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The track is called "Village Life" played and written by John Barron. It opens with a sample from a village in Africa of young girls singing, followed by some very full & exciting rhythms!
it's only €2 to download, so click here to get your music and donate to Fundrums today :
World famous drummers are supporting a Sudan365 by helping create a global beat for peace to launch the campaign.
Celebrity drummers – including Phil Selway of Radiohead, Jonny Quinn of Snow Patrol, Stewart Copeland of The Police, Nick Mason of Pink Floyd, the renowned Egyptian drummer Yehia Khalil and Mustapha Tettey Addy from Ghana who has been drumming since the 1970s – have come together to create a global beat for peace for Sudan.
The drummers appear in a music film which was the brainchild of Jamie Catto – the drummer of Faithless who was behind the hit global music project ‘One Giant Leap’ – and produced by Emer Patten and the team at Splinter Films, the specialist music film company who have produced concert films for Beyoncé, Foo Fighters and Kings Of Leon.
The film features a drum beat for peace starting in Sudan and being picked up and passed on like a baton between drummers in over 15 countries around the world including Brazil, Mexico, US (New York and San Francisco), UK, France, Spain, Senegal, South Africa, Ghana, Egypt, Mali, UAE, Japan, Russia and Australia.
WHILE MOST schools were quiet over the half term break, St. Patrick's at Bohreen Hill in Enniscorthy was anything but silent as the campus hosted the fifth annual Arts Alive! festival. The event, promoting participation of people with disabilities in the arts, came to a cheerfully rowdy finale on Friday afternoon
Drums, strings and the sound of the human voice raised in song and ensured that no-one was likely to fall asleep at the end of the four day extravaganza. The 200-plus participants were joined by a squad of volunteers, all attired in their brightly coloured Arts Alive! tee-shirts.
Organiser and mistress of ceremonies Rosaleen Molloy, county council arts officer, led the excited audience in a chorus of 'we've had a great week and we'll come back next year'. The participants were joined by Cllr. Paddy Kavanagh representing Enniscorthy Town Council; county council chairwoman Anna Fenlon; Father Colm Murphy of the Wexford Mental Health Association and Mental Health Ireland chairman Brian Howard.
'It is about ability and about everyone's talent being celebrated. Everyone can be included in the arts,' summed up Cllr. Fenlon. Her enthusiasm was shared by Brian Howard who suggested that the unique Wexford event should be replicated throughout the country: 'It's fantastic,' he exclaimed.
The drummers, musicians and puppeteers were to the fore during Friday's finale as various groups were called up to perform. However, much of the emphasis during the four days was on arts such as weaving, basket making, painting, pottery and writing.