Virtual Costa Rica: Turn your house into a Costa Rican club, music fest or concert hall

(Featured image from Jorge Drexler via Facebook. Photo credit @john.duran.969.)

No doubt, we’re in the middle of a nightmare: but one silver lining is that for a music lover (particularly an introverted, broke music lover), it’s a bit of a dream. There’s a host of Costa Rican and Latin American music to be had on YouTube, Facebook and other platforms as artists hunker down during the 2020 Quarantine. Here are a few:

  • One of the firsts artists on this bandwagon in Costa Rica was the extraordinary Uruguayan singer-songwriter Jorge Drexler, who carried on his March 13 concert at the Teatro Melico Salazar as scheduled – just without an audience. You can watch it in its entirety on YouTube, and I highly recommend you do.
  • Costa Rican group Buena Calle is performing its third-anniversary concert on Facebook tonight at 8 pm.
  • Costa Rican comedian and director Hernán Jiménez put his latest comedy show, Se Despichó Tere, on on YouTube for free during the crisis.
  • There’s an entire online Costa Rican music festival this weekend! The #SoloPeroJuntos Festival (#AloneButTogether) offers a lineup of musicians via Instagram Live including Debi Nova and Pedro Capmany. Basically, you can just start streaming at 1 pm Saturday or 2 pm Sunday; hop from musician to musician (schedule and handles below); go about your so-called homeschooling/working from home/reorganizing your sock drawer life; and hear a whole range of Costa Rican music. At least, that’s my plan.

  • The following weekend will see Latin America’s first-ever online music festival, La Unión Hace la Fiesta (best name ever?). You can see and hear Costa Rica’s República Fortuna and other bands from around the region.
  • And the list will probably continue to grow. Happy viewing, everyone…

I’m a writer in San José, Costa Rica, on a year-long quest to share daily posts on inspiring people, places and ideas from my adopted home as a kind of tonic during a rough time in the world. Sign up (top right of this page) to receive a little dose of inspiration every weekday in your mailbox; tell a friend; check out past posts; and please connect with me on Instagram or Facebook! During the COVID-19 crisis I’m focusing on slices of Costa Rican life that people can enjoy virtually during these tough times. If you see a great Costa Rica cam, FB Live, online class, photo series or other gem being shared from Costa Rica, let me know! If you want to learn more about how to support Costa Rica during the crisis, visit my COVID-19 section, updated regularly.

Day 27: A quest for the lost tapes of a music legend

My husband and I were strolling through the Costa Rican Caribbean town of Cahuita years ago when we spotted an unmistakable figure: music legend Walter Gavitt Ferguson, just sitting on his front porch. Costa Ricans tend to take close encounters with national heroes in stride – natural enough, in a country of five million – but I was practically struck dumb in the presence of this person whose voice had enchanted me for years. My fussing was out of place in the southern Caribbean, where conversations are mellow and steps are slow. It’s not a landscape that lends itself to big egos or dramatic scenes.

That’s why it’s so easy to imagine that don Walter, during the 70s, 80s and 90s, simply gave away or sold one-of-a-kind cassette tapes of his original recording sessions to tourists and music lovers. He never made copies for himself: he simply sent his work out into the world, one priceless plastic case at a time. In 2017, his youngest son, Peck, and world music aficionado Niels Werdenberg teamed up to ask the world to return the favor. Send a long-lost Ferguson tape to them, and they’ll compile the work into a digital archive, preserving Ferguson’s work for new generations.

By don Walter’s 100th birthday earlier this year, the Walter Gavitt Ferguson Tape Hunt had already rescued more than 60 original songs from tapes sent in by music lovers around the world. However, they estimate there are still many dozens of songs out there, undiscovered – and don Walter has forgotten much of his repertoire, making the missing tapes a crucial piece of the puzzle.

From walterferguson-tapehunt.mozello.com/

Want to help? You can: simply by sharing the story. You never know who might see your post. It might just come to the attention of another music lover out there whose memories, like mine, hold a lazy Cahuita afternoon and a brush with a legend. That person may even have a cassette stashed in a drawer that is just waiting to share the treasure within: that warm, wry smile of a voice, soaked in sun and rough with sea salt, traveling the world, ever dreaming of Limón.

Read more: http://walterferguson-tapehunt.mozello.com/join/. Many thanks to my old friend and massive Ferguson fan Tammy Zibners, who saw that I mentioned don Walter in a Daily Boost last week and tagged the Tape Hunt so I could learn about this amazing project. And here’s a little taste of that voice:

I’m a writer in San José, Costa Rica, on a year-long quest to share daily posts on inspiring people, places and ideas from my adopted home as a kind of tonic during a rough time in the world. Sign up (top right of this page) to receive a little dose of inspiration every weekday in your mailbox; tell a friend; check out past posts; and please connect with me on Instagram or Facebook! You can also find me churning out small, square poems on any topic under the sun (here on the site, on Instagram or Twitter). 

 

 

Day 24: Heaven is October in Limón

Ahhhhhh. Will you look at that?

Come October in San José, everyone’s thoughts turn to the Costa Rican Caribbean. Or they should. As rain soaks the rest of the country, the province of Limón often experiences lovely weather. And because it’s the off season, you’ll often find empty beaches.

It’s impossible to overstate the beauty of this province, especially the nooks and crannies of its coast. If you aren’t there today, then get your boost through the music of Walter Ferguson, the revered Calypso king from Cahuita on the southern Caribbean coast (you can find plenty to sample on YouTube, Spotify and other spots on the web). His gentle voice brings a smile to your face even as he skewers social wrongs. If you’re stuck in an office, on a clogged highway or inside your head today, take a listen.

Photo by Simon Dannhauer via Shutterstock.

I’m a writer in San José, Costa Rica, on a year-long quest to share daily posts on inspiring people, places and ideas from my adopted home as a kind of tonic during a rough time in the world. Sign up (top right of this page) to receive a little dose of inspiration every weekday in your mailbox; tell a friend; check out past posts; and please connect with me on Instagram or Facebook! You can also find me churning out small, square poems on any topic under the sun (here on the site, on Instagram or Twitter).