09/02/2018

New Book Tells The Story Of Massive Attack, Trip Hop And The Influential ‘Bristol Scene’


My interview with Matt Catchpole for Essentially Pop:

Here Melissa Chemam tells Matt Catchpole how she went about generating the band’s mystique and why she feels Bristol’s history as a slave port is so important to shaping its music.

https://essentiallypop.com/epop/2018/02/the-wild-bunch-new-book-tells-the-story-of-massive-attack-trip-hop-and-the-influential-bristol-scene/


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essentiallypop.comepop

essentiallypop.com/epop 

THE WILD BUNCH – New Book Tells The Story Of Massive Attack, Trip Hop And The Influential ‘Bristol Scene’


Posted on  By 

Emerging from the Bristol Party scene of the late 1980s, Massive Attackhave been hailed as one of the most original and influential groups the UK has produced.

Now a new book seeks to lift the lid on the band, their home city and the network of artists and collaborators that broke through alongside them.

Massive Attack Out of the Comfort Zone is the product of three years’ work by French journalist Melissa Chemam.
Her book is drawn from a long series of interviews with Massive mainman Robert “3D” Del Naja and other key figures including Tricky, producer Neil Davidge, bassist Sean Cook, and members of the bands Portishead and Alpha.
Overtly political and fiercely uncompromising, Massive Attack is as much a multimedia arts collective as a conventional band.
Fearless in their support of causes like the plight of Palestinian refugees, inter-band rivalries mean members have often fought their biggest battles with each other.
Tricky left early to forge a solo career, while Andy “Mushroom” Vowles rancorously quit in 1999 after growing disenchanted with the dark direction in which Del Naja was taking the group.
Here Chemam tells Matt Catchpole how she went about generating the band’s mystique and why she feels Bristol’s history as a slave port is so important to shaping its music.

Massive Attack’s classic Trio – Daddy G, Mushroom and 3D
Bristol became a leading port in the slave trade in the 18th century, with thousands of Africans forced to make the difficult and dangerous journey to the Caribbean to face a life of servitude on plantations.
Due to overcrowding and appalling conditions on board the ships, it’s thought that half of those trafficked failed to survive the voyage.
It’s this grim history that forms the backdrop to Chemam’s book and she argues it’s been central to shaping the culture of the city, along with the more recent arrival of the “Windrush” generation of immigrants in the 1950s.
“Bristol’s past, its link with the Americas, the slave trade and the influx of newcomers from the Caribbean, Italy, Ireland and beyond, in the 1950s, was defining,” Chemam asserts.
“We could say artists are connected to their birthplace and origins in many cases, it’s true for The Beatles, as well as Nirvana, or Jean-Michel Basquiat.
“But in the case of Massive Attack, they put Bristol on the cultural map in a way few had done before then. The very dynamic reggae and punk scenes of the 1970s obviously helped them in becoming so unique. And the birth of their first album, Blue Lines, was very much nourished by a dynamic intended to bring these influences into their very new and British hip-hop style.”
What makes Massive Attack so special, Chemam argues, is that they’re able to assimilate diverse influences and combine them to create something entirely fresh and original.
“Not every Bristolian of the 1980s became Massive Attack! It is about finding alchemy between different elements, talent, a self-taught ethos, a vision and a good instinct,” she explains.
Massive Attack’s principal trio, Del Naja, Vowles and Grant “Daddy G” Marshallmet and gained notoriety in the mid to late ’80s through the Bristol partying collective and sound system The Wild Bunch.
Tricky was also a member along with Nellee Hooper, who would go on to be a celebrated producer and re-mixer of artists, such as MadonnaGarbage andBjork.
The success of Blue Lines was like a statement of intent, a clarion call, focussing attention on the burgeoning music and arts scene in the city.
Suddenly a whole wave of musicians from the area were garnering national attention – many with close links to Massive Attack.
Portishead, Tricky, Martina Topley-Bird and Goldfrapp – to name but a few – all came through at about the same time, garnering considerable critical acclaim.
Much of the music was an entrancing, eerie, hypnotic blend of punk, reggae and hip hop and a new phrase was coined, with the city rapidly becoming known as the capital of ‘trip hop’.
“Bristol was big enough to attract great collaborators, producers and vocalists, but also small enough to allow encounters and good opportunities.It was far enough from and close enough to London, connected enough to New York City.” Chemam explains
“Hip-hop and street art all emerged together in a melting-pot in the early 1980s, and were taken to a new level by The Wild Bunch. From there, a dynamic was on the way.”
Following the departure of Vowles, and with Marshall taking a temporary break from studio work during the making of 100th Window, Del Naja became Massive Attack’s de facto leader.
It was pivotal to the success of Chemam’s book that he agreed to cooperate.
“Of course, to me, this project was only worth writing if Robert Del Naja was willing to participate. He’s the heart of the story, both an artist and visionary musician,” Chemam says.
“It was difficult to reach out to him but once he received my message, he said yes right away.”
With Del Naja on board, doors opened and many other key figures in the band’s inner circle began to emerge from the shadows.
“Most of the 30 artists and musicians I interviewed were a bit difficult to reach, but once I did, they were all very cooperative and helpful. Especially Mark Stewart of The Pop Group, Neil Davidge and (street artist) Inkie.”

