04/02/2015

New Bristol sound: Discovering Young Echo and Kahn



Latest discovery from Bristol on the side of electronic music and dub mixing: Young Echo, a collective of interesting and thriving musicians performing all over the UK and even in France. 





Young Echo includes:

Neek, Ossia, Kahn, El Kid, Vessel, J a b u, Ishan Sound, Manonmars, Rider Shafique, Bogues

(alternatively/collectively known as) Killing Sound, Baba Yaga, Gorgon Sound, APE, Osamasm, Zhou, Rei, Sam Kidel, DJ Oasis, Spazz Money, DJ Snopa Troll, Supermarket!


Listen from these links:


See more on their website:

And on their soundcloud page: 


--

About Young Echo's record "Nexus":


Reviews

Young Echo 
NEXUSMaya Kalev , August 8th, 2013 07:28 on The Quietus 

It would be easy to draw parallels between the introspective and bass-heavy spaces of Bristol collective Young Echo's debut group transmission and the city's cult-worshipped trinity of Portishead, Tricky and Massive AttackNexus, however, is far more than a post-millennial take on 90s trip-hop. It's more like a lateral study of Bristol's musical heritage, drawing on trip-hop, yes, but also the city's rich sound system culture and its unique contribution to the dubstep scene.
A continual state of flux is one of the most exciting things about electronic music, but all too often the ongoing need for new material in a saturated field results in a depressingly reiterative feedback loop that at least partly explains a number of revivalist current trends, from house to R&B to industrial, which mostly engage on an imitative and uncritical level with their once-subversive source material. That's not a criticism you could level at Young Echo, the eight-strong collective of VesselEl Kid, Kahn, Jabu, Neek, Manonmars, Zhou and Ishan Sound. They may wear their influences proudly, but they're not enslaved to them, cherrypicking from the spectrum of Bristolian music with a critical eye plenty of young producers would do well to note.
Their shared obsession with the hiss, echo and crackle of tape is to be expected from a city whose many music scenes blossomed out of dub. But Young Echo manipulate tape's many timbres to a number of interesting ends. The antique crackle on 'Blood Sugar' lends its halfstep percussion and stoned, filtered vocals a languorous, messy quality. That same medium on 'Radial Sheaves' imparts a sputtering froth and splintery hiss that hints at a producer equally versed in noise. Mucky and craggy rather than tuneful, the 'Earth & Dust (Version)' interlude sounds like the dub of a dub, all shadowy delay and ghostly tape textures.
Bristol's trip-hop influence comes through most clearly on the vocal tracks. It's hard to avoid comparisons between Tricky and the spoken word vocals from Jabu's Alex Rendell on 'Slow Jam', but Rendell's more fluent, less self-important flow and hint of aggro attitude reflects grime's interposition between trip-hop's prime and the present day. And 'Nexus' may boast the kind of plangent vocals that Beth Gibbons admittedly rinsed to death some time ago, but they come packaged with a Shackletonian attention to space and twitchy, Peverelistic drum patterns. Massive, torpid bass pulses through nearly every track on Nexus, the upshot of lifetimes spent skulking next to clubs' subs.
Yet while the vocal tracks recall influencing artists fairly explicitly, the instrumental tracks are less specific, and more interesting as a result. Each song has its own identity, even its own subgenre, but it's nearly impossible to tell who's behind what. The barren, ominous 'Umoja' – the closest Nexus has to a dubstep track proper – could well be by Kahn, and the viscous daubs of mercury-like synth and stuttering drum machine percussion of 'Untitled #7' hint at the hand of Vessel. Excitingly, both could equally be the work of anyone else in the group.
As individuals, the members of Young Echo produce entirely different work and until now, have only released music individually, or as pairs and trios. Spread across a number of records, tapes and files, it's not always easy to pin down the connection between the eerie dub techno of Vessel'sOrder Of Noise, the ethereal drones of Jabu's self-titled album for Astro:Dynamics, and Kahn and Neek's raw grime. But Nexus, as the album art illustrates, draws lines between these points without quite revealing the factor that unites them – something intangible but fundamentally Bristolian. Young Echo's members have already proven themselves to be talented individuals; when they pool their influences and styles as a collective, they draw a musical map of their home city.
--


young echo


@youngechosound

Ishan Sound, Jabu, Vessel, El Kid, Zhou, Neek, Kahn, Rider Shafique, Manonmars, Ossia.


