Ologunde
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2001
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Dendê Macedo: Drumming with Spirit
By Eileen Condon, Ph.D. | Published September 24, 2008
DendeMacedo
The Meaning of a Name
When I talked by phone with Jailton “Dendê” Macedo, director, dancer, and drummer with the traditional Afro-Brazilian musical ensemble Ologundê, before the group opened CTMD’s Heritage Sunday performances at Lincoln Center in August, one of the first questions I asked him was where he got his nickname. As it happened, the sobriquet was given to him by a musical mentor, Carlinhos Brown. Brown founded the renowned Afro-Brazilian band Timbalada, in Salvador da Bahia, the capital city of the state of Bahia, in northeastern Brazil.
The story was, I used to play in the group Timbalada. For seven or eight years of my life. This was my school, where I was learning a lot of stuff. I learned a lot of rhythms, original rhythms…used to play over there the drums called timbal, long drums with plastic heads, you play them by hand, very high notes. It’s like a djembe, but a different sound. Almost the same technique from Africa, djembe style. I was recording one album and I did, like, a funny mistake. And he [Carlinhos] was listening on the side, on the headphones. And he stopped the recording, and he was talking through the mike to everybody who was listening, from the band, in the studio. So I was so embarrassed! I was only maybe sixteen, seventeen, maybe. Eighteen, something like that. And, you know, I’m a black man, but I have light skin. And then, I was so red–I was embarrassed! It was scary [laughing]! And then he calls, “Look at you, man, look at you! Oh my God, look at your face! It looks like a dendê!” You know, because of dendê–the palm oil. Palm oil, it’s like…if you shake it, it’s almost like fire…that’s where the name came from. I recorded six albums with his band, so now, everyone’s calling me Dendê. “Dendê! Dendê! Dendê!”
Receiving a nickname from one’s musical role model, a name which later becomes one’s professional name, is a traditional form of honor for musicians in Brazil, Dendê confirmed. Honorific nicknaming is practiced in a variety of other Afro-Latin and African-Caribbean musical traditions as well. Jailton’s new name symbolized a rite of passage—an exceptionally talented and hardworking young musician’s emergence into a new way of life: the beginning of a long career as a professional Afro-Brazilian roots musician—as Dendê Macedo.
Musical Offerings
Dendê is a key ingredient in Bahian home cooking, and serves as a seasoning in the dishes prepared for Afro-Brazilian religious celebrations honoring the orixas (west African deities). The word “Dendê” also shows up frequently in capoeira songs. Capoeira is an Afro-Brazilian form of music and acrobatics accompanied by drums (the pandeiro or hand frame drum, and the conga-like atabaque) and the berimbau (a stringed instrument resembling a fishing rod, consisting of a pole with gourd and steel string, sounded with a stick). Performed in a circle, with call-and-response singing, the dance traces its origins to the 16th century, when it is thought to have been developed by African slaves on Brazilian sugar cane plantations. Practiced for centuries afterward as a form of martial arts training despite government prohibitions, capoeiraproved useful in actual combat (Brazil’s war with Paraguay in 1864) and also for the purposes of self-defense, exercise, and recreation, as is the case today. Capoeira and samba da roda(pronounced “samba gee-hawda,” an older form of samba performed, like capoeira, in the round, the roda) are just two of a variety of traditional music and dance forms that Dendê performs with the members of Ologundê and with several other groups he directs (the Afro-Brazilian band Hahahaes, the samba group Samba de Três, and his Brazilian percussion ensemble Arrastão de Dendê).
From Bahia to New York and Back
Ologundê’s 8-15 members reside in New York City as well as Brazil. Dendê emigrated to the U.S. in 2001 and now lives in New York most of the year. He returns annually to Bahia, facilitating tours for fellow musicians and friends, and to visit his own relatives, as well as his family in Candomblé, the members of his spiritual house. Their commitment to each other, like the commitment between immediate family members, is expected to last a lifetime. Like Haitian Vodun and Cuban Santería, Brazilian Candomblé is a religion evolved by African slaves, who synthesized west African orixa worship—including its music and dance forms–with some of the iconography of Catholicism, in order to protect and continue the traditional African spiritual practices unbeknownst to Christian slavemasters.
