D.R.U.M. (Divine Rhythm United Motion)
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D.R.U.M. (Divine Rhythm United Motion)

Houston, Texas, United States

Houston, Texas, United States
Band World Reggae

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This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

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Press


"D.R.U.M. named Houston Press Artist of the Week"

D.R.U.M. is arguably the world music band in Houston. They've been together, in one form or another, since the early '90s, released a few very good albums and won about a million world music awards. They are made men in the music community.
Even still, not nearly enough people outside D.R.U.M.'s genre are familiar with them. Admittedly, we didn't even start listening to their music until we met band member Anura Neysadurai a couple of months ago while working on an article about his business parter, rapper Zin. In light of that injustice, we reached out to the quintet to have them answer a few questions.
After the jump, read about the alphabetical complexity that lacks from one of the members' name, if they think they'll ever not win the Press' Best World Music award, and who would in a D.R.U.M.-Moodafaruka death match.
Rocks Off: Let us preface this interview by saying that Jah, in fact, is not the answer to several of these questions. Just wanted to clear that up. D.R.U.M., "Jah Is the Answer"
RO: When you all were forming, was there any hesitance with regards to letting Nathan join? I mean, he's obviously very talented musically, but his name just doesn't fit in. Maybe he should consider throwing in a J or an X or something. Nathjan Fauxlk looks about right.
D.R.U.M.: Nathan is actually one of the original members of D.R.U.M. Maybe the real question should be, "Why did Nathan let any of the rest of us that came later join the band!?" But on a more serious note, of course the names don't matter. Some of us were born here in this country and our names reflect that, culturally. Of the three C's - Color, Culture and Consciousness - we will always choose to make primary connections with others based on their Consciousness.
RO: So you guys basically win Best World Music, like, every year. Maybe you all should consider putting out some crazy off-brand album like Garth Brooks did just to see if you can get away with it. Give the other guys a chance, ya know? Yeah, that seems like a smart career move.
D.R.U.M.: More than just a career move, it's the thing with the most heart! We also realize that we are a proactive part of helping the World Music scene to develop locally. Other bands need to get known better as well: Dubtex, King Cobra, Trenchtown Texans, Cosmic Force and Idiginis are all bands that people need to get to know better. World Music is not limited to reggae alone, either.
Yeah, we should probably opt out next year, but we have so much fun being a part of the whole event!
RO: We actually saw you all perform at iFest, if we're not mistaken, and the show was way intense. What type of prep goes into a live show?
D.R.U.M.: We do an audience and theme-specific song list. A list for an outdoor festival may not be the same as a club list. It is really, really intense process sometimes for us to craft our vision. When Baba Ifalade (Alafia) knows that there will be a larger stage available, there may be a collaboration between he and Osakwe to do a drum/dance solo or something very visual to make the show more powerful.
RO: Did you all happen to see that Houston Music Fight Club thing Craig Hlavaty did not too long ago? That was a good idea, we think. Let's say there was battle to the death between D.R.U.M. and Moodafaruka. Which group is going home to see their families that night? We'd take you guys, mostly because Anura looks like he's the type of man that could take your head off with his bare hands if he wanted to.
D.R.U.M.: Actually, we missed it. But we think nobody would have won, because if we both were put in that situation neither one of us would resort to violence.
- Houston Press by Shea Serrano


"Houston Press cd release"

The title of the latest CD by D.R.U.M. — that's Divine Rhythm, United Motion for you newcomers — is a mouthful, and not technically a word, but it's probably the best description of the long-running Houston Afro-reggae group's music and philosophy anyone could ever come up with: Loveternalightruthealingrowthappiness. Get all that? In plain English, that's love, eternal, light, truth, healing, growth and happiness. That's D.R.U.M., all right, a group that truly believes music is a mystical experience, and in almost 20 years has left no Afro-Caribbean rhythm and style untouched in its quest for the perfect groove. Saturday's CD release for, well, you know — D.R.U.M.'s first recording since 2004's D.R.U.M. Live — is just the latest stop on its journey, with Austin's Rattletree Marimba and Houston's DUBTEX along to further ensure everyone has a funky good time. One love, y'all. - Chris Gray- Houston Press


