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HAVANA CLUB RUMBA SESSIONS: LA CLAVE

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Sat 12 March 2016 // 16:30

Tickets: £5 / £4 / £3 (TTT)

After Last Friday's sold out event and the demand from those who sadly failed to get tickets and those present who were desperate to see it again we're doing another screening.

A feature length documentary directed by Charlie Inman, Havana Club Rumba Sessions: La Clave sees Gilles Peterson, along with his old friend Ade Egun Crispin Robinson, guide the audience through rumba's continued significance in a country where a carefully preserved past has long sat side-by-side with innovation

Highly respected both in the island's spiritual drumming community and as a session musician in the UK, Robinson connects Gilles to key figures across Cuba’s musical generations. 

Accompanied on their journey into Rumba by one of the shining lights of Cuba’s current music scene Daymé Arocena, the film traces the through lines running from slave communities' spiritual drumming practices, the dancers and musicians who've preserved those traditions, through to the younger generation who've plucked out and re-contextualised the elements most exciting to them.  

The history of rumba, inextricably tied up with the slave trade, uniquely intertwines West African and Iberian musical styles. With roots in the Congo, Nigeria, Benin and Cameroon, different African religious institutions such as Ifa, Ekpe and Nkisi were remade in Cuba as Lukumi (Santeria), Palo, Abakua and Arara. The film draws together how the religious and social realities instituted by the African diaspora have a distinct, if complex, connection to the rhythms foundational to contemporary club music.