24/03/2015

MUSIC & POLITICS: LOST RELATIONSHIP?


Very interesting topic. Working on the issue myself.

Read this article about today's music and its (non) relationship with politics on Don't Panic website:

http://dontpaniconline.com/magazine/radar/music-politics-a-lost-relationship



Music & Politics: A Lost Relationship


Written by
 Ellie Moore

MUSIC & POLITICS: A LOST RELATIONSHIP



23 MONDAY 23RD MARCH 2015




Political parties of the past decade have made all sorts of sad attempts to appeal to youth culture. Watering down their manifestos or applying a bland ‘social media presence’ are typically feeble examples of their clumsy steps into the not-so-new age of Facebook and Twitter. According to Brand Love, political parties in Britain are some of the most unpopular brands among 18-24 year olds. 54% of people in this age bracket named UKIP as most unpopular, closely followed by Tories with 27%. The coalition is currently running a £530,000 campaign with the NUS asking students to come up with a marketing campaign to encourage people their age to vote. So they’ve essentially turned to us to convince ourselves to head to the ballot box. If you can’t beat ‘em, recruit ‘em.
Broaching the topic of young voters over breakfast, my nostalgic mum declared that she feels sorry for my generation. “We were whipped into a frenzy by bands like The Clash and The Sex Pistols,” – cue the dreamy-eyes – “We felt that we had a voice, and that what we had to say mattered. These days, you’ve got Ed Sheeran, Adele or Sam Smith droning on about lost love. Very few mainstream musicians get angry about real issues anymore.”
She has a point. And it set me wondering whether perhaps this is what’s needed for us ‘young’ folk to start appreciating our right to vote like we used to – drivers who don’t belong to a party. We’re generally quite cynical of the government and have an interest in political change, but don’t necessarily see voting as the catalyst to this. We’ve not got the roaring and rebellious bands paving the way for reform, spurring the power of the people and encouraging them to speak their mind, vote, and make a difference. We’ve got muppets like Russell Brand harping on about deceit and discouraging all those who look up to him from using the system to let our political preferences be known. Music has a resounding effect on popular trends, fashions and opinions among young people more than any other demographic. Bands like Coldplay and Radiohead are all very middle class and comfortable. Where are all the angry young men and women? A new, passionate, politically driven music movement wouldn’t be great news for the Tories, as the nature of the angry, tormented musical beast is always going to be left of centre.


There were the protest songs of the sixties, the angry punks of the seventies and…then what? Music was a form of resistance against established power, often showing its effectiveness as a force for social change. The U.S. in particular has bred plenty of revolutionary musicians and songwriters penning political messages through story-songs that have enthused interests and changed minds.
Billie Holiday turned executions in the South in to ‘Strange Fruit’ hanging from trees. Aretha Franklin inspired Civil Rights Movements in the 60s by bringing her gospel sounds to protestors in the streets, encouraging everyone to stand up and demand ‘Respect’. More recently, Bruce Springsteen has continually touched on an ever-growing regulated and corporate world, referencing identity struggles and inhibitions for those living within it. Victor Jara created songs about Chile’s struggle with military dictatorships, sparking the Nueva Cancion (New Songs) movement that inspired South Americans to rise up and replace them with democracies.


Pre-millennium Britain had a roster of talent to add to this list. 
The Clash released ‘White Riot’ aiming to encourage disaffected young white people to riot like their black peers at the time. Their album ‘Sandinista!’ featured an extensive list of songs inspired by political issues outside of Britain; notably, ‘The Call-up’ was a prolific rumination on 1980 US draft policies.
Rock historian Mikal Gilmore recalls a 1977 music festival in Belgium where 20,000 people were separated from their idols by a ten foot-high barbed wire fence. Joe Strummer leapt from the stage in efforts to knock it down. They’d rather run the risk of the audience getting on stage than condone holding them back like caged animals. 
They were the only artists at the festival who made any noise about the set-up. According to Gilmore, this was their political and social gumption in a nutshell; ‘fighting the good fight that few others would’.


