14/02/2020

LIBERATO X 3D (Massive Attack) X GAIKA - 'WE COME FROM NAPOLI' - ULTRA soundtrack


Napoli's mysterious and anonymous singer Liberato has been working on the soundtrack for ULTRA for months, secretly of course, with 3D from Massive Attack and the London artist/vocalist Gaika.

The track has just been released this 14th of February 2020, from Naples, Italy, one of the most interesting place in the world...

The film will be out in March.


LIBERATO X 3D (Massive Attack) X GAIKA - 'WE COME FROM NAPOLI'





”WE COME FROM NAPOLI“ 
STA INT'A SOUNDTRACK 'E ULTRAS 'O FILM 'E FRATM FRANCESCO LETTIERI ULTRAS 'O CINEMA 9-10-11/03 https://www.ultrasilfilm.com ULTRAS 'NGOPP' A NETFLÌX 20/3 https://www.netflix.com/ultras Regia di Francesco Lettieri Prodotto da Indigo Film Fotografia - Gianluca Palma Aiuto Regia - Francesco Coppola Organizzazione - Alessandro Elia e Walter de Majo Montaggio - Mauro Rodella Costumi - Antonella Mignogna Scenografia - Vincenzo Aquilone Direttore di produzione - Nicola Maiello Location Manager - Raffaele Cortile e Edgardo Pistone Coordinatrice di Produzione - Alessia Rossacco Ispettore di Produzione - Luigi Pompei Segretario di Produzione - Bruno Sullutrone Operatore Steady Cam - Giuliano Molle Assistente Operatore - Fabio Farinaro Fotografo di scena - Glauco Canalis Aiuto Operatore - Pasquale Di Sano Data Manager - Davide Faustico Bomber Design - R.M. Assistente ai costumi - Virginia Carillo Stunt - Diego Guerra e Emanuele Freddo Grafic Design - Antonello Colaps / Dopolavoro Color Grading - Alessio Zanardi Assistente alla regia - Mario Ricci Amministrazione - Studio Tramontano Trasporti - Leur Trasporti Catering - Fratianni Con la collaborazione di Film Commission Regione Campania Si ringraziano: Anemone Film, cinqueesei, Comune di Napoli Area Cultura e Turismo – Servizio Cultura – Ufficio Cinema, Comune di Pozzuoli, Autorità di Sistema Portuale del Mar Tirreno Centrale, Guardia Costiera, Capitaneria di Porto di Napoli, Agenzia delle Dogane – Direzione Interregionale delle Dogane per la Campania e la Calabria, London Store, Antica Tripperia O’ Russ e un grazie speciale a: Pina Causa, Walter d’Aprile, Barbara Diana, Massimiliano Elia, Ottavio Ferulano, Adele Gallo, Domenico Maiello, Francesca Maiello, Brunella Manzi, Fabio Massa, Marcella Mosca, Massimiliano Pacifico, Vincenzo Paccone, Chiara Pandolfo, Costantino Sgamato



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ULTRAS di FRANCESCO LETTIERI - TEASER TRAILER




ULTRAS di FRANCESCO LETTIERI sarà AL CINEMA come FILM EVENTO il 9-10-11 MARZO. Le musiche di Ultras sono di LIBERATO. Alla regia Francesco Lettieri, autore di oltre sessanta videoclip (per Liberato, Calcutta, Emis Killa, Thegiornalisti, Motta e molti altri che hanno ottenuto 160 milioni di visualizzazioni complessive) e qui al suo esordio con un lungometraggio. Il film è scritto dallo stesso Lettieri insieme a Peppe Fiore, e ha come protagonisti Aniello Arena, Ciro Nacca, Simone Borrelli, Daniele Vicorito, Salvatore Pelliccia e Antonia Truppo. Ultras è un film originale Netflix in associazione con RTI prodotto da Indigo Film Dopo l'uscita al cinema verrà rilasciato su Netflix.


13/02/2020

Let's talk about local elections!


Chapter One: Local elections and the climate emergency


  The 2020 Bristol City Council election is to take place on 7 May 2020, alongside nationwide local elections.

Why is there nothing about the campaign in the news?



News outlets write more about the US elections than local elections... I wonder what we can do about these from here?

But, as this column says: "Local elections are key to climate action"!!
So let's act and vote - Opinion:
https://mancunion.com/2020/02/13/opinion-local-elections-are-key-to-climate-action/

Written by Sebastian Cousins, contributor

The world is on fire. The ice caps are melting. Yet, we have a government that is simply saying ‘we’ve done enough, let the market sort it out’.

