Friday, July 6, 2012

19 Cape Coast: Discovery of African Talent


Last night when I ventured out in the pitch black to collect my name bracelets from Koby’s mate, who should be waiting in the beer garden for me than the Reggae muso with the bountiful dreadlocks?

In some cosmic coincidence, Kingdom (yes that’s his name) just bumped into me! We walk together to the corner and who should we bump into (another miracle!) but his musician friend Wonder Boy (yes, that’s his name!)

Actually I think the boys are calling and texting each other with tip-offs as to my movements and ambush me, in a very nice way of course!

Another BFO (Blinding Flash of the Obvious) handsome young Kingdom was not chatting me up for my voluptuous body after all! He sees in me a potential UK promoter and publicist for their band!  

If Kingdom is shy and mysterious, Wonder Boy is not reticent in launching into the hard sell on his group of African drummers and dancers. I’m intrigued and, after collecting my bracelets, the three of us wander back to the beer garden for an impromptu business meeting.

The group of three drummers and two dancers (and sometimes Wonder Boy’s sister also dances) is called African Dance Theatre. The talented performers, who’ve been playing since childhood, are a sensation at festivals and gigs up and down Cape Coast with shows that include dramatic fire tricks and acrobatics. And the dynamic team also teach workshops in drumming, dancing and singing to school students and adults.

Like musicians everywhere they yearn to be discovered and get that elusive lucky break. The boys have been praying night and day for years for someone to come along. And you guessed it! I am the answer to their prayers, Heaven sent, direct delivery! Divine Appointment!

I am instantly hired as their International Manager and adopted as Mummy yet again! My mind is racing with ideas. This unexpected discovery, as an accidental talent scout, has triggered my latent fantasy of being a promoter! My networking instinct kicks in, as I mentally list all the people I know who could help the guys in a grand cross-cultural collaboration!

This is crazy and a little bit MAD, but Making A Difference often means suspending common sense and going with the flow. I say goodnight to the boys with a plan to meet them on the beach bright and early for a photo shoot.

So here I am at 8 am in the beer garden, slightly dumbstruck, with camera in hand and the boys show up, Kingdom and Wonder Boy and three others; Antonio, Patrick and Joseph, all with stunning physiques, dazzling smiles and heads exploding with thick black dreadlocks!

Just as planned, we hit the beach with the rising sun in perfect position and the boys strut their stuff, performing with power and passion for the camera. I effortlessly snap the most remarkably beautiful shots and take some footage of the boys drumming, singing and dancing. It is an enthralling spectacle that brings tourists and locals running to watch.

Our spontaneous photo shoot is surreal and could not be better if carefully planned and stage-managed! These talented guys really are naturals! They could take the world by storm! 

Over a big breakfast, they enthuse about their dreams and ambitions to extend beyond Ghana. I am fast getting caught up in their vision of global success!

The excited boys tell me how the newly elected US President Obama came to town in 2009 in the biggest event that’s even happened on the Cape Coast; how everyone across Ghana converged, celebrating with parades and festivals, how powerful jets blew the roofs off shacks, security soldiers swarmed the streets and how Ghana’s President, the village Queen Mothers and King Fathers and all the local chiefs laid on the pomp and ceremony and even built a ‘palace’ for the glamorous couple to stay.

The euphoric celebrations I suspect were not so much adulation for Barrack personally as rejoicing for the inspiring example that a once-disadvantaged black man could rise to a position of greatness through “the audacity of hope.”

All five smiling boys escort me along Obama Street, tracing the famous route, embracing the spirit of possibility, as they direct me to the depot and put me on a bus for Accra. I give them motherly hugs, heavy with a serious sense of responsibility that I am now carrying the hopes and dreams of these young performers.

I’m travelling on a big bus today, not a 15-seat tro tro, but it’s just as cramped as the wide-shouldered man next to me is solid as a rock and not giving an inch! I sit hunched for two and half hours and finally, bone weary and scruffy, end up at the fancy, air-conditioned Paloma Hotel.

No prizes for guessing what comes next: the hot shower, washing my hair, the lashings of skin cream and I’m civilised again. I spot a veggie burger on the Room Service menu. How did I miss that last time?

Now I am coming down the earth, not so much crash landing, as floating on a parachute, as I reflect on the whirlwind two days at Cape Coast. Apparently I am now the Manager of the African Dance Theatre!

If you happen to be bored and stuck in a rut, might I suggest a trip to Africa! Your life will never be dull again!  



1 comment:

  1. And what a Manager you make! Please get them to beat their drums over here in London!

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