Théâtre ce soir : "La Maison d'à côté" au Théâtre du Petit Saint-Martin


 Merci à Yaël Hirsch ;)


piece.jpg

La Maison d'à côté 
Une pièce de Sharr White
Adaptation française Gérald Sibleyras
Mise en scène Philippe Adrien

Avec Caroline SilholHervé DubourjalLéna BrébanStéphane Comby. Décor Jean Haas, Lumières Pascal Sautelet, Vidéo Olivier Roset, Musique et sons Stéphanie Gibert, Collaboration artistique Laura Koffler, Conseiller artistique Tanya Lopert.

La pièce. Juliana est une femme brillante, un modèle de réussite sociale, une scientifique de haut niveau. N’a-t-elle pas découvert le médicament qui va révolutionner le traitement de certaines démences ? Ce matin-là, devant une assemblée de médecins conquis d’avance, elle engage sa conférence… Soudain au milieu d’une phrase, un suspens, une déchirure, un trou. La foudre vient de frapper dans le ciel tout bleu de l’île de Saint Martin… Quel est le secret de Juliana ? Que s’est-il passé quelques années auparavant avec sa fille Laura ? Pour retrouver son chemin au-delà des apparences, Juliana va mener, avec le soutien de Ian, son tendre mari, une enquête dans laquelle elle est à la fois le chasseur et la proie. Un thriller émotionnel, une comédie qui vire au drame !

« La maison d’à côté » aux États-Unis. The Other Place fut créée off-Broadway en mars 2011. Devant le succès rencontré, la pièce a poursuivi sa car- rière à Broadway jusqu’en mars 2013 puis en tournée dans tous les États-Unis, tournée qui se poursuit encore à l’heure actuelle. The Other Place a reçu de nombreuses nominations et plusieurs prix dont le Plawright First Award, le Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation’s Theater Visions Fund Award et a été nommée dans la catégorie « Nouvelle Pièce Exceptionnelle » à l’Outer Critics Circle Award… The Other Place est la première pièce de Sharr White jouée à Paris sous le titre La Maison d’à Côté.

Ce qu'en dit «Le Figaro» :
Interprétation magistrale de Caroline Silhol […] Un spectacle rare.

Ce qu'en dit la presse.
> Voir la revue de presse


Actuellement aThéâtre du Petit Saint-Martin
Du mardi au vendredi à 21h.
Samedi 16h30 et 21h.
Tarifs : 32€
Placement libre.



L'auteur
Sharr White fut découvert pour la première fois en 2006 à un festival régional américain avec sa pièce Six Years. Le saut jusqu’à Broadway ne se fit, lui, qu’en 2011 avec le succès de The Other Place. White fut élevé dans la ban- lieue californienne à Orange County. À 21 ans il s’inscrit dans une maîtrise de théâtre à l’American Conservatory Theatre de San Francisco. Très vite, il se rend compte que son talent est dans l’écriture plus que dans le jeu d’acteur. Sa carrière est longue à se dessiner et pour sur- vivre il est serveur pendant plus de 8 ans. C’est d’ailleurs en étant serveur qu’il rencontre celle qui allait devenir sa femme. Pour elle, il décide d’un changement de car- rière et devient cadre dans le marketing pour la marque américaine J. Crew. Malgré le manque de reconnaissance de son travail théâtral jamais il n’abandonne l’écriture et bien lui en prend puisque grâce à The Other Place il est aujourd’hui considéré comme un des auteurs les plus talentueux de sa génération. Quand on lui demande la raison pour laquelle il n’a jamais arrêté d’écrire il répond par une citation de Shakespeare : « J’ai marché si avant dans le sang que si je cessais maintenant de m’y plon- ger, retourner en arrière serait aussi fatigant que d’aller en avant. »
--

Africa: fraud and tax avoidance killing the ecomomy and hurting millions (Guardian)


I am just working on the issue myself this week for a French newspaper. More soon.

