Filed under: Team Blog
First up this afternoon I listened to the Ross Daly Ensemble comprising players from Crete, Iran and Adelaides own string savant Paddy Montgomery. Featuring rebats, lyra’s, lauto’s and great hand drumming, the Ensemble moved through an hour of music with barely a halt for intro’s except to introduce the players. This fabulous quintet romanced the crowd as the birds flocked to nearby trees adding their warbles to the humid pulsating air. Dramatic changes in tempo and time signature added to the passionate playing.
For a change in pace but not the passion up next on my afternoons feast was Frank Yamma on Stage 3, playing with Russell Smith, Helen montford and David Bridie. I have waited years to see this singer songwriter from the western desert of South Australia. There arent many singers whose delivery taps into a core that bring tears to my eyes. Frank Yamma is one of them. All the nights I have listened to his songs in the dark at home pressing repeat every time the disc finished paled into insignificance when I finally saw and felt the power and authenticity of possibly Australia’s greatest singer, up close in the flesh. Singing songs about his home, culture and the realities of contemporary life, Frank Yamma came a long to play at Womad and I would go to the end of the earth to feel that again. Accompanied by some great musicians Frank had the crowd in his warm hands from the start. ‘Hi I’m Frank’ he said and played a song about the land being here before him and all of us. People like Frank Yamma dont come along every day. Next time I see Frank at Womad it should be on the main stage, even that isnt big enough for this man of country.
Ross Daly opened the All Star Jam talking about the purpose of music in our lives. We can use it to simply entertain or for a greater purpose to take us out of ourselves to other realities and then Frank Yamma played, how apt.
-Ian
Filed under: Team Blog
It’s sad to think all of this is soon coming to an end, we have become a family here and I wish today could last forever…
We have seen more and more amazing acts including The Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, Babylon Circus (yes that was me ON STAGE last night), Ross Daly and Ensemble and Xavier Rudd!! Where else will you find such diverse music all in one place???
Keep on checking back here because there’s still so much so share and many more podcast performances to come and remember…..WE ARE LIVE until 8.30pm SA time so feel free to text in too and tell us what you think, we are getting heaps of feedback so thanks to those who have already!!
I’m welding myself to the site so until next time….
Nicole
Michelle Smith speaks with Shellie Morris about her busy life full of contrasts and diverse locations…
Look I just feel really privileged - I love the work I do with remote communities which I’ve been working in a lot of them I’ve been doing that work for about 9 years…I’ve worked in about 47 remote communities across WA/NT and…it brings such a joy to my life and I think they love their stories… the young ones I’ve seen grow up…you know where you come from it just makes you very proud we’re in it together and we’ve taken that journey together…Shellie Morris – Womadelaide 2010 LIVE!
Hear the full interview here: http://womadelaidelive.com/2010/03/05/womadelaide-2010-live-on-site-interviews-shellie-morris/
Systa BB chats with Joey Burns from Calexico and asks him if music is an adventure for the band…
It is and it’s also a vehicle - You can jump inside the Calexico car and you never know where the map or the road will take you…it can get really deep when the water fills up all the pot holes and then your car is not driving but floating…and you just kind of see where things go… Joey Burns – Womadelaide 2010 LIVE!
Hear the full interview here: http://womadelaidelive.com/2010/03/07/womadelaide-2010-live-on-site-interview-calexico/
Filed under: Team Blog
To every dorky brass playing band weirdo at high school I paid out – I apologise. Who knew brass could be so sexy? The Hypnotic Brass Ensemble are playing right now behind me on Stage 2 – I just had to sneak away from the computer and have a peek. The crowd are entranced! They are bouncing around like mad to “Kryptonite” right now…what the hell am I doing here writing this??!!?
Next time I want the attention of a woman…I’m buying a trumpet…
-JB
Filed under: Team Blog
Monday morning. Usually, I would have just woken up and realised that it was all over. I was going to have wait another 12 months for artists from all over the globe to grace botanic park once again. But no. Here we are again, the dream continues.
