Grand Baton - The Homecoming Concert - Part 4 - "Zafe A Koule La"
On February 2012, Grand Baton brought their music back to its roots, to the people it was created for. "The Homecoming Concert takes you back to this moment". "Zafe A Koule La" is a song from the album "Le Grand Baton". with: JC Maillard: guitar, vocals Thierry Arpino: drums, vocals Didier Juste: ka drum Arnaud Dolmen: drums, ka drum Fabrice Fanfant: bass, vocals What is Grand Baton? Grand Baton was born at the crossroads of heavy rock and Gwoka music, the traditional percussion-driven style of Guadeloupe. Its creator, Jean-Christophe “JC” Maillard, was born and grew up in Guadeloupe with a soundtrack that blended local traditions and American rock, shaped by the island’s cultural proximity to the United States. Later, in Paris, as an active participant in the flowering of the world music movement, Maillard found the space to experiment and develop a new musical language. The first seed of Grand Baton appeared with Filé, a song Maillard wrote and produced for Tanya Saint-Val’s album Mi, where he combined rock energy with the drum ensemble Akiyo. Beneath the sound experiments lay a deeper cultural motivation. As Maillard explains:“It is a painful feeling for me to conceive that a cultural expression like Gwoka music (or the Creole language, for that matter) could be deemed unfit for this world of complex communication. I felt the responsibility to draw attention and participate in building a legitimacy for my culture. Grand Baton started as an experiment aiming at extending the vocabulary of the Gwoka tradition into the territory of rock music. The focus was to build coherent combinations of rhythmic patterns for ka drums and traditional drum set that would maintain a tangible reference to each culture. On this canvas, the melodic lines and riffs were built. Following the analysis of Édouard Glissant, these cultural entities had much to bring to one another in this creolization. It was anyway already happening inside of me. I just had to give it a structure.” Grand Baton was conceived as a recording project in 2004 and took two years to complete. The project debuted publicly at the Printemps de Bourges Festival, followed by the release concert for the self-titled first album Le Grand Baton in June 2007 at the Théâtre du Sentier des Halles in Paris. After relocating to the United States in 2009, Grand Baton performed in venues such as Le Poisson Rouge and Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) in New York. It also appeared in Louisiana at the Festival International de Louisiane (Lafayette) and the House of Blues (New Orleans). In 2013, Grand Baton began collaborating with Grammy Award–winning singer Lisa Fischer. What is Gwoka music? Gwoka is the emblematic music and dance tradition of Guadeloupe. More than just a style, it is a cultural practice born from resistance, memory, and the search for identity. In 2014, UNESCO recognized Gwoka as part of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, acknowledging its central role in the life of Guadeloupeans. Gwoka emerged during the colonial period, created by enslaved Africans who carried fragments of diverse traditions from the continent. Forbidden to use their drums under the Code Noir, they preserved rhythm through voice and body until instruments could be rebuilt. The ka drum, made from a wooden barrel with a goatskin head, became the beating heart of this new form. From its beginnings, Gwoka was a space of survival and solidarity: a way to mourn, to celebrate, and to resist oppression. Seven fundamental rhythms structure the practice: Lèwòz, Kaladja, Toumblak, Graj, Padjanbèl, Woulé, and Menndé. Each rhythm carries its own emotional tone, from the solemnity of kaladja to the fiery celebration of toumblak, the spirituality of léwòz. Gwoka is inseparable from dance. In léwòz gatherings, dancers enter the circle one by one, facing the makè drum. A dialogue unfolds: each gesture is answered, accentuated, or challenged by the drummer’s improvisation. This encounter of rhythm and movement is at the heart of the tradition — a living conversation between music, body, and community. Gwoka is both art and philosophy. Its lyrics often comment on social injustice, love, work, and spirituality. To this day, gatherings function as a space of cohesion, where collective memory and identity are reaffirmed through rhythm and song. For many Guadeloupeans, Gwoka is not only music but a marker of belonging: a way to connect past and present, to speak truth, and to dream of freedom. More about JC Maillard/Grand Baton: https://beacons.ai/grandbaton https://linktr.ee/jcgrandbaton Find the album here: https://grandbaton.bandcamp.com/album... The studio version of this song can be found here: Youtube (with lyrics): • Zafe A Koule La - Grand Baton (Album versi... Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/zaf%...

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