Rhiannon Giddens is an American artist of folk and
traditional music, played on fiddle and banjo; Francesco Turrisi is an Italian
pianist and percussionist well versed in jazz, early music and Mediterranean
music; at first blush, their worlds don’t overlap.
But at a chance musical meet-up in Ireland they found
that her 19th century American minstrel banjo tunes and his traditional
Sicilian Tamburello (tambourine) rhythms fit very naturally
together. They soon discovered the reason for that - their respective
roots coexisted in the past. Pictures of early minstrel bands all represent
banjo and tambourine (called tambo) together, where in many cases the tambo is
held in the same manner of Southern Italian tamburello traditions
today.
The massive effect that West African music and dance has
had upon American culture is by now well known; but centuries before, European
music was being transformed by Arabic and North African modes, instruments, and
rhythms. Working together they trace this musical globalism by
reimagining the encounter of the banjo and the frame drum, and other
instruments, through their journey from Africa, the Middle East, through
southern Europe and England, and over to the Americas….