09/12/2018

Bristol Cable: On Fat Paul and the Exchange, the "rebirth as Bristol’s first community owned venue"



My first article for @TheBristolCable !
Fat Paul and the Exchange’s rebirth as Bristol's first community owned venue:


Fat Paul and the Exchange’s rebirth as Bristol’s first community owned venue






For the past decade, he has been one of the key “behind-the-scene” players in Bristol’s music scene, and now building a new era at The Exchange.

In the familiar surroundings of Cafe Kino ‘Fat Paul’ Horlick and I meet to discuss his part in saving The Exchange, by turning it into Bristol’s first ever community owned music venue.
The ‘DIY’ club on Old Market is not the only music venue currently under threat in Bristol. On the way from the Bearpit, I pass Lakota and Blue Mountain on Stokes Croft; the former has announced it will be closing in the next few years, the latter the Cable revealed has been bought by developers of student accommodation who are registered in the tax haven of Luxembourg.
Keep going and you get to the Canteen – one of the few survivors following the saga over the future of Hamilton House. Just like Westmoreland House, whose demolition began on November 21st, the whole of Stokes Croft is undergoing a complete transformation. For better or worse, depending on your perspective.
“When I was living here, the area was still a nightmare, marred with poverty, drug dealing, noise, insecurity,” says Paul, who first moved to the area 33 years ago, in a building facing CafĂ© Kino. “It has changed… and is continuously changing.”
With change comes opportunity, too. The team behind the Exchange, who used to own the Croft here in Stokes Croft have a solution that might inspire others in the fight to defend nightlife.
In October, they launched a campaign to become a Community Benefit Society, a set up where everyone gets one share in the enterprise regardless of whether they put in £250 or £25,000. In this way all shareholders equally own the society and can have a say in how it’s run.
This is similar in many ways to the Bristol Cable’s model, whose members contribute a minimum of £1 a month to own a part of the co-op and steer its direction.
So why did the Exchange team decide to take this route? “We had experienced some difficulties with the council, in every way,” laments Paul. “I was working with Matt Otridge and Pete, and we were literally working all the time for free! We couldn’t afford to give ourselves any wages; we started running the venue out of passion only. We opened the Exchange six years ago in 2012, but it was never easy. But as we also needed the help of other people, we were aware of the fact that it was unfair for them…”
So something needed to change. Raising money, not from venture capitalists, but gig-goers and locals was the solution they came upon.

Bristol’s first community owned venue

By the time the community share offer ended on 31 October the 400 shareholders, mainly locals and fans of the venue, including a generous donation from the Fleece’s owner Chris Sharp, had raised an investment of £300,000. The new arrangement means that in January 2019, the Exchange will become Bristol’s first community owned venue.
The funds will allow them to make significant changes to the venue. Just as important to their future success will be a new ethos, or as the team declared after the completion of the campaign “the enthusiasm and ideas that our new co-owners will bring”.
Since 2012, the venue has been open almost every night, for gigs or charity events. But now the 400-something group will be able to bring in new ideas for events and musicians to perform. From January 2019, the leading team will launch improvement work,and a rebuilding of the stage, but want to keep it organic in the spirit of their newly formed co-op.

For the love of Bristol music

Music fan and drummer, Fat Paul is also known for his talent as a DJ. His sets are remembered for their lists of pagan folk music, from Tibetan monks to ritual themes, crossed with punk music.
Paul has also launched independent labels to give new artists a platform and free them from the regular commercial pressures.
The most successful has been Invada, created with Geoff Barrow, founding member of Portishead. Invada released all the albums for Dope and Barrow’s own band, BEAK> which he launched with Billy Fuller and Matt Williams in 2008. Paul is completely uncomfortable with the success. Invada is a label that is now “too big and selling too much”, he says.
To produce even more underground music, he launched the label Environmental Studies here in Bristol, which “doesn’t have to sell”, giving the artists no boundaries to their creativity. Documentary filmmaker Katie Bauer, who directed a film on Paul Horlick this year (named Dead Man’s Money), released her album Post via Environmental Studies.
2019 is going to be a busy year for Fat Paul, and the new owners of the Exchange too, as they struggle to keep up the good work in trying times.
“I cannot claim to own anything of the Exchange now,” says Paul, who still works seven days a week to run the venue. “We now vote all the important decisions together, of course not every detail every day or even every week, and we’re putting into place a new team of managers. We want the Exchange to continue as it is, really.”