In the meantime, you can read:


Africa losing billions from fraud and tax avoidance

First African initiative to address illicit outflows says governments, multinationals and crime deprive poor countries of crucial services




A billboard reading 'We will not tolerate corruption' mounted by the leading opposition All Progressive Congress is seen along a Lagos highway on January 20, 2015. Former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, who was in Abuja last week urged all presidential candidates and parties to rise above the personal and debate the issues that matter.
 A party political billboard along a Lagos highway. Nigeria’s crude oil exports are often mispriced, according to a new report. Photograph: Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP/Getty Images

Africa is losing more than $50bn (£33bn) every year in illicit financial outflows as governments and multinational companies engage in fraudulent schemes aimed at avoiding tax payments to some of the world’s poorest countries, impeding development projects and denying poor people access to crucial services.
Illegal transfers from African countries have tripled since 2001, when $20bn was siphoned off, according to a report released by the African Union’s (AU) high-level panel on illicit financial flows and the UN economic commission for Africa (Uneca).
The report was praised by civil society groups as the first African initiative to address illicit outflows from the continent.
In total, the continent lost about $850bn between 1970 and 2008, the report said. An estimated $217.7bn was illegally transferred out of Nigeria over that period, while Egypt lost $105.2bn and South Africa more than $81.8bn.

--

Read more here: 

http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2015/feb/02/africa-tax-avoidance-money-laundering-illicit-financial-flows


03/02/2015

London calling: "Mapping the City" at the Somerset House



 I'm soon going toward Bristol from London via Somerset... What's more natural than stopping at the Somerset House ;)?



Mapping the City

22 January – 15 February 2015
Daily 10.00-18.00 (last entry 17.30)
Enter via the River Terrace
Free admission

Somerset House Trust - Strand London WC2R 1LA 






More infos:


Somerset House, in association with collaborative arts organisation A(by)P, present Mapping the City, an innovative exhibition of works by established and emerging artists from the street and graffiti art scenes. To complement the exhibition, Somerset House and A(by)P are hosting a diverse series of events, including a series of film and music evenings, artists talks, performances and interactive workshops, all inspiring visitors to re-evaluate their own relationship to the cities in which they live.

The exhibition features works by over 50 internationally recognised artists such as Shepard Fairey, Swoon and Aryz, alongside rising stars from Australia to Argentina, Sweden to Spain and France to Finland.

Graffiti and street artists have an intimate relationship with the cities that they use as a canvas. They understand and engage with the urban landscape in unique ways – through subjective surveying rather than objective ordinance. Mapping the City will present a series of cartographic representations of the artists’ chosen cities. Ranging from literal to highly abstract, each map will be an individual response to the way these artists experience and interpret the places that they know so well. 

The artists selected by A(by)P to take part in the exhibition use a wide variety of media in their practice, from digital technology to illustration, paintings to sculpture, and video presentations to performances. Over 40 of the works were specially commissioned by A(by)P, with artists using their individual aesthetic to share their knowledge of each city’s secrets and challenge visitors to look at their own urban environments in a new light.

Mapping the City follows the success of the exhibition Futurismo Ancestral: An Offering to Peru by Sixe Paredes presented in the lower levels of Somerset House in May 2014.

All the artworks presented during Mapping the City are available for sale through A(by)P.



