Mementos in Music and Dance

Remembering my mum on her birthday.

From a young age, my mum had a passion for dance. Ballet and tap had transformed her life at the age of four and by her late teens she was teaching at Stella Mann’s Dance School in Hampstead, London. Her ideal ballerina was Margot Fonteyn who was the most wonderful dancer she had ever seen. According to Mum, it was Margot’s musicality and expressiveness that made her dancing so compelling. She was always perfectly at one with the music and when dancing on ‘points’ she was elegant, appearing at times, to float across the stage. She made it seem effortless.

Aged just eight, at the beginning of the second world war, my mum was evacuated to her Aunt’s home, an old farmhouse on a hillside in Yorkshire. She was frightened and homesick being away from her parents and older sister and after eighteen long months, she was relieved to return to her home in London. Although she felt safer, she had come home to air raids and slept under a Morrison shelter, and a few years on, she lost her father to a heart attack, in 1943. Her mother was the epitome of keeping cheerful and carrying on and so they did. And Mum had music and dance to keep her going, she talked of rushing off to choir rehearsals before school and of stopping to dance in an empty shop on her way home. And she told us how they danced for joy at the end of the war, joining the street party. During her late teens and early twenties, her experience of the cultural events that were suddenly springing up in a newly optimistic postwar London, was intense and unforgettable and she admitted to being ‘star struck’. She loved music, film, theatre and poetry, with an enthusiasm that remained throughout her life.

Whenever I’m in London, I visit the Southbank Centre and think of my mum’s visits there when it was newly built for the Festival of Britain in 1951. And when I hear a particular piece of music or see a film that she loved, I think how much she enjoyed it and I appreciate it all the more.

One of the CDs Mum had asked me to get for her in her latter years was of the music by Benjamin Britten for the ballet The Prince of the Pagodas so I think she would have loved this clip from the ballet. The choreography is by Kenneth MacMillan, whose work she adored, and the wonderful dancers in this pas de deux are Darcey Bussell and Jonathan Cope.

Mum admired Darcey Bussell and we both enjoyed watching the programmes she made about dances from Hollywood musicals (which Mum had enjoyed in her youth). In these clips she recreates the dances from the Puttin’ on the Ritz and Singing in the Rain.

This last one is full of optimism, silliness and fun, a great way to remember the good times.

A Song from my Childhood

Listen with Liv: where I share my musical choice of the month.

December is traditionally a time of year for many families to get together and for me that means reminiscing about a time when we had large gatherings with lots of great-aunts and uncles and two sittings for dinner. Looking back, we (my siblings and cousins) were often asked to perform for the grown ups – sing a song or play the piano. I was happy to play for my grandma who always gave me a shilling afterwards but most of us were a bit too shy in front of all the relatives and preferred when they sang or played for us. One of the songs the grown ups sang for us to dance to, when we were little, was Dance to your Daddy. Why this song I am not sure, as we have no connection with fishing, as far as I know, though my maternal grandmother’s family did come from Whitby, a fishing town on the north east coast of England. 

I love this brilliant version of the song, with fiddle and guitar, by award winning duo: Nancy Kerr and James Fagan. It was recorded at Bath Folk Festival in 2013 and is my choice this month for Listen with Liv.

Education with Music and Culture at its Heart: The Gambia Academy

Sona Jobarteh has a vision for the future of education in Africa. Sona is the first female professional kora-player who has achieved world-wide fame and has an international following. Her financial success enabled her, in 2015, to establish an academy in rural Gambia where children can learn to play the kora, balafon and drums (jembe and dundun): instruments once traditionally the preserve of men from griot families. The young students also learn singing and dance as well as a full range of academic subjects.

Sona is from a griot family, a hereditary class of musicians from a cultural tradition with a seven hundred year old history (see previous post about the kora). To keep pace with modern society change is inevitable and necessary but the high standard of music making that resulted from the old griot tradition need not be lost. The Gambia’s heritage of music and dance can continue to be passed on to new generations, by integrating it into education for children from all backgrounds. And Sona’s wider vision, which she is implementing now in the Gambia, is reform of the curriculum throughout the continent, so that children gain the life skills and confidence to flourish and develop, as individuals, as a community and as the future of Africa.

In the following clip, from 2018, Sona talks about her vision for The Gambia Academy. I find this truly inspirational.

Hear from the children themselves as they go about their school day.

Read more about The Gambia Academy Note that they are looking for volunteers, funding and guess what? You can go there to learn to play the kora, balafon or drums or to study dance.

Website: Sona Jobarteh

For me, music is at the heart of everything when it comes to communicating and bringing about change in the world.

Sona Jobarteh