(...)

Other than joining the climate strikes, going vegan and not travelling by plane, what else can an individual do to effect change? Direct action works; the occupation of the John Owens building last year by People and Planet is evidence of that. An essential action that individuals can take is voting in local elections, particularly, voting Green.

It’s not a general election, nor does the result directly affect who’s in the government. But here’s the thing: local government affects you. They run local services, they provide spaces for the public to socialise in, they’re in control of green spaces. It’s not all just about bins!

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The campaigner adds that in Manchester, "public transport is a real issue."
So is it in Paris, London, and especially here in Bristol! Where only a few private, expensive and insufficient bus lines are helping us moving around.

I personally walk everywhere, and only take a bus when the journey exceeds 45 minutes. But it's not sustainable for everyone.

I chose to live near the centre, even if it means that I don't have my own place, but I did it so that commuting wouldn't be a problem, as I work with three different institutions, BIMM, UWE, and the Arnolfini, and write and report for diverse media still.

The trains are particularly inefficient in the region, not running often enough and connecting only a limited amount of places.

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Last summer, I spoke the the Green Party candidate for the mayoral election here in Bristol, Sandy Hore-Ruthven, and here is what he had to say. First, we talked about people's expectations in terms of fight against climate, for an article I wrote in French for the magazine Socialter. Then we talked about the Green Party's plans in an interview I was filing for the German international radio, DW.



"Extinction Rebellion has created a space for discussion but now we must act within this space," Sandy Hore-Ruthven told me. "We come to a time when it is time to move from protest to action."

"Here the Greens have had good results in all the last elections, throughout the south-west of England, in particular as a party for the European Union, but especially in Bristol," he added (then in July 2019). "But the real test will be the next municipal elections in May (2020). We want to reduce carbon emissions to zero by 2030. We want to tackle three areas in particular: electrical energy, heating and transports."

 The question is how to transform our current transport system?

"For now, it still relies heavily on cars; every day almost half of the inhabitants travel by car. The rest travel by bus, bike or walk. And we think that we must transform this situation so that a large majority of the population will soon be using public transport, by bicycle or on foot. So we have to develop a good transport system."

This doesn't exactly say how... But we talked about building a tramway, and most engineers stated many times that Bristol is not suited for an underground train system, its rocks are too hard to dig and its hills are a challenge for underground transports anyway. The size of Bristol is also much smaller than London so an underground system would take millions and years to build, which the city probably cannot afford.

Talking about energy, he said: "In terms of electricity, we want to continue investing in renewable energy: Bristol is one of the first cities in the country to have had wind turbines, but it has been caught up, we want to invest in wind energy and build off shore turbines, solar panels."

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The Green Party wants to make the city “carbon free” from 2030, by reducing individual transport, installing a congestion tax (like the one in place in London), by creating additional bus lanes, investing in wind turbines, cycle tracks, railway lines and pedestrian areas.

But these sectors are not always in the domain of the powers of the mayor and the municipal council, responded the Labour Party.

According to me, even though the current Labour Mayor Marvin Rees has declared a "climate emergency" (see here: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/feb/04/bristol-declares-ecological-emergency-over-loss-of-wildlife), the party's current and prospective measures in term of action against pollution and global warming are unclear and contradictory.

Luckily,  the recent plan to expand Bristol airport was rejected after climate protests this week: Councillors voted against the plan endorsed by North Somerset council officers, in decision hailed as ‘historic’ (more here: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/feb/11/plan-to-expand-bristol-airport-rejected-after-climate-protests).

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This is just a post on my blog to start a discussion. Much more in depth articles on these issues are needed and I count on some media to start the conversation.

I could also draw examples and lessons from my hometown, Paris, and a few other places where I've lived, Prague, Miami or London, simply.

I'll try to work around it in the coming weeks...


Thanks for reading,

Melissa Chemam


Arnolfini Gallery - Ep. 4: Art as an experience of closeness beyond separation


Dear readers,

since September 2019, I've been the writer in residence at the Arnolfini International Art Centre in Bristol, UK.

The first part of my writing, on feminist art and resistance, is now online on their blog here:
https://arnolfini.org.uk/category/writer-in-residence/

 I'm happy to announced that the gallery has extended my residency until the beginning of the summer...  Here is the new episode, inspired by Amak Mahmoodian's Zanjir exhibition...


