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Notes of Commonality

May 18th, 2010 Megan Martin No comments

I’ve got a lot of fun YouTube discoveries this month for you,  HarmonyWishes community.  So get ready to strap in and take the visual (or auditory) journey.

This latest find I stumbled upon while on the TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) video site.  (The link is actually via YouTube).  TED hosted a conversation about “Notes & Neurons” and the common, almost innate connection humans have to the Pentatonic scale. If you don’t know what a Pentatonic scale is, don’t worry, me neither. I had to look it up.  “A Pentatonic scale is a musical scale with five pitches per octave in contrast to a Heptatonic (seven note) scale such as the major scale.”  Apparently, Pentatonic scales are very common around the world, found in Celtic music, West African music, rock, blues, melodies from Korea, China, India.  The list goes on.

In this video you’ll see musician Bobby McFerrin demonstrate the very ingrained notes of the Pentatonic scale with the audience.  He comments that no matter where he performs this exercise, whatever country, the result is the same–”everyone gets it.”

It’s sometimes hard to believe in our giant world that we all could share some innate capabilities or instincts.  Here at HarmonyWishes our mission is to embrace and encourage diversity and tolerance.  Exploring our differences, as well as our common characteristics, whether through music, ideas, images or sound, is important to us.  We’d love to hear your stories of commonality in unexpected places.  You can share it with us here on the blog, or send us a line.

Happy May!

Cheers,

Megan

The Circuitous Path

April 27th, 2010 Megan Martin No comments
Who’s heard of Rube Goldberg?  Anyone? He was an American cartoonist, and Pulitzer Prize winner, quite famous in his day. Perhaps you may be more familiar with the Rube Goldberg machine, which Goldberg depicted in many of his cartoons.  In a nutshell, the Rube Goldberg machine was a complex device designed to complete a very simple task.  If you’re still feeling a bit in the dark, watch this lovely video from Chicago band OK Go.  It demonstrates a pretty immense and incredible Rube Goldberg machine that I’m sure you’ll enjoy.

The irony in Rube Goldberg machines is that the end result would be easier to attain via a direct and simple action.  Just shoot the guys from OK Go in the face with paint; done. Why all the fuss? Yet the details themselves are where the fun lies!  Likewise, each individual part is fundamentally important to the end result.  If you remove one step of the machine, it doesn’t function. So perhaps at a deeper level the Rube Goldberg machine begs one to consider both the enjoyment in the journey and the significance that each step takes towards the final destination.
I’ve been thinking about this a lot in the facilitation I do for community events and group conversations here in Mexico.  Whether we’re talking about neighborhood recycling programs or the survival of local craft work in Oaxaca, the conversations and subsequent actions often take circuitous paths.  Sure, I would love sometimes for things to be simple: we need a municipal recycling program and BAM we have one.  But life very seldom works out that way.  At least my life doesn’t.  :)  I often need a reminder that some actions I put into motion today, may not come to fruition for some time–but when they do, the whole together is this beautiful machine, with a complex path and story.
There are lots of little stories on the horizon in all of our lives this month, I am sure.  There are big moments we all share like Mother’s Day, Earth Day, Spring.  But maybe we can also take May to celebrate the tiny moments that build up to the whole, too.  Let us at HarmonyWishes help you do that!  We’ve got a trove of wonderful images and quotes, that inspire no matter what the context.  Go take a look at our galleries today and celebrate your (or someone else’s) leg of the journey.
Saludos,
Megan

A Playful Use of Color

March 9th, 2010 Megan Martin No comments

I just saw the latest from the imagination of Michel Gondry, one of my favorite music video directors.  The concept is so simple and playful. A great accompaniment for Mia Doi Todd’s  “Open Your Heart.” Check it out:

After watching the video, it had me scanning Oaxaca for interesting juxtapositions of color (an easy task in such a colorful city). Where does color and image play a role in your life?  Can you think of a particular place or time where color evoked a feeling or memory for you?  Are there any images in our gallery that use color in a way that you find intriguing?  Let us know!

Cheers,

Megan

Music - Playing for Change in Kirina, Mali

March 7th, 2010 harmonywishes No comments

In a past blog post, we highlighted Playing for Change, an organization that promotes peace through music. Their latest endeavor definitely caught our attention, for the sheer beauty of the story behind it, not to mention the music that accompanies it.

Rather than paraphrase a wonderful story, I encourage you to listen to the music, feel the joy, and then read Mark Johnson’s description of this project below.

When we think about the role of dreams in our lives, they serve as both the places we go when we shut our eyes as well as the hopes and aspirations we hold for the future of our loved ones and ourselves. Playing For Change began as a dream to create something that could be full of positivity and inspiration for the human race. We have found that music is the greatest tool on earth for us to achieve our dreams of a better world for everyone. The village of Kirina, Mali is the heart and soul of this dream and a place with music at its core.

It is an ancient village with about 1,000 people, all of whom are descendents of musicians– many of them over 75 generations! They have no electricity, but enough soul to brighten all of us as we share this journey together. It is also the home of the newest Playing For Change Music School. When they heard the Playing For Change crew was coming to visit them to discuss the idea for the new school, they told us they had dreamed we would come. They went on to explain that they are prepared to be a part of the next chapter of our life’s journey, and thus have titled the new school “The Playing For Life” Music school.

