Carnival Band Makes a Splash at Henderson Elementary

Today the Carnival Band performed for one of its favorite audiences: children. Over one hundred kids from grades 1 to 5 danced, sang, and shook the auditorium for over an hour in the small east Vancouver school of Henderson Annex Elementary.

This unique environment allowed the band to add short but engaging lessons in music history and performance to its regular repertoire of fun and funky tunes from around the world. The children responded enthusiastically, asking to hold instruments, play notes, and clap out rhythms of their own.

The band is grateful to the school’s administration for the opportunity to reach the leaders (and musicians) of tomorrow.

Feb 11 2008: Latin Percussion Workshop with Pepe Danza

Pepe Danza, the well-known and highly sought-after local percussionist, will be hosting a 2-hour workshop specifically for the rhythm section of The Carnival Band on February 11th, 2008. A native of Montevideo, Uruguay, Joseph “Pepe” Danza started his professional career at thirteen, then studied at the National Conservatory. Pepe quickly developed an interest in world music and spent three years studying shakuhachi in Japan, and two years studying Indian music in India and Sri Lanka. Moving to Canada in 1989, he quickly established himself as one of the foremost drummers and band leaders on the West coast. His credits include performances with South Indian master drummer Trichy Sankaran, and concert tours throughout Europe, Korea and New Zealand.

Carnival Band to Help Bring in the Rat

The Carnival Band has been invited again this year to participate in Vancouver’s Chinese New Year Parade, one of the city’s largest non-commercial parades. The event starts at 10am on Sunday, February 10th at the Millenium Gate (Pender and Taylor St.) in Chinatown, and features the largest assembly of traditional lion dance teams in Canada.

As well as showcasing Vancouver’s vibrant Chinese and Asian communities, the parade provides a safe and fun setting for a wide range of street performances representing the diverse cultural heritage of Vancouver and Canada. There are estimated to be 3,000 performers and 50,000 spectators at this enormously engaging event, and Channel M’s media coverage will bring the parade to thousands more.

The Carnival Band Invited to Honk Fest West

Bill Clifford of the Anti-Fascist Marching Band has begun organizing the 1st annual Honk! Fest West, to be held in Seattle, Washington on March 23rd. This Honk! event draws much of its inspiration from the enormously successful Honk! festival held annually in Somerville, Massachusetts. The Honk! Fest West celebration will coincide with the 9th Annual Conference on Diversity in Musical Education (C-DIME 9) to be held that weekend at the UW School of Music. Charles Keil, another key organizer who will also be the keynote speaker at the conference, is a leading advocate of early childhood musical education and of grooving street music. See his websites such as www.128path.org, http://BornToGroove.org/, and http://www.musekids.org/.

Honk! events are a celebration of the emergence of a new type of street band, one that is typically accoustic and mobile, often politically aware and articulate, and always high spirited. There is a rich community ethic amongst many honkers, who use their music to erode the barriers between professional and novice, and between audience and performers. Although uniforms are sometimes used as a performance tool, individuality is key, and group members often hail from all range of classes, ethnicities, ages, and backgrounds. Perhaps most importantly, the Honk! website proclaims, “the honkers’ ultimate goal is to have fun, to relish the art of making fun as a form of individual and collective transcendence, and to encourage others to see and do the same.”

A Short History of the Carnival Band

In 1997, theatre grad and community advocate Dan Vie formed a musical ensemble called “The Cacophonistas” in order to protest the APEC summit being held in Vancouver at that time. Upon seeing the potential need and impact of such a group, Dan set to the task of creating a more permanent community activist band.

In 1999, professional tenor saxophonist, composer and arranger Ross Barrett joined Dan in hosting the first of many workshops of “The Carnival Band”. Soon after, Dan asked local performer, composer, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist Marcos X to join the team as lead percussionist and co-musical director alongside Ross. These workshops quickly gained popularity and became regular weekly events hosted at the Britannia Community Centre. The band members and other creative partners drew largely from the richly creative population of Vancouver’s east side.

In 2002, Dan raised federal monies to import composer Gregg Moore from Portugal for three weeks of extensive musical and performance workshops. These workshops not only lifted the band’s energy and skill, they also provided the group many of the charts they still play today. Fuelled by this vibrant street band culture so alive in Europe, Dan organized a 2-week tour of the UK and Germany for eight players in the summer of 2003. The band’s first CD, self-titled, was recorded in 2004 by Marcos X and Kirk Pleasant and was released in 2005. Hundreds of shows were played throughout this time, including monthly performances at the east Vancouver restaurant, “El Cocal” for over six years.

In the spring of 2006, Dan became a father and needed a break from the everyday tasks of the band, and so he turned over the management duties to the group at large. At this time, Marcos X stepped up to take on the duties of managing director, and long-time surdu player, Devon 8, took on responsibility for the band’s booking and promotion. In late 2006, the band attended the Honk! festival in Boston, a gathering of street bands from around the world. In the spring of 2007, a group of five players from the band toured to China to the Shanghai International Music Festival. In the summer of 2007, the band continued its touring frenzy with a trip through the UK, Basque Country, France, and Germany.

In the late summer of 2007, Marcos X, Devon 8, and several others left the group to pursue more professional music opportunities. The remaining 25 or so performers, driven by the common purpose of ensemble playing and advocacy, sought better clarity and accountability in the business and artistic direction of the group. For these reasons, the band elected to form the “Open Air Orchestra Society”, a registered non-profit, to manage “The Carnival Band” and to promote live, community-centred music throughout the city. Ross continued as co-musical director, joined by long-time baritone saxophonist and composer Tim Sars.

Throughout the band’s colourful history, hundreds of players have passed through our ranks, many of them continuing on to successful musical projects of their own. We cherish the memories, and wish them all well.

Good Neighbour Awards Gig

The Carnival Band is pleased to have recently performed at this year’s Good Neighbors Awards. This is an annual event hosted by the Association of Neighbourhood Houses of Greater Vancouver (ANH) to honour volunteers who have made significant contributions to their neighbourhoods and communities. Awards were presented to secondary school students, to volunteers of Neighborhood Houses, to an outstanding corporate citizen, and a lower mainland award to someone whose volunteer activities have benefited many neighbourhoods.