--

More: 

http://www.somersethouse.org.uk/visual-arts/mapping-the-city?utm_source=Somerset+House&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=5298033_Feb2015+WO&utm_content=MappingTheCity&dm_i=65V,35JZL,IRQ8OA,BAVS9,1

EVENTS hosted by UCL Anthropology
MAPPING THE CITY Presents: Mapping Through Discourse
Wednesday, 04 February 2015, 19.00-21.00
Free, advance booking required
An evening of talks by academics all working in diverse fields on the topic of mapping. Speakers include a neuroscientist, a geographer, and an expert in participatory mapping, all of whom have the subject at the core of their research.
BOOK TICKETS NOW
MAPPING THE CITY Presents: Mapping Through Making
Saturday, 07 February 2015, 12.00-15.00
Free, Drop-In South Wing
Join Maggie Li, illustrator and author of Big City Explorer to fill the room with marvellous 3D map making! Explore some of the most vibrant cities in the world in response to the Mapping The City exhibition and Maggie’s most recent publication. For families with accompanied children age 6-12 years.
MAPPING THE CITY Presents: Mapping Through Film: An Evening with Marc Isaacs
Thursday, 12 February 2015, 19.00-21.00
Free, advance booking required
A screening of Lift and The Road by award winning filmmaker Marc Isaacs, followed by a live Q&A with the director.
BOOK TICKETS NOW




"Eurochild"


With my Paris - London - Bristol trip coming up, I think about Europe, of course.

Powerful lyrics in this song basically written by 3D and Tricky about our "world", the European Union, the non union between people and stigmatisation of some.

"Eurochild" is the seventh track on Protection, Massive Attack's record released in 1994.

Lots of word invention too.

And first mention of the expression "no-go zone" in a song as far as I know:


"Hysterical, ecstatical no matter, call me stags
Hard to get a drink or a girl to relax

Upon phono, no go zone i go through
Aching awaits just to relocate you
Kill us with your fist
 
Now baby mix it with me
You see me function better when i get approximately
High by my technical flyby
I function better with the sun in my eyes
So goodbye"



Listen here:



Lyrics:


                                                       "Eurochild"


[3D]

Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted
Blessed by the drink
Upon the corner's where we've seen it
Chased by the plane it
Haunted by the medium
Too high to flow toward to break the tedium
Glow from my tv set was blue like neon
Activated the remote I put the BBC on
I've seen this city somewhere
I'm looking out for no-one
Pallor in my eye it get blue like neon

[Tricky]

Hell is round the corner where i shelter
Isms and schisms we're living on a skelter
If you believe i'll deceive then common sense says shall you receive
Let me take you down the corridors of my life
And when you walk, do you walk to your preference
No need to answer till i take further evidence
I seem to need a reference to get residence
A reference to your preference to say i'm a good neighbour
I trudge so judge me for my labour

I walk in a bar and immediately I sense danger
You look at me, girl, as if i was some kind of a
A total stranger

[3D]

Hysterical, ecstatical no matter, call me stags
Hard to get a drink or a girl to relax
Upon phono, no go zone i go through
Aching awaits just to relocate you
Kill us with your fist
 
Now baby mix it with me
You see me function better when i get approximately
High by my technical flyby
I function better with the sun in my eyes
So goodbye

[Tricky]

Take a second of me you beckon i'll be
And when you're sad i'll mourn
And when you tear i'm torn
Take a second of me
Take a second of me
I stand firm for our soil
I lick a rock off foil
So reduce me, seduce me
Dress me up in Stussy.
Show me and i'll stick em
Will you be my victim
Take a second of me

[3D]

Mad over you, mad over me, an analogy
Baby tagging up up all of my stationary
Sitting in my daycare, media dego painted
Colliding with the jam
Until the drink got dated
Window indigo when they go boom
I run inside my room
No sense you can trust me
Climb on my sofa
Roll in a daydream
Spliff make daddy go sleep-a-trip dream


02/02/2015

In other news: Nigeria ahead of elections - declaration from the Prosecutor of the ICC



Statement: 02/02/2015

Statement of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Fatou Bensouda, ahead of the general and state elections in Nigeria

On 14 and 28 February 2015, Nigerians are set to participate in general and state elections in the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Nigerian presidential candidates and political leaders recently signed a pact committing themselves, their parties and their followers to refrain from violence before, during and after these elections. I urge them to consolidate this commitment.