Who will be the next Springsteen, Franklin, or Clash? And why aren’t we hearing their young voices on the radio today? 
Ultimately, I don’t believe it’s the means by which we vote or the failing campaigns that are the problem. I think it’s that we aren’t enthused by the concept of voting in general, that we don’t necessarily see how it makes any difference if we do or if we don’t.
So, as the election looms and we all try to encourage younger generations to appreciate their right to vote, perhaps we should ask the question: What would Joe Strummer do?


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22/03/2015

Nigerians in the UK: In Bristol, Nigerians hope for a change back home



Report on Nigerians in the UK: A look on the coming election
by Melissa Chemam in Bristol, England, UK


While upcoming Nigerian elections have raised concerns all over Africa and beyond, they are particularly watched in the UK, where live the largest part of the Nigerian Diaspora. 

Nigerians abroad cannot vote; they have to travel home and be registered in Nigeria to be able to cast a ballot.

But the links between Nigerians in England and in Nigeria remain strong; lots of businessmen travel between the two continents and lots of Nigerian students move to England to get a degree, particularly in Bristol where the Nigerian community is wide and vibrant.

Melissa Chemam went to Iroko restaurant in central Bristol for RFI English, where Nigerians gather to talk politics and local news. Here are the views of the owner Kolade Giwa and young student Funmi.

Listen here: 
https://soundcloud.com/melissa-chemam/nigerians-in-the-uk-a-look-an?in=melissa-chemam/sets/report-on-nigerians-in-the-uk-ahead-of-nigerias-elections


Here is the view from regular customer Leslie, born in the UK and raised in Nigeria, living between the two countries on the sense of unity he believes Nigerians have managed to buit up:

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Whole story: 


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Thanks to Iroko Restaurant and Bar Bristol : Anyone in Bristol, come and taste the delicious Nigerian food and enjoy their welcoming atmosphere!





20/03/2015

"There's a hole in my soul like a cavity"...



"There's a hole in my soul like a cavity
Seems like the world is out to gather just by gravity"...


This quote from a Massive Attack song defines those days' mood around here.

Equinox, solar eclipse, planets' arrangement and atmosphere of ending eras...

Listen if you will:

From Blue Lines




Beautiful live version: 





--

                                                   "Hymn Of The Big Wheel"

[Horace Andy]

The big wheel keeps on turning
On a simple line day by day
The earth spins on its axis
One man struggle while another relaxes

There's a hole in my soul like a cavity
Seems like the world is out to gather just by gravity
The wheel keeps turning the sky's rearranging
Look my son the weather is changing

I'd like to feel that you could be free
Look up at the blue skies beneath a new tree
Sometime again
You'll turn green and the sea turns red
My son I said the power of axis over my head
The big wheel keeps on turning
On a simple line day by day
The earth spins on its axis
One man struggle while another relaxes

We sang about the sun and danced among the trees
And we listened to the whisper of the city on the breeze
Will you cry in the most in a lead-free zone
Down within the shadows where the factories drone
On the surface of the wheel they build another town
And so the green come tumbling down
Yes close your eyes and hold me tight
And i'll show you sunset sometime again

The big wheel keeps on turning
On a simple line day by day
The earth spins on its axis
One man struggle while another relaxes
As a child's silent prayer my hope hides in disguise
While satellites and cameras watch from the skies
An acid drop of rain recycled from the sea
It washed away my shadow burnt a hole in me
And all the king's men cannot put it back again
But the ghetto sun will nurture life
And mend my soul sometime again

The big wheel keeps on turning
On a simple line day by day
The earth spins on its axis
One man struggle while another relaxes
One man struggle while another relaxes...
--


BRISTOL SOUND SYSTEM CULTURE: EXHIBITION IN JUNE


Great news from Bristol!!



