30 years banging a drum for women

We’re fundraising to commission a film to tell the missing ‘herstory’ of the women’s samba movement in Scotland.

Please contribute to make the film happen!

CALL TO PAST PLAYERS

WOMEN DRUMMERS WHO PLAYED WITH STIRLING’S BEAT THAT AT ANY POINT OF ITS 30 YEAR ‘HERSTORY’ ARE INVITED TO JOIN US TO MAP THE STORY


 Storytelling workshop: 1-4pm, Sun 24 April 2022 Macrobert Arts Centre, Stirling

Call to past players

 

BEAT THAT, Stirling’s women’s samba band closed at the end of 2021 when its Musical Director of 30 years, Erin Scrutton, hung up her whistle.

Now, A Quiet Revolution, a Scottish charity is planning to capture the band’s ‘herstory’ on film and is holding a Discovery session at Macrobert Arts Centre on 24 April to get a sense of the range of the band’s stories to help determine how to approach filming. 

Past players in Beat That who are interested should contact team@aquietrevolution.org for more info and confirm if they can come or want to be kept in the loop and contribute at another stage.

This first stage - the Discovery phase - is funded by Stirling Council’s Community Pride Fund, A Quiet Revolution and Macrobert Arts Centre. The charity is applying to Year of Stories for funding to run a second session at the end of July with women drummers from across Scotland to further explore their shared ‘herstory’.

“The storytelling, film and archive project aims to capture the unique and untold 30 year story of the women’s samba movement in Scotland exploring its legacy and impact on Scotland’s cultural heritage,” said the Charity’s Chair, Jane Alcorn, who was one of the founders of Beat That.

. “Through women drummers’ stories, we’ll share and pass down a unique slice of contemporary culture. We imagine the story will challenges perception of women, celebrate diversity and model positive images of women, LGBTQ+ people and disabled people. It will promote creative ageing. Macrobert Arts Centre have invited us to screen the film - if we get funding for it - at their annual Docufest in 2023, marking the 30 year anniversary of samba bursting onto the streets of Scotland.”

Part of the wider women’s samba movement?

We’re applying to Year of Stories to run an event on 31 July in Glasgow’s Tramway to capture wider stories from the many samba groups across Scotland.
Get in touch if you want to be kept in the loop.

The back story

 

1993

  • March 93: A workshop is held in Stirling for International Women’s Day. Beat That samba band is born: Scotland’s first (and longest running). Erin Scrutton will lead the band for 30 years.

  • October 93: 50 women drummers led by Erin explode onto Glasgow’s streets for the first Glasgay! festival, fuelling a women’s/LGBTQ+ creative revolution. The following week, 120 women turned up at Maryhill Women’s Centre to sign up and join in.

2023 

  • 30 years on, Erin has taught thousands to drum, leading women and LGBTQ+ people in parades, marches, celebrations and demonstrations, exciting and delighting hundreds of thousands of spectators across Scotland and internationally. 

  • A pioneer of community drumming, Erin has seeded bands across Scotland… Beat That (Stirling), SheBoom (Glasgow), Samba Sisters (Dumfries), Impact (Fife), SumWumminDrummin (Irvine), Commotion (Edinburgh) and led women’s workshops from Aberdeen to Wales, Ireland to Newcastle, performing at home and internationally.

WHY HERSTORY MATTERS

Too often, women’s stories have gone unnoticed and unrecorded. We want to change this imbalance by capturing this important 30 year herstory. 

Samba as a community activity has been a powerful contributor to wellness and creativity for thousands of women in Scotland for 30 years. They drum for fun, to express their creativity, work through their emotions and life’s challenges, form bonds, celebrate sisterhood, support each other, stand up for womankind.  

Many who never intended to perform have amazed themselves, taking to stages at events and festivals at home and abroad, growing confidence and skills, surprising themselves and challenging perceptions. Scotland’s women’s samba bands have led Gay Pride marches, Anti-War protests and Climate Change marches over 30 years. They’ve performed on TV, made videos and CDs, had Top10 singles with the Pet Shop Boys, opened for Elton John and George Michael at a London Stonewall fundraiser. Scottish sambistas were the first women in the world to perform at Barcelona’s Correfoc fire festival. These women have transformed their own and others’ expectations of their potential and been ambassadors for women’s freedom at home and internationally.

Over 3 decades, thousands have had a go. Women’s samba has grown to be a symbol for feminism, activism, inclusivity, LGBTQ+, appealing to women of all ages, women of colour and accessible to women with disabilities. Bringing women together tackles social isolation and builds community resilience. The rewards are massive for women’s health and wellbeing, for Scotland’s creative ecology and for broader society.

Erin hung up her whistle with a finale parade at COP26 in October 2022, retiring after 30 years. Beat That closed as a community group. The Macrobert Arts Centre plans to pick up the baton and continue the legacy. A Quiet Revolution, on behalf of all the women whose lives have been transformed by drumming want to capture its impact on herstory.