At a time when abhorrent levels of violence already plague parts of the country, I recall that the International Criminal Court (ICC) has jurisdiction over Rome Statute crimes committed on the territory of Nigeria or by Nigerian nationals from 1 July 2002 onwards. Crimes under the jurisdiction of the ICC have already been committed in this context, as reflected in my Office’s preliminary examination report published in December 2014. Further analysis is on-going to determine the next steps that my Office should take in accordance with its duties under the Rome Statute.

Experience has shown that electoral competition, when gone astray, can give rise to violence and in the worst case scenarios, even trigger the commission of mass crimes that “shock the conscience of humanity.” Any person who incites or engages in acts of violence including by ordering, requesting, encouraging or contributing in any other manner to the commission of crimes within ICC’s jurisdiction is liable to prosecution either by Nigerian Courts or by ICC. No one should doubt my resolve, whenever necessary, to prosecute individuals responsible for the commission of ICC crimes.

A team from my Office will be present in Nigeria prior to the elections to further engage with the authorities and encourage the prevention of crimes.





Déclaration : 02/02/2015

Déclaration du Procureur de la Cour pénale internationale, Mme Fatou Bensouda, en amont des élections générales au Nigéria et au niveau de ses États

Les 14 et 28 février 2015, les Nigérians seront appelés à se rendre aux urnes dans le cadre des élections générales de la République fédérale du Nigéria et de celles qui vont se tenir à l’échelle des États qui la composent. Les candidats à la présidence et les dirigeants politiques ont tout récemment signé un pacte de non-violence les engageant personnellement, ainsi que leur parti et leurs partisans, à s’abstenir de toute violence et ce avant, pendant ou après les élections. Je les prie instamment de renforcer cet engagement.

Alors qu’actuellement, certaines régions de ce pays sont déjà en proie à des violences ignobles, je tiens à rappeler que la Cour pénale internationale (la « CPI ») est compétente pour connaître des crimes visés par le Statut de Rome commis sur le territoire nigérian ou par les ressortissants de ce pays à compter du 1er juillet 2002. Il ressort de mon rapport sur l’examen préliminaire de la situation, que mon Bureau a publié en décembre 2014, que des crimes relevant de la compétence de la CPI ont déjà été commis dans ce contexte. Mon Bureau poursuit actuellement son analyse afin de déterminer quelle sera la prochaine marche à suivre conformément aux obligations que lui impose le Statut de Rome.

L’expérience a montré que des violences et, dans le pire des cas, des crimes à grande échelle qui « heurtent la conscience humaine » peuvent malheureusement survenir au cours de processus électoraux dévoyés. Toute personne qui incite à commettre des actes de violence, ou qui y prend part, notamment en ordonnant, sollicitant, encourageant la commission de crimes relevant de la compétence de la CPI, ou en y contribuant de toute autre manière, sera passible de poursuites devant des tribunaux nigérians ou la CPI. Personne ne doit douter de ma détermination, si besoin était, à poursuivre les responsables de tels crimes.

Des membres du Bureau se rendront au Nigéria en amont des élections pour s’entretenir avec les représentants des autorités du pays et encourager à renforcer la prévention de crimes.



Why Bristol? An insight into the Bristol pound


 Hello.

For those who wonder why I'm going to Bristol and not, let's say, Nigeria where I really wanted to travel ahead of crucial elections, well apart from the Nigerian government's blockade of journalists' visas...

