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 New York, USA - GlobalFEST is a one-night festival modeled after other
popular music industry events that draw in players from the Performing Arts
industry and the public at large. As part of the
Arts Presenters Annual Conference,
GlobalFEST will present short performances of sixteen artists from Africa, Asia,
the Middle East, Europe, and the Americas on three stages at The Public Theater
including Joe's Pub over a six-hour period on Saturday, January 10, 2004.
Performances will run from 8 p.m. to approximately 1:30 a.m., with a DJ party
continuing until closing time at 4:00 a.m. All-night passes are available for
$40 from Telecharge, 212-239-6200 beginning December 1. Organizers hope to
simultaneously reveal extraordinary performers to new ears at the fan level,
while exposing concert presenters from around North America to the artists for
consideration over the next few years.
Intended to be an annual event, GlobalFEST has struck an amazing balance in
repertoire and performers, drawing on a broad definition of world music. From
the classical sounds of Persian kamancheh (spike fiddle) player Kayhan Kalhor,
to the hip-hop/rumba beats of Cuban singer Raśl Paz and the electronic mixing of
Brazil's DJ Dolores & Aparelhagem, to some of the world's finest vocalists,
including Portuguese fado star Mariza and Anglo/Indian singer Susheela Raman,
audiences of all stripes are sure to find sounds suited to their tastes. Fans
looking for roots music might take in the sweet sounds of Rajery's valiha
(tube-zither) from Madagascar, Tania Libertad's provocative Peruvian landos and
Mexican boleros, or the soulful Spanish flamenco vocals and guitar of Diego "El
Cigala" and Diego El Morao. Others may get uprooted and onto the dance floor
with Brazilian global percussionist Cyro Baptista's Beat the Donkey or fall into
a trance to Mercan Dede's Turkish Secret Tribe, with his special guest, the
Tunisian diva Amina. If you want political songs, listen to the dulcet voice of
South Africa's Vusi Mahlasela or the rhythms of Haiti's queen of song, Emeline
Michel. For something that spans tradition and modern improvisation, take note
of Greece's Savina Yannatou & Primavera en Salonico, France's Klezmer/Gypsy band
Les Yeux Noirs, and Lebanese ud (plucked lute)-player Marcel Khalife. And if
that is not enough, stay out all night with New York's own DJ collective,
GlobeSonic.
Not only have GlobalFEST organizers focused on high quality performers and
diversity of origin as criteria for artist selection, they have also sought
artists appropriate for a variety of performing contexts: concert halls, cabaret
settings, dancehalls, and festivals. And to ensure a strong audience and an
original feel, they selected both established and emerging artists. "We were
looking for some artists who would be fresh and lesser known even to those
actively presenting world music regularly," explains Bill Bragin, director
of Joe's Pub at The Public Theater, and one of three key players behind
GlobalFEST. "And then some artists who have played on the established 'world
music' circuit, but who are primed to move to more 'general interest'
presenters... ready to move from the five-to-ten-market tours to thirty or forty
markets. Also, we needed people with a commitment to touring North America. We
are not merely doing this to have an incredible world music festival. We want
the performances to lead into touring over the next few years, and to help
expand the visibility of world music in general throughout the U.S. and Canada."
The other two initiators behind the GlobalFEST concept are Isabel Soffer,
associate director of NYC's World Music Institute (WMI); and Maure Aronson,
director of World Music, Inc., Boston, which has a similar mission to WMI. The
ad hoc trio, who have been key in bringing world music performers to stages in
America in recent years and are active in an emerging North American World Music
Coalition, have created the event to be a part of the Association of Performing
Arts Presenters (Arts Presenters) 47th Annual Members Conference, the most
important booking event in North America. Arts Presenters is a national service
and advocacy organization with more than 1,400 members worldwide dedicated to
bringing artists and audiences together. Many of the organizers of America's
performing arts centers and music festivals book much of their annual schedule
as a result of showcases and contacts at Arts Presenters.
The Cultural Services of the French Embassy to the U.S. are the principal
sponsor of GlobalFEST. With the participation of the French Music Export Office
in New York at least five of the featured artists at GlobalFEST will be
affiliated with French music labels. "The French Embassy's Cultural Services
have participated in the Arts Presenters conference, the largest North American
meeting for performing arts professionals, for several years," said Emmanuel
Morlet, the director of the music department of the French Embassy. "In 2004,
for the first time, Arts Presenters will celebrate world music by dedicating its
opening night and a number of panels to the artists and professionals from this
sector. We are proud to participate fully in the support of this event, which
carries a much-needed message of cultural diversity." GlobalFEST is
additionally made possible by the support of the participating artists, and
their record labels and booking agencies.
Presenter tickets for Arts Presenters conference attendees are currently
on-sale through the Arts Presenters; general public tickets will go on sale on
December 1, 2003 through www.telecharge.com,
212.239.6200 or The Public Theater Box office. Artists and schedule are subject
to change. For more information on GlobalFEST, visit
www.rockpaperscissors.biz/go/GlobalFEST; on The Public Theater, visit
www.publictheater.org; and on this
year's Arts Presenters Conference, held at the Hilton NY and Towers, NYC, visit
www.artspresenters.org.
Media solicitation: Cindy Byram PR,
CindyByram@aol.com. Media fulfillment: Dmitri Vietze, rock paper scissors,
music@rockpaperscissors.biz.
[Photo of Mariza].
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