Skills & Experience

• Workshop facilitation
• Programme facilitation
• Basic drum technique
• Confidence with ensemble instruments
• Introducing musicality
• Introducing leadership
• Applying the Rhythmic Flow Chart
• Understanding the Workshop Template

Applications

• Kindergartens
• Primary Schools
• Secondary Schools
• Community development
• Drum circles
• Rehabilitation facilities
• Rehabilitation and self help groups
• The arts

School Rates

As an African Drumming Facilitator, you’ll gain access to our Schools and Educator rates with big savings on instruments. We pride ourselves on the quality of our percussion and very competitive rates, and the ongoing support needed for you to get the most out of your gear. We can tailor instrument packages to suit your application and bottom line.

I just wanted to send you this email to let you know how inspired and motivated you have made me feel about my Primary music classes after doing the training on the weekend

Tracy

Thanks again for a great day yesterday. It’s not often I get to drum just for the pure pleasure, and learn new rhythms, so we were definitely on a high heading home last night!

Megan

Just wanted to say that I have just had the best time this weekend. The African drumming Levels 1 and 2 were fantastic and very worthwhile. I learned so much.

Annamaria

Since first discovering African Drumming at a teacher seminar I have grown to love the simplicity and subtlety of the Djembe. I have my own beautiful 14” Ghana Djembe and have gradually built up my own set of 10” djembes for use with my Grade Five class. I have found that by including a few of the higher quality Ghana djembes with the more economical Indonesian drums, we achieve a much better ensemble sound. I have now added a pair of Stumpy Duns, some bells and Kiss Kass. In the two years that I have been using my drums, I have yet to suffer a breakage, and I look forward to may years of introducing young people to the joys of ensemble. My drumming group (which is generally made up of those students who missed out on the more prestigious ensembles) gave its first public performance at our school’s Annual Music Concert. It proved to be the most popular item on the programme and has lead to a series of invitations from the school, community groups and the council to perform.

Alan

The facilitator training was valuable to me, offering formula for teaching that accommodated both experienced and inexperienced teachers and musicians. We learnt many games and warm-ups (which I am still using today)- including body percussion and correct technique. Simon obviously has a vast knowledge of African rhythms, but his ability to break them down and notate them in a form easily understood, is what makes them accessible to everybody. Using his formulas as a basic structure, gave me the confidence to plan and facilitate my own drum circles with my students. With these newly acquired skills, I was able to formulate traditional African pieces by seeking out new rhythms and teaching some of the pieces from the vast Instructional Pack. It’s a lot of fun because we get to experiment with sound, to catch a glimpse of what it feels like to be part of something ancient, something bigger than us. There’s no way to describe the feeling, when we are all connected, in a matrix of woven individual rhythms that serve the unified purpose of a superior sound. I call it “being in the groove”. All the kids can do, is smile when that happens, and “Wow” gets said a lot ?

Leah