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"I will not"



The sound of this end of the week...

PJ is, by far, the greatest artist in music this country has ever producer.

Bless her.



"Pig Will Not"







I, I, I will
I will not

I will not
No, I will not
No, I will not
I won't
I won't
I will not
I will not
I will not
I will not
I will not
I will not
I will not

Hunter the associator
He crashes high
Shakes the disbeliever
Woof woof
Shakes the disbeliever's head
Shakes him harder, instructing you well
Woof woof
Woof woof
Woof woof
Woof woof

Hear me you healer,
Your rubbish inside your rotting mind
Woof woof
I am your guardian
I am your fairy, do my will
Woof woof
Woof woof 
Woof woof
Woof woof

Shit lovers, this is true love 
That we're doing now
Your lover that was before, all broken
Your face all messed up
Woof woof
Woof woof 
Woof woof

I will not
I will not
I will not
I will not
I will not
I will not 
I will not 
I will not
I will not


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Live version:


 PJ Harvey & John Parish: 'Pig Will Not' (live)





05/12/2018

#SAVEHAMILTONHOUSE


A message from the Hamilton House, in Bristol's Stokes Croft:







Dear friends and supporters,
things have been changing rapidly at Hamilton House recently, with the landlords, Connolly & Callaghan, serving just 24hr notice on Coexist to leave the building - after ten years! 
This notice is currently being disputed legally but it looks like the community will be leaving the building on the 20th of December.
However this is not the end of the campaign to save this amazing community resource! One exciting avenue that we're now pursuing in order to protect the building as a vibrant community and cultural space is to encourage Bristol City Council (BCC) to purchase the building on behalf of the community and potentially use their powers of Compulsory Purchase to make this happen if needed.
In order to encourage Bristol City Council to consider taking this step, we've set up an e-petition on the BCC website. The new petition went live yesterday and within the first 24hrs we've already got over 1000 signatures, which is incredible! However we need to collect a minimum of 3500 signatures by the 11th of December in order to get the motion debated at the next full council meeting on the 12th. 
As you've already lent us your support by signing our previous petition, we'd like to ask if you could also sign the BCC petition and help us convince Bristol Council to purchase Hamilton House and secure the building for the community forever!
Just click on this link to sign (or copy it into your address bar) it only takes a few seconds and your signature could have a real impact in helping to keep Hamilton House as a crucial centre of community and grassroots culture in Bristol:
The 3500 mark is the minimum number of signatures we need, but the more we get the louder our voice will be in the debate and more seriously Bristol Council will take our request, so please also share the link widely on social media and encourage all your friends and colleagues to join us in the fight to protect this fantastic, inspiring community facility!
Many thanks to you all.

Much love.
SaveHamiltonHouse !




01/12/2018

Bristol sounds - New chapter: Zen Hussies / Talisman / the Exchange / The Play


Hello people!

I'll be in Bristol intensely this month of December, starting as soon as this Monday, for my work on a new and exciting BBC podcast on family, parenting and how to help those raising children, with advice & expertise from around the world, and the help of science & culture.
I'll be taking one of our two brilliant producer to East Bristol to talk about sport and discipline...
More soon!

Then a few days later, I'll be back for two exceptional concerts: one from the unique madly-folkish-puncky band the Zen Hussies; the second by the iconic reggae pioneers of the band Talisman.



Talisman - 'Relijan' 




TALISMAN ‘Relijan’
The first single taken from the new album ‘Don’t Play with Fyah’ to be released on CD, Digital and Limited Edition 8 track Vinyl March 17th 2017. Talisman's new album “Don’t Play with Fyah” is a revelation. Most bands with a history that stretches back four decades are content to go through the motions, their creative peak somewhere in the past, not Talisman. Their new album includes some of the strongest material they've ever recorded, with seven brand new songs and the corresponding dub counter parts; this is their finest album to date.


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More here soon.

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In the meantime, I wrote a portrait of the music maverick Paul Horlick, known in Bristol as DJ 'Fat Paul', who launched a few fiercely independent record labels, among which the brilliant Invada - with Geoff Barrow of Portishead's fame - and more recently Environmental Studies.

