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History told by Peru Negro

DANCE

March 14, 2008|Anne-Marie O'Connor, Times Staff Writer

Peru's Roman Catholic Church once frowned on the zamacueca, a seductive courtship dance performed by African slaves, but today it lives on in the whirling sensuality of the celebrated national dance of Peru, the marinera.

When Peruvian authorities outlawed African drums, fearing they could be used to organize slave uprisings, slaves turned to the heavy wooden boxes of cargo they carried, and in 2001 the cajon, or "big box" drum, was declared a Cultural Heritage of the Nation.


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The stubborn survival of Afro-Peruvian music that such facts illustrate makes Peru Negro, which will be appearing at UCLA's Royce Hall on Saturday night, more than just a Grammy-nominated Peruvian music and dance ensemble. It's a celebration of the triumph of those performing arts over disapproval, disdain and disenfranchisement.

"We are showcasing the roots of a cultural heritage that has been forgotten or ignored," says the group's manager and producer, Juan Morillo. "The rhythms are borrowed or handed down from an African tradition, in a form that is uniquely Peruvian."

Peru Negro's new album, "Zamba Malato," is a collection of the kind of Peruvian songs chanted and sung by slaves as they worked, a genre that Peru Negro (Black Peru) helped to usher onto the world stage.

Royce Hall, in fact, played a role in that when it hosted the group's first U.S. show in 2001, says Rony Campos, its current artistic director and the son of one of its founders.

"That show was our calling card," Campos says. "Our objective was to show the world that there were Afro-Peruvians, with unique traditions. Now we have an international audience."

Live Afro-Peruvian music is almost narcotic. Multiple cajon drummers pound out elegantly layered rhythms; criolla guitar drives the swaying sound with classical and flamenco flourishes. Dancers, traditionally male, challenge each other to elaborate duels of zapateo, or tap dance. But on this tour, women are stepping up.

"It was a challenge to tradition," Campos says. "Women have always known how to tap-dance very skillfully in Peru, but they haven't been used as performers. Why not?"

Indeed, recognition for Afro-Peruvian music and dance alike is relatively recent. Many Peruvians still have no idea that the patrimonial marinera was fueled by a risque slave dance, just as people across the Americas remain unaware of the African roots of much of their rhythmic music. Peru's slaves arrived with the unprecedented forced migration of African captives, some of whom came with Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro.

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