Yesterday started with Irish born musical troubadour, now based in Crete, Ross Daly and his ensemble. You really feel like you are at a world music festival when you hear sounds like this. With instrumets such as, lyra, saz, the Cretan lauto (lute) and percussion played by Iranian, Bijan Chemirani, Daly and his band transported us to places many of us have never been before. And through all these exotic sounds from the Meditarranean and Middle-East, there was this underlying irishness to it. I suppose you could say that you can take the Irishman out of Ireland but not the Irish out of the Irishman. It was beautiful, listening back stage through my headphones, I found it hard to open my eyes for if I did, It would remind me of where I was rather than where this musical journey was taking me. The sound on the outset seemed simplistic but as I listening closed there were all these subtle beat shiftings, changing the emphasis gradually. I didn’t want it to end and neither, it seemed, did the musicians as the last piece gradually worked its way through a crescendo that seemed to never want to end. Unfortunatley it did. And the CD store ran out of his CDs, but he is performing today so I’m hurrying this bog to run over and catch some more.
Alex
Filed under: Team Blog
What an amazing night – after our second national broadcast (and streaming internationally!) some of the Womadelaide 2010 LIVE! team decided to let loose side of stage at Babylon Circus. Little did we know it would end up with two of us up on stage dancing with them! The French performers had Adelaide pumping on stage 2 and clearly LOVE being on stage. Well done guys – you certainly know how to please a crowd!
As for our broadcasts, we’ve been having such a great time presenting the sounds of the planet across community and indigenous radio. We now know we’ve got listeners in Canada and Germany and people all across Australia are getting in touch to tell us they’re LOVING Womadelaide 2010 LIVE! So if you’re enjoying our broadcasts, blogs, podcasts, photos and videos – let us know! A huge team of dedicated volunteers make all this happen so it’s great to hear your feedback from across Australia and the globe.
Well, it’s currently 2am here and there’s a whole new day of Womadelaide action ahead – I better get to sleep! Make sure you tune into our last broadcast tomorrow night from 6.34pm (South Australian Time) – we’re saving some of the best for last we promise! Remember you can listen to us on many community and indigenous radio stations across the country and streaming online. If you have a bad case of Monday-itis, dance and sing your blues away with Womadelaide 2010 LIVE!
-JB
Filed under: Team Blog
So cool to be in botanic park again for the best weekend of the year. For seventeen years I’ve been coming to Womadelaide now and every year I think I’ve seen it all but am corrected. Saturday night I went to stage 5, the one under the Moreton Bay Tree, my favourite stage, and I heard what on paper sounded like it wouldn’t work but did. Slide guitar, the harp-like instrument from Africa called the Kora and the Indian tabla drums. Sounding like the equivalent of some multicultural fusion meal from an Australian cafe. But did it work, my lord it did. With the incomporable Jeff Lang on guitar, Malian Kora virtuoso, Mamadou Diabate and musical chameleon, Bobby Singh on tabla, DJAN DJAN blew me away with their unique blend of musical flavours. At times Lang’s guitar sounded like a sitar blending with Singh’s tabla and sometimes took us to Hawaii accompanied by Diabate’s Malian grooves. It wasn’t just myself that soaked up this fusion, a multicultural blending that’s fast becoming a Australian tradition, but the huge crowd that were trying their hardest to keep themselves warm after the previous downpour, finished each number with a tremendous applause.
Earlier there had been a tremendous downpour, tremendous for our Adelaide gardens but not so for contemporary flamenco group, the Arrebato Ensemble. Part way through their second piece the rain came and it was unforgiving. Not so much to them, they were happy to keep playing, but to their instuments. As they tried to frantically dry their instruments with towels, they announced that they couldn’t go on. Much to everyone’s dissapointed they continued to play one more song but with ‘pops’ coming from electrical equipment on stage, it was clear to everyone that was becoming dangerous. Fortunately, the Arrebato Ensemble have one more set on Monday so Adelaide will get to hear more of what was something special. Their unique compostions, based on traditional flamenco rhythms, and beautiful combination of guitar, cello, saxophone, harmonica, double bass and lightly played drum kit, were spellbounding and I look forward to hearing more from this Oz-based group.
Well, that’s it from me for now. Next is Sunday…and then Monday! Bring on the sounds of the planet, here in the festival state.
Alex
Filed under: Team Blog
Hello again, first of I want to say how amazing a couple of acts were I caught today. First, The Skatalites whom were playing as I arrived and there was such a great vibe around the stage, people cheering and bopping and I could not help but stand and watch a cute couple dancing together and had attracted their own audience, everyone say AWWWW! The other set that I did not want to miss was Los Amigos Invisibles, simply amazing, I went and stood at the front for a while and I could not believe the energy spreading.
