion? Is it fantasy or fortune, casting us in the roles we play?
Believe it or not, we are playing our parts, and whether we were
born to them, or chose them freely is a matter for philosophers. We
cheer with her triumph, we love to see her, and to see ourselves in
her, up there, angelic. Her wings sweep over us and in their shadow
we are made brighter, lighter, a seated crowd of seraphim, cherubim,
and cheeky laughing spirits of delight.
She is a woman who
knows what she wants. She knows how to step to, step up, whip and
drive the beat, she can out-cool the street, and there ain't no-one
who can say other-wise. She can jump an inch or jump three styles,
she can call it, name it, sing it out, diss it, kiss it goodbye and
come time to drop the beat, she already skipped ahead.
I've waited 2 years
to see her dance again, and it would have been worth it to wait 1001
nights. Tradition is born anew with her every gesture. The curve of
her spine, the smile in her eye...I wish I loved anything the way she
loves dance, the way she loves herself, the world. Her arms could
encircle the sun.
*
It is a limping, stepping, skipping
dance
a blindfold race through time
through cities bright and cities dark
and in my hand a glass of wine
and I salute the crooked ways
the messy, broken, wayward days
of youth and age and even sleep always
if we survive the coming dark
and when the dawn-birds sing and hark
the coming day
the unknown way
we'll go skipping, stepping, blindfold
limping,
crying, singing, fighting, winning and
all the ways
we keep on trying,
to play the two against the one
to dance the moon against the sun
so we will find out one by one
by three by six by nine,
one day we will run out of time
until then we will dance
the skipping, stepping, tripping,
falling
and the ever present,
rising
up again
that is the song of all our pain
and laughter.
*
She is the temple she dances in, she is
the moonstone crown priestess of the half-time drop beat. She, like
the shaman of old, she the inventor of a synthesis, the receiver of
wisdoms, of teachings, of traditions, she the transmuter of an
elemental drama as fundamental to the human race as it is to the
formation of mountains and the burning brightness of stars. She
brings the temple with her on this pilgrimage of dance.
We all love her, she wears a rainbow,
but it is a mere monochrome shadow beneath her bright and laughing
smile. Just because it's trad, don't mean it's old fashioned...they
knew how to move it in the old days too, knew how to shimmy, shake
and spin...and beauty is timeless. Her hair sways like tall summer
grass and we move with her in the delicious summer night as she
kneels before us and spins, and spins, and spins...
A duet is an agreement, a sharing of
shapes and a bolstering of mutual spirit. It is about support, not
expressing starlight, but instead, sisterhood, sharing shapes and
steps, not outshining, but holding hands. She is a chorus, a harmony
and a parallel universe of equal measures part sugar, part wine,
spice and clear spring water.
He speaks through us, we breathe in
unison at his eager request, we speak the words that first formed in
our mouths as children. We chant HO! We sing, DOUM, TEK. We spin
dizzy and clap GA MA LA clap GA MA LA in variable cycles of success
and laughter. He springs and leaps, a Spriggan sprite, a Puck for
our evening's delight who floats so high when he kicks his heels.
She is black and blue, I hear a bone
battle rattle. She is a spirit-speaking-sorceress, she wears the
painted mask of a beast that cannot be named and shapes come to life
in the shadows around her, broken piano keys, a violin with only one
string. She dances a possession ceremony, she shakes with passions I
cannot here speak, yet I know. She is pulled up on hooks, dragged
down on a rack of invisible ropes like a shibari puppet. We
roar to see such passions displayed, to see our own darkness given
voice through her.
Someone must have put absinthe in my
drink, I think, (though I think that I have thought this before...??)
She is a green fairy dancing as if she were born inside an
accordion. She proves again that there are 10,000 ways to dance to
Baladi. You can speed it up to break-hip speed or you can slow it
down until the cycles of the moon seem fast by comparison and the
drummer may improvise endlessly in spaces between the beats. There
is a slink, a wink, a sly slip and spring-time rill, and shimmering
with glimmer glamour she dances us the story of a land far, far away.
She wears Doc boots, which to me
support a certain punk attitude, along with denim jackets and messy
hair. She stomps with a swagger, shouts with clout, steps in and out
and turns again in a dance where perfect rhythm would indicate a
weakness of spirit, it's a folk-punk-swing-thing that leaves
prettiness behind in the mascara mud and instead marches on into a
place where anger can be served as a meal.
Where do you keep your swords? Mounted
on the wall, hidden beneath the floor? Or do you wear them on your
bare arm? Keep them ready for the moment when they might be needed?
