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Dunun Workshop Saturday Sept 14th

Dunun Workshop
Saturday, September 14
Decatur, GA
with Colleen Caffrey

Are you a djembe / dunun ensemble player or student?
Are you a drum circle enthusiast?
This 5-hour workshop is packed with fun and useful skills for you!

You may know them as dunun, dundun, dounoum, (or possibly even djun djun, in which case, PLEASE come to this class). They are the melodic bass drums of the Mandingue drumming orchestra. Learning or delving deeper into these instruments will ● deepen your knowledge and FEEL of djembe music ● improve your coordination and limb independence ● give you skills to be of great service to any drum circle or community ensemble

Colleen playing dununba10:00-12:30pm Traditional-Style Dunun
The traditional-style dunun will cover all 3 dunun parts (sangban, kenkeni, and dununba), accompanying bell patterns and some dununba variations for 1 or 2 (time depending) traditional West African rhythms.  More importantly you’ll learn the archetypal patterns inside these rhythms that you can use to learn new rhythms faster and create your own variations!  The bell patterns on their own can be applied to any percussion instrument and can be an empowering, solidifying force for cohesive groove in a community drum circle setting!

2:00-4:30pm [American] Ballet-Style Dunun

Turn those dunun upright and now you can play several drums at once like a drum set!  This style Colleen playing ballet style dununemerged in the 1950s with the advent of the West African national “ballets.”  But instead of sparse arrangements designed for the fast and furious tempos of professional African dance companies, in this class we’ll focus on arrangements that transpose most of the notes from the 3-drum traditional piece onto two hands.  This makes it possible to keep the full melodic richness of the 3 drums and bring a ton of musicality to your ensemble or drum circle with just one dunun player!

Who Should Come?

  • Beginner – Intermediate Djembe & Dunun Students
    If you study traditional West African djembe, it’s critical to also learn the dunun to understand the conversation going on between the two.
  • West African Ensemble Players
    Colleen is adept at teaching multi-level classes. You’ll get some new parts to add to your repertoire and review some building blocks that will deepen your groove on familiar patterns
  • Drum Circle Enthusiasts
    You’ll come away with material that you can use to support a rich, consistent groove in any drum circle or spontaneous rhythm jam situation.

Registration:

Register in advance and save!  We will need a minimum of 8 students registered by August 20 to hold each class.
One class:  $40 in advance / $45 at the door
Both classes:   $65  in advance / $75 at the door

Register  Now!
Location: 

Leafmore Community Clubhouse
1373 Altamont Dr, Decatur, GA 30033

About Colleen
Colleen Caffrey is a gifted teacher and performer who has been playing and teaching djembe since 2003. She is a close student of grandmaster djembefola, Mamady Keita and has travelled with him to Conakry Guinea, where she passed his arduous exam of music and cultural knowledge to become a Professor of the Tam Tam Mandingue djembe school. She is the co-founder of DrumRise which offers djembe and dunun instruction in Atlanta, Georgia and across the United States. As a certified TaKeTiNa facilitator, Colleen uses a kinesthetic learning process to help students deeply embody polyrhythmic relationships found in West African and other archetypal rhythms. Colleen Caffrey crafts a group experience that makes West African rhythms accessible to people at all different experience levels while challenging each person to expand their skills and play with greater confidence and musicality!

Register  Now!

2013-08-27 Taste of TaKeTiNa at Glenn United Methodist Church

 Tuesday August 27
6:30-9:30pm

 A Taste of TaKeTiNa

Glenn United Methodist Church

1660 North Decatur Rd, Atlanta, GA 30307

 $25-$85 sliding scale. Please be generous within your means.


Register Now!

The Yoga of Rhythm – post by founder, Reinhard Flatischler

Reinhard Flatischler photoRhythm is one of the most ancient and efficient ways to influence and develop human consciousness. In our globally networked and technologically focused world, human beings often lose touch with their own internal rhythms, making them feel displaced and de-synchronized. TaKeTiNa allows them to reconnect with the healing powers of rhythm and primordial motion.

Social, mental, creative, spiritual and of course musical faculties are reawakened and developed with the practice of TaKeTiNa. These qualities are essential to the peaceful cohabitation of human beings on this earth, yet few societies or school systems invest the time and dedication needed to promote them in an authentic fashion.

Rhythm is our earliest companion, our first guide to life. As we grow within the womb, in a state of unity with our surroundings, the heartbeat of “pulse” and “pause” prepares us for the duality, the polarity of the world we are going to be born into. Rhythm can be understood as “polarity in motion” and this is precisely why it is so effective in dissolving opposites and resolving the kind of dichotomic thinking that our polarized worldview draws us into. Rhythm and motion give us access to a third state of being, beyond the habitual patterns of “mine – yours”, “sad – happy”, “internal – external”, “tense – relaxed”.

Using rhythmical exercises, TaKeTiNa teaches you to step out of these mutually exclusive states of being. Simultaneity replaces the familiar “either – or”. Someone who is capable of being angry at another person, and at the same time finding quiet compassion within, is on the way to emotional stability and profound inner peace.

Flyer for the TaKeTiNa workshop: The Yoga of Rhythm, in Decatur, Ga Oct 18-20, 2013In the practice of TaKeTiNa, you learn to consciously let one hand be passive while you actively move the other. You develop the capability to recognize order within chaos, and to identify the chaotic element inherent in order. You can be simultaneously tensed for activity and deeply relaxed. Your awareness is tuned to both yourself and another person. Through this process, you experience deep inner calm within the superposition of polar opposites: movement and stillness at once.