Other than that i’ve happily been veggin’ out in the tent bringing you more and more of the wonderful acts Womadelaide has brought to us this year including many live performance podcasts and Interviews so continue to check back and remember WE ARE LIVE…..tonight until 8.30pm (SA time) and again tomorrow from 6.30pm!
Thanks also to those who have been texting in, we appreciate all our listeners where-ever you may be, sun, rain or total thunderstorms and are getting some great feedback!
Nicole
Filed under: Roger's Blog
The workshop by Japan’s Yamato Drummers (on the Zoo Stage) turned into a ‘free for all’ when the artists abondoned their drums to the audience. I was wandering back from Kamel El Harrachi’s workshop (where he had decided he wanted to play music rather than speak about it), when I was attracted by what seemed to be a less synchronised pounding.
The drums were in the middle of the audience, and every one, of every age, was having a go – each to their own rhythm. Talk about ‘dancing to a different drum’. Some had even fallen to their knees in order to wield what appeared to be truncated baseball bats.
The phrase about a million monkeys writing Shakespeare came to mind. A certain randomness would occasionally result in a coordinated pattern before entropy took over and chaos ruled again.
Ah well – elsewhere the Amazing Drumming Monkeys were on the kids’ stage. Perhaps the Yamato audience were auditioning.
Roger
Filed under: Systa BB's Blog
Well its been a while since I last posted….just been a bit busy, having a GOOD time!
This year has been an interesting WOMADELAIDE so far. There are so many common threads running through the music. Brass has been a BIG feauture from the ska horns of The Skatalites, to Calexico and beyond. Soul and dunk weave their way through various acts like Ethiopiques featuring Mahmoud to the Bamboos and Public Opinion Afro Orchestra. Politics have played a part in bringing the issues of the Saharawi people of Western Sahara via Mariem Hassan and Palestine from Amal Murkus and backstage musicians and artists from all over the world and eating, drinking and talking. I guess thats what I love most about this festival. Meeting people and going the gab on the backgrounds of different music forms and experiences. Then there is the whole thread that seems to by slying informing us of the old and the new the hip and the experienced. To see the absolutely world class gentle performance of Eliades Ochoa swaying us with his son and salsa and then to be blitzed by Nortec Collective with their clash of Norteno sounds and software is a truly amazing experience. To see a Mahmoud Ahmed who released his first album in 1975 and then be trapped by the politics of his country and remain unknown for 20 years and then feel the ground shake with Dub Colossus shows an understanding of a musical journey that WOMADELAIDE has been part of and encouraged for so many years.
The rain has been hilarious! bucketing down on an audience that so wasn’t prepared for it. After so many years of blisteringly hot weather and yes cold nights you’d think that we would have heeded the warnings. Alas no most people forgot their raincoats etc and I think we were all in a a state of total denial…..there was a lot of miserableness around between the stages but we all got over it. Today is the first day Ive actually had a chance to go and actually see some bands. Ross Daly & Ensemble were gorgeous. Cretan music has such a heaviness to it….this isn’t bazouki music in your local bar but a deep ancient sound that draws you in. I did get to see Calexico….twice heh heh EXCELLENT and a chat with Joey Burn who treats music as an adventure……….Ethiopiques were astonishing. A lot of people were surprised that the Ethiopiques were a French band….more to the point they were expecting an Ethiopian band to be there, but when you think about the politics of Ethiopia and the rule of the Derg who shut down all venues and censored music, it comes as no surprise realy that the band is French. This music was kept alive outside of the country……not within it and it is going to take a long time to build up the music within Addis and other cities.
Anyhoo…Im off to check Mariem Hasan….more deep music and see the Kathakali Dance Ensemble puttin on their make up. It takes em 4 hours to get into costume to perform and they chat to people about the characters from their 2 hour exerts from The Mahabarata……maybe I’ll pick up a few tips….Systa
Filed under: Team Blog
Sitting here writing this , the Skatalites are on Stage 1 livening up a post midday crowd. Yesterday I saw Amal murkus singing songs enriched by poetry, politics, love and humour. A great band behind her, Amal sang songs from her Palestinian heritage, informed by contemporary and past poets with the modern reality of the people of palestine starkly illustrated against the strident beauty of the songs.
I write this having just returned from a david bridie workshop that included members of Grilla step, consequently music and politics are intertwined in my brain and body. Talking about the shared culture of melanesia from West papauu, the Solommons, timor Strait to Fiji and playing his songs and songs from Rabaul, West papua and the highlands this was the gentlest delivery of a profound truth about our region that I have experienced. Wontok, shared language, in this case music united all who gathered under the fig tree on the grass to hear this warm music of flutes, drums and piano. Like the sea that surrounds the islands of our region, the songs took me on a journey through the community of our shared humanity and so many peoples struggle to express their culture freely. This is what Womad is truly about.