She is tall as a warrior, supple as the willow spirit, she is a
balancing point counter point between sagacity and a certain savage
sensuality. She is a storm of swords, a cyclone name Kalikah.
She plucks the stars from the sky and,
stitching them all into one dress, she dances all the years of
travel, all the lives she has lived, the phases, the phrases, the
styles and smiles, she wakes with us upon this native shore to find
that all the moons, suns, and stages of our lives, share a common
goal.
*
We share a common goal. This stage is
an altar whereupon we place our offerings and whether we play or pray
to Dionysis, to Demeter or the Devil in disguise, whether we sing to
the Moon, the Sun, or the God that goes by a thousand names but is
nameless, whether we know no religion or spirit at all, we find
revelation together here in this common purpose: The Dance. The
dance, which knows no boundaries, which fuses past present and future
into one blissful moment, this one blissful night. We who sit and
watch and we who stage the evolution of our art, are together in this
temple.
On this warm October evening in a
little city by the sea.
*
Eindama
In the spotlight, the scuff-marked
stage beneath us, darkness above, we stand at the crossroads of
culture, caught up in a wave of humanity so vast we cannot know its
edge. We tumble, grain-like within the sweep of this movement, this
moment of history, in this curling, coiling music that is the sweet
score of our lives. All I can see is you, framed by shadows leading
to hallways leading to mysterious rooms alive with decades of magic.
We are products of that magic. Our eyes lock and there is a
wonderful sensation of puppetry, of being moved by a living mind not
my own, as if you and I hold each others strings. We are bound
together by a promise, it is the promise of this moment. For this
moment we have danced and played all our lives, this moment and all
the other moments of the performer's life. We limp and stride and
shuffle and skip and in our moment in the spotlight, in that
beautific glow that shines from all directions and paints us in
colours to make the sunset jealous, we are...
What are we? We are but human, garbed
in cloths of human making, dancing to rhythms described and danced by
the ancestors of our ancestors in far-away lands, and we are moved,
as they were moved, by the drum that skips the 10th beat,
by the voice that calls aloft, by the poetry of our longing, of our
wandering.
Yet there is joy in it, yet there is
life unassailable, hope inexhaustible and if this joy be within our
grasp, then what calamity could overcome us, what wound could
overwhelm us, what loss could take from us the urge to dance and to
play and to sing? To create is to transform and we are transformed
by our creations, consumed by them, like wood to fire, like sunlight
to trees.
We become what we create.
You and I, in that bright spot,
enshrined in the darkness of the theatre.
Saturday, 3 August 2019
Communique #9: The new Baladi
Hey Drum Drummers,
Here's a copy of the new song parts we're working on this term. The photos used in the video are taken from a few different places, but they all illustrate my love of decay, and of getting down to the ground and seeing the world from floor level.
The Rhythm is:
D_DkTkT_DkTkT_ _ _
or: D_D_T_T_D_T_T_ _ _
or, filled in completely.....
D_DkTkT_DkTkTkTk
Enjoy!
Friday, 13 July 2018
Communique #8: Life ain't always slow,
y'know?
I'm sitting in the sunshine on my back
porch which has become a very relaxing place to practice this winter.
On the table beside me are my Setar, Ukulele and Frame Drum, (as
well as biography of Cicero and a Latin dictionary). I have just
played through North of Egypt, Temple of my familiar and Garyan
(another frame drum solo song), and I have to say that I am really
looking forward to classes again in term 3.
I haven't been very disciplined with
drumming recently, instead finding myself forever with either a
ukulele or a book in my hand, and in every other available hour I am
writing. But writing has its own rhythms, and practice in one
instrument is practice in all instruments, since music is the
skill that is being developed. Techniques come second, musical
feeling comes first. I am reminded of this continuously in the
beauty of playing slowly, no, slower than that.
For example...
A) D T T D _ T _
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
B) D T T D _ T _ T _
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Play them one after the other and
experiment with how the tempo can be sped up and slowed down within
the 7 + 9 rhythm cycle.
But life ain't always slow, y'know?
There's nothing quite like running as fast as you can and then
pushing harder and practice routines can be used to strengthen your
endurance as well as to perfect your techniques. Sometimes a rhythm
has to be brought to the boil before it has the right feeling, but it
is the continual practice of slowing down and speeding up that makes
for flexibility in you as a player.
Here's a little snippet of some recent practice...
So keep your hands warm and your
shoulders loose and I'll see you all real soon.
PS...It warms my heart to see you drumming together while I have been away. Thank you for keeping the fire going.
Saturday, 23 June 2018
Drum Arabesque Communique # 7:
Pressure, release, pressure, release (pressure....)
