Life in the key of ‘O’
Alex Coolman
Kurt Rasmussen hasn’t changed apartments in 18 years. Now he’s finally
moving out, and it’s easy to see why he waited this long.
Rasmussen’s Costa Mesa apartment is filled with drums: drums in enormous
cardboard boxes and drums in cloth travel bags and drums in hard-shell
travel cases. He has tambourines and cymbals, timbales and bongos, piles
of drumsticks and mallets, and seemingly every other device that could
conceivably be used to raise a percussive racket.
They are the tools of the trade for Rasmussen, a professional
percussionist. They just happen to be very bulky tools.
The reason Rasmussen is leaving, despite the equipment-shlepping required
to do so, is that he’s just accepted a job in Las Vegas with Cirque du
Soleil, the Canadian performing arts show that puts American circuses to
shame with its aesthetic and technical complexity.
Rasmussen will be the percussionist in the band for Cirque’s intricate
underwater ‘O’ show, which is about 90 minutes long and fairly
challenging musically.
‘It’s a combination of a lot of things,” Rasmussen said, describing the
program he will play. “It’s an eclectic mix of classical, jazz and world
ethnic influences.”
Ironically, the motivation for Rasmussen’s move is a desire to stay put
more often. He’s been traveling for years as a percussionist and musical
coordinator for Paul Anka’s band, as well as taking numerous side trips
for other projects.
“I’d been wanting to get off the road for a long time,” Rasmussen said.
“I finally just hit the wall.”Besides working with Anka for the last 10
years, the drummer has performed with artists from Sergio Mendez to
Quincy Jones and groups such as the Long Beach and Atlanta symphonies.
His music has appeared on dozens of records, as well as on television and
radio programs and movies such as the recent IMAX film “Everest.”He has
also been active over the years in the local music scene. Rasmussen had a
steel drum band at the Ritz Carlton in Laguna Nigel and a Latin jazz band
that played the Studio Cafe through the early ‘80s. As a teacher, he has
worked at Cal State Long Beach teaching Afro-Cuban and Afro-Brazilian
percussion.Most exciting for Rasmussen has been the experience of playing
in Brazil’s Carnaval, the enormous celebration that consumes the streets
of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro in the days before Lent.Rasmussen is a
member of the Brasilian Escola de Samba Vai-Vai, one of the drumming
groups that performs in Carnaval parades. For a primarily
English-speaking drummer, he said, membership in an escola (“school” in
Portuguese) is a rare and remarkable honor.
More surprising still, for Rasmussen, was the experience of Vai-Vai’s
winning the top award at the parade the first year he drummed with the
group, in 1998, and then doing the same thing in the following year.”It
was the best experience of my life as a professional player,” said
Rasmussen, who was one of 500 main drummers forming the escola’s
“bateria,” or core percussion group (the complete escola has 5,000
drummers).
Vai-Vai’s theme for the first year’s parade was “Banzai Vai-Vai,” which
meant that Rasmussen had to perform the group’s energetic 70-minute
precision drum routine in a chain mail Samurai costume -- all while
sweating in the tropical heat and 100% humidity.
“You’re judged on your songs, on your singers, on your dancers, your
floats,” he said. “Everything is scrutinized.”
For the competition, Rasmussen had his left arm tattooed with the
distinctive Vai-Vai logo, a mark that all the drummers of the escola are
expected to display.”It would have been dishonoring the school if I’d
have gone down there without it,” he said. “I would never have gotten a
tattoo otherwise. I mean, I was scared.”In addition to this permanent
reminder of his role in the escola, Rasmussen’s wrists are encircled with
numerous bracelets and colorful ribbons, each of which, he says,
represents specific honors and ceremonies he has experienced in
connection with his drumming.”These ribbons are all blessings,” he said.
“They have to do with Candomble,” an Afro-Brazilian religion practiced by
many Samba players.
But if the outward evidence of Rasmussen’s participation in Carnaval is
conspicuous, he says the experience itself was far more vivid.
“I can’t even explain the feeling you get,” he said. “They helped me to
remember why I even started playing.”Rasmussen’s roots as a percussionist
go all the way back to his childhood in East L.A.’s Lincoln Heights,
where he was frequently exposed to rhythmic Afro-Cuban styles of
music.”There was a park across the street where they would play rumba,”
he said. “I heard it all the time and I grew up digging it.”The love of
the drumming in such musical styles is what has brought Rasmussen through
his varied career to his current position with Cirque. Although the group
is perhaps best known for the complexity of its staging and the the
acrobatic dexterity of its performers, Rasmussen says the music is
something that struck him the first time he saw the show.
“The sound system [at the Bellagio hotel, where Cirque takes place] is
amazing,” Rasmussen said. “I really like the music.”
But transporting his entire life -- and his life’s gear -- to Las Vegas
is proving to be a bit of a chore. In addition to all the African jun-jun
drums and djembe drums that he has packed carefully away and the
Brazilian pandeiro that has its own hard case, he also has to transport a
few delicate and eccentric instruments like the gamelon gong he picked up
in Java.As if this weren’t challenge enough, Rasmussen has to cope with
the all the additional gear he has acquired through another hobby, one
that has nothing to do with his professional life: Rasmussen has an
enthusiasm for toy robots.
“It took me eight hours a day for three days to pack up all the toy
robots I’ve got,” he said, gesturing at a bedroom full of cardboard
boxes.
“These are all robots. These boxes.”
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