"Housto Press "Rhythm Kings""

It's a late June Tuesday night at the Ensemble Theatre's former home on Holman and Main, and it's hotter than Salma Hayek in a Norma Kamali bikini. That is, when you get inside the unventilated corridors of the upstairs facilities known as the Midtown Art Center. The air conditioning is on the fritz, and anyone who dwells in these halls is stuck in a perpetual state of mustiness. This is where musical group D.R.U.M. moved to rehearse when their last practice space was found to be saturated with asbestos. They might be asbestos-free at the moment, but since they're now warming up in the already-too-warm complex, to paraphrase Richard Pryor, funk is their shadow.

Members have stocked the lavatory with ice, water and whatever else might relieve the hellish temperature of this new location. While keyboardist and new addition Anuraney Saeuri makes the sound check rounds, guitarist Jammal Udiyn Ali works out new licks, and bassist Osakwe Rikondja and drummer Nathan Faulk get a backbeat going, Alafia Gaidi, the band's founder, lead percussionist and main vocalist, picks up the symbol of their latest victory, a hefty, spiral configuration that looks more like a science fair project. It's a Houston Press Music Award, the second they've won. "Wild lookin' shit, huh?" ask Gaidi. The sultriness of the atmosphere doesn't leave anyone with the will to reply.

They have got to take a break.
The band members clamber outside to shoot the breeze as well as take some in. In the midst of getting the color back in their faces, they take time out to discuss the philosophy of their band and what beliefs they inject into their music.

"The concept is that the whole universe is based on art, and art is rhythm," explains Gaidi. "The idea is that here is a divine rhythm that makes things move together. And that's a united motion."

It is certain that D.R.U.M. (an acronym for, not surprisingly, Divine Rhythm, United Motion) unites many fans and audiences to move in unison wherever they play. From the massive festival setting of August's annual Bob Marley Festival to the small but vibrant confines of the Mahogany Cafe, where they played a night gig late this June, people are happy to soak in D.R.U.M.'s eclectic range of inspired sounds.

"We're all from, kinda like, different backgrounds who come, more or less, to form a unit of sound," says drummer Faulk. "We just like to give something fresh. Something that's not of the norm." But then again, almost every act claims to be "fresh" and "not of the norm." So are D.R.U.M. actually the innovative beat-heads they so assuredly claim themselves to be?

To get the answer to that question, it helps to go to the beginning. In November of 1985, Gaidi moved to Houston from his hometown of New Orleans. A well-established percussionist and musician since the age of 16, Gaidi had played with various blues and reggae bands at home and on the road, performing at venues ranging from California and Arizona to the Caribbean and South America.

Then, in 1988, Gaidi began laying the groundwork for D.R.U.M. while supporting himself as a music teacher, teaching the chops he had learned on the road to pupils in private schools and community centers around Houston. "I came here and I realized there was this drumming scene going on here, but there wasn't a lot of people really out there teaching, trying to make drumming available to people," Gaidi says. "So I started teaching, taught a couple of people and started working with them as a foundation for the group. We had a percussion ensemble. [We] did a lot of African traditional songs and chants and stuff like that."

Gaidi originally devised D.R.U.M. as a nine-piece percussion ensemble, but by 1990 he'd reduced the lineup and added instruments such as guitar, bass, keyboard and saxophone (the last of which he plays). But despite the contemporary instrumentation, D.R.U.M. was continually known by one descriptive: world beat. Members of the group obviously find those words irksome.

