Adele Ramos

"Information is power"

Ayahuwatiwa Buwagu—We Cry For You

 

(January 20, 2008 )
 

How dark the clouds, how bleak the day

As Belize sheds tears,

Weighed down with a crippling

Sorrow, the loss of our hero.  

Watiwa buwagu, ayahuwatiwa buwagu, Andy Palacio,

Because we know that you are irreplaceable.

Though others will try their very best,

They will never surpass you. 

Through it all, through fame and glory,

You never forgot your people or your country.

Your will to reach out to all mankind…to build not only

Cultural awareness, but appreciation for our fellow artists,

Always shone through. 

You are gone, but your spirit will live on,

Always alive in our hearts,

In our souls, in the undying drums

Of our forefathers,

Long after we bid you good-bye.

Wayahuba barigi.

Good-bye, Andy Palacio 

 

Nelita M. Sambula Doherty

Chairlady, N.G.C  O.W. Branch

 

Dedicated to the women of UMALALI

Wamalili (Our voice)

 

If only I knew how to sing like Sofia

Or fluently speak the tongue of my ancestors - Garifuna

I, too, would be proclaiming that message

Of our legacy -

Who we are and will always be

I am filled with pride to hear them sing,

Wamalali – for once, it is our voices that ring

They always sang as they baked Ereba - bread from cassava

Now their voices reign not only in the kitchen

And other domestic settings

But on stage, behind the microphone;

On personal I-pods, boom boxes, and car stereos

Yes! Garifuna women with voices unique and strong,

Reverberating above the beat of the drums

In perfect harmony, a melody so sweet

Even in acapella, it would please you, engage your feet

My spirit burns to jump out of me

To join them swaying, dancing,

Lifting their voices so all could hear

That they, too, have a story to share

A story about them, a story about us,

To our brothers and sisters, and to the world

Bridging the great divide

Between past and future, a gap so wide

They sing for Andy P and those already gone

And for those babies yet to be born

They chant a spirited, sincere song

Reflecting truth and reason

And advice for every season

Like, “Street company is bad to keep”

“Don’t listen to gossip; listen to me”

Wise words married with an irresistible beat

In unison with the drums, and a new-age flair

The resulting masterpiece captivates the ear

Trading in sleep for song, Ivan plays his guitar

With vibrancy, The Garifuna Collective beats on

In changing tempos, the primero and segunda resonate

A magnitude 10.0 on the Rector Scale earthquake

And the whole wide world does a double take

Across Belize, Honduras and Guatemala, borders dissolve

As these women lift up their enchanted voices with resolve!

Effortlessly enshrining in their lyrics, the words we could not speak

 

Anaha ya – here I am!

They are our voices merged as one.

 

Poem © 2008 by Adele Ramos (Black Orchid)

Poetic Tribute

Ode to Andy!

 

BY ADELE RAMOS

(aka Black Orchid)

The skins of the primero and segunda resound

Rising in a rapid crescendo

Thundering that hip-swaying punta beat

Feet doing a fancy, seemingly effortless shuffle

Oh how the foreigners envy

The Belizean couple as they whine up!

Celebrating the intangible heritage of our Garifuna culture!

They dance to his compositions:

Punta Medley, Ereba and Bikini Panty

And now the world knows Wátina!

Knows Garifuna!

Knows Belize in Central America!

 

His rhythmic guitar strums sweet sounds

Resonating melodies of the soulful Paranda

Oh, like Bob Marley - the great!

He was a redemption singer

Singing of Balisi, Yurumein, Africa

In signature style he sings

So powerfully the sound waves

Warm wintry hearts

The verve in his voice

Leaves one no choice but to listen…

 

You know whom I’m talking about

It’s Andy Palacio!

 

(Drums playing, dancing)

 

“Do you want me to take it slow, or do you want me to stop?”

And they reply: ‘til da mawnin! Let us listen, ‘til da mawnin!