-Ian
Filed under: Team Blog
Well it was nice to finally have a little break from blogging and take a quiet stroll along the parks to see what was going on. Although my perfect timing (as always) meant I was just catching the end of a great act……or just in time for setting up, typical! None the less just seeing the excitement of people dancing randomly (in the rain might i add), kids playing and kicking soccer balls around and just getting a great wiff of the “tastes of the globe” it is such a friendly, safe and fun atmosphere and you can’t help but get a warm fuzzy feeling!
Until the blog next allows….
Nicole
Filed under: Michelle's Blog
Rain, rain, go away, come again ’round about Tuesday when Womadelaide’s all over for another year! Having said that, I’ve just come back from stage 3 where the 19 member Melbourne band, The Public Opinion Afro Orchestra had a huge crowd dancing and punching the air wildly in the teeming rain. (“Is this Womadelaide, or Glastonbury?” I had to wonder for a moment!) Who would have thought that Afrtobeat music and rain could work together to such dazzling effect? Everyone was going off – band, crowd, rain gods. . . No one’s gonna forget that gig for a while.
Michelle
Filed under: Roger's Blog
I’ve just seen one of the most insane displays of drumming … no, the most insane display of commitment … or (as Seth said on stage) of honouring a contract!! Imagine about 8 drummers hanging on a huge mobile from a giant crane, circling above the crowd, drumming and whooping and whistling, and throwing their drumsticks from one to another. All 30 metres above us … and 10 metres above THEM, a trapeze acrobat. AND they’re all dressed as toy Napoleonic drumming soldiers.
They drummed in the crowd for a while, then hooked onto the mobile and soared above us.
And, did I mention, that it was pouring rain the whole time! Have a look at the photos. Believe it … though it was hard to believe it while we watched. Images: crowds staring upwards into the rain, mouths agape.
“Mobile homme” they called it – they being French group La Compagnie Transe Express. Craziness I’d call it. I wouldn’t go up there – not in the rain, not in the dry, not with a safety net (which there wasn’t), not in a thousand years.
Roger
Filed under: Roger's Blog
Following up my previous blog, we Melbournians hear that we are fortunate to be sitting here in cool drizzle, rather than sheltering from the hail and storm front sweeping across our home town!
And at the moment, we’re standing in the drizzle (too damp to sit on the grass) being transported to northern Africa with Kamel El Harrachi singing his father’s ‘Ya Rayah’. Strange contrasts of climate and atmosphere. But great music. A line-up of oud, banjo, violin, acoustic bass and percussion, recreating much of the sound of the great chaabi orchestras.
We also wandered into this stage 1 gig after watching Murat Yucel from Unified Gecko cooking in the ‘Taste the World’ tent. Meze (of pasta with yoghurt and paprika sauce) plus fried potatoes with a tomato sauce. And while Murat cooked and joked, cumbus player from Unified Gecko, Yuval Ashkar, entertained us and explained the quarter-tones.
Roger
Filed under: Team Blog
Greetings from the tent, where unfortunately I have not ventured from too often (my chance to break free will come), but I have been trying to bring all the wonder that is Womadelaide to your computer screens as fast as I can. Including Interviews, performances, photos and video so make sure you keep looking back, THERE’S JUST SO MUCH!!!! I have to say I am thoroughly enjoying the atmosphere and being an Online Producer means I get to sift through all the amazing performances the team are recording.
Until I can break free from the website again…
Nicole
Filed under: Team Blog
In the cool air (and brief rain) of a Womad Friday night, I heard the wild fast paced sounds of George Kamikawa and Noriko Tadano pulsating off stage four. Norikos’ Japanese banjo brings a plucky contrast to the fast strumming of Georges guitar and his stomp box which pounded into my chest. Traditional Japanese songs mixed with traditional blues, done Japanese style, originals and the odd contemporary cover spiced up a stormy Adelaide night. The crowd responded to the music even refusing to shelter from the rain. Georges exhortations of the crowd to drink, drink and drink some more was wildly applauded. Inventive and humorous this duo played as equals and shouldnt be missed.