A former BBC journalist, Chemam says it was Del Naja’s political activism that first made her want to tell the band’s story.
“I have always loved their music of course but what sparked the book project for me was their show in Lebanon in August 2014.
“They highlighted the situation of Palestinian refugees in the country in a very striking manner, going themselves to visit refugee camps with a charity they have been helping for years.
“As a reporter on culture but mainly international news, I was very moved by the authenticity of their involvement. I looked back at their history and realised how deeply relevant they had been in defining the past three decades, culturally.”
Chemam argues that Del Naja’s activism bleeds into the band’s music in both explicit and more ambiguous ways.
Songs like Eurochild, Future ProofFalse Flags and Splitting The Atom are direct in their message, while others look at the challenges we face in the current geo-political landscape.
Hymn of The Big Wheel on Blue Lines is about looking at the world and wishing for change,” Chemam explains. “While the collaboration with James Massiah, for the EP Dear Friend, is about our post-colonial world and the tensions we’ll have to overcome whether we want to face them or not.”
Having now released five albums, along with numerous EPs, film scores and other collaborations, and with Marshall firmly back on board, Massive Attack remain as inventive and influential as ever.
Never far from controversy they remain a source of fascination for both music and mainstream media.

Massive Attack’s Daddy G (left) and 3D
A former graffiti stencil artist, Del Naja, has often found himself compared with another of Bristol’s famous sons, the mercurial Banksy.
Banksy has admitted his early work was inspired by Del Naja, but some have speculated that the relationship is actually much closer.
In a 2016 post, blogger Craig Williams suggested that the anonymous Banksy, may not have been a single individual, but a network of artists including Del Naja.
To support his theory, Williams matched the appearance of several Banksy works to Massive Attack live dates.
A year later, drum and bass artist Goldie, appeared to add further fuel to the fire, when he referred to Banksy as “Robert” in an interview with Scroobius Pip’s Distraction Pieces podcast.
Chemam, however, is roundly dismissive of these stories.
“These are old rumours, recently exhumed by people who hardly know Bristol,” she says. “British tabloids, The Daily Mail, The Sun, regularly use them to bring traffic to their websites. Banksy’s anonymity sells and Massive Attack won’t give these media any interviews.”
For the real connections between the band members and Bristol’s street art scene,” Chemam says you have to “dig into the story”.
Where better to start than with Out of the Comfort Zone?
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  • Massive Attack Out of the Comfort Zone by Melissa Chemam is out in the Autumn through Tangent Books

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Link: https://www.waterstones.com/book/massive-attack/melissa-chemam/9781910089729


07/02/2018

New book cover: "Massive Attack - Out of the Comfort Zone", by Melissa Chemam


My book cover:




Artwork by Robert Del Naja, or 3D.
Of course.


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More details on the book:


Massive Attack - Out of the Comfort Zone 
By Melissa Chemam



Melissa Chemam’s book Massive Attack - Out of the Comfort Zone discusses, analyses and presents the unique development of the band Massive Attack through a story of the band’s members and the group’s gestation in the inner city cultural melting pot that was the Bristol of the 1970s and 1980s. It is charting their rise out of the fairly inclusive communities of urban working and middle class kids, Jamaican, Irish, Italian and Asian immigrants that were particularly productive and mixed in Bristol, partly to do with the city’s closely intermingled communities and partly with its geography that meant all communities rubbed up against each other easily. 