La Cumbiamba eneyéIn the tight-knit and extensive social network in Salvador da Bahia, where he was born in 1977, Dendê found many musical role models. He was raised by parents who appreciated music of all kinds—secular and religious, folk and pop. From his father he learned to appreciate Cuban and Puerto Rican music and to love merengue, fusion styles, the best African djembe players, and the music of Tito Puente. Throughout the family there was a strong spiritual heritage, as well, with aunts, uncles, his mother, his sister, and his grandmother keeping up the old religion, attending different spiritual houses in Bahia, and keeping up the old customs at home.
He can’t remember when he first heard the drumming and music of Candomblé or Samba da roda, he says. These older musical forms were just part of everyday life. They were everywhere in Salvador da Bahia, whether he was visiting family and friends, other spiritual houses, or just hanging out in the street, as a kid. He would listen to, and eventually imitate, the best of the oldest musicians accompanying these dance forms, something he continues to strive to do on stage today, here in New York, and around the world.
Early Signs of Determination
By age eight, Dendê said, he would make short excursions out of his parents’ home to visit some of the spiritual houses in Bahia, eating the food they would cook for any visitors and for ceremonies, watching the drumming and dancing through the window, until he was invited in. After a while, people saw, even as a child, that he was serious, and stopped telling him, “You’re too little, you’re too little.” He began with the hand percussion, the bells known as the agogo. The agogo play continuous repetitive rhythmic lines alongside the layered rhythms of the three sacred drums at Candomblé ceremonies. In this sense the bells are akin to the claves (sticks) or campana (cowbell), which play simple but steady and continuous rhythm alongside the three sacred drums (batá) played at the spiritual dance and drumming sessions in Santería. Once Dendê had mastered the agogo to his elders’ satisfaction, he graduated to the drums of Candomblé, progressing from easiest to hardest. He began with the third (rumpilé or lé for short), moved to the second drum (the pi or rumpi), and finally mastered the first drum, which plays the most complex rhythms—the variations: the rum.
He would listen for a long time, visiting again and again. Then he would practice at home, practice until he felt confident, and return to the older musicians for their approval. He would play with them to their satisfaction before trying to move on to the next instrument. In this way, by age 12, he was permitted to play for Candomblé ceremonies. By 13, Dendê had started his own “kids” version of the samba da roda circle dance group. This attracted much positive attention in his neighborhood. By 14, Dendê was drumming professionally, invited to play at festivals and to lead a variety of bands from different neighborhoods in Bahia.
Embracing a Calling
Shortly thereafter his brother-in-law Mauricio introduced him to Carlinhos Brown, who accepted him into Timbalada. This launched his professional career fully and established him as a recording artist as well. Drumming with Timbalada, Dendê toured through Brazil, Asia, and Europe, producing an array of CDs, and appearing on television programs. The roster of leading Brazilian, jazz, and world musicians with whom he has performed so far is impressive, including Marisa Monte, Gilberto Gil, Yvette Sangalo, Sepultura, Giovanni Hidalgo, Vinicius Cantuaria, and Zakir Hussain.
For Dendê, music is a spiritual calling, as well as a lifelong source of energy and enjoyment–which he strives to share with his audiences today. “When I play, the Spirit is strong, really strong.” Dendê explains that he has faith in the three orixas who guide him in his life, and in his playing: Ogum, the warrior; Oxossi, the hunter; and Obaluaye, the deity of healing. His own personal practice and hard work have played a role in his success as well, he admits. Discipline is really important, Dendê points out, as is continued exposure to new people and new ideas.