SOUND SYSTEM CULTURE: BRISTOL – official launch of
 a new photographic exhibition

Saturday, June 13 at 2:00pm in UTC+01

Colston Hall in Bristol, United Kingdom




SOUND SYSTEM CULTURE: BRISTOL

Exhibition launch event
13 June, 2–4pm

Exhibition and sound installation
8 June–17 July 2015
Opening times: Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 2pm–4pm
Free admission

Colston Hall is proud to present Sound System Culture: Bristol, an exhibition documenting Bristol’s rich history of reggae sound systems through photographs, audio recordings, archive film footage and other memorabilia. As part of the display, visitors will have an opportunity to interact with Heritage HiFi, a vintage-style sound system custom-built for the project, consisting of a record deck, amps and speaker boxes. 

--

More soon.


Bristolian Nick Walker show in Paris



 Graffiti on canevas are not as powerful as on walls, but come on, Nick Walker is a legend.
His paintings are to be seen in Paris, 40 rue Volta, 75003.

Preview, pictures by myself:









More, closer

Impressive "Choice":





My favourite: "Haunted Love"




Se mettre en scène...



More, again:




"Double Trouble"



Speaks for itself:



The gallery







Iconic: "Silver Heart"




"Bow Ties":




--


Vicious Beauty, du 19 mars au 4 avril
Signature du livre The Art Of Nick Walker le samedi 21 mars à 16h
Galerie Brugier – Rigail, 40 rue Volta 75003 Paris
Nick Walker's website:

Bristol in Paris: Nick Walker's exhibition opening

Bristol in memories. Bristol in dreams.



"Write hard and clear about what hurts", Hemingway on the board of Café Kino, Bristol, on Feb. 17, my winter paradise
 — in Stokes Croft.






19/03/2015

Interview with Daher Ahmed Farah, Djibouti's main opposition leader


DJIBOUTI IN THE NEWS


Interview with Daher Ahmed Farah,

 Djibouti's main opposition leader


On RFI English



Djibouti opposition leader is in Europe to raise attention about the tense political and social situation in the strategic Horn of Africa country.
Daher Ahmed Farah has been leading demonstration in Djibouti since the last parliamentary elections two years ago, where the opposition claims it's been rigged of MP seats.
An agreement has been signe last December to settle a compromise but has never been finalised.
In the meantime the country remains at the heart of security strategy for Western power in the Horn of Africa, in the fight against piracy, terrorists and against instabilities inside neighbouring countries as Eritrea and Sudan / South Sudan.
France has for instance thousands of troops as well as warships, aircraft and armoured vehicles and the US has stationed hundreds of troops in Djibouti, its only African base, in an effort to counter terrorism in the region.
But Daher Ahmed Farah told RFI's Melissa Chemam security cannot come without democratisation and good governance.

Listen on RFI English' webpage today:

And anytime here: 
https://soundcloud.com/melissa-chemam/interview-with-daher-ahmed-farah-djiboutis-main-opposition-leader



England calling again: More of 3D's artwork



Well kown...


1994
1994
2013
112 cm x 91 cm
Screen print and silver leaf on paper

Red Attack
Red Attack
2013
93 cm x 82 cm
Red and black glitter screen print on hand painted paper



Old or new


Protection 1
Protection 1
2013
92 cm x 65 cm
White glitter screenprint on cardboard with red glitter hands


Safe From Harm
Safe From Harm
2013
89 cm x 68 cm
Gun metal and black screen print on cardboard


How to Sneak a Bomb into a Gallery
How to Sneak a Bomb into a Gallery
2008
120 cm x 120 cm
Mixed media on canvas

Insecurity Guard
Insecurity Guard
2013
122 cm x 76 cm
Pink, blue, green and orange glitter screenprint on paper


But also unbelievably beautiful...



Unbelievable
Unbelievable
2008
79 cm x 110 cm
Hand-finished archival pigment print on canvas


Glossheart
Glossheart
2013
86 cm x 87 cm
Screen print, aerosol and acrylic on paper


Cherry Coke
Cherry Coke
2013
91 cm x 61 cm
Ink jet, aerosol and acrylic on hand painted paper.


Burroughs
Burroughs
2013
123 cm x 95 cm
Ink jet, aerosol and acrylic on hand painted paper


4 Noble Truths - Fire Sale
4 Noble Truths - Fire Sale
2013
124 cm x 95 cm
Screen print, aerosol and acrylic on paper