Paul also opened the venue the Exchange on Old Market 8 years ago with two friends and managed to save it from closure recently thanks to a new approach...




More soon in my interview with him on the Bristol Cable.

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And last but not least, on the list of the new music I follow, here is a special band: The Play, forging a new instrumental jazzy sound in between Bristol and Bath, between joyful experimentation and melancholic influences...


Their presentation:

"An exotic opium romance with a darker shade of jazz."


The play is the new musical brainchild of Zen Hussies and Bartoune guitarist Seb Gutiez.
Once described as “an exotic opium romance with a darker shade of jazz”, The Play creates a boundless musical space, where their original compositions explore grooves from different places and time, from mellow and atmospheric to upbeat and raucous, the whole thing set alight by heavy blues licks and driving melodies.
Seb's playful guitar and heartfelt riffs are propelled by the instantly recognizable sound of Bristol drummer Matt Brown (Dakhla, Modulus III, Sefrial ).
His creativity finds a perfect match with the driving groove of Tom Allen (Zen Hussies, Bartoune) on double bass, while understated virtuoso and master of sound Martin Jenkins ( Rhythm-ites, Freight) sets up the mood beautifully. There is an incredible alchemy between the four musicians and this great wall of sound is delivered effortlessly, whether they play a tight arrangement or a total improvisation.
Their first eponymous album is due to come out in winter 2018.


The Play - Album Teaser




Snippets from The Play's upcoming album. The Play is... Seb Gutiez - Guitar Martin Jenkins - Keyboard Tom Allen - Double Bass Matt Brown - Drums




The Play - Carlos (Live Session)





Recorded in December 2013 at The Bell's lounge in Bath (UK) The Play is... Seb Gutiez - Guitar Martin Jenkins - Keyboard Tom Allen - Double Bass Matt Brown - Drums Lejos De Ti composed by Seb Gutiez and The Play Filmed and edited by Puzzle Box Sound recorded by the excellent Nicholas Dover


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The Play's first album coming out soon... www.facebook.com/theplay.bristol/


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See you soon, Bristolians!!




30/11/2018

The Good, The Bad & The Queen - 'Merrie Land'


Song of these last days of autumn...

The Good, The Bad & The Queen - 'Merrie Land' 







MERRIE LAND

If you are leaving Please still say goodbye And if you are leaving can you Leave me my Silver Jubilee mug My old flag My dark woods My sunrise If you are leaving Can you please say goodbye And if you are leaving Can you leave your number I’ll pack my case And get in a cab and wave you goodbye I’ll drive in the early hours down to the sea I’ll stand on the beach where the storms amplify All the voices I care for And the ghosts I hold sacred In this alignment that lasts for a day There’s nothing that I can do anyway, anyway What am I doing here waiting for you So rebuild the railways Firm up all the roads No one is leaving now this is your home And the horses, the foxes, the sheep and the cows Bow down on their knees To the fanfare of progress it’s always the same We cheer on the clowns as they roll into town But their faces look tired and sad to me And carry the terrible things they have seen All lost in a painting of a sky coloured oil In this Merrieland You are my crows, my window rattlers Perfumed valley criers Oh the dark ponds of Merrie England The deep space echoes Get on your mo…. What did you say? Get on your mobilised hooters … Get hold of those mobilised hooters You can fly to the moon one day They are half price This is not rhetoric It comes from my heart I love this country Daneland I am your kin You were the ones who work together Put the money in the pockets Of the few and their fortunes Who crowd the school benches And jeer at us all because they don’t care about us They are graceless and you shouldn’t be with them Because they are all disconnected and raised up in mansions And two hundred plastic bags in a whales stomach So you turn to the trident Are we green are we pleasant? We are not either of those Father We are a shaking wreck where nothing grows Lost in the sky coloured oils of Merrieland You can fly to the moon… one day

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The Good, The Bad & The Queen



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And this nice event can bring more meaning to the song, the album, and the relation the musicians have with their England:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-46391087




Tea, cake and Brexit: What happened when Damon Albarn played a 200-capacity Geordie social club



28/11/2018

TALKS AND DISCUSSIONS: British Library - Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone


Dear friends,

you can imagine how proud I am to invite you to this event.
We'll show some videos from the band to illustrate the talk... 