Ep. 4 – Amak Mahmoodian’s Zanjir: Art as an experience of closeness beyond separation 




Bristol, February 2020 

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Distance, departure, death.

Three notions that have been driving Amak Mahmooding’s work, now on display in the first gallery of the Arnofini. Through archival material from her country of birth, Iran, her own artistic photographs and some texts inspired by these reflections, Amak can help us process an often unspoken series of feelings, inspired to all humans by the passage of time, the loss of people, places and experiences.

Two women, separated by almost 200 years, guide us into this emotional reflection on our constant feelings of separation, mostly denied in the modern world, but above all teach us how to reconnect… With the past, with our lost loved ones, with ourselves and with the people we love the most, beyond time and distance. 

The Persian princess who in the middle of the 19th century became a pioneer feminist, Taj al-Saltaneh and her father, the Persian king Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, are at the centre of Zanjir, an exhibition of the artistic photographic work of Amak Mahmoodian, curated by Alejandro Acin and the Kieran Swann for the Arnolfini. 

And so are Amak’s own parents: Her mother, whom she calls every day from here, Bristol, and her father, who sadly passed away a few years ago.

Her book and exhibition Zanjir thus creates a dialogue between Taj and Amak, between different parts of history, and different parts of the world, but also between them and the public of the exhibition. 

Why? And most importantly how? Because as a photographer and a researcher on archival photographic material, Amak has spent years using images to explore her deepest emotions, linked to exile and separation, but above all to overcome these constant tearing feelings of loss and disconnection, some of the emotions that at the core of any human experience.

*

When I first listened to Amak Mahmoodian, in December 2019 at the Martin Parr Foundation here in Bristol, I was very touched by her journey… 

She moved from Iran to the UK, two countries often antagonised by history and their politics, and is now almost unable to go back, missing daily her mother, her culture, her language, her previous life… Because of repression, harassment during her last trips, multiple arrests and the general dislike of her photographic work in Iran, she has been away for years.

And I have myself written and reported about migrations and displacement for years, have also grown up with a mother who had the same experience, coming to Europe at 25 years old, and living in profound nostalgia of her past childhood, both joyful and tragic, until this very day.

Amak’s constant movements between the present and the past, the west and the east, the western way of life and her culture from a Muslim country, her quest to reconnect the present ones and the absents, do mirror my mother’s feelings very deeply, and some of mine, also an outsider here in the UK. 

But through her books, photography and exhibitions, Amak manages to constantly recreate the links that the passage of time tries to destroy… And she’s sharing with us this powerful lesson through her latest exhibition.

So we met again a few weeks later, in the gallery, to pursue our conversation. 

*

In between the photographs and texts exhibited, listening to her, I felt we have so much I common. And I’m sure many of you would too…

Surely, her family is from the Middle East, and mine from North Africa, two of the most misunderstood regions here in the West, marred over decades by an imperial past that weighed on their history and politics, but also obviously on our own families’ story… So that is a first strong link. 

We both lost our dads and are very close to our mothers. And we’re even born in the same year…

Then in our experience of expatriation, Amak and I both ended up in Bristol, which was never in any of our early plans!

Since I first moved to the UK in 2009, a lot of British people have asked me if I was Iranian myself. So much that I even wrote a first short story about a young Persian British woman living in London, ten years ago. This sparked a deep reflection in my mind about identity and identities. Since then, I’ve been based in East and Central Africa, moved back to London then returned to Paris, my city of birth, and finally moved to Bristol. In each of these places I’m perceived extremely differently. In Britain, I’m often called Middle Eastern. In East Africa, I was a “white African”; many of my friends told me about how different I was from the “other” European and American “expatriates”. That is how foreigners from the West are called in most African places. While African newcomers are designated as migrants, foreigners, if not outsiders, and in some case undesired intruders.   

But more recently, when I travelled to Iraqi Kurdistan, near Erbil and Mosul, I was asked about my identity because Kurdish people don’t feel at ease with Iraqi Sunnis and Shias, or Iranian people. So they felt reassured that I was French from a North African background. 

