20/09/2016

Discovering poet Nayyirah Waheed


Beautiful words, beautiful ideas...





“you broke the ocean in half to be here. only to meet nothing that wants you. – immigrant” 
― Nayyirah Waheed, Salt




“you
not wanting me
was
the beginning of me
wanting myself
thank you” 
― Nayyirah Waheed




“expect sadness
like
you expect rain.
both,
cleanse you.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed




“remember,
you were a writer 
before
you ever 
put 
pen to paper.
just because you were not writing 
externally. 
does not mean you were not writing
internally.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed




“Someone can be madly in love with you and still not be ready. They can love you in a way you have never been loved and still not join you on the bridge. And whatever their reasons you must leave. Because you never ever have to inspire anyone to meet you on the bridge. You never ever have to convince someone to do the work to be ready. There is more extraordinary love, more love that you have never seen, out here in this wide and wild universe. And there is the love that will be ready.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed




“When I am afraid to speak is when I speak.
That is when it is most important.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed




“i knew you
before
i met you.
i’ve known you my whole life.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed




“there have been so many times
i have seen a man wanting to weep
but 
instead
beat his heart until it was unconscious.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed




“she asked ‘you are in love, what does love look like’ to which i replied ‘like everything i’ve ever lost come back to me.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed





“creativity keeps the world alive, yet, everyday we are asked to be ashamed of honoring it, wanting to live our lives as artists. i’ve carried the shame of being a ‘creative’ since i came to the planet; have been asked to be something different, more, less my whole life. thank spirit, my wisdom is deeper than my shame, and i listened to who i was. i want to say to all the creatives who have been taught to believe who you are is not enough for this world, taught that a life of art will amount to nothing, know that who we are, and what we do is life. when we create, we are creating the world. remember this, and commit.” 
― Nayyirah Waheed






Music: Siêm


This week's musical discovery: a lovely voice from Marseilles, South of France...


©siêm folknomade







Siêm ❖ 'Ana Wi Yek'
[ Lullaby On A Black Note Or 2 ]




Published on 28 Apr 2016
Siêm : voix | auteur, compositeur, interprète _ composition piano & exécution _ photo & artwork.
❖ tous droits réservés : Siêm ❖ FB : https://www.facebook.com/siem.musiQ/
TW : https://twitter.com/siemfolknomade TBLR : http://siemfolknomade.tumblr.com

-

The song explained by  Siêm:


[ My _ Almost _ Explicit Lyrics ] 

The prelude of this song is: this is not a song. 
this is a metaphor of U and I. 
ana wi yek [ lullaby on a black note or 2 ]. 
el risèla _ la lettre. 


The writing of this song began with 4 keys on a piano
​, an after​
 that invited itself over my w
​h​
ite notes, black notes footprints, then 2 words : Longing & Fragility. 

You & Me, Ana Wi Yek, the essential. 

Necessarily this letter could only be for Her. 

I refer to the past as the silence after the wave, then a letter. The letter. 

One that reminds me of her eyes caravan, which have so lived & wept too. A forgiveness on my promise. & life which gave us a time
​O​
n a
​B​
lack
​N​
ote or 2. 

To the place of the one thing that tells me : She. 

How I wish you
​'​
re still here. Forever. With me. 

You & Me, Ana Wi Yek. 

Then The letter. 

I speak of a love that has not bloomed. 

It has only existed. M
​y​
 chance. It existed. As rosy bouquet in your eyes. Lullaby On a Black Note Or 2.

--


Her first EP is now in the studio. 

--

Social media:



17/09/2016

"Rekindle the inner spirit"





Ken Loach and the impact of "I, Daniel Blake"


 Back in the UK in a few hours. Here is the creation that is always with me these days:


"I, DANIEL BLAKE" - OFFICIAL UK TRAILER




Published on 15 Jun 2016

The new film by British filmmaker Ken Loach, I Daniel Blake won the Palme d'Or at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.

Daniel Blake (59) has worked as a joiner most of his life in Newcastle. Now, for the first time ever, he needs help from the State. He crosses paths with single mother Katie and her two young children, Daisy and Dylan. Katie’s only chance to escape a one-roomed homeless hostel in London has been to accept a flat in a city she doesn’t know, some 300 miles away.

Daniel and Katie find themselves in no-man’s land, caught on the barbed wire of welfare bureaucracy as played out against the rhetoric of ‘striver and skiver’ in modern-day Britain.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/idanielblake
Twitter:  https://twitter.com/idanielblake
#IDanielBlake

--

Extract:




Published on 14 May 2016

The tale of Daniel Blake, a 59-year-old widower carpenter from Newcastle, who is fighting to hold on to his welfare benefits, when he spots a woman in a similar predicament at the welfare office, he tries to help her & the two kids get set up... leading into a surrogate family.

