FemmeNoir
        
        A Web Portal For Lesbians Of Color
        
        
        
                
                
                
                
 Ubaka 
                Hill
Ubaka 
                HillUbaka Hill (Ooo-bah'-kah) is a 
                nationally-known drummer, teacher, performer and visual artist. 
                She began drumming professionally with a local jazz group in 
                1974 at the age of 18 while growing up in inner city New Jersey. 
                Since then Ubaka has performed with various creative artists and 
                has co-founded percussion performance groups. "My teachers 
                are many," she says, though her earliest inspiration as a 
                female percussionist came from Edwina Lee Tyler. Ubaka has 
                recorded with various other artists and on soundtracks for 
                educational and creative videos. 
                
                Ubaka is a shape shifter, a storyteller, an innovative drummer 
                in the creative tradition of jazz and in the spirit of social 
                change. Her first drum was the conga; the djembe is now her 
                primary instrument, her "other voice." She also plays 
                other kinds of drums and percussion instruments from various 
                cultures. The root of Ubaka's drumsong is primarily intuitive, 
                inspired by the rhythmic drumming traditions of North and West 
                Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, American Jazz and 
                Shamanism interwoven with poetry and song. She has become an 
                inspiration to many who wish to learn to make and play drums and 
                to share the power of drumsongs as a tool of liberation, 
                community building, healing and personal joy. 
                
                 As a 
                teacher, Ubaka has the unique ability to make drumming easily 
                accessible to all who want to feel their own voices through the 
                voices of drums. She has begun to teach drumming to the deaf and 
                hard of hearing. Ubaka has performed and taught numerous 
                workshops on the art and spirit of drumming throughout North and 
                South America. With great energy, talent and sensitivity, she 
                brings drums, percussion, poetry, and song to hospitals, 
                conferences, music festivals, universities, rallies, children's 
                programs, community centers, and to various celebrations and 
                ceremonies.
As a 
                teacher, Ubaka has the unique ability to make drumming easily 
                accessible to all who want to feel their own voices through the 
                voices of drums. She has begun to teach drumming to the deaf and 
                hard of hearing. Ubaka has performed and taught numerous 
                workshops on the art and spirit of drumming throughout North and 
                South America. With great energy, talent and sensitivity, she 
                brings drums, percussion, poetry, and song to hospitals, 
                conferences, music festivals, universities, rallies, children's 
                programs, community centers, and to various celebrations and 
                ceremonies. 
                
                Ubaka's personal mission and vision is to be a catalyst; to 
                inspire and develop, to document and preserve the evolving 
                tradition of women and drums, from the sacred to the secular, 
                fostering a tradition in the making. She is the founder and 
                director of the Drumming Institute - based in Brooklyn, New York 
                - which provides workshops, performances for all ages, and 
                related information and resources to the drumming community. She 
                is the editor and publisher of the newsletter, Drumsong/Drumming 
                Womyn's News: Views and Attitudes. The Drumsong Institute is 
                currently facilitating a national survey on women drummers of 
                all levels and ages in preparation for written documentation on 
                the evolving tradition of women and drums in the U.S.
                
                "Ubaka Hill's energy and deep spirituality make her music 
                exciting, thought-provoking and moving. I love working with 
                her." 
                - Kay Gardner (Performer, Musician, Author, Stonington, ME)
                
                "Ubaka Hill's ShapeShiftersis a woman's drumvoice, quickening 
                my blood as it makes its precious gift of memory. How is it that 
                we have strayed so far from this root power? And how can we 
                return? The music Ubaka makes brings us much of the way!" 
                
                - Margaret Randall (Photographer, Author, Activist, 
                Albuquerque, NM)
                
                Contact/Booking Information
                E-mail: 
                Address: PO Box 452, Catskill, NY 12414 
                Phone: 518-678-0166 
                Fax: 518-678-0167 
                
                Website:  
                
                http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/aks3/Ubaka.html
                
                Source:
                
                http://www.ladyslipper.org/vendors/ladyslipper/ubaka_hill.xtm
l
                
                
                
                
                Ubaka Hill - Dance the Spiral Dance 
                Sound Clips: 
                
                 
                
                 
                
                
                
                
                Ubaka Hill - ShapeShifters 
                
                Sound Clips: 
                
                 
                
                 
                
                
Home