When in Turkey or in the Balkans, I was often very warmly welcome on the contrary, just as much as in Sicily and southern Italy. During my first trip to Naples, I was quite surprised as how much I could “fit in” for a change. And in the streets of Palermo, I was constantly asked for directions in the street, mistaken for a local…

*
  
Once she showed me her photographs, Amak explained why she chose to use the process of the “mask”, to make every portrait look more universal: “This one for instance is me under the mask,” she said, “but it could be you or any other person…” It’s about helping us sharing the feelings that motivated the photograph… 

I also asked Amak if she had always knew she would leave her country. Because in her photographs, it looks like she had been destined to go beyond her homeland and its borders. Her story and her research seem to predict her move to England. 
But she had not. She had never dreamed of the western world and wasn’t prepared for such a level of separation with her homeland and original culture. Just like my mother… and maybe like yours. The younger Amak never thought she’d be one day prevented from going back home and seeing her mother.

On the contrary, I have. From a very early age, I have dreamed of walking all over our globe, of foreign lands and long travels. I have always felt a call to be a nomad, maybe like my ancestors? 

But in the end, it doesn’t matter how prepared you think you are, when you become a foreigner, a outlander, a stranger in a place, even when the others are in full acceptance of your differences and choice to invade them, you experience this constant emotion of separation. Yet I believe that every human has this experience regularly. As Amak showed me with Zanjir, we’re all constantly separated from our past and from our most cherished people, moments, places. Constantly trying to recreate the feeling of belonging with the ones we loved and the places that made us who we are. Even if you’ve only moved from West-Super-Mare to Bristol, or whether you have lost a parent or experienced a falling-out with someone you thought was a dear friend or a solid partner… 

Walking across time and continents through Zanjir made me more aware of how universal it can be to feel estranged and lonely; it’s actually a common experience. And having the chance to walk through the exhibition with its creator herself, building up a new links in our lives, made me realise how precious some encounters can be, and how important it is to be grateful for them and nourish them while there is still time. 

I can only invite you to do the same and walk through Zanjir with this powerful thought in mind.


 – Melissa Chemam

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All photos by myself: 










PS. In the next episode, I’ll explore how Angelica Mesiti’s Assembly made me feel about our need to come together in these times of utter individualism…


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Read the previous episodes here:
https://arnolfini.org.uk/category/writer-in-residence/


11/02/2020

How Caribbean music and migrants changed British music


dear readers,

a year ago, in Paris, I started trying to spread the word about the impact, influence and quality of Bristol music (and street art) to the rest of the world...


How Bristol became a musical and artistic melting pot 


Historically a centre of the slave trade, Bristol is the hometown of a wealth of internationally renowned artists: Damien Hirst, Banksy, Portishead, Tricky and Massive Attack. Author Melissa Chemam says that there is a clear link between those two facts. As people were brought in from across the world, their cultures came with them. The result put Bristol ahead of much of the UK when it came to new and different sounds and ideas. 

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This scene has largely benefited from the arrival of immigrants and especially Caribbean people, as I explained and retold in this video.

The news of the ongoing persecution against Jamaican British citizens is really bringing the UK to a low and a breach of human rights!

See here:

'Waiting is worse than death row': tension and confusion before deportation flight

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/feb/11/they-taking-me-now-tension-and-confusion-before-jamaica-deportation-flight?CMP=share_btn_tw


Deportation row: David Lammy asks 'when will black lives matter again'




Never forget to support their rights...

Here is a petition:

https://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/stop-deportations-until-the-windrush-report-is-published?bucket=&source=twitter-share-button&utm_campaign=715ef5f249-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_02_07_02_25_COPY_01&utm_source=twitter&share=4430bfff-8007-4de3-954e-ce9c78973370





08/02/2020

Creatives In Conversation // 13 February 2020 // Hamilton House, Bristol



Dear friends and creatives!

just a short note to say that I'm invited to join this conversation on creatives in the city, to discuss writing, music & arts on 13 February at the Hamilton House in Stokes Croft.

I'm bringing the brilliant Laura Phillips and Colin Moody with me, and we'll be with a few more talented people to talk to students and young people.

If you know anyone all over Bristol who could interested, please share and forward!






See details on the Facebook page:

Creatives In Conversation // HOUND


HOUND is presenting an intimate night of 'Creatives in Conversation'. We will be bringing together a handful of inspiring Bristol creatives to talk about their past achievements, future projects and how to survive the turbulent waves of being a creative in a city like Bristol. A night of discussion and collaboration. Tickets £1-2. 






07/02/2020

Bristol: Fundraising for the Disc Shop Zero in Tokyo


Bristol! Internationally renown city: Notably there is a shop in Tokyo, Japan, that has been selling all sorts of records from the city since 1998...

