15th Panama Jazz Festival ends with teaching mission on course

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PJF finale
Danilo Pérez and those who won scholarships at the festival.

Much cooler to be a student than a
spectator at the Panama Jazz Festival

by Eric Jackson, with additional data and graphics by the Panama Jazz Festival

Probably to more Panamanians than those with other perceptions, the Panama Jazz Festival is this annual open-air free concert and traffic jam in surrounding areas. That it was on Satuday, January 20 when a large crowd in the old Fort Clayton parade ground was entertained by Lefty Pérez and Wichy Camacho, La Kshamba, the Colectivo Calipso, the Panamonk Trio, jazz ensembles from the Berklee Global Jazz Institute, the Thelonious Monk Institute and the New England Conservatory, the Pan-African Jazz Project and the Yogev Shetrit Trio.

But for a bunch of young people and a few adults who teach or perform for a living, the highlight of the day’s festivities was the scholarship awards ceremony — and some of those who didn’t get scholarships nevertheless during auditions over the days of the festival did get admitted to some internationally respected schools of musical education.

(Missing but not forgotten on the scholarships, admissions and educational workshops scene, and people in the know hope and pray for their quick return, was the Conservatorio de Música de Puerto Rico, a usual past participant. The school mostly withstood the winds but was largely put out of action by last September’s hurricane and accompanying power outages. For parts of San Juan, the lights came back on just as night fell on the Panama Jazz Festival finale. Thank you, US Army Corps of Engineers.)

Know ye that the Panama Jazz Festival has long gone beyond jazz, with a classical component all along and incorporating a number of other genres all along, and in recent years expanding to include an annual Latin American music therapy summit. So all seminars, and all scholarships, were not necessarily for jazz.

Winning the full scholarship to the New England Conservatory Jazz Lab this year was a Costa Rican, guitarist Natalia San Lee Salazar. Chilean violist Brian Urra got the Patricia Zárate scholarship for academic excellence and social work. Berklee College of Music summer school scholarships went to Óscar Cruz (percussion), Gilberto Campos (drums), Susana Arcia (cello), Sophia Fernández (vocals), Juanita Acosta (piano), Samuel Barrios (piano) and Erick García (violin). The musically advanced Crossroads High School in Santa Monica, California gave scholarships to guitarist Victoria Rosas, saxophonist Oliver Mall (saxofón) and percussionist Lucas Maylín.

KH
Gotta get that Gringo pronunciation of “water” down! Kevin Harris, a pianist and Berklee piano teacher, who in Panama has developed a following as an apostle and instructor of gospel music. Photo by Eric Jackson.

Due to conflicting commitments and a low bus fare budget, The Panama News coverage of this year’s Panama Jazz Festival was relatively abbreviated. This reporter, however, did catch a part of one of Kevin Harris’s three black gospel music workshops.

There was a crowd of newcomers and regulars, mostly youngsters from Panama but with a senior European visitor next to me and a bunch of teachers of various descriptions mixed in. The young translator — the jazz festivals also educate these — could stand an English immersion, for this line of sessions better yet a Black English immersion, but she could make Harris’s English-language instruction understood well enough.

It was not only a lesson in African-American music, but also in black American history. As in, the old spiritual:

Wade in the water
Wade in the water, children
Wade in the water
God’s gonna trouble the water

You may correctly associate that with the black churches of the USA, and with the civil rights movement of some decades back. But this is not a song about being baptized so as to pay tithe to the reverend and so on. Its author is unknown because in slavery days it was downright dangerous to be known as the author of such a thing. It was a coded escape message, advising slaves to wade through streams to get the slave catchers’ tracking dogs off of their scent if and when they ran away toward freedom.

(We could do a comparative history seminary about runaway slaves, with the slaves who ran away from their Spanish masters to Cimarron communities in Panama as one example. The US history of runaway slaves is most commonly associated with the Underground Railroad that flourished in the years between the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act and the Civil War. The prior history of slave escapes, including to those North American indigenous nations that would take such fugitives in, is less well known. Also infrequently taught in US schools was the enormous importance of runaway slaves in the Civil War itself. The Confederacy thought that they would send their white men to the front to fight the Yankees while the slaves stayed back on the plantations to feed the rebel army. Black people had other ideas, and tended to run to Union lines at first opportunity. The Emancipation Proclamation was designed to enhance this trend.)

There were some interesting logos and uniforms in the audience. Was the Banda León de Judah of a Rastafarian denomination? If haled before Mutabaruka’s court, would they be found irie? In any case, figure that one of the main things going on in the room was the improvement of a number of Panama’s church choirs.

 

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