Bristol’s youth of different backgrounds with a passion for music could encounter the interesting musical mix of punk, reggae, soul, funk and later hip-hop. Chemam charts this musical hybridity expertly through interviews with key Bristol musicians and scene stalwarts such as Mark Stewart of The Pop Group and The MafiaJabulani Ngozi of Black Roots, Graf Artist InkieRay Mighty of Smith and MightyTricky, Neil Davidge, and members of Portishead, Lupine Howl and Alpha

But central to this book is the unfolding story of Massive Attack, their art, their politics, their reflections on their own identity and the development of their astounding music that has been received and loved all over the world. The group’s creative driver Robert Del Naja is a key component of Chemam’s analysis and his account, through interviews conducted by the author and documentary sources, is the spine of this story. Together they for instance detailed the making of their groundbreaking album, Blue Lines, as well as the impact of their third album, Mezzanine. They also reviewed the coming of the band’s incredible collaborations, defining to their uniqueness, from Horace Andy and Elizabeth Frazer to Young Fathers and Adam Curtis


Robert Del Naja was also instrumental in developing the Bristol Graffiti scene, working early on, under the pseudonym of 3D, with Goldie and the U.S. Tats Crew and later with Inkie and Banksy. The story of Bristol’s graffiti scene is intimately linked to the art and vision of Massive Attack themselves and Chemam weaves the evolution of Bristol street art culture into the account with a researched empathetic knowledge and understanding of the scene. 


Melissa Chemam, as a French Journalist and writer, gives an outsider’s account of this incredible band and the city they still live within. Her account and analysis, using Del Naja’s memory of this story, really gets to the roots of what the music and art scene in Bristol has been about and how it was the background for the development of the band until their recent show in Bristol in 2016. Massive Attack were always unlike any other band in their combination of emotive music, art, social commentary as well as very unique shows. They also had such a huge impact worldwide that it is hard to deny their influence in defining a very unique part of British culture through the past three decades.


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Tangent Books 
Release: April 2018  > postponed to August 2018





06/02/2018

"Justice in Syria Must Go Beyond the Courtroom," ICTJ Says


For Syria...


ICTJ
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Justice in Syria Must Go Beyond the Courtroom, ICTJ Says

NEW YORK, February 6, 2018 ― The war in Syria rages on as the most documented in history, with thousands of photos, videos, and testimonies circulating in the public sphere and countless more otherwise accessible. This information holds enormous potential: it could offer paths to justice for victims and their communities through acknowledgement, the fulfillment of their right to truth, and of course through criminal justice proceedings. However, if this wealth of information is to be properly leveraged, those fighting for justice should broaden their focus beyond the courtroom and take concrete actions now.
A new paper released today by the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) challenges the notion that criminal prosecution is the sole use for documentation of violations in Syria. The paper, titled Justice for Syrian Victims Beyond Trials,” urges the international community, human rights groups and Syrian civil society organizations to use the tools at their disposal to pursue overlooked avenues towards justice. These include the search for the truth, public acknowledgement of violations, and laying the foundation for future truth-seeking and truth-telling processes or reparations process.
The paper grew out of ICTJ’s involvement with the Save Syrian Schools project, an unprecedented collaboration between ICTJ and ten Syrian partner organizations documenting the destruction of schools in the conflict and aiming to expose their impact and long-term harms. The project will host a public hearing-style event in Geneva on March 22 which will gather a global audience of activists, policy makers, international organizations, and more to hear the stories of those affected by the violations and affirm their dignity.
“The Save Syrian Schools project underlines the immediate utility of documentation,” says Fernando Travesí, ICTJ Executive Director and co-author of the paper. “Documentation does not have to be gathered solely for criminal proceedings that may or may not happen in the future. It can be used now to secure acknowledgement for victims and influence public dialogue about the war.”