The couple who created Disc Shop Zero, fan of the band the Moonflowers, came over to Bristol for their honeymoon, and have since welcome so many bands in Tokyo - Alpha and the Mad Professor, Chaos UK, DJ Flynn, Smith & Mighty and More Rockers, Young Echo, etc.

And thus Naoki and his wife, every time they came over, made dozens of friends in Bristol.

Unfortunately, Naoki is now really ill, and his Bristol friends are raising funds to try and help him save the shop.

Here they are at Trinity Centre, Lawrence Hill:



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I spoke to Ray Mighty among many people on Tuesday from the duo Smith & Mighty and the band More Rockers, and he share some of his memories with Naoki:


“Naoki is a very friendly guy, such a fan of Bristol. When I went to Tokyo, I met all his family, so every time I go to Japan or when he comes over to Bristol I meet him and his family at one point. But especially, when we went to Tokyo, he and his family always took time to take us out for a meal. What I remember from the shop is this weird feeling, being in the middle of Japan, and seeing all the records from Bristol, all sort of music, not only hip hop, really everything, from punk to all sort of stuff, any kind of genre, it’s amazing. And he’s such a good man with a really good vibe, so we’re obviously all sad to know he’s in the condition he is right now.”

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Message from the group:

Raising funds for Naoki E-Jima
Our friend is going through a really rough time right now, we're raising funds to help him and his family.
Watch this space for special events, music etc
If you would like to donate directly to Naoki & family please do via paypal at info@discshopzero.com

Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/Raising-Funds-For-Naoki-DSZ-110424707177484/?ref=search&__tn__=%2Cd%2CP-R&eid=ARABHOkO2UhOEp8kryNdqqDHNoA7P5JSh1IxwD_JQkUPPZP6eH9ei5XKDH_hTKCKOy0pXbbGTdh3LCRm



Go to their page for more:
https://www.facebook.com/Raising-Funds-For-Naoki-DSZ-110424707177484/?ref=search&__tn__=%2Cd%2CP-R&eid=ARABHOkO2UhOEp8kryNdqqDHNoA7P5JSh1IxwD_JQkUPPZP6eH9ei5XKDH_hTKCKOy0pXbbGTdh3LCRm




05/02/2020

Back from Knowle West, South Bristol


Interesting week here in Bristol, getting deeper into different communities.

Always inspired and guide by the music scene, today I went to a part of South Bristol known as Knowle West, where most houses and building have been built after the First World War to bring new homes to the soldiers returning from the battles and newcomers arrived to help rebuilding that part of Britain.

I had a great visit at the Knowle West Media Centre as part of my research for a podcast/exhibition project named #12communities1Bristol, to be aired on BCfm and shown at the M Shed Museum.

The Knowle West Media Centre is currently hosting a very interesting exhibition on the history of the neighbourhood and its famous (some of them are DJ Krust, DJ Flynn, the posse Fresh 4 and rapper/music producer Tricky) and less famous inhabitants: go and visit!





Exhibition: 100 Years of Knowle West Style





Photography, maps, films, audios... Local history in the making!









"The best thing about Knowle West is about the people." 




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Exhibition: 100 Years of Knowle West Style

26/11/2019 - 30/04/2020
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Knowle West Media Centre, Leinster Avenue
Our Autumn / Winter exhibition explores the hidden heritage of Knowle West and marks 100 years since the first council estates were built in Bristol.
From its ‘Garden City’ ideals to its ‘Do It Yourself’ (DIY) culture, explore what Knowle West has meant to people for nearly 10 decades.
Experience new artworks, hear local stories and revisit almost 100 years of history, music, architecture and memory.
There are lots of gems to be rediscovered: from bingo cards used at the Broadway Bingo Club to film footage of nights at The Venture Inn!
The interactive exhibition features commissioned work by artists Holly Beasley-Garrigan, George Lovesmith and Lukus Robbins, created in collaboration with Knowle West residents as part of 100 Years of Knowle West Style.
Opening & Access Information
The exhibition is open Monday to Friday, 9am – 5pm, until the end of April 2020.  It may occasionally be closed for private events – please call 0117 903 0444 to check before travelling.
There are two special Saturday openings during the exhibition in case you can’t visit during the week. Sat 8th Feb 11-1 and Sat 21st March 11-1.
Each section of the exhibition includes an audio station that provides two audio tracks: the first is an audio guide that will read the exhibition text to you, and the second is an audio description for visitors with visual impairments. A booklet containing large print text of the whole exhibition is also available.
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More soon.  Thx to @knowlewestmedia


TRICKY INTERVIEW: Tsugi, France


My recent(-ish) interview with Tricky is in this month's edition of Tsugi magazine, in France 




Issue 129 (with The Black Madonna on the cover) : disponible partout  






"La légende du trip-hop de Bristol Tricky publie son autobiographie, Hell Is Around The Corner : il nous explique l’origine de ce livre, sans fausse pudeur."