In the course of the TaKeTiNa process, different rhythms are built up concomitantly: your steps and claps are based on different rhythms, and your voice adds an additional layer. Everyone who goes through this process repeatedly, sooner or later will find themselves in a state of being in which the more they add, the clearer and emptier the rhythm space becomes – what a wonderful paradox! Those who regularly practice TaKeTiNa become adept at stepping out of the imaginary polarity that holds our life in its grip so very fiercely: the past and future. The experience of timelessness is the door to where our life is really taking shape: in the here and now, the eternal present. In this timeless state, everything that makes up your life is open to being restructured, which is why the confidence and ability to step into this state is so essential for both personal development and the growth of human consciousness.

TaKeTiNa does not simply promote creativity and musicality; rather, creative-musical learning is closely tied to the growth of human qualities. Two basic abilities in particular are of importance both within music and in daily life: flexibility and connection. As these become an integral part of your being, you will find that rhythm will guide you to inner quiet, centeredness and aliveness. The intuitive experience of seasoned TaKeTiNa practitioners is increasingly being validated by recent results in the field of rhythm research: TaKeTiNa does not only stimulate “inner values”, it also predictably and repeatedly creates ideal circumstances for the regeneration of the human nervous system.

Insofar TaKeTiNa is similar to yoga, as it becomes a pathway to integrate physical, emotional, mental and spiritual development. This is why many practitioners of TaKeTiNa refer to it as “the yoga of rhythm”. The term yoga (Sanskrit, m., , yoga, from yuga “yoke”, yuj for: to yoke or bind together, to harness) can be used to mean “to unite” or “to integrate”, or it can describe the act of “harnessing” or “yoking” the body and soul together in a sense of merging into a state of collectedness and awareness.

As the founder of TaKeTiNa, this definition touches me deeply and I cordially invite you to join a workshop and have your own experience of dissolving polarity. May TaKeTiNa guide you, too, in the journey to your rhythmical homeland, to the primal force that permeates all living beings. TaKeTiNa allows you to reconnect with your earliest self, and to bring rhythm back into your life with full awareness. For none of us can ever really forget the womb rhythm that accompanied us into the world, nine months long, during our becoming.

With heartfelt greetings,

Reinhard Flatischler

Banner for the TaKeTINa workshop, The Yoga of Rhythm in Decatur, Ga Oct 18-20, 2013

 

TaKeTiNa – The Yoga of Rhythm – A Rhythm Immersion with Founder, Reinhard Flatischler

TaKeTiNa - The Yoga of Rhythm

Friday October 18 – Sunday, October 20

TaKeTiNa is a practice that allows you to reconnect with the healing powers of rhythm and primordial motion. Like yoga, it is a pathway to something much bigger than musical or physical dexterity. It is a rhythmic route to integrating mind, body, and spirit for vibrant peace and wellbeing.

In the TaKeTiNa process you learn at your own pace, layering multiple rhythms in your body using steps, claps and voice. You learn to consciously let one hand be passive while actively moving the other. You can be simultaneously tensed for activity and deeply relaxed. TaKeTiNa gives you access to profound stillness in movement.

Read more from Reinhard Flatischler about why TaKeTiNa can be understood as The Yoga of Rhythm

Join Taketina founder Reinhard Flatischler as he weaves the “yoga of rhythm,” and discover how your own innate rhythmic wisdom can guide you into joyful presence in the here and now.

Location: Decatur Recreation Center, 231 Sycamore Street, Decatur, GA 30030
Schedule: Friday: 10:30am – 6pm, Saturday: 10:30am – 6pm, Sunday: 10:30am – 4pm

Early Registration through Sept 15: $325
Late Registration after Sept 15: $395

Register Now!

Comments From Past Participants

I felt BALANCED at the end of the experience and that calming sense of inner peace stayed with me for days, weeks, and beyond.

“Three glorious days of being literally “out of my mind” and into experiencing so much FUN being with others, dancing with others and dancing with my own soul.”

Thanks a million for a wonderful weekend. Just want you to know I woke up this morning full of peaceful vibrant energy. I’ve felt all day as though “all cylinders were charged” and working at full capacity. What a great way to get a ‘tune up’

Sundays – Two New Djembe Intensives — 3-hour All Level Classes — Sundays, November 3 and 10, 2013

ALL LEVELS DJEMBE 2- Three hour Intensives! 5:30-8:30 On November 3rd and November 10th, 2013

Location: Harmony Yoga and Wellness

Instructor: Amy Jackson

2227 Idlewood Rd Tucker, GA 30084
Cost: One class $45.00 / Both classes $75.00

Please email for confirmation to Amy:  amy@drumrise.net or call 404-784-2462

Djembes are available for use!  Please reserve!

 

2013-11-15 Intro2 at Etowah Yoga

 Friday November 15
6:30-9:30pm

 A Taste of TaKeTiNa

Etowah Valley Yoga

18 S. Erwin St, Cartersville, GA 30120

 $40/advance $45/door


Register Now!

2013-08-10 Intro to TaKeTiNa at Stillwater Yoga

 Saturday August 10
3:00-6:00pm

A Taste of TaKeTiNa

Stillwater Yoga

931 Monroe Dr, Atlanta, GA 30306

 $25-$85 sliding scale


Register Now!

Sundays June 2 – June 30

ALL LEVELS DJEMBE 7:00-8:15pm Location: Harmony Yoga

2227 Idlewood Rd Tucker, GA 30084

Cost: $75 / 5 classes or $20 drop-in.

Please register online here. You will have the option to either pay online or bring payment with you (cash or check) on the first day of class.