Last week we traveled with the Playing For Change team to Kirina with our brother and soul mate Baaba Maal. He is a legendary singer in West Africa, and even he was humbled by the opportunity to visit the people of Kirina and meet the elders. He told us that he learned about Kirina growing up in school, but did not realize that it was a real place that still maintains their ancient traditions and culture. We traveled with 4 cars full of musicians and the Playing For Change crew and were greeted with open arms and songs from the villagers. We gave gifts to the elders and were granted permission for Baaba and friends to perform music for the village chief under their mango tree. I swear if ever humanity has shined a light it was on this day!! Baaba performed for all the people in Kirina and was joined by our friend and percussion master, Mohamadou Diabate. The elders from the village had donated land for us to build our new music school, and this day was an opportunity to celebrate the great future we all share together.

I ask everyone who believes in a better world for tomorrow to join us today to build our next great music and art school in the village of Kirina, Mali. Together, it is a dream that we can make come true, and we will always know that there is a place where music and inspiration are passed on from generation to generation for the betterment of all of humanity – Playing For Life!!!

For anyone wanting to contribute, you can find more information on their website, Playing for Change (org) and for more videos, check out Playing for Change (com).

Blessings,
Meg

Notes from Abroad - Guelaguetza in Oaxaca

July 21st, 2009 Megan Martin No comments
Dancers from one of Oaxaca's 7 Regions

Copyright 2007~ Rebeca Beeman

Celebrations marking Guelaguetza week have arrived here in Oaxaca. Also known locally as Lunes de Cerro (Monday on the Hill), Guelaguetza is one of the most important customs celebrated in Oaxaca. The word—a bit tricky to pronounce (gay-lah-GHET-sah)—comes from Zapotec, an indigenous language still widely spoken around the state. It means: “reciprocal exchanges of gifts and services.”

The focal point of Guelaguetza week is the large folkloric dance festival that takes place on the two Mondays following July 16 in a large amphitheater on the hillside overlooking Oaxaca City (thus, Lunes de Cerro). Indigenous delegations hailing from the seven regions around the state flock to the city to present their region’s traditional music and dances in the intricate and colorful costumes representative of their home communities. At the close of each dance, delegations heave giant palm-thatched baskets up onto stage, dipping in, and hurling treasures from their villages to the eager public in the stands. Clothe-wrapped cheeses, artisanal breads, sombreros and the like, are tossed out wildly. The dancer who can heft with the most gusto receives the wildest cheers from a grateful audience.

But Guelaguetza involves much more than the two dance festivals atop the Cerro de Fortín. Parades, or calendas, begin days before the big show; brass bands, giant puppets and roving revelers hoisting up luminaries march through town, gathering up passersby in their wake. A mezcal festival squats down between the walls of Santo Domingo and Carmen Alto churches, offering visitors a chance to sample from the myriad flavors and varieties of Oaxaca’s artisanal producers.

The packed Amphitheater

Copyright 2007~ Rebeca Beeman

Guelaguetza week draws many tourists from around México, and the world. The town is pulsing with new activity. I’ll confess that I prefer the celebrations out in small villages, or the ones that take place in homes all over Oaxaca, to the pomp and circumstance in town. Small pockets of communities all over the state host their own dance festivals over the next two weeks. The crowds are less, but more local. And the celebrations take on some air of what the Guelaguetza originally looked like when there was no amphitheater or Secretary of Tourism—but just a hillside packed with those proud to share what their ancestors taught them.

Una pareja bailando

Copyright 2007~ Rebeca Beeman

My own adopted Mexican family here invites loved ones over for a lunch that stretches from two in the afternoon until dawn. We sprawl and eat, dance and chat. We embody the Spanish word “convivir,” which a dictionary will tell you means “to exist,” but also literally means “to live with.” I like both meanings. And I like to think of Guelaguetza as a time to personify that verb in action. I invite you, wherever you are in the world, to celebrate your own kind of Guelaguetza this week. It’s a great excuse to reconnect!

Saludos,
Megan

** Photos courtesty Rebeca Beeman.

Music Corner - Where Music Hits the Ether

June 16th, 2009 harmonywishes No comments
From the album, Un Día

From the album, Un Día

Some haunting music has been captivating me of late.  Have you heard of Juana Molina?  I’m very usually late to the musical game; and yet, I can’t help but add to the commentary: she’s wonderful!

Molina is Argentinean, raised partly in Paris by a tango-singing father and mother.  She became a huge success as a comedic actress on Latin American television—when suddenly, she realized at the height of her career, I don’t want to do this. I want to make music. And that’s what she did.

Her songs are these unwinding, ethereal pieces, where she’s looped together her voice with instruments, overlapping and repeating them to create a whole symphony of sound.  Lyrics and melody seem to take the backseat to the environment she stirs together.  I’m inspired by the sounds, but also by the woman who was able to redirect her life and energy mid-swing.

If any of you are interested in an introduction to her work—I recommend you listen to this Radio Lab podcast all about Ms. Molina! (And poke around a bit on Radio Lab’s site. Radio Lab is in my Public Radio Top Five; you won’t be sorry.)

Saludos,

Megan

Categories: Artists, Music Tags: , ,

Music Corner - Playing for Change

June 3rd, 2009 harmonywishes No comments

A friend recently sent a link to this site and made my day….how can you not feel better after watching one of these videos?  Take a look…share them with friends….Founder Mark Johnson’s concept is to music what HarmonyWishes is to ecards -  spreading the message of the global family where similarities outweigh the differences…

Have any world music sites that you like?  Feel free to share via our comments section.

Cheers!

Meg