Hope to see you there!

Best regards,
melissa


Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone




A new book on the band's story
Bristol was part-built on the wealth generated by the slave trade, an arrival point for Caribbean immigrants, and a melting pot that shaped one of the most successful and innovative bands of the last thirty years, Massive Attack. 

Journalist and broadcaster Miranda Sawyer talks to the author of a new book on their story, Melissa Chemam.
This event will have speech to text interpretation.



Image: Cover art from Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone by Melissa Chemam. 
Artwork by Robert Del Naja.

Details

Name:Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone
Where:Knowledge Centre
The British Library
96 Euston Road
London
NW1 2DB
When: - 
Price:Full Price: £12.00
Senior 60+: £10.00
Student: £8.00




27/11/2018

Bristol : une contre-histoire culturelle du Royaume-Uni ?



Annonce:

Je suis invitée par le groupe "Génération" du Royaume-Uni à parler art, musique et politique, en janvier 2019, ici à Londres.

Date confirmée : le mardi 8 janvier, à partir de 19h.

Lieu: East London

Pub The Gunmakers, 

13 Eyre Street Hill, London EC1R 5ET 

(salle Ă  l'Ă©tage) 

métros: Farringdon ou Chancery Lane


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Et quelques mots d'introduction ici :


Bristol : une contre-histoire culturelle du Royaume-Uni ?

La vie culturelle d’un pays est souvent la meilleure plateforme d’observation de sa vie politique… Dans son dernier ouvrage, la journaliste et auteure MĂ©lissa Chemam livre ses apprĂ©ciations sur la ville de Bristol et plus particulièrement sur le groupe Massive Attack. 


Elle sera parmi nous pour prĂ©senter ses idĂ©es lors de notre rĂ©union de janvier (renseignements Ă  suivre); entre temps, vous trouverez ici un article qu'elle a rĂ©digĂ© pour nous, en guise d'introduction.


Bristol : une contre-histoire culturelle du Royaume-Uni ?

Par Mélissa Chemam


La vie culturelle d’un pays est souvent la meilleure plateforme d’observation de sa vie politique… Depuis mon installation au Royaume-Uni en 2009, je n’ai cessĂ© d’explorer la culture de ce pays puissant et fascinant. Je suis revenue de manière plus permanente en 2015 – après des annĂ©es en Afrique – pour Ă©crire un livre sur la ville de Bristol et plus particulièrement sur le groupe Massive Attack. Pourquoi ce groupe ? Parce que comme mon propre parcours de journaliste, le leur les a menĂ©s sur quatre continents.
ComposĂ© de membres d’origines antillaises et italiennes, Massive Attack a rĂ©volutionnĂ© la musique britannique dès leur premier album, Blue Lines, en 1991. Une sortie qui leur a valu de temporairement changer leur nom en « Massive » ; l’expression « attaque massive » faisait la une des journaux pour dĂ©signer la Guerre du Golfe. Le nom du groupe avait Ă©tĂ© choisi en 1988 pour dĂ©crire leurs fĂŞtes mĂŞlant punk, musique soul, reggae et hip-hop de manière explosive ; il rĂ©sonnait dĂ©sormais autrement. MarquĂ©s par cette abdication forcĂ©e par leur label, les membres du groupe n’ont depuis cessĂ© d’imposer un son mĂ©tissĂ©, invitant des artistes d’origines nigĂ©rianes, jamaĂŻcaines, Ă©cossaises, afro-amĂ©ricaines ou irlandaises Ă  travailler avec eux, incorporant des influences turques, russes et mĂŞme mongoles Ă  leurs chansons.
Parallèlement Ă  un riche dĂ©veloppement qui a les menĂ©s Ă  un succès mondial  avec la sortie de l’album Mezzanineen 1998, les membres de Massive Attack ont approfondi leur engagement politique et pacifiste. Leur principal parolier et compositeur, surnommĂ© 3D, a protestĂ© de manière particulièrement forte contre la Deuxième Guerre d’Irak en 2003, un fait rare dans la communautĂ© musicale, allant jusqu’Ă  transformer leur spectacle en tableau de chiffres, donnĂ©es et noms documentant l’Ă©volution des batailles. Quelques annĂ©es plus tard, il crĂ©ait pour leur cinquième album, Heligoland, une illustration inspirĂ©e du passĂ© esclavagiste de Bristol…
3D avait dĂ©jĂ  marquĂ© Bristol avant de fonder Massive Attack par ses graffiti pionniers et adulĂ©s. Il est connu pour avoir inspirĂ© un autre artiste bristolien, le fameux et anonyme Banksy. Ensemble, ils ont créé plusieurs expositions pour souligner l’injustice en Irak et en Palestine, dĂ©signant leur pays comme l’un des responsables historiques de cette situation du fait de sa domination coloniale dans la rĂ©gion.
Une telle position est rare dans le paysage culturel britannique. Alors que j’Ă©crivais ce livre, le pays s’est enfoncĂ© dans une crise identitaire en lançant ce rĂ©fĂ©rendum sur sa sortie de l’Union europĂ©enne. Une crise qui a nourri une montĂ©e des extrĂŞmes et le renvoi de nombreux Antillais de la gĂ©nĂ©ration « Windrush », appelĂ©s de JamaĂŻque dans les annĂ©es 1950 pour reconstruire le pays. Massive Attack, dont cinq des membres de la formation de tournĂ©es sont d’ascendance caribĂ©enne et deux italienne, a exprimĂ© sa dĂ©ception Ă  Hyde Park en juillet 2016, et rĂ©cemment dans le Guardian. HĂ©ritage brillant d’un multiculturalisme complexe, le groupe de Bristol sonne dĂ©sormais comme une rĂ©ponse pleine d’espoir face aux inquiĂ©tudes actuelles.


