Mar / Apr 2007
Jan / Feb 2007
Nov / Dec 2006
Sep / Oct 2006
Jul / Aug 2006
May / Jun 2006
Mar / Apr 2006
Jan / Feb 2006
 
January/February 2006  |  VOLUME 117, NO. 1
Show


Photograph courtesy of Peru Negro Private Collection

THE MOST EXCITING MUSIC IN PERU these days mixes the traditional with the unexpected. Delicate, folksy guitar sounds blend with soft percussion beats, and then the velvety vocals come in strongly, belting out a chorus: "Black is my color, and proud I feel."

This is Perú Negro, or Black Peru, the musical troupe at the forefront of Afro- Peruvian culture for the past 35 years. Though it is not commonly known that Peru has a sizable black population—West Africans were brought as slaves, and the coastal area around Lima is still the center of black Peru—Perú Negro is on a mission to educate the world about their history.

Until the 1950s and 1960s, Afro-Peruvian traditions were ignored by mainstream Peruvian society, says Kirstie Dorr, who will receive her Ph.D. at Cal in ethnic studies this spring and now teaches at Kenyon College in Ohio. Afro-Peruvian cultural leaders began working together to study and document cultural practices that, while still practiced by some members of older generations, were fading from the lifestyles of younger Afro-Peruvians. This push for cultural preservation also included adapting musical traditions and instruments from other Latin American countries with vibrant African-influenced cultures, such as Cuba.

In 1969, when musician Ronaldo Campos de la Colina founded Perú Negro, there was a wave of "cultural identity awakening around the world," says Juan Morillo, the group's Peruvian-born U.S. manager. Inspired by black power movements abroad, Afro-Peruvians pushed to have their culture recognized at a time when the country was just beginning to openly accept its indigenous roots.

Afro-Peruvians have always "viewed music and dance as an outlet for expression," says Morillo, and Perú Negro's repertoire reflects the satire slaves could only act out behind the Spaniards' backs. Songs such as "Toro Mata" show the subversive possibilities inherent in the music, and they were performed only in slave quarters, Morillo says. "Toro Mata" mocks the stiff minuets of the Spaniards, and when Perú Negro performs it, the rigidity of the slave masters' movements is accentuated.

Performances are grand affairs for this group of 26 members. The music is a mix of flamenco-style guitar and distinctly South American-intoned lyrics, with dashes of Catholic imagery and a strong focus on slave-era folklore. During the colonial period, the Spanish forbid Afro-Peruvians from using drums, so they got creative about instruments: Tithing boxes and fruit crates became easily disguisable drums with their own unique sounds. The group's shows feature colorful folkloric costumes and modern versions of instruments born out of the ban on drums—such as the cajón, a slick wooden box on which musicians sit and beat rhythms, and a donkey jawbone that, when hit with a stick, lets off the rattling sound of its loosened teeth.

More than three decades since its creation, Perú Negro has become "the standard bearer of Afro-Peruvian culture," Morillo says. The group lost its founder five years ago, and Campos de la Colina's son Ronny has taken the helm. And though there are now black members in Peru's congress, racial discrimination still exists in the country, says Morillo, though "it is more subtle than blatant." As an antidote, Perú Negro continues to shine light on the vibrancy of Afro-Peruvian culture by giving audiences a sensory tour of the country's slave-era history. The group's Berkeley appearance will kick off its U.S. tour.
FEBRUARY 17 | 8:00 P.M. | ZELLERBACH HALL

Lygia Navarro
Things to see on campus

BILL T. JONES/ARNIE ZANE DANCE COMPANY performs their trademark fusion of dance and theater in two distinct programs at Cal Performances. The first program, entitled As I Was Saying, spotlights solo dancing by Jones. The second program features the West Coast premiere of Another Evening, a full-length collage that interweaves new movement, excerpts from the existing repertoire, original and traditional music, singing, and text in a multimedia work.
JANUARY 20 AND 21 | 8 P.M. | ZELLERBACH HALL

THE ART, TECHNOLOGY, & CULTURE COLLOQUIUM's Spring 2006 Speaker Program features MARK PAULINE on "Exploiting the Momentum of Self Righteousness." Pauline is the founder of Survival Research Labs in San Francisco, which stages mechanized performances consisting of ritualized interactions between machines, robots, and special-effects devices in the name of sociopolitical satire.
FEBRUARY 1 | 7:30-9:00 P.M. | 160 KROEBER HALL

Writing his own biography on the Monty Python website, comedian JOHN CLEESE describes himself as "the most spiritually advanced, intellectually gifted, and professionally distinguished of the Monty Python group." Also known for his work on the television series Fawlty Towers and in the film A Fish Called Wanda, Cleese appears in Seven Ways to Skin an Ocelot, part of Cal Performances' Strictly Speaking series.
FEBRUARY 8 AND 9 | 8 P.M. | ZELLERBACH HALL

Internationally acclaimed improvisers MARK DRESSER, MYRA MELFORD, BOB OSTERTAG, and electronic musician DAVID WESSEL demonstrate the possibilities of the improvised musical medium in a program that fuses acoustic with live, computer-based performance. An installment of Cal Performances' 20th Century Music & Beyond series.
FEBRUARY 11 | 8 P.M. | HERTZ HALL

HOWARD BARKER, one of Britain's most controversial playwrights, follows the "seven ages of man" in the life of King Lear in Seven Lears. The drama, set prior to the events in Shakespeare's play, unravels the Lear myth while posing new questions as to the nature of man, the effects of power, and the fine line between good and evil. PETER GLAZER, associate professor of the Department of Theater, Dance & Performance Studies, directs.
MARCH 3-12 | ZELLERBACH PLAYHOUSE

Following the San Francisco earthquake and fire in 1906, Hubert Howe Bancroft's personal library was the only one in the city to survive the conflagration. One hundred years later, the BANCROFT LIBRARY houses an exceptional collection of documents and media that follows the human experience from ancient Egypt to the ever- changing frontiers of the American West. Centennial Exhibition: A Celebration 1906-2006 features many of the most visually compelling objects and historically significant treasures. Organized by BAM/PFA.
FEBRUARY 11-DECEMBER 2006

A new exhibition at the BERKELEY ART MUSEUM, Measure of Time, traces the ways American artists have incorporated time as a conceptual and physical element. The exhibition features significant pieces by many of the leading artists of the past one hundred years, including HANS HOFMANN, and is organized around four main cornerstones: the modernist era of the first decades of the 20th century, the abstract expressionist era at mid-century, the emergence of conceptual and process art in the 1960s and '70s, and new approaches and techniques of the recent past.
FEBRUARY 22, 2006-JUNE 2007

Further information is available at:
Department of Theater, Dance & Performance Studies
Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive
Cal Performances

  Copyright © 2006 California Alumni Association. All Rights Reserved.