By performing in the Walker Stage series on Walker Street in lower Manhattan, for example, Dendê met and played with many of New York’s best jazz and world musicians. The series culminated in a performance at Bahia’s Mercado Cultural, by the jazz ensemble Speak in Tones, led by Daniel Moreno and Mike Ellis, featuring Cheikh Tidiane Seck, Graham Haynes, Adam Rudoph, and many others. His work with these fine musicians and his lifelong immersion in Afro-Brazilian traditional music and dance have provided the rich musical inheritance he shares with his students. Thus, Dendê’s career has been a series of opportunities to teach and to learn, from the variety of artists and friends who have appeared along the winding path that has been his musical life.
To book Dendê in performance with Ologundê, contact Kaisha Johnson, CTMD’s Director of Artist Management, at 212-571-1555, ext. 23 or kjohnson@ctmd.org.
About The Author
Eileen Condon, Ph.D.
Eileen Condon, Ph.D., was Project Director for the Ukrainian Wave Community Cultural Initiative, the Chinese Community Cultural Initiative and Verite Sou Tanbou: the Haitian Community Cultural Initiative. - Center for Traditional Music & Dance
Los tambores de Ologunde en Teatro Esperanza
Por impactolatin - April 4, 2019017
Música y danza afrobrasilera del grupo Ologunde se presentará en el Teatro Esperanza el sábado 13 de abril. Además, niños y estudiantes entran gratis.
Por Andrea Bolinaga
Presentan la cultura afrobrasileña a la comunidad del norte de Filadelfia
Son más de ocho los miembros del grupo Ologunde, que llega el próximo 13 de abril al Teatro Esperanza a cargar el norte de Filadelfia de danza, música y artes marciales.
El conjunto brasileño, con sede en Filadelfia, “realiza un repertorio diverso que incluye los rituales asociados con el candomblé (tradición religiosa afrobrasileña) y una síntesis de las religiones yoruba y católica”, según reitera su página web.
Bajo la dirección del maestro percusionista afrobrasileño Dendê Macêdo, el conjunto “incluye a antiguos miembros de compañías de música y danza de renombre mundial”.
Nuestra “música está profundamente arraigada en las tradiciones de candomblé, capoeira y samba de roda”, declaran los miembros del grupo.
Por medio de su presentación buscan mantener viva la cultura afrobrasileña en Estados Unidos, la cual afirman puede perderse al emigrar.
“Como inmigrantes de otro país, a menudo estamos desconectados de la práctica habitual arraigada de nuestras tradiciones. La práctica de candomblé, capoeira y samba de roda son una parte regular de la vida cotidiana en Brasil, y aquí en Estados Unidos tenemos la oportunidad de mantener esas tradiciones durante las presentaciones. Cada función es una oportunidad para profesar nuestro patrimonio cultural en un foro público”, asegura Ologunde.
Y en esa búsqueda por preservar su cultura, su interpretación se ha diseminado a lo largo del mundo. Adaptándose a cada lugar o evento que asisten, han recorrido Estados Unidos y Grecia, donde formaron parte de la Olimpiada Cultural en el Festival de Danza de Kalamata y en el Festival de Atenas en la Acrópolis.
El turno es ahora para el norte de Filadelfia, donde el grupo afirma estar emocionado de llevar a cabo su presentación.
“Una gran comunidad brasileña se concentra en el noreste de la ciudad. Hemos tratado de crear programas en esa área para servir a nuestros compatriotas brasileños. Pero al igual que en Nueva York (donde solían residir), nuestras audiencias son mixtas y no solo están compuestas por brasileños. De hecho, muchos de nuestros partidarios son de otras culturas de la diáspora africana, muchos de los cuales son afrolatinos”, agrega el grupo.
Ologunde es parte de la fundación Mamadele que ofrece programas de educación artísticas a través de presentaciones, clases y viajes que celebran las artes y la cultura de Bahía, Brasil.
“Ser artista en cualquier cultura es un desafío, pero también es posible. En el corazón de cualquier carrera está la creencia de que puedes tener éxito en ello. Si lo crees, puedes lograrlo”, fomenta el grupo.