On Saturday afternoon, at Stage 5 , the Moreton Bay stage I heard and watched the spectacular , mesmerising Young Wagilak Group. Comprising members of the Wilfred Family, from the Yolgnu in Arnhem Land this song cycle accompanied by dance quickly drew a crowd once the hypnotic drone of the Didgeridoo vibrated the area around the stage. The tones of the singers voice, clapsticks and didge took me on a metaphysical journey, I kid you not. For a moment I forgot I was recording the performance and felt like I had fallen through the earth into the rich soil, then I was up in the air. These fellas play again on Monday. catch them if you haven’t, I will see them again.
-Ian
Filed under: Team Blog
One of the best things about Womadelaide is watching people dance – everyone seems so carefree and willing to embrace the spirit of the music. Besh O Drom just now was a great example of that with the crowds dancing like mad – no one cares if they look like a total dork – which is the beauty of this atmosphere!
My advice – keep dancing! It’s the best way to experience Womadelaide!
-JB
Filed under: Seth's Blog
Hungarian band Besh O Drom just opened the afternoon on Stage 2 with a blistering set of Budapest knees-up!
I’m looking forward to sets later today from Tuscon Arizona boys Calexico, Chicago’s Hypnotic Brass Ensemble and especially the modern Ethiopian sounds of Dub Colossus.
Hope you’ll be listening to our live Womadelaide broadcast tonight!
Love & kisses,
Seth
Unlike many previous WOMADelaides, the first evening of 2010 has been chilled and slightly wet. A storm band scurried through and drove many under shelter, while others danced along regardless.
But I mused that we’d become deeply unaccustomed to the idea of a cool and wet event, for (despite forecasts and predictions), we’ve arrived fairly unprepared. Where are the jumpers; where the raincoats? We’re still thinking about sandals and T-shirts.
Ah well, sweating from the dancing means we’re well and truly soaked!
-Roger
Filed under: Team Blog
Have you ever krumped?? Well I just witnessed Grilla Step make every one go wild at Stage 3. Krumping is a mixture of pacific tribal and breakdancing without the floor spins. It’s the only way I can explain it. An islander in full tribal dress came out and prowled the stage moving this way and that, arms out, head moving from side t side…. then we had a hip hop crew come out and do the same kind of thing but looser. They were almost gymnasts, the way they were moving this way and that, rolling their hips and letting it flow all the way down to their legs A feast for the EYES and the EARS.
-Tara
Filed under: Team Blog
Oh. My. God.
La Compagnie Transe Express with “Mobile Homme” is an great feat – a wonderful aerial creation that you just have to see. Imagine little drummer boys flying through the air…I won’t ruin it by telling you too much – Just go see it! Saturday and Monday at 5.00pm and for those of you who can’t be here we’ll make sure to get some footage and photos over the next couple of days!
-JB
Filed under: Roger's Blog

Roger Holdsworth and Deb Welch with Zazi (NubeNegra Records) and Womadelaide performer Mariem Hassan
They both live around Barcelona and obviously know each other. But it was fascinating to see Mariem Hassan, ‘the voice of the Sahara’, in traditional Saharauis dress, pumping the air to the flamenco scratch and rap of Ojos de Brujo. She cheered and ululated as Ojos did their high energy set, than wandered into our Radio Adelaide broadcast tent backstage for a chat.
Mariem talked about the responsibility she feels for portraying and communicating Saharaui culture, especially in a situation where her people are in exile in refugee camps (in Algeria) or under occupation. From a repertoire that talked of political and armed struggle, she now also sings about love and family – and also about betrayal. Her most recent CD is called Shouka – The Thorn, and she remains a cultural thorn to remind us all of a forgotten struggle of a dispossessed people.
-Roger

Roger Holdsworth and Deb Welch with Zazi (NubeNegra Records) and Womadelaide performer Mariem Hassan
Womadelaide 2010 LIVE! – On Site Interviews – Mariem Hassan (mp3)
Mariem Hassan chats to Melbourne’s Roger Holdworth with help from her interpreter Zazi
Womadelaide 2010 LIVE! – On Site Interviews – Shellie Morris (mp3)
Michelle Smith and Womadelaide 2010 performer Shellie Morris have a chat at the Radio Adelaide tent
Womadelaide 2010 LIVE! – On Site Interviews – Ojos De Brujo (mp3)
Radio Adelaide’s Michelle Smith speaks with Ojos De Brujo for Womadelaide 2010 LIVE!




