Frustrated efforts by the international community

The paper examines the myriad commissions and mechanisms the international community has sought to use since the start of the war and how they have shaped the documentation process. These institutions, such as the International Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM) and the International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic, seek to document alleged violations, identify perpetrators, and hold them to account – ends that then become overemphasized by information gathering efforts. The paper contends that these goals should not be the limit of activists’ imaginations, urging them to collect and use information with other accountability aims in mind.
"Progress towards criminal prosecution has been slow and may not always represent the most effective path to justice for Syrians," says Nousha Kabawat, co-autor of the report. "We must imagine forms of justice that lie beyond the confines of these mechanisms and do work to support an array of efforts now."
The paper points out that many Syrian organizations are currently pursuing such alternate paths towards justice. These efforts may foreground the importance of acknowledgement of the crimes as a first step to alleviate victims’ suffering and open the door for them to participate in other transitional justice processes, which their experiences and opinions can inform.

How can documentation be used towards justice?

Acknowledgment is also not a step that has to wait for the wheels of criminal justice mechanisms to grind forward, but can happen now and pressure the international community to stand against the attacks.
Beyond acknowledgement, documentation collected now can support justice efforts in a post-conflict Syria. Information should be collected and shared more effectively among Syrian and international groups as a way to start advancing processes that will be crucial for the Syrian future such as the search for the disappeared and answer questions about property and civil status.
“We must not wait for peace to start the search for the disappeared," Travesí says. "We can use documentation now to map and protect burial places, empower families, coordinate national and international work, and provide psychological support to victims and their families.”
The paper reflects ICTJ’s ongoing involvement in the Save Syrian Schools project. The project will also issue a report on its findings on March 22. Stay tuned for more.

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Marx in America!



In Theaters from February 23rd...





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Condition noire : Conversation française, conversation américaine


Alors que les Etats-Unis sont en plein "Black History Month", l'Université Columbia à Paris organise cette conférence à la fin du mois :



"La Condition noire : Conversation française, conversation américaine"

Lundi, 26 février, 7pm
Columbia Global Centers
Reid Hall, Grande Salle
(4 rue de Chevreuse  75006 Paris)


Wall graffiti


Nous assistons à une intensification des tensions autour des questions dites raciales aux États-Unis et en France. Bien que des similarités puissent être constatées entre les deux situations, de profondes différences existent entre les séquelles du colonialisme français et la "binarité noir-blanc" aux États-Unis, née d’un passé douloureusement marqué par l'esclavagisme. 
Cette table ronde s’inspirera de la question posée par W.E.B. Dubois dans les premières pages de son livre Les âmes du peuple noir «Quel effet Ã§a fait d'être un problème ? »  C'est la question qui unit la diaspora mondiale et à travers laquelle se manifestent les variations locales.  Dans un contexte de mondialisation rapide et de révolution technologique, comment distinguer, comprendre et traduire les subtilités des expériences singulières et des nuances culturelles ? 

Cette table ronde a lieu à l’occasion de l’exposition « Black Dolls, la collection Deborah Neff » du 23 février au 20 mai à la Maison Rouge – Fondation Antoine de Galbert


Avec :


Patricia J. Williams est professeure de droit à Columbia University. Elle est également journaliste et signe une chronique mensuelle pour The Nation Magazine. En 2000, Williams a reçu le prix MacArthur pour son travail dans les domaines des droits de l'homme et de la sécurité humaine.


Pap Ndiaye est professeur des universités à l'Institut d'études politiques de Paris (histoire nord-américaine). Il est l'auteur de La condition noire. Essai sur une minorité française (Calmann-Lévy, 2008) et Les Noirs américains. En marche pour l'égalité (Gallimard "Découvertes", 2009).


Balla Fofana est diplômé d’un Master en communication politique de l’Université Paris-Est Créteil (UPEC) et du Centre de Formation Professionnelle pour Journalistes (CFPJ). Ancien membre du Bondy Blog, il a également été journaliste au service économie de TF1 de septembre 2014 à août 2016. Il est actuellement en poste chez Libération. Et travaille également depuis 2014 sur des projets de sensibilisation et d’éducation aux médias dans des lycées en région parisienne.


Gratuit et ouvert au public


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Lien : https://events.reidhall.com/en/?event=1517499256&utm_source=Paris+database-in+Paris&utm_campaign=3fb664dd63-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_01_26&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_51a93049cb-3fb664dd63-212108477


03/02/2018

...blossom



“And the day came when the risk to remain 

tight in a bud was more painful than the risk 

it took to blossom.”