I've not been drumming much this week,
but in all other musical regards I am constantly reminded of the
beauty in simplicity, and the immeasurable importance of subtlety in
feeling. All these ideas just keep dancing around in my head in a simple waltz that slows on the third beat, always letting the tempo slide
into slower and slower cycles. By way of contrast, the complex books I am
reading require of me a slower and more careful approach, as
sentences stretch over many lines, becoming paragraphs depicting the
most picturesque of ideas, becoming pages turned over and still the
central arguments build with tenacity and precision and an
unstoppable logic that finally when the hammer is brought down and
the author deigns to speak the final words, I am left carrying the
weight of a thousand years of poetry condensed into a page turned
over a paragraph that all began with a single idea.
It is this combination of the
simplicity of the waltz, and the complexity of ancient literary texts
that brings me to today's lesson.
I've talked about it before in class,
the notion of pressure and release, roughness and smoothness, open
rhythms and closed rhythms, sustained and separated notes bookended
by hammering boot marching, gunfire patterns of hail-storm quality.
It is these competing pressures of all life that contribute to good
music. Never more so than in music intended for dance, which in
itself seems to be an expression of competing pressures, of
intellectual conceptions and thoughtful, deliberate choices in
choreography, and the utterly instinctual movements of one who is IN
THE DANCE, devoid of thought or language or syntax, unaware of
composition, choreography or conception. One who feels the contrasting pressures and responds as birds do to thermal layers in the atmosphere.
So the question then is, how do you
create pressure in music? Take the classic combination of a slow
Chiftatelli, or even a slow Macedonian Cocek, followed by a filled
Malfuf...for example.
Cocek x3 Malfuf x2
D-kT-kTk/D-kT-kTk/D-kT-kTk/ DkkTkkTk/DkkTkkTk
The second part, the x2 cycles of
Malfuf, is played quickly, taking as much time as a single Cocek
cycle. This also utilises one of my favourite patterns of making
five feel like four.
That's three Cocek, and two Malfuf, for
a total of five rhythm cycles, played over the time it takes to play
four of the 'tonic' rhythm, the dominant, slow Cocek.
It's a good idea to record yourself
playing one of these rhythms, and to practice playing the other
over the top. Practice playing Malfuf at the same slow tempo as the
Cocek, then practice doubling the tempo. Practice all this in your
mind as well as on your drum. I said that I haven't drummed much
this week, but I have practised every day on my knees and on my dog
and on my steering wheel, listening to the world and playing
counter-rhythms to the patterns in my head. This kind of daily
drill, maintaining a circadian discipline, is, I think, the source of
the deep confidence that I have in my hands. They know more than I
do, they trust more than I do, because I let them guide me in my
everyday practice, and as such, it is never a chore, it is only the
instinctual reflex of an animal at rest.
In nature, the sun rises and sets, the
moon lights the darkness, the dawn brings a chorus of birds and
twilight is forever shaded blue and mysterious with the pending
shadows of night.
So too it shall be with our music.
We look before and after
and pine for what is not
our sincerest laughter
with some pain is fraught
our sweetest songs
are those that tell
of saddest thought.
Percy Shelley, from The Nightingale
Friday, 8 June 2018
Drum Arabesque Communique #6: Clicking, clapping and cucumbers.
Drum Drum Drum,
click one
click two
click three click
click four
click five
click six click
click seven click
With your off hand, click a continuous
slow, steady beat. The rhythm is in seven, but you don't have to
tell your off hand that. As far as your off hand has to know, it's
just a one beat rhythm, repeated. Your good hand clicks on three,
six, seven.
You could clap your hands against your
legs, or pat your dog with this pattern. You could tap it out on
your cat with just your fingertips. As I frequently say, tap it out
on the steering wheel, use the indicator as a metronome, or play your
patterns in cross rhythm duets with the ticking. Play these kinds of
silent drum games at any time of the day or night, surprise yourself.
Suddenly stop in the hallway to drum your patterns, and stay there
until you get it real smooth, letting others pass you in your
momentary study. Or stand caught in drum catatonia, mid dinner
preparation, a knife in one hand, the universe in the other.
Tonight I cut the cucumber into twelve
pieces,
four groups of three slices
shared out on dinner plates.
One one one
two two two
three three three
four one four
one two five
two three six
three one seven
four two eight
one three nine
two one ten
three two eleven
four three twelve
one one one
I've only done one Taketina class, but
it sure had a deep impact on me. I felt overwhelming patterns
spinning through my body, dizzying, I loose count, loose my bearings,
fall in vertigo, in and out of rhythms. Cutting cucumber is drum
practice, in the same way that splitting wood is meditation.
We will drum together again soon.
Drum Drum Drum
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