In-Person | Donation Based $5- $35
Giba Gonçalves will be our special guest this week leading class for the kick off of Batalá’s Dance For Joy series. Join us to learn Afro Brazilian grooves from someone who was there during the development of modern, global Afrocentric rhythms like Samba Reggae. A true OG!
Learn to drum some Brazilian beats with Batalá. This group class will break down the music you've heard Batalá play, step by step. Students will be guided in proper stick technique, body positioning, and performance strategies, and dynamics for playing any of 4 different drums and other percussion instruments. Play the big surdo to bring in that deep base, the repique to send up that clave, or the agogo bell to resonate and inspire. The class will also include light choreography and Afro-Brazilian movement technique--appreciating the drum as an extension of the body. Every class will feature different rhythms, including Samba Reggae, Samba Duro, Samba Mambo, and Samba Afro. This class is for all levels. Instruments provided. All genders are welcome. No prior musical experience necessary.
Giba Gonçalves is a native of Salvador da Bahia, a city known as "Black Rome" and home to powerful and prolific bearers of African culture and a UNESCO World Heritage site. Giba began his career as a dancer and percussionist in several groups such as Ilê Aiyê, Olodum, Muzenza and Tupi Nago. He toured globally with the band KAOMA and performed with other bands in South America, Europe and Africa. In 1997 he moved to Paris where he became leader of Tambourlode. In that same year, Giba founded Batalá, a batucada style samba-reggae ensemble with more than 80 percussionists. He composes the Batalá music and provides vision and guidance for Batalá, which has since grown around the world.
While Giba Gonçalves was abroad his friend Alberto Pitta, the former artistic director of Olodum, started the community reinvestment project Instituto Oya de Arte e Educaçao in Salvador de Bahia, Brazil. This project included Bloco Cortejo Afro, a school for dance, percussion, printing, textile design, fashion design and capoeira. Giba Gonçalves is the producer of the band Cortejo Afro, bringing an “Afro-Bahian musical revolution” via a percussive mixture of African rhythms, electronic beats and Brazilian popular music.
Giba Gonçalves has also composed music for various projects, including commercials for brands such as Nike and films such as "Code Unknown" by Michael Haneke starring Juliette Binoche (MK2 Productions). In 2000, he was assistant musical director of "Festival Latitudes Villette Brésil" and the show "Solstices, Carnavalcade de St. Denis" (France). To this day, Giba keeps developing the Batala project around the world, collaborating with 47 bands and over 1500 percussionists, in addition to contributing to all forms of sacred and popular culture in Bahia.
Batalá New York is an all women, Black-led, Afrocentric drumming ensemble. We understand Afro-Brazilian culture to be the product of Black resistance and promote and collaborate with a network of Afro-Brazilian artists in Bahia, in New York, and around the globe. We are also transforming images of women by presenting a loud, fearless and diverse community of female drummers. We perform all over the New York region in concert halls, at community centers, parks and gardens, on the streets, at protests, and at top cultural institutions.
Batalá New York is part of a global arts project of over thirty bands playing Afro-Brazilian music with percussive instruments and costumes hailing from Salvador de Bahia, in northeast Brazil. The Batalá bands principally play Samba Reggae, a world music that incorporates Brazilian Samba and Caribbean Reggae. The band's music includes rhythms heard throughout the African diaspora and pays homage to traditional Afro-Brazilian music and spirituality. Most of our instruments are worn on the body as we play. Our performances, with colorful costumes and dynamic choreography, are a high energy, joyful percussive experience.
Deinya Phenix, Ph.D. is a sociologist, mother, and child of the African Diaspora. After decades of dancing on stage (since the age of 5), she was blessed to be introduced to Afro-Brazilian percussion by gifted musician Cafe da Silva in 2009. She has been a member of Batala New York among other bands since 2012, and she has traveled to Europe, South America and the Caribbean teaching and learning about Afro-Diasporic music and dance. Over the course of 9 years, Deinya rose through the ranks from conductor to Co-Musical Director to Artistic & Musical Director of Batalá New York. Deinya has trained and led over 100 women of Batalá New York to bring high energy, culturally relevant, visually stimulating performances grounded in community, centering service, and powered by partnership with masters of percussion and dance across the globe.