ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 2月2日 12時38分
Salvador in northeastern Brazil is famous for its Afro-Brazilian #drumming traditions. The internationally acclaimed bloco-afroband @olodumoficial has broadcast its colorful drums and pounding syncopation internationally for decades. To see that band — which is composed almost exclusively of men — perform live in the streets of #Salvador is a deep dive into the roots of this country’s musical traditions. But traditions change. Or actually, traditions are changed. By women like the ones that make up Banda Didá, a group composed exclusively of black women. “We’ve brought visibility to a group — black women — that have been historically marginalized here,” Viviam Caroline de Jesus Queirós, one of the band’s leaders, tells @ニューヨーク・タイムズ. The group is also breaking gender boundaries. “They used to say drumming wasn’t for women because the instrument was heavy,” said Jean Jesus dos Santos, one of the younger members of the group. “But we’re warrior women, and yes, we can play. And the proof of that is there in the street: we play just as well as the men.” @stephaniefoden photographed Banda Didá performing last month on the streets outside their headquarters in Salvador’s historic neighborhood, Pelourinho. #???
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