Director - Ken Loach
Winner - Palme d'or, Cannes Film Festival 2016

CAST
Dave Johns, Hayley Squires, Dylan McKiernan, Briana Shann, Kate Rutter, Sharon Percy, Kema Sikazwe


--


Listen to Ken Loach's acceptance speech at Cannes here:

https://vimeo.com/172302451



--

I'm writing an article about the impact of the film and of Ken Loach's work in the UK nowadays.

Reach out if you have any thought to share!

Cheers





Important call: Refugees are still needing us



An important call from the International Rescue Committee below.

I'm helping a team of filmmakers for their coming films on refugee camps.

Reminder in picture: photos by myself in Calais, in February 2016






-

IRC:


Upcoming refugee summits will be a failure unless world leaders commit to concrete actions


As world leaders converge at the United Nations for the upcoming summits, “Addressing the Large Movements of Refuges and Migrants” and the President Obama-convened “Leaders’ Summit on Refugees,” the International Rescue Committee (IRC) is urging concrete, collective action from the international community to take bold action to address the global refugee crisis.

Refugees and displaced people are the greatest victims of failed political leadership around the world today. In host countries and in the hands of smugglers refugees are at the sharp end of painful neglect.  We are well past the time for analyzing the status quo. It needs to be changed.
The fear of refugee flows - and the toxic political rhetoric of the last year - will only increase if refugees are scapegoated rather than helped.  Compassion allied to competent administration is a winning combination. The last year has seen extraordinary commitment by local people and elected officials - from Lesvos to Hamburg to Dallas, but also in Mafraq in northern Jordan, in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon, as well as in countries like Uganda and Pakistan.  Safe refuge for the world’s most vulnerable is right, practical and smart.
These Summits must go beyond stating challenges.  They must expand resources, modernize systems, update strategies and combat the fatigue of refugees and receiving populations alike.

David Miliband, President and CEO of the International Rescue Committee

Over 65 million people around the world have been forced to flee their homes due to conflict, violence and persecution and one in every 113 people in the world are now either a refugee, internally displaced, or seeking asylum. Given this staggering reality, concrete, actionable and time-bound commitments are needed to address their needs and modernize the humanitarian system to deliver better aid.

The IRC calls for bolder responsibility around three mutually reinforcing pillars: 

- More robust and long-term support to host states;
- State policies that promote greater self-reliance and solutions;
- Increased use of resettlement and alternative forms of admissions to other states?

The IRC also calls for 10 percent of refugees worldwide to be resettled over the next three years. The White House letter spearheaded by the IRC and signed by more than 130 groups urged President Obama to demonstrate global leadership by making bold new commitments to refugee protection, assistance and solutions, including increased U.S. resettlement. The recent announcement of the Administration’s intent to resettle 110,000 refugees in 2017 (up from 85,000 this year) is good progress, but remains a small fraction of the global need.
-

The International Rescue Committee responds to the world’s worst humanitarian crises, helping to restore health, safety, education, economic wellbeing, and power to people devastated by conflict and disaster. Founded in 1933 at the call of Albert Einstein, the IRC is at work in over 40 countries and 29 U.S. cities helping people to survive, reclaim control of their future and strengthen their communities.

Link: www.rescue.org 

13/09/2016

On parle de Banksy sur France Inter




Lundi 12 septembre 2016

LE NOUVEAU RENDEZ-VOUS


Nouvelle autobiographie pour Cherfi, toujours motivé. Premier roman pour une histoire du hip-hop américain signé Laurent Rigoulet. Les 100 ans de Roald Dahl.


et

La chronique de Stéphanie Cabre : Mais qui est Banksy ?

Pour écouter l'extrait : 
Lien : https://www.franceinter.fr/emissions/le-nouveau-rendez-vous/le-nouveau-rendez-vous-12-septembre-2016




12/09/2016

Words from Rushdie


Salman Rushdie on Saturday in Paris told Wajdi Mouawad that he didn't think books could change the world... but that they could change people. 

Books can change people, I agree! And films and music and art and performances.



Salman Rushdie au Théâtre de la Colline, Paris, Sept. 10th, 2016



I want to thank here Salman Rushdie and all the wonderful people who believe we can change and improve our world... Especially the wonderful ones I've been honoured to work with.

This included more than any other irreplaceable filmmaker Raoul Peck and multitalented musician and artist Robert Del Naja.



Massive Attack in Croatia, August 2016



Just thank you for all you created and for spreading the world...



-


En dehors de la zone de confort - De Massive Attack à Banksy : mon livre sur Bristol sort le 6 octobre


Depuis le 6 octobre dans toutes les bonnes librairies! En France, Belgique et Suisse :


En dehors de la zone de confort

De Massive Attack à Banksy, l’histoire d’un groupe d’artistes, de leur ville, Bristol, et de leurs révolutions


Editions Anne Carrière




Copyright / crédit : Robert Del Naja



Qu’ont en commun le Pont suspendu d’Isambart Brunel, l’acteur Cary Grant, le groupe Massive Attack, le plasticien Damian Hirst et l’artiste de rue Banksy ? Ils sont tous originaires de Bristol, une ville moyenne de l’ouest de l’Angleterre. Une ville marquée par une histoire riche et complexe, mais encore jamais racontée !

