About this Event
6:15PM: DOORS OPEN | 6:30PM: PERFORMANCE BEGINS
Join us for an evening of drumming, spoken word and lyrical poetry in a new, improvised collaboration from Indigenous Garifuna drummer and dancer, Ronald Raymond McDonald, and Scottish Jamaican poet Jeda Pearl. Jeda will be speaking poems from her debut collection, Time Cleaves Itself, (and poems from elsewhere), alongside Ray's vital, ancestral beats as we call upon time, our ancestors, our bodies, each other in this shared space celebrating resistance, resilience and liberation.
Jeda Pearl (She/Her)
@JedaPearl
jedapearl.com.
A Scottish Jamaican writer and artist based in Edinburgh, Scotland. In 2022, she was shortlisted for the Sky Arts RSL Award and longlisted for the Women Poets’ Prize. Art installations include Windrush Legacy Creative Reflections (2023), Caledonian Biotech Library, 3033 (Scottish Storytelling Centre, 2022) and Acts of Observation (Collective, 2021). Performances include StAnza, Hidden Door, Push the Boat Out, Cymera and Edinburgh International Book Festival. Her poems and short stories are published by New Writing Scotland, Open Book, Not Going Back to Normal, Shoreline of Infinity, Aesthetica, Tapsalteerie, and her debut poetry collection, Time Cleaves Itself, is published by Peepal Tree Press. There will be a chance to purchase a copy of Time Cleaves Itself at the event.
Ronald Raymond McDonald
A Belizean professional drummer, dancer and singer from the indigenous Garifuna people of the Caribbean. He is a former performer for the Belize National Dance Company and has a successful family-run cultural drum and dance school in his home town of Punta Gorda, Belize. He now lives in Edinburgh, and in between working as a Porter for the NHS, offers Garifuna drum and dance lessons and performances.The Garifuna people are a blended Afro-Caribbean people who have never been enslaved: descendants of Africans from shipwrecked slave ships who made it to the shores of St. Vincent and there mixed with the Amerindian Carib and Arawak who had been living there before Europeans arrived, creating a new blended people and culture. Their history is deeply connected with Edinburgh: The French and British fought over the island, and when the British won, Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville, forced the Garifuna people from their island home in St. Vincent, and they migrated to Honduras, Guatamela and Belize.
Please note:
Verdant Works Museum is cared for by a charity that relies on donations and annual pass fees to remain open. Find out how you can at our website.
Whilst every effort is taken to ensure this information is accurate, mistakes do happen. Dundee Heritage Trust reserves the right to make changes as necessary.
Tickets cannot be exchanged or refunded after purchase except in the case of a cancelled workshop/event. Cancellations may occur due to circumstances out with our control or where they do not reach the minimum number of participants required. Events which do not meet the minimum number of participants will be cancelled no later than 7 days in advance.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Verdant Works Museum, West Henderson's Wynd, Dundee, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00