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African and Central American Roots

Umalali & The Garifuna Collective

| Guatemala, Honduras, Belize

Umalali: The Garifuna Women’s Project is an album overflowing with stories. There is the story of how it was made: a ten-year labour of love that started with five years of collecting songs and discovering striking female voices, followed by recording sessions in a seaside hut, and ending with exquisitely detailed and subtle production wizardry. There are the stories told in the songs: of hurricanes that swept away homes and livelihoods, a son murdered in a far-off village, the pain of childbirth and other struggles and triumphs of daily life. There are personal stories of the women who participated in this magical recording project: mothers and daughters who while working tirelessly to support their families, sing songs and pass on the traditions of their people to future generations.

Umalali is an entrancing journey into the heart and soul of women whose strength, hard work and perseverance provide the bedrock of their community.

The Garifuna People live primarily in small towns and villages on the Caribbean coasts of Belize, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua.
Umalali: The Garifuna Collective Women’s Project expands on the story of this fascinating community, which is struggling to retrain its unique language, music and traditions in the face of globalization.

Umalali (which means “voice” in the Garifuna lan-guage) began in 1997, when a young Belizean musician and producer named Ivan Duran, Womex Award Winner 2007, began travelling to Garifuna villages in search of exceptional female voices. The founder of the Belize-based label Stonetree records, Duran had noticed that while men were usually in the spotlight, it was the women that were the true caretakers of Garifuna songs, and were often responsible for new compositions that dealt with issues of day-to-day life. “With women, music is more part of their daily lives,” explains Duran. “They are the bearers of most of the traditions, they are the ones who teach the Garifuna language to the children while the men are either out to sea all day on their fishing boats or working abroad to earn money to send home to the family”.

During the early years of the project, Duran discovered a number of exceptional talents, women with striking voices and engaging personalities, whose songs echoed with the joys and sorrows they had experienced during their lives.

Sofia Blanco, a 54-year old mother of four from Livingston, Guatemala, first sang for Ivan in the temple home of Garifuna Collective member Paul Nabor. The minute she opened her mouth and he heard her tender and heartbreaking voice, Duran knew he had found a singer for the ages. Sofia’s daughter, Silvia Blanco, also sings lead vocals on two tracks on Umalali.

Duran was also introduced to Desere Diego, a young singer in her late 20s who is one of the few Garifuna women to make her living through music. Blessed with a powerful voice that can echo over pounding drums and chants for hours on end, Desere sings at almost every Dügü ceremony in southern Belize. A traditional healing ceremony, the Dügü is a ritual feast in which the community comes together to honour ancestral spirits and ask them for their intervention in curing the affliction of a living family member.

In 2002, after five years of research and preparation, Duran set up a recording studio in a small, thatch-roof hut that rests on stilts just steps from the Caribbean Sea in the village of Hopkins, Belize. The songs, many of which were composed by the women who sang them, included moving ballades, upbeat anthems of celebration and religious chants. It wasn’t always easy getting the women he wanted into the studio because they were so busy with their daily chores and jobs. But the women knew they were part of something exceptional, a project that would link them to their Garifuna brethren in other areas and one that would present their voices to the outside world.

After the Hopkins sessions were finished, Duran took the tapes to his Stonetree Studio in the town of Benque Viejo in western Belize. Over the next five years, Duran recorded layers of instruments, tightened the structures of the compositions and added subtle effects and elements of ambiance to capture the context in which the music is often heard. He invited various members of the Garifuna Collective, an all-star, multi-generational line up of musicians who are devoted to taking Garifuna music in new directions, to lay down guitar, bass and sax parts, although Duran himself played extensively throughout the album as well.

While he probably could have kept fiddling for years to come, in late 2007 Duran finally put the finishing touches on the twelve tracks included on this album. The joy of completion is tempered by Duran’s frustration that all of the dozens of singers who participated in the Project could not be included on the final CD. Since Duran feels this is their album as well, some of these songs are available as part of the enhanced features on this CD, accessible via computer.

The extensive field recordings will be made available to researchers and Garifuna musicians, in the hopes that future generations can appreciate the valuable role women have played in the preservation and persistence of Garifuna culture.

The hard work paid off, because their debut album was 2 month on top of the World Music Charts and was elected the No.2 of the World Music Albums of the year 2008 by WOMEX and the World Music Charts Europe. Next May and summer 2009 the entire women choir will come to Europe for the first time to present live on stage the beautiful songs of their own album.

On tour

 (11071 Bytes)

Portico Quartet

10.02. F-Agen
15.02. B-Gent
17.02. NL-Rotterdam
18.02. NL-Amsterd.
20.02. P-Lisboa
22.02. E-Madrid
23.02. E-Barcelona
02.03. B-Antwerpen
15.03. F-Vaulx e. V.
20.03. D-Munich
21.03. D-Reutlingen
22.03. D-Langenau
23.03. D-Kreuztal
24.03. D-Essen
26.03. D-Rostock
27.03. D-Berlin
28.03. D-Dresden
29.03. D-Leipzig
30.03. PL-Wroclaw
31.03. PL-Warsaw
01.04. PL-Gdansk
03.04. F-Massy
06.04. R-Moscow
14.04. S-Lund
20.04. CS-Prag
21.04. D-Nordhausen
23.04. D-Chemnitz
24.04. D-Kassel
25.04. D-Cologne
26.04. D-Hamburg
27.04. D-Altenburg
28.04. D-Karlsruhe
29.04. D-Ravensburg
04.05. F-Thonon l. B.
14.07. CS-Ostrava

This young band from London makes music with an inimitable, beautiful sound...Portico Quartet sounds like nothing you´ve ever heard before.