 

Oh, Nanigi! We refuse to bid you farewell

But only whisper to you a soft…goodnight

Goodnight

Nite, nite

            Sleep tight…

 

The drums fade into deafening silence

As he departs peacefully, yet so suddenly

His heart—which gave us so much love—beats its last beat

He lungs—which chanted such sweet songs—took its last breath

 

And now in a mournful procession they go

United they go…Back to Barranco, they go

To replant the seed of our legacy

Our dearly beloved brother and friend, Andy P

 

We shall remember you!            

                                                Mabuleidu wabadibu!

Lamuisaruñadibu Balisi                             

Belize mourns you

Rest in peace, brother, icon and friend!

 

(Dec. 2, 1960- Jan.19, 2008)

Mass for Andy on Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008

More slide shows - funeral and tribute

Funeral: Saturday, January 26, 2008





TRIBUTE:Friday, January 25, 2008

The story from Barranco

Articles

Andy Palacio’s homecoming – special appearance at Expulsion Fest in Dangriga
(Posted: 12/07/07 on www.amandala.com.bz) Andy Palacio and the Garifuna Collective returned home on Monday, on a three-week break from a hectic world tour. Andy does hope to kick back and enjoy some of that Caribbean breeze and Belizean serenity he’s been missing for the past seven weeks, but before he gets fully settled into that relaxation mode, he has a big appearance coming up this weekend in the “Culture Capital,” Dangriga.

Andy Palacio and the Garifuna Collective returned home on Monday, on a three-week break from a hectic world tour. Andy does hope to kick back and enjoy some of that Caribbean breeze and Belizean serenity he’s been missing for the past seven weeks, but before he gets fully settled into that relaxation mode, he has a big appearance coming up this weekend in the “Culture Capital,” Dangriga.
 
The artist will headline a star line-up of Garifuna artists who will be featured in Expulsion Fest, planned for Saturday night, July 14, at Y-Not Island, Dangriga. (See details in advert placed elsewhere in this edition of Amandala.)
 
The show’s chief organizer, Simeon Boyd Lorenzo, told Amandala that the event is a big homecoming for Palacio and the Garifuna Collective, because their accomplishments on the world stage must be celebrated.
 
Lorenzo told us that the emphasis would be on Paranda music. July is a great time to awaken people’s interests in the culture, and the July fest seeks to highlight the survival and struggle of the Garinagu since their ancestors were exiled from St. Vincent over 200 years ago, he said.
 
Apart from Palacio, the show will feature Garifuna legend - Paul Nabor, along with Adrian “The Doc” Martinez, Lugua Centino, Justo Miranda, Joshua Miranda, Felix “Reckless” Flores, and Lloyd Augustine, who will be performing some hits from his recently released album, This is It. Ligiya Le, backed by the New Rebels. The Los Angeles-based artist, Dayaan “Nuru” Ellis, who is presently in Belize working on his new album The Journey, will perform backed by Ugurau.
 
Promoting Belize on the world stage
 
Belizeans will see Andy perform at home for the first time in a while. Seven weeks ago he embarked on an international tour, beginning with Slovenia on May 24 and ending with London, Ontario, Canada, last Saturday, July 7.
 
“The best part of the tour is the opportunity that’s being given to me to tell the world about us, and I feel personally gratified about being able to make a contribution to be remembered in a good way for doing something that I actually love,” said Palacio in an interview with our newspaper today.
 
“When you show up at an immigration officer’s desk who has never heard about Belize before and who has never seen a Belizean passport before, you feel a sense of urgency to shout out the name of your country to the world, to make Belize known not only for the fact that we exist, but that we have valuable things,” he added.
 
There were some comical interactions with those to whom the very name of Belize and the Garifuna culture were quite foreign.
 
“Somebody asked, ‘Where are you from?’
 
“We said, ‘Belize.’
 
“He said, ‘I know, but in which country is that?’” Palacio recollected, laughing.
 
