With
its founding in June 1988, the art of the 24 Festive Drums celebrated 35 proud
years of drumming this June.
Damien Leow opening the Coffee Talk with a brief introduction |
I
learnt that when the drummers furthered their studies at universities located in
the UK, US, Australia, China and other countries, they brought along their
passion for drumming and established drum troops there.
This dramatic art of drumming was literally
exported back to China when the drum troop from Foon Yew High School proudly
staged a performance of the 24 Festive Drums at Teochew City and Beijing in
China on their first visit there in 2008.
Facade of the Permaisuri Zarith Sofiah Opera House in Johor Baru |
This performing art continued to be actively promoted by younger
generation drummers and professional drum troops like HANDS Percussion, Orang
Orang Drum Theatre and the JB Drums.
I was privileged to document the art of the 24 Festive Drums in My Johor Stories 3: Proudly
Johor, Then and Now,
among the brands that were proudly established in Johor, spread nationwide and then
exported abroad.
Under
the Downtown Johor Baru Grants Programme: Arts, Heritage and Culture provided
by Think City and supported by Iskandar Regional Development Authority and the
JB City Council, the Drum Up JB! shows, a collaboration between JB Drums
and Orang Orang Drum Theatre, were presented at the Permaisuri Zarith Sofiah
Opera House.
The audience waiting for the Drum Up JB! show to start for the 8pm show |
To
commemorate the 35th anniversary of the 24 Festive Drums, a number
of activities planned for the celebration weekend of June 17 & 18, included
a 24 Festive Drums Workshop, a Drum Up JB! Photography Exhibition and a 24
Festive Installation Art By Artbaiduren.
On
Sunday, June 18, there was a 24 Festive Drums Guided Walk with a tour of the
Museum of the 24 Festive Drums and two sessions of Drum Up JB Coffee Talk
that were held at YSpace, Johor Baru.
Mohd Shahril speaking at the Coffee Talk |
They
were Tan Chai Puan also known as Xiao Man, co-founder of the 24 Festive Drums,
Indian classical dance virtuoso in the art of Bharatanatyam, Ajith Bhaskar of
Suvarna Fine Arts, and Mohd Shahril Abd Manan, Programme Manager with Think
City Johor Baru.
This
Coffee Talk aimed to discuss how the staging of Drum Up JB! shows impacted audience
members from our multi-cultural community and to share ideas on how to develop
the cultural scene in our city.
The original illustration by Tan Chai Puan was screened as a backdrop for a segment of the show |
In
my second viewing, I saw that a storyline was woven into the flow in an
interesting biopic narrative that showcased the origin of the art of the 24
Festive Drums.
I
was impressed with the clever use of lighting and I liked the screening on the
backdrop, particularly in the segment where the original illustration by Tan
Chai Puan that depicted the artistic pose of a drummer was screened as the
backdrop while the outline of nine drummers were portrayed in silhouette.
Ajith speaking at the Coffee Talk |
Incidentally,
Tan and Ajith were acknowledged for their contribution to the Arts by the
Iskandar Malaysia Social Heroes Awards (IMSHA), and I had the pleasure to
document each of their stories under Portraits in my 2017 MPH Non-Fiction
Bestseller, My Johor Stories: True Tales, Real People, Rich Heritage.
In
our Talk, Tan was pleased to share relevant info on how data on the number of
drum troops and drummers were collated from a social media application since
2018.
In
Malaysia alone, there were over 300 drum troops with more than 30 drum troops
based in universities while drum troops were also established in primary and
secondary schools.
Facade of the Permaisuri Zarith Sofiah Opera House by night |
Ajith
said that the performing arts community must have its own eco-system to sustain
interest and develop future generations of artistes and performers.
While
Suvarna Fine Arts train young people and build the next generation of artistes,
they also work hard at developing a succession of performers through personal
engagement among a network of students, parents and friends.
Tan Chai Puan speaking at the Coffee Talk |
Ajith
applauded the Chinese schools which has an Art curriculum in place, something which
is sadly lacking in Tamil schools and National schools here.
This,
he observed, was probably why youths lacked the exposure and opportunity to
develop their passion for the Arts, unless their parents arranged for separate
classes outside of school.
He
shared from his 30 years of experience in Suvarna Fine Arts, with more than 27
years of teaching and performing in Johor Baru, with all the struggles from
seeking a suitable venue, how they were forced to work in isolation, to the
lack of recognition of their artistic value.
Ajith
highlighted the need to make a distinction between theatre performances vs
public entertainment and that Tourism cannot be lumped together with Art &
Culture because serious theatre productions are not the same as shows for
tourism promotion.
Entrance to the Permaisuri Zarith Sofia Opera House in Johor Baru |
They
lamented the absence of an active JSPA and the driving force behind it, the
late Suzie Yap and her husband, Yap Siong Cheng, who worked hard at bringing a
wide range of live shows, both free and ticketed, to this city.
I had
the privilege to pay my tribute to the Yaps and their work in JSPA, in a piece published
in My Johor Stories 3: Proudly Johor, Then and Now, the third and final
instalment of My Johor Stories.
“Art
is not cheap!” declared Shahril as the speakers discussed the lack of
theatre-going culture in our community and the issue on why the audience often
arrived late for the start of the shows.
Having
supported a host of art, culture and heritage events, Think City is well aware
of the costs involved in presenting a live show or event.
The
organisers needed to find out why the audience was arriving late and must
address the issues as they lay down the ground rules to deal with the late
arrivals.
Logo for the Johor Society for the Performing Arts |
The
Coffee Talk closed with a general consensus that this city needed a reboot of
the Johor Arts Festival in a two-way engagement to develop administrative
skills in production management and as a platform for applying and acquiring
the funding.
Shahril
suggested to learn from the experience of other creative cities and to seek
opportunities to collaborate with other artistes.
To
create more interest in Drum Up JB!, Shahril proposed that they reached out to
students and parents through schools in weekend cultural exploration events and
to corporate groups through promoting the show packaged with hotel stays.
Ajith
shared that the Indian arts community here knew very little about Drum Up JB!
and proposed that they reached out personally to Indian arts organisations,
community leaders, temple presidents and other organised groups.
Tan
gave an example where a lady in Singapore used WhatsApp to connect with art,
culture and heritage groups or personalities, and kept everyone regularly
informed of the activities that was happening in the city.
He
said that the Southern University has created a similar WhatsApp chat group and
was keeping the art, culture and heritage community in JB and Singapore
connected and updated with relevant info.
Borrowing
the same concept, Tan proposed to create a landing page in multi-language to
let the art, culture and heritage community here stay connected and well
informed.
Lim Yi Kai [third from Left] with Ajith [Centre] and friends at Suvarna Fine Arts |
I
could hear the pride in his voice because this was a classic example of a healthy
cross-cultural exchange and how each race group here may collaborate to create
something very special together.
Fast-forward
to Wednesday night when I received a WhatsApp message from Lim Yi Kai of JB
Drums.
“Tonight,
we had a practice session with Ajith,” was the caption he sent with the photo.
I trust
this was the start of an exciting collaboration, a smart initiative by these
talented artistes in JB.
The
dates for the following bi-monthly Drum shows are scheduled at
2pm and 8pm for
Saturday, August 12, October
14 and December 30 for drumming enthusiasts
to plan their trips and enjoy a spectacular live show at the Opera House in
Johor.
Tickets
are
available from https://www.cloudjoi.com/buy/mic1ja
Note:
The trilogy of My Johor Stories books is available from MPH bookstores
nationwide and online from mphonline. In Johor Baru, my books are available
from JARO and YSpace.