Marquée par une fortune précoce liée à l’ouverture de l’Angleterre vers l’Amérique, elle devient aussi un des points névralgiques du commerce triangulaire. C’est justement cette histoire qui va nourrir, de manière inédite et radicale, la génération d’artistes éclose à Bristol à partir de la fin des années 1970. Post-punk et reggae se rencontrent autour de groupes comme Black Roots, le Pop Group puis The Wild Bunch.

-


En retraçant l’histoire du groupe Massive Attack, ce livre dessine le portrait de leur ville, Bristol, dans une enquête qui mêle musique, art et politique.

Des mouvements post-punk et reggae nés dans les années 1970 au trip-hop et au révolutionnaire Banksy, en passant par les débuts du hip-hop britannique et la naissance d'un mouvement de street art unique, l’auteur interroge les destins croisés de Mark Stewart et son Pop Group, Smith & Mighty, Portishead, Tricky, The Insects, Inkie et, bien sûr, Massive Attack - ayant passé des mois à les interviewer.

En 1983, lorsque le jeune graffeur anglo-italien Robert Del Naja signe de son pseudonyme – 3D – sa première œuvre sur un mur de la ville, les DJs d’origine antillaise Grant Marshall et Miles Johnson, font exploser leur collectif, The Wild Bunch. Ils appellent rapidement 3D à les rejoindre. 3D et Grant forment Massive Attack en 1988 avec le jeune Andrew Vowles et connaissent un succès éblouissant avec leur album Blue Lines. Le groupe devient l’incarnation du métissage à la britannique. Et, à partir de 1998, Banksy s’empare des murs de Bristol, inspiré par 3D, alors que Massive Attack change de ton avec son album Mezzanine. Et la ville elle-même semble s’accorder à leur tonalité de plus en plus engagée, militante et révolutionnaire. 

Bristol, comme Détroit ou Liverpool, se met à rayonner dans le monde comme le berceau d’un grand mouvement créatif. C’est la généalogie urbaine de cette renaissance que nous propose de découvrir l’auteur.

Elle est allée à la rencontre des artistes de Bristol, interviewant pendant plus d'un an ses meilleurs musiciens, ses graffeurs de renoms et leurs proches. Du studio de Massive Attack au Dismaland de Banksy en passant par des galeries et salles de concert, de Bristol et d'ailleurs, elle leur a demandé de raconter eux-mêmes leur histoire et de revenir sur leurs inspirations, motivations, et engagements.

-

Journaliste depuis 2004, Mélissa Chemam a vécu à Paris, Prague, Miami, Londres, Nairobi, et voyagé dans plus de 40 pays. Elle a collaboré notamment avec la BBC, RFI et France Culture.

-

Lien vers le site de l'éditeur :

11/09/2016

On parle de L'insaisissable artiste #Bansky sur la RTS suisse




L'insaisissable artiste (enfin) démasqué?


Un blogueur écossais affirme avoir démasqué Banksy

Le graffeur Banksy est connu pour ses images-chocs qui dénoncent les dérives de notre société. Il a toujours dissimulé son identité. Craig Williams, un blogueur écossais, pense avoir démasqué l'artiste, il s'agirait d'un membre du groupe de musique Massiv Attack. L'interview de Melissa Chemam, journaliste et auteur de "En dehors de la zone de confort - de Massive Attack à Banksy, l'histoire d'un groupe d'artistes, de leur ville, Bristol, et de leurs révolutions", aux éditions Anne Carrière.
Forum, aujourd'hui, 18h00
L'une des réalisations de Banksy dans les rues de Manhattan. [banksy.co.uk/]
L'une des réalisations de Banksy dans les rues de Manhattan. [banksy.co.uk/]








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"Unfinished - The Making of Massive Attack" on YouTube


"Unfinished - The Making of Massive Attack" - the BBC documentary about the Bristol sound and Blue Lines - is now on YouTube...  




It starts with Mark Stewart remembering the release of 'Unfinished Sympathy' and then goes back to the Bristol riots, in 1980.

Blue Lines was then released in April 1991. In the meantime, you had a fascinating decade of creativity.

The main artist at the core of these events is 3D, real name Robert Del Naja, at the centre of my upcoming book.

See more here:
https://www.facebook.com/FromBristolToParis/


-

Film's presentation:

"Unfinished: The Making of Massive Attack"

Paul McGann narrates the story of how Massive Attack's debut album was made.

The story of the creation of Massive Attack's debut album, Blue Lines, which was released 25 years ago, to critical acclaim and commercial success. How the city of Bristol found a musical identity it could claim as its own - told by the people who were there.


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Link: https://youtu.be/cUlCGWHM4zE