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Marcus Kreiger
Master drummer John Amira and percussionist Marcus Kreiger bring decades of combined expertise in Afro-Cuban and Haitian drumming to performance, teaching, and lineage-based mentorship, offering rare access to batá as a living language. Their work blends ceremony and deep pedagogy to explore rhythmic dialogue and spiritual depth. Amira, author of The Music of Santería, has spent over 50 years performing, teaching, and preserving these traditions, appearing with legends including Celia Cruz and Tito Puente, and instructing at The Hartt School, Juilliard, and others. Marcus, his longtime mentee, has served as Professor of Cuban/Haitian percussion at the Hartt School, a role Amira entrusted to him. He brings this tradition to global audiences through performances including the inaugural FIFA Club World Cup Halftime Show and featured music in 60 TV shows. Joined by Wilson Torres, percussionist for MJ the Musical on Broadway; a trio that appears together in a national TurboTax campaign.

LINEAGE & LANGUAGE: Conversations in Afro-Cuban Drumming

World
Clinic / PerformanceLive

LINEAGE & LANGUAGE: Conversations in Afro-Cuban Drumming is an exploration of Afro-Cuban Batá drumming as a linguistic and communicative system, presented by a foundational pioneer of the tradition and his long-time student, carrying the lineage forward.
In 1999, Afro-Cuban and Haitian percussionist John Amira released The Music of Santería, a pivotal work documenting decades of research and reconstruction that shaped the history of batá tradition. After 13 years of study under Amira, Marcus Kreiger now collaborates with him to curate deeper rhythmic vocabularies and rare patterns for an expanded second edition.
This clinic grants participants access to material seldom encountered outside of oral-based learning, offering an immersion in batá as a complex medium. While much instruction focuses on isolated rhythms or performance preparation, this session connects drum patterns to the vocal songs, prayers, and spiritual structures they reflect, illuminating both form and function in Afro-Cuban percussion.
Opening with a live batá performance, the clinic moves into a mix of demonstration and deep-dive breakdown – explaining the integral roles of the Iya, Itótele, and Okónkolo drums, dissecting the dialogue between them, and demystifying stretched tension and release – subtle rhythmic nuances between 4/4 and 6/8 that cannot be fully captured in notation. It concludes with all of these elements combined, letting participants hear and feel the music through newly initiated ears.
Presenting this clinic at PASIC gives percussionists the chance to engage with batá as an interactive transmission of knowledge, expanding their expressive vocabulary in Afro-Cuban drumming and gaining practical techniques to add nuance to their playing. Participants will deepen their understanding of the spiritual context and intangible qualities that make Afro-Cuban music a living, speaking art — insights that can transform how they perform, teach, and interact musically.