― Anaïs Nin



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02/02/2018

American Marx


Our film is travelling to North America!
And so will Raoul Peck for the premiere mid-February.

I'm... still boycotting Trump's "Disunited" States. For what good it can bring!
But they are the response.

Article published by The Playlist:
https://theplaylist.net/young-karl-marx-trailer-exclusive-20180201/



The Playlist logo


‘The Young Karl Marx’ Trailer: Happiness Requires Rebellion [Exclusive]




Following his outstanding, acclaimed documentary “I Am Not Your Negro,” director Raoul Peck tackled another culture changing, and politically charged figure in “The Young Karl Marx.” However, he takes a feature film approach this time around, but the results are no less compelling.
Starring August Diehl, Stefan Konarske and “Phantom Thread” breakout Vicky Krieps, the film traces the footsteps of Karl Marx through the Socialist movement and founding of the Communist League, as it originated in Paris during the 19th century. The drama sees Marx teaming with his wife Jenny and industrialist friend Friedrich Engels to fight for the oppressed and spark revolution. Here’s the official synopsis:
At the age of 26, Karl Marx (August Diehl) embarks with his wife Jenny (Vicky Krieps) on the road to exile. In 1844 Paris they meet young Friedrich Engels (Stefan Konarske), son of a factory owner and an astute student of the English proletariat class. Engels brings Marx the missing piece to the puzzle that composes his new vision of the world. Together, between censorship and police raids, riots and political upheavals, they will preside over the birth of the labor movement, which until then had been mostly makeshift and unorganized. This will grow into the most complete theoretical and political transformation of the world since the Renaissance – driven, against all expectations, by two brilliant, insolent and sharp-witted young men.
“A few years back, while the world was going through yet another financial crisis, I felt the need to go back to the basics: The analysis of the violent capitalist society we are still embedded in, through these three young Europeans of wealthy families (Karl, Friedrich and Jenny) who decided to change this utterly unequal world,” Peck said about his inspiration behind the film. “And they eventually did; though not the way they imagined it. I am thrilled to be working with The Orchard to bring the film to the American audience later this year.”
“The Young Karl Marx” opens on Friday, February 23rd in New York at The Metrograph and Los Angeles at Laemmle Royal, with a national rollout to follow.
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American trailer:

The Young Karl Marx (2018) | Official US Trailer HD



Published on 1 Feb 2018
In select theaters February 23. Available on Digital Platforms March 6.

In the mid-1800s, after decades of the scientific and economic march of the Industrial Revolution has created an age of both new prosperity and new problems, a 26-year-old writer, researcher and radical named Karl Marx embarks, with his wife Jenny, on the road to exile. In Paris in 1844 they meet young Friedrich Engels, the well-to-do son of a factory owner whose studies and research has exposed the poor wages and worse conditions of the new English working class who operate looms, printing presses and other engines of industry that enrich their owners while punishing laborers. The smooth and sophisticated – but equally revolutionary and radical – Engels brings his research, help and resources to provide Marx with the missing piece to the puzzle that composes his new vision of the world. Together, between censorship and police raids, riots and political upheavals, they will preside over the birth of the labor movement turning far-flung and unorganized idealists and dreamers into a united force with a common goal. The organizations they create and ideas they put forward will grow into the most complete philosophical and political transformation of the world since the Renaissance – started, against all expectations, by two brilliant, insolent and sharp-witted young men whose writings, works and ideas were embraced by revolutionaries even as they were corrupted by dictators. As director Raoul Peck himself puts it, “Before they’d even reached the age of thirty, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels had undoubtedly started to change the world – for better or worse …”

THE ORCHARD FILMS

WEBSITE: http://www.theorchard.com/filmtv
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/OrchFilms
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/OrchFilms
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/orchfilms


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01/02/2018

Music talks


Life in songs...




Michael Jackson - 'Working Day and Night' live in Toronto in 1984






Nick Cave - 'Do You Love Me?'








"Our Deepest Fear"


Long, busy week. Intense, though joyful month!

Just a thought for tonight:


"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. 
We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? 

Actually, who are you not to be? There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone...

And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others."


- Marianne Williamson