Devant le micro de Clémence, Marea Stamper a retracé sans fausse pudeur un parcours chaotique qui l’a conduit en une vingtaine d’années d’une jeunesse dans la pauvreté au fin fond du Kentucky, jusqu’aux plus grandes scènes des festivals et clubs mondiaux. Son engagement aujourd’hui pour les réfugié.e.s LGBTQ+ trouve certainement ses racines dans ces années de galère. Parce qu’il ne faut jamais oublier d’où l’on vient. 
Autre morceau de bravoure : les confessions de Tricky qui, avec sa jeune descendance, les agités HMTLD et Algiers, forment dans ses pages un drôle de triptyque. Succession de personnages jusqu’au-boutistes, cramés de la vie, mais qui gardent toujours chevillés au corps l’espoir de se battre pour un monde meilleur. Ça tombe bien nous aussi.
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TRICKY : ‘L’ENFER EST AU COIN DE LA RUE’



Une des voix qui a fait de Bristol un haut lieu de la culture musicale anglaise depuis le début des années 1990, le producteur et rappeur Tricky a depuis sorti 13 albums et connu une carrière emplie de rebondissements et de collaborations passionnantes. Il vient de publier son autobiographie au Royaume-Uni, Hell Is Around The Corner (Blink publishing), du nom d’une de ses célèbres chansons. Il y revient longuement sur ses origines modestes et son enfance difficile, marquée par un univers violent et la perte précoce de sa mère. Son corps reposant dans un cercueil est, raconte-t-il, son premier souvenir… 

Le livre est à la fois intime et honnête, même s’il permet plus de comprendre ses parts d’ombre que la composition de sa musique révolutionnaire. Mélissa Chemam, auteur d’un livre sur la scène de Bristol (En dehors de la zone de confort, éditions Anne Carrière, 2016), l’a rencontré pour Tsugi à Bristol, lors de la sortie de cette autobiographie ultra-attendue. Entretien. 


04/02/2020

Power up!! Writing on feminism, art and resistance


Dear readers,

as stated previously  since September 2019, I've been the writer in residence at the Arnolfini Art gallery in Bristol. 

The first part of my writing, on feminist art and resistance, is now online on their blog, links here:


Our current Writer in Residence is freelance journalist/reporter, radio producer and writer, Melissa Chemam. 

Melissa writes for many publications such as The Public Art Review, Transfuge Magazine, Le Figaro, Le Monde, Skin Deep, The Bristol Cable, Bristol 24/7, CIRCA Art Magazine, The Times Literary Supplement and Public Pressure. 

Below, Melissa shares the first episode of her writing on Still I Rise: Feminisms, Gender Resistance – Act III. 


‘STILL I RISE’ – EPISODE 1: THE STORIES WOMEN CARRY



‘STILL I RISE’ – EPISODE 2: WOMEN’S… AND MEN’S VOICES



EPISODE 3: FEMALE WRITERS, EMOTIONAL STORIES AND MOTHER TONGUES



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Second part soon, on Iran, Australia, and our need to 'assemble'...


Just a professional/personal note tonight



Dear readers...
I must say, I still can't believe Brexit actually took place... So we're out of our union, and we actually don't know where we are, or how it's going to turn...


After a busy month working on my first students' assignments - in journalism, I'm back reporting and currently interviewing people willing to get a second, European, citizenship. 
I'm also writing about women's art, further, producing radio content about preservation and history of forgotten part of the city, and will also be writing about the coming local election in Bristol.



My Facebook page related to this blog now has more than 400 followers, so thank you so much for your support! 
I post here for free and my goal is only to share my knowledge and to connect all the places I have had the privilege to report in, some 40 countries, countless cities. I've been a nomad for a while now, but you all know Bristol holds a special place in my heart! 
Hopefully I'll be able to stay for another year, and keep on this journey.
Otherwise, it's not been my first move... to say the least. And one day, most probably, I'll find my own way home...
All the best to you, anyhow, whatever your situation. And keep believing in what you love...
melissa