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Lien: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1jj6g8aeLBoFqOzaX31KIrodkpTfL9t_eW8M1K7GtpLc/edit



23/11/2018

The Story a Sound, a City, and a Group of Revolutionary Artists...




Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone 
The Story a Sound, a City, and a Group of Revolutionary Artists

By Melissa Chemam





Dear book and music lovers,

A few words to explain the latest delay on the release of my book on Massive Attack and Bristol's art and music scene... 


This book retells the story of Massive Attack's roots, history, influences, friends, collaborators and many explorations up until today. It describes Bristol's history and explains its art and music scene from the outburst of punk to our days.

Through interviews with members of many Bristol bands, like the Pop Group, Black Roots, Smith & Mighty, Portishead, Alpha, Tricky, Martina Topley-Bird, Tracey Thorn, Inkie and other artists from Bristol... Interviews with historians and local actors, as well as artists close to the bands...
I worked on this project over the past four years.  

What happened in the summer is that the publishers suddenly decided that they didn't like my choice to write in the present tense, and I had to rework the text on my own. 

Luckily, in terms of fact checking, I received tremendous help from the artists themselves and I've now completed the work on the proofs.

It's now up to the publishers to send this text to print. 

They apparently cannot give me a proper release date but it should be early in March 2019, according to Waterstones:

As soon as I'll receive confirmation, I'll update the details on the book's Facebook Page: 



Book Presentation:

Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone 
The Story a Sound, a City, and a Group of Revolutionary Artists

By Melissa Chemam


This book retraces a journey into Massive Attack’s multicultural history. Influenced by the underground reggae and punk scenes, the band members gave birth to a new form of sound and urban art movements, selling over 13 million albums.

Known as a graffiti artist under the tag 3D, from 1983, Robert Del Naja was the first of a group of underground writers to come out of Bristol, spawning a scene that gave birth to the most fascinating artist working today, Banksy. 3D joined Nellee Hopper, Milo Johnson and Grant Marshall in the seminal crew the Wild Bunch and they paved the way for a whole generation. Forming Massive Attack in 1988, 3D, Grant and Andrew Vowles released in 1991 an acclaimed first album, Blue Lines

The author also looks at the whole scene that emerged in Bristol afterwards, and explores the making of albums, experiments and political statements. She met with friends and collaborators of some of the major actors in the Bristol scene – from the Pop Group to Tricky, Massive Attack and Portishead, delivering a unique story about music, art and social change.




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Thanks to everyone for your interest!
I'm now based in London again.

I'm invited to give a talk at the British Library about this book... I'll update everyone interested.

Feel free to get in touch!

With my best wishes to you all,
melissa