(see here: http://news.yahoo.com/nigerian-govt-blocking-journalist-visas-main-opposition-231229307.html)

... apart from the huge cost of travelling to Nigeria from Paris no newsroom would help supporting,
I'm also willing to prove to myself as well as to fellow journalists and to chief editors that it is actually possible to cover positive stories.

In Europe, yes, in England especially, but also in Nigeria! And anywhere in Africa.

Thus, I'll be in England, my country at heart, my second home, intellectually and socially awakening home, where I spent two wonderful years of my life, in and out, between May 2009 and August 2012.

Now a few facts about Bristol.

As the lovely man in the following video states, Chris Sunderland, director of the Bristol Pound project, "Bristol prides itself on being slightly unorthodox, slightly edgy". Two centuries ago, "we even had our own time"!! Yes. And now the city has its local currency:


What is the Bristol Pound?

Bristol Pounds stick to Bristol, build community connections and work for people not banks to create fairer, stronger, happier local economy.

Love Bristol. Go Local.

The Bristol Pound is the UK’s first city wide local currency, the first to have electronic accounts managed by a regulated financial institution, and the first that can be used to pay some local taxes.
The Bristol Pound is run as a partnership between the Bristol Pound Community Interest Company and Bristol Credit Union. It is  a not-for-profit social enterprise.

More on the video: 





The Story of the Bristol Pound





By Chris Sunderland, Bristol Pound and Real Economy Director

What would it be like if we did a local currency at scale, across a whole city? What would it be like if we had an
electronic means of exchange as well as a paper currency?
These were the two questions which the Bristol Pound set
out to answer. The Transition movement was booming
across the world at that time and everyone was aware that serious changes had to be made, not only to our individual lifestyles, but also to the very structure of our economies. We had benefited here in the UK from some brave experiments. Totnes, Lewes, Brixton and Stroud had all launched a paper currency. They had proved that these systems could attract attention to local traders, but we wanted to explore the possibility of creating systemic change, truly benefiting the local economy by means of the local multiplier effect and for that there was a need to step up in scale.

--

More soon! 

All the world's a stage



All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages. At first, the infant,
Mewling and puking in the nurse's arms.

Then the whining schoolboy, with his satchel
And shining morning face, creeping like snail
Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,
Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad
Made to his mistress' eyebrow. Then a soldier,
Full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard,
Jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel,
Seeking the bubble reputation
Even in the cannon's mouth. And then the justice,
In fair round belly with good capon lined,
With eyes severe and beard of formal cut,
Full of wise saws and modern instances;
And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts
Into the lean and slippered pantaloon,
With spectacles on nose and pouch on side;
His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide
For his shrunk shank, and his big manly voice,
Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,
That ends this strange eventful history,
Is second childishness and mere oblivion,
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything. 

01/02/2015

More on Bristol: Bristol Debate 2015



Bristol, part II, social and green event next week: 

Is Our View of Place Too Short-sighted?



Bristol Debate 2015

Wed 11 February 2015, 18:00-19:30

The Pavilion, 1 Hanover Quay, Harbourside, Bristol, BS1 5JE



 Publicity image


How much do we consider the long-term consequences of our decisions and actions around place? Can we make quick wins and still achieve long-terms success for people and places? Are sustainability and political and financial attention spans mutually exclusive?
The issues will be discussed by panellists, including Barra Mac Ruairí, Strategic Director of Place, Bristol City Council, Melissa Mean, Redcliffe Neighbourhood Development Forum, and Steve Maslin, Director, Building User Design
Chair: Sophia de Sousa, Chief Executive, The Glass-House Community Led Design
Join the debate at the event or follow it on Twitter with @GlassHouseCLD. Tweet using the #GHdebate hashtag.
This event is part of ‘To a More Ambitious Place’, The Glass-House Debate Series 2014/15 in partnership with The Open University and The Academy of Urbanism.
It is supported by local partners Bristol Festival of Ideas, The Architecture Centre BristolWalking Interconnections and Bristol Green Capital 2015