“A journalist asked me, ‘Now this language you’re singing in, is it really a language?’
 “I told him, ‘Even sign language is a language,’ and then I schooled him about the issue of superior language and inferior languages, as a culture official, I don’t believe in such things.”
 
Palacio traveled with a 9-member delegation. The world-class band was comprised of Honduran additions: Guayo Cedeño of Orchestra de la Papaya on lead guitar and Rolando Sosa on rhythm guitar and maracas. They joined Belize musicians Carlos Perrote on segunda drum and percussion, Al Ovando on bass, Giovanni Chi on percussion, Joshua Arana on primero, and parandero Paul Nabor, making guest appearances with Andy, who appeared on rhythm guitar and lead vocals. Alexandro Colinas of Mexico, who worked with Andy on Keimoun and ‘Til da Mawnin, was the sound engineer and road manager.
 
Together they won the hearts of fans in places like Paris, Germany, Liverpool, Switzerland, and Dublin—many of them places Andy had never ventured to in his life. There were also more familiar venues like Canada, Chicago and New York.
 
It was a wonderfully exhilarating experience meeting new acquaintances and rediscovering old ones, and all the hype that the advance press and publicity provoked meant that everywhere the delegation of musicians made their appearances, there was an anxious audience waiting to soak up their riveting compositions.
 
“In most cases, they’ve heard the [Watiná] CD, they’ve read about us, even in major publications, and in some cases they’ve seen some television stuff that I’ve done – promo appearances, so that they came out to find out if this was for real,” said Palacio.
 
During the tour, Watiná soared to number one on the World Music Chart (Europe), and Palacio and his producer, Ivan Duran, won the internationally acclaimed WOMEX [World Music Expo] Award for 2007.
 
“When you make it to number one, beating out outstanding names like Angelique Kidjo…[and] Salif Keita, this is the company we found ourselves in, and to outrank such big names on the charts, you have to be able to show the proof on stage,” Palacio elaborated.
 
Re-establishing lost linkages to home
 
In the midst of those hundreds and sometimes thousands of people who flocked to see Andy Palacio and the Garifuna Collective were many Belizeans, some of them elated at the golden opportunity the tour had presented for them to reestablish long-lost linkages to their homeland.
 
Such was the case with a childless widower, Mr. Ortiz, originally from Dangriga, who had been living in Liverpool, UK, for over 50 years.
 
“He saw the festival poster and he saw Belize on it. He had been completely disconnected from Belize and doesn’t remember any relatives in Dangriga. After the show, I invited him backstage. Now Joshua [one of the band members] has taken on the assignment of reconnecting him with his relatives in Dangriga,” Palacio gleefully reported.
 
It was experiences like these that made the whole Liverpool experience special and intimate:
 
“I saw people who worked with me at Cultural Partnerships Ltd. in 1987. They read about me in THE GUARDIAN and heard me on the BBC. They bought tickets to come. I ran into old acquaintances like Philip Lewis, the artist and poet [author of ‘A tink a si wah new Belize’]. This is probably where I saw the biggest showing of Belizeans, apart from London [Canada] and Chicago. I never experienced the intimacy of London in Chicago, however.
 
“There were two particularly interesting scenarios in Liverpool. I met the granddaughters of Simon Martinez, a Garifuna man (originally from PG) who had gone to Scotland as part of the Forestry Unit during World War II from Belize. He remained in Scotland and started a family. Carrie and Stacey Simon [his granddaughters] are writing a book about him. They heard me on the BBC [doing my April promo], and they became interested in the work... They wanted to use some lyrics of ‘Watiná’ in the book – because they had bought the CD – and they came down to Liverpool and met the band.”
 
Apart from connecting with diverse Belizeans abroad, Palacio also connected with Garinagu from other countries, such as Honduras, who are living in foreign countries. In Paris, for example, a Honduran woman came with her two daughters raised in Paris.
 
