
Tambufest 2022 Goal Met!
Donation protected
Our 2022 fundraiser is closed now. Thank you for your support. We invite you to check out our Tambufest 2023 fundraiser!
Date: Saturday July 30, 2022
Venue: Covers Bar and Grill
Location: Long Bay, Portland, Jamaica!
This year's Tambufest will feature the St. Thomas Kumina Collective, Charlestown Maroon Group, Kingston Drummers, Port Maria Jonkanoo Group, Manchioneal Cultural Group (Bruckins) and Islington Cultural Group (Dinki Mini).
Tambufest, organized by Junior "Gabu" Wedderburn, Nicholas "Rocky" Allen, and Deborah Thomas, is a celebration of one of Jamaica's most vibrant and dynamic traditions - Kumina. Kumina was developed by members of the self-described Bongo Nation in eastern Jamaica, the area that has led the resistance to colonialism, that birthed the Morant Bay Rebellion and inspired the founding father of the movement of Rastafari, Leonard Howell. Though geographically dispersed, particularly across the parish of St. Thomas, members of the Bongo Nation looked to the Congo-Angola and Guinea Coast regions of Africa as the home of their oldest ancestors. They found in the tradition of Kumina a unifying cultural heritage, one that interweaves musical, linguistic, movement, and spiritual practices that connect them to the ancestors.
Kumina is, therefore, an embodied archive of our history. It is also the tradition that is at the root of the popular music of dancehall and reggae. This year, Tambufest will begin by honoring the elders who have served the tradition over their lifetimes. There will be drumming and singing (and dancing!) by the St. Thomas Kumina Collective, a group that brings together representatives of all the St. Thomas Kumina groups.
"The Tambufest is an invaluable celebration of timeless cultures. What a sight to behold elders, youth, and even young children from different communities across Jamaica engaging with passion in music and dance! The festival's intergenerationality is particularly poignant, strengthening communal ties through nurturing and propagating the magic of Kumina."
Tambufest is part of a broader project, “Bush Music,” which is ultimately meant to amplify awareness of traditional musical practices associated with Afro-Jamaican rituals – such as Kumina, Nyabinghi, and Coromantee – through digital archiving and collaboration with ritual practitioners.
On one hand, we seek to preserve the integrity of the original forms, understanding that people constantly innovate based on current experiences, the availability of other instruments, and familiarity with drumming traditions from other parts of the Caribbean and Africa. More broadly, Tambufest seeks to create dialogical spaces within Jamaica and beyond within which communities might discuss the forms of renewal and respect they would like to see moving forward.
We feel that by embracing that which has been denigrated – “bush” music – we re-orient humanistic practice in a way those excluded from the grounds of modernity become the center of the elaboration of our futures.
Organizer
Junior Wedderburn
Organizer
Brooklyn, NY