"It's kind of a misnomer to me," says Gaidi, who would prefer his band's music be referred to as African rock and reggae. "We don't think this 'world beat' title is us," he says. "What do they do in Czechoslovakia? They may call reggae 'world beat' there, but if somebody is listening to Beethoven in Jamaica, they don't call it 'world beat.' "

D.R.U.M.'s first official gig took place in September of 1991 at the Salsa on the Plaza festival. "We did all right," Gaidi recalls of the now-defunct activity. They did so well, in fact, that now it's hard to find a place in town where D.R.U.M. hasn't played.

No locale is beneath the group. They've played almost any place in Houston that has a platform and an amp system, from clubs such as Rockefeller's and Fitzgerald's to festival sites such as the Wortham Center and the Houston Zoo.

In a given D.R.U.M. gig, the performance breaks down to two sets. A good part of their show consists of original compositions, ones composed either by individual members or by the group. But they also do the occasional cover of reggae legends such as Bob Marley and Black Uhuru. They even do a rendition of the Temptations' "My Girl."
"We're very eclectic," Gaidi says. "We got one song called 'Do You Believe?' that's got this straight-up, New Orleans, second-line bite. That's one of the pieces that I wrote. The thing is, there are so many elements that I don't know what to call [our music]."

"We offer those elements that can hopefully touch people," seconds Ali. "But we bring in other elements from points around the world into the situation. And that's the uniqueness that we offer. African-American element, South American element, it doesn't matter to us. We just wanna know, hey, is it good? And if it is good, will people be magnetized to it and get the spirit of what the music is trying to do and what the musician is trying to do with the music?"

Oh yes, spirit -- that's another important part of the D.R.U.M. aesthetic. Although Gaidi is the group's founder, he claims there isn't a team leader or a physical guiding force running the band. Instead, everything is up to a higher power. "We are spiritually focused -- a spiritually based group," Gaidi says. "We let the spirit guide us when we're making moves."

D.R.U.M. has been touring since 1993, performing in New Orleans, Dallas, San Antonio and other locales around the country, though mostly in the South. When he's not with D.R.U.M., or spending quality time with his bride, dancer Oshun Bunmi, whom he married last November, Gaidi teaches at the Alafia School of Percussion, which is located right down the hall from D.R.U.M.'s new practice digs at the Midtown Art Center. The members of the band also created an indie record label, D.R.U.M. Music, a few years back, and on it in 1995 they released their first album, Ancient Sounds of the Future.

D.R.U.M. Music has also released Patake, a storytelling tape done by Gaidi. But it's the fuel of the drums that Gaidi and his boys want to pass on in their music. It's the sense that anything can be achieved from the standpoint of music as long as there is a good beat and you can dance to it.

"Coming from D.R.U.M., I would say it's universality," says Gaidi. "It's the oneness of all the humans on the [planet]. Because the drum is the only universal instrument on the planet. Out there, there are cultures in the world that don't have strings. There are cultures in the world that don't have brass or woodwinds. [But] everybody in the world has got drums. Because it's the universiology of the human heartbeat, and the rhythm of life." - Craid D. Lindsey- Houston Press


Discography

D.R.U.M's new single "Answers Dancehall" is #22 on this weeks (2/22/10) Billboard Hot Single Sales Chart. 4th week on the Charts.
D.R.U.M.- LOVETERALIGHTRUTHEALINGROWTHAPPINESS
D.R.U.M.- D.R.U.M. Live
D.R.U.M.- Africanexus

Photos

Bio

World Rhythm, African Rhythm and Reggae band, based in Houston, Texas. Perennial winners of Houston Press Music Award for Best World Music,Best Ethnic/Traditional, Best Reggae a total of 12 times! The band has headlined festivals nation wide and has been on the Bob Marley Festival National tour since 1994. D.R.U.M.has toured Asia,Europe and Central America. D.R.U.M. had its roots as an African Percussion Ensemble, founded in 1988 by member Alaafia Ifalade (nee Gaidi) In 1990, the group expanded to include Electric Bass, Guitar, Trap Drums, and Keyboards,defining it in its present configuration/incarnation.,