Para más información sobre la presentación de Ologunde en el Teatro Esperanza en Filadelfia diríjase a www.teatroesperanza.us o llame al 215-324-0746. - Impacto Latino
A Synthesis of Spirit: Afro-Brazilian Music and Dance
The Afro-Brazilian ensemble Ologunde brought its exciting and dazzling blend of music, dance, and martial arts to the Rutgers-Newark campus. Presented by the Institute on Ethnicity, Culture, and the Modern Experience, A Synthesis of Spirit presented the rich Afro-Brazilian culture of Salvador, Bahia through a diverse repertoire of music and dance, including the rituals associates with Candomble, a synthesis of the Yoruba and Catholic religions in which various orixas (gods) are invoked; the breathtaking Capoeira martial arts dance; Maculele, a warrior dance which utilizes sticks and matchetes and was originally created in the sugar cane fields by slaves; and the exhilarating Samba de Roda, which can be trace back to the samba of Angola.
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Afro-Brazilian Folkloric Music & Dance
by Ologundê
https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/ologunde© Copyright - Mamadêlê Productions / Ologundê (884502074123)Afro-Brazilian folkloric music of the performing group Ologundê featuring candomblé, capoeira, maculêlê and samba de roda.Genre: World: World Traditions
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Ologundê: Afro-Brazilian Folkloric Music, Dance & Martial Arts
“…their daring gestures drew gasps from the audience” - Dayton Daily News
"...color, clamor and captivation are the order of the day.” - Santa Fe New Mexican
The US-based Ologundê ensemble celebrates the rich Afro-Brazilian culture of Salvador, Bahia through a diverse repertoire of music, dance and martial arts. Comprised of Brazilians living in the United States and Brazil, the ensemble includes former members of world-renowned music and dance troupes and is under the direction of master Afro-Brazilian percussionist Dendê Macêdo. The ensemble has performed throughout the US since its formation in 2002 and toured Greece as part of the Cultural Olympiad, appearing at the Kalamata Dance Festival and at the Athens Festival at the Acropolis.
The group which ranges from 8-15 members, performs a diverse repertoire which includes the rituals associated with candomblé, a synthesis of the Yoruba and Catholic religions in which various orixás (gods) are invoked; the breathtaking capoeira martial arts dance; maculêlê, a warrior dance which utilizes sticks and machetes and was originally created in the sugar cane fields by slaves; and the exhilarating samba de roda, which can be traced back to the semba of Angola. Its performances can be tailored to fit a specific venue or event.
Candomblé
Candomblé is a syncretic Afro-Brazilian religion that evolved as a means by which the African slaves were able to disguise their religious traditions under the banner of Catholicism. As with Cuban lucumi and Haitian vodun, Africans transposed the names of their deities, known as orixás into those of Catholic saints. The ritual is performed by drummers who play the sacred atabaque drums with rhythms that invoke the orixás. The dancers dress in elaborate costumes that represent the various orixás who have possessed them.
Maculêlê
This dance originated in the sugar cane fields. Utilizing sticks and machetes (sharp, large knives), maculêlê imitates the movements of cutting cane. It is intricately choreographed to a specific dance rhythm. Today maculêlê is strictly used for entertainment, but during the Paraguayan war the discipline was used in battle.
Capoeira
Like maculêlê, capoeira is a warrior dance. This exciting martialarts dance,thought to have originated in Angola, is accompanied by the berimbau (a one-string bow with a small gourd attached) that is found in various guises throughout Central Africa. It is performed by two people at a time who use various strategies in order to trick their opponent. Capoeiristas employ acrobatic movements and extraordinary feats of strength and balance to further enhance their performance in addition to theberimbau, various percussive instruments are used as well as call and response singing.
Samba de Roda
Samba de Roda is a spontaneous dance that is characteristic of the city of Bahia. The call and response singing recalls its African roots and it can be traced to the semba of Angola in which the dancers “bump” bellies. In Brazil, this belly-bumping is called umbigada. A dancer enters the roda (circle) to dance only when he/she received an umbigada from the previous dancer.
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