'Unganisha' showcases the African roots behind popular dance genres - Action News
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'Unganisha' showcases the African roots behind popular dance genres

A theatrical dance showcase coming to Calgary Saturday explores the African roots behind nine different popular styles of dance.

Dance theatre showcase explores the roots of rhythm

Dancers perform in Unganisha, exploring the African roots behind many of our most popular dance forms. (Consult PR)

The Homestretch radio space was transformed into a pop-up dance studio Friday, when two of the creative forces behind a unique African dance-theatre showcase sat down with host Rob Brown to tell him about 'Unganisha.'

That's the name of the uniquely theatrical dance theatre showcase that will be performed Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.and then again at 7 p.m.at Wright Theatre atCalgary's Mount Royal University.

Artistic director Chibie Okoye and producer Wunmi Idowuexplained the dance-theatre concept to Brown.

"[We'll be]talking about the history of some of these dance forms that are popular today," Okoye said."Jazz, tap, salsa,capoeira,Afro-Caribbean, samba, Afro-Cuban, step dancing they all have some sort of roots tracing back to Africa.

"'Unganisha'celebrates that. It educatesus andentertains us."

The "educate"part of the story comes because the duo felt there was a gap between the knowledge of various dances and their origin stories.

Tap's roots are in Africa

"Tap has a lot of Igboroots in Africa," said Idowu. "We dance with our feet a lot, barefoot and without any shoes. We do that to feel the rhythms of the soil beneath us and I see a lot of movements of tap in that same context."

"It demystifies where African dancehas brought [to] the modern dances," said Okoye. "There's a lot of tap andjazz in moremainstream dance, but you don't know where they came from and that's not being educated [taught] when you go to dance class.

Artistic director Chibie Okoye (L) and producer Wunmi Idowu are presenting Unganisha Saturday at Wright Theatre at Mount Royal University. (ConsultPR Pamela Munoz)

"They will just teach you the specific choreography, [but not] the roots of where it came from so it was very important to showcase where it came from, so then people would have a better, more educatedidea [of its musical and cultural roots].

New York Salsa recipe

Even a popular dance form like salsa commonly thought of as a Latindance form has its roots in Africa, said Okoye.

"Salsa reallyis rumba and rumba is Congolese," she said. "A lot of us when we come here, we start understanding the influence. When you're in Africa, sometimes you don't realize these things. When you come out here andsee how much it has spread, you have a new appreciation for it salsa is rumba. The salsa that we know today as New York salsa today is rumba fused with jazz."

Performers in Unganisha, a dance theatre showcase of the African roots of some of our most popular dance forms, including tap, salsa, capoeira and step dancing. (Pamela Munoz, PR Consult)

Where an art form comes from matters, she said, and as an example, pointed to Bob Marley.

"Remember what happened with Bob Marley being exposed to the global market?" she said."It was really scat music in Jamaica.People didn't know much about that, then he put a spin on it and took it out [to a new place].

"The story has to come along with it," she said."We don't just get the music. [When] we got Bob Marley, we got Jamaicanow, [when]we get Afrobeat, [or] Afropop, we get Nigeria. It comes with the package.

"It's important for that story not to be lost in translation, so that we appreciate the roots andheritage of where ever certain songs anddance form genres are coming from."


With files from The Homestretch