In Germany, Allan Partis, a Belizean who is enlisted in the US military and based in Germany, came out with his Garifuna drum. Others arrived at the performances with their Belizean and Central American flags or shirts that told the entourage that they had some link to Belize or the Garifuna culture.
 
An outpouring of love and acceptance
 
Even though it was a heartwarming experience for the group to connect with people of their own, it was also a motivating experience to be embraced by people outside their cultural and national domains.
 
Palacio said that these fans showed them “pure love.”
 
The audience was mostly comprised of adults, but Andy could not help but take note of the children who had gone with their family to the outdoor performance in Canada. For him, it was refreshing to see them jumping and skipping to the beat of the music.
 
The music seems to speak for itself, but nothing seems to move [the audience] more than the message. The story behind the music accounts for perhaps half of the success of the music itself. When I do my introductions, I don’t just say this is Paul Nabor, but I tell them what he represents,” Palacio asserted. “He is a living legend of the oral tradition…and when this 79-year-old man walks onstage, the audience not only pays attention, the journalists and photographers swarm onstage to get the best view, capture a moment. That is usually the highlight. Nabor must be the most photographed person this touring season in Europe.”
 
Apart from the many pictorial memorabilia fans will have of Andy Palacio and the Garifuna Collective, they will also have cherished autographed memorabilia. Whereas autograph signing by famous Belizean artists is not a big thing at home, even when the energy was waning on tour, it was the least the musicians could have done in a show of love and respect for their fans.
 
A few critical travel mishaps
 
Palacio told us that one of the major differences between this recent tour and tours he had done in the past was the high level of professionalism in the way the entire tour was organized. However, the journey was not without its share of mishaps, and a one-day delay in returning home.
These mishaps were of the most worrying nature, however, since they involved instruments that are the very essence of the Garifuna soul sound.
 
First, British Airways lost the segunda (a Garifuna drum) and broke Joshua’s primero drum. It was not until hours before their first show in Slovenia that they got the segunda returned.
 
Then, when Ryan Air was carrying them from Paris, France, to Dublin, Ireland, they refused to let the musicians carry their fragile instruments, such as guitars, on to the plane with them, as other airlines allow them to do. They were charged 30 Euros (about 80 Belize dollars) for each instrument and forced to sign a paper saying that the airline would not be responsible for them. It so turns out that a guitar broke while being transported.
 
“I won’t fly them again,” Palacio declared.
 
Proud moments and more possibilities
 
Despite these few misfortunes, the entire seven week tour in North America and the UK has been a great one for the group, but more than that, the whole of Belize has earned wider international acclaim from their being in the spotlight.
 
“Belize can be proud of its musicians. We’ve always known that we have great Belizean talent, and we’ve proven it. With Al Obando, Josh, Chi, Perrote, these guys hold their own with the best of them in the world. A Garifuna primero player from Belize could be on par with a seasoned jazz pianist from Chicago, just skilled in different instruments,” Palacio observed.
 
“We could truly be proud of our boys. More opportunities are opening up, because the [Garifuna] Collective has to grow. We’ll be looking out for alternate musicians, in case someone can’t make it on tour. We need somebody else that we can call. With the release of the Garifuna women’s CD [Umalali], we will be looking for more people to back the project. Some members of the Garifuna women’s project will be touring with the collective in the fall when I go up to receive the WOMEX award,” he further explained.
 
As we have recently reported, Andy Palacio and his producer, Ivan Duran of Stonetree, were selected for this year’s WOMEX Award, which he holds as a great honor.
 
The award will be presented in Seville, Spain, on Sunday, October 28, 2007, when the group makes a grand appearance promoting the upcoming Umalali.
 
Andy resumes his tour on July 28 with an appearance at FloydFest in Floyd, Virginia. But before then, he hopes to spend some quiet time in his village, Barranco, Toledo, where he hopes to unwind from the buzz of his first international tour in four years.
 
More articles:
 
RIP Andy P (22/01/2008)
Andy P Serious (18/01/08)
 
 

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