Yacub Addy

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Zankel World Music With Addy and Chandra

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Skidmore Professor and National Heritage Fellow Yacub Addy will join forces with frequent music department lecturer and sitarist Veena Chandra this Thursday at 8pm for Zankel World Music, a world music concert at Zankel. DUH.

Chandra’s current sitar and Indian dance students and the Skidmore Indian Ensemble will be joined by their professor and her son Devesh for a 45 minute recital to open the show. After all that sitar stuff Yacub Addy and his West African hand drumming class will perform for 30 minutes. Fosino Nelson, a dancer from from Addy’s Albany based Ghanaian ensemble Odadaa!, will join the fun for a little performance as well.

8pm Thursday April 28th @ Zankel

West African Hand Drumming Recital

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Addy, At Center, With Assorted Other Cool People

Students from Yacub Addy’s West African hand drumming classes will join Addy for a “selection of Ghanian poly-rhythms using hand and stick drumming, bells, and shakers” Thursday night at 7pm in Zankel.

I went to this recital last year and my housemate played so hard he popped a blood blister on his palm, which is still the most badass thing I had ever seen anyone do in a drum circle.

Addy was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts in September, recognizing him as one of the United States’ artistic treasures for his work on the preservation of traditional Ga culture and music.

(fbook)

Yacub Addy Awarded National Heritage Fellowship

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010
Addy and Marsalis

Addy and Marsalis

The United States National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) awarded Skidmore music professor Yacub Addy a National Heritage Fellowship award at the Library of Congress today. When’s the last time you took a class with a national treasure?

Addy currently teaches West African Hand Drumming and leads the College’s West African Drumming Ensemble. The award is America’s highest honor for folk and traditional arts and recognizes Addy’s “lifetime of artistic excellence” and efforts to conserve Ga (ethnic Ghanaian group’s) and Ghanaian culture for future generations.

The award, as given to an African man by the United States government, is particularly important because it rewards Addy for working to preserve Ghana’s traditional culture, as opposed to contemporary Ghanaian or African American culture.

Addy is a world-renowned percussionist who has worked with many musicians, perhaps most notably jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis on the Africa Jazz concerts at Columbia College in 2003, and the composition Congo Square, which premiered in New Orleans in 2006. Addy also heads the Odadaa drum ensemble (currently in resident at The Egg in Albany) and has been a faculty member at Skidmore College since 2005.

For more information take a look at the NEA’s profile and interview.

West African Hand Drumming 7pm @ Tang

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009
Yacub and some other master drummer straight vibing

Yacub and some other master drummer straight vibing

Students in Yacub Addy’s West African Hand Drumming classes have their final recital tonight at 7pm in The Tang.  A trustworthy inside source tells me that it is going to be “the best mother fucking time you’ve had in a while.” In addition he promised to play so hard he “pops a blood blister” so yeah.

Appelman Interview Series: Yacub Addy

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Yacub Addy is a drum master, composer and choreographer and professor originally from Ghana.  He co-composed the 2-hour masterpiece “Congo Square” with Wynton Marsalis, performed it with Marsalis at Lincoln Center and on national tours, and recently performed at a major inaugural event for Barack Obama.  Willy Appelman sat down with Yacub Addy and talked about his musical background.