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  • Women bring world in music

    Dover Sherborn Tab, MA
    April 8 2004

    Women bring world in music

    By Chris Orchard/ Correspondent

    SHERBORN - Music from around the world filled the
    Unitarian-Universalist Church in Sherborn last Saturday.

    Libana performed several international folk songs, many of which
    dealt with longing for home.

    The group brought rhythms, lyrics, instruments, and voices from
    across the globe into the church. Their songs came from countries
    such as South Africa, Republic of Georgia, Israel, Armenia, Russia,
    Hawaii and 14th-century Persia.

    "We've been exploring music from around the globe" for 25 years, they
    said.

    Libana performs "contemporary and traditional music of the world's
    women," said artistic director and founder Susan Robbins.

    "We play ancient folk songs," and "also songs that give voice to a
    more visionary sense of how women" are creating better lives for
    themselves, she said.

    The group, composed of seven women, was formed in 1979, when "world
    music was hardly even a term yet," said Robbins.

    That year was a turning point, musically, in the life of Robbins.

    "It was the times and my curiosity," she said. "I wanted to see what
    the women of the world had created."

    Other members of Libana are Lisa Bosley, Allison Coleman, Charlotte
    Miller, Marytha Paffrath, Linda Ugelow and Cheryl Weber.

    In folk cultures, where men and women work separately, there are
    differences between men's music and women's music, said Robbins.

    "Women were the carrier of a lot of oral tradition," she said.

    Gary Strichartz, chairman of the music committee at the
    Unitarian-Universalist Church, said "I'm enraptured" by the music.

    "Sue and Marytha have come to our Sunday services," he said. Marytha,
    who is Libana's main percussionist, also leads a drum group at the
    church.

    Libana's rhythms and songs brought listeners, momentarily, to another
    place and time. Their music has a spiritual dimension, said
    Strichartz.

    "It's one of the most wonderful things to drive around in, especially
    in Boston traffic," he said.

    While the group hails from Harvard Square, its members travel and
    perform around the world, learning as they go.

    "We do a lot of listening to world music," said Robbins.

    There's international flavor right here in Boston, too. In order to
    get songs right, "we will go about finding someone from the greater
    Boston area," said Robbins.

    They specifically mentioned local Armenian communities as great
    sources of music and authenticity right here in Eastern
    Massachusetts.

    Some of their most profound songs that night came from Islamic
    countries, such as Algeria and Egypt, where women still struggle for
    a public voice in society. One song, from the Bedouin tradition, they
    said, involved heavy drum beats. One rhythm melted into the next
    rhythm, with dancing and high-pitched shrieking.

    The music they played that night was also being recorded for a live
    album.

    "I love this church," said Robbins.

    "I don't think you can have any idea how glad we are to be here
    tonight," said Paffrath.

    Though in their minds they were probably somewhere else - in some
    far-off country, the crowd seemed glad to be there, too.
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