Dhol Drum Masters The Dhol Foundation Announce First North American Tour

By: Aug. 24, 2016
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North American audiences are in for a powerful new experience this fall, as England's The Dhol Foundation launch their first North American tour. Led by master drummer Johnny Kalsi, the ten-piece multi-instrumental collective will bring their tunefully thunderous performances to eight stages:

09/14: The Landfall Festival of World Music - Cedar Rapids, Iowa
09/15: Des Moines Social Club - Des Moines, Iowa
09/16: Madison World Music Festival - Madison, Wisconsin
09/17: Lotus World Music and Arts Festival - Bloomington, Indiana
09/22: Drom - New York, New York
09/23: Tropicalia - Washington DC
09/24: Small World Music - Toronto, Ontario
09/25: The Sinclair - Cambridge, Massachusetts

London-born Kalsi founded the group in 1989, and has travelled the globe to promote broader awareness of the deeply resonant, colorfully-tasselled, double-headed dhol drum, a musical backbone of his Sikh family's ancestral Punjabi culture in India. As a respected ambassador for the rich multi-culturalism of today's United Kingdom, he has hosted stages at Peter Gabriel's acclaimed WOMAD world music festival for many years, as well as co-hosting with Gabriel at the historic Live 8 at Eden event, which highlighted the scarcity of African music at Live Aid. Honoring his tireless work, Kalsi was named a Fellow of the prestigious Leeds College of Music in 2015.

The Dhol Foundation were a prominent feature of the official Closing Ceremonies of the 2012 London Olympic Games, as well as at the Jubilee Celebration of Queen Elizabeth II. They have played major venues throughout the world, from London's iconic Albert Hall to festivals in Abu Dhabi and Singapore. Their music has appeared in such major motion pictures as Gangs of New York and The Incredible Hulk, and in January they were selected to make their first North American appearance at the juried Globalfest showcase event at New York City's Webster Hall.

However, Johnny Kalsi is no stranger to world music fans in the U.S. and Canada. His blazing performances have burned up stages across North America in his other incarnation as longtime lead percussionist for the perennially popular Afro Celt Sound System; his incendiary segments are dynamic visual highlights of the group's legendary live shows.

His sensational drum work will appear on forthcoming new albums this winter from both Afro Celt Sound System and The Dhol Foundation.

Onstage, The Dhol Foundation present a colorful spectacle - "a brightly dressed groove machine, of whirling arms and booming beats." The sonic flavors they concoct are likewise multi-hued, vibrantly blending folk sounds from India, Brazil, Ireland, Morocco, and West Africa with bhangra as well as modern electrobeat elements that reflect Johnny Kalsi's work with the likes of TransGlobal Underground and Asian Dub Foundation. Their sound is hypnotic and sensuous, fluid yet impeccably precise. It bespeaks the deep, celebratory heritage of the dhol drum in traditional Punjabi life, where the large cylindrical wooden drum with two goatskin heads -- one treble, one bass, played with cane drumsticks -- accompanies the rituals of harvest and other milestones of life. (During the Mogul empire of the late 16th century, the drum was also legendary for fiercely leading troops into battle and intimidating their foes.)

But, at the same time, it gives voice to the fruitful assimilation of South Asian ethnic traditions into mainstream British culture. As such, the group was selected for funding by England's Asian Arts Agency (Bristol UK) and are presented, through these concerts in the United States and Canada, as emissaries of cross-cultural understanding and cooperation. In this era when xenophobia, bigotry, and hatred seem to be on the rise around the globe, the timing could not be better for the mighty Dhol Foundation to open the floodgate on a torrent of percussive grooves and share their exuberant message of tolerance and goodwill.



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