22/01/2016

The refugee crisis, Giles Duley and Massive Attack


British trip hop group Massive Attack is including images of the refugee crisis in Europe taken by good friend and photographer, Giles Duley, into their European tour.

Together Massive Attack and Giles are encouraging people to support UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, the world’s leading organisation dedicated to saving lives, protecting human rights and building a better future for refugees who have been forced to flee their homes to escape conflict and persecution.
"For over a decade I’ve documented the impact of conflict on communities around the world. In all that time little has moved me as much as the ongoing refugee crisis across the Middle East and Europe. It's a defining event in our generation and I was honoured when UNHCR asked me to tell this story.
However it wasn’t just about taking photographs, it was about making sure people saw them. Which is why I wanted to collaborate with Massive Attack in using some of the images through their live shows.
I was in Lesvos last October and the scenes there were overwhelming. In all the time I’ve worked, I’ve never seen such emotion and humanity laid so bare as I witnessed on the beaches of Lesvos. One of the first emails I sent was to the guys in Massive Attack. Seeing such events, I felt so powerless, I needed to do something. At that stage I had no idea how the collaboration would work, but I knew the band would want to act.
Within minutes of seeing the images, they had replied to my email. As with me, they were shocked that this was Europe, this was now. So when they suggested using the images during their European tour it made total sense - as they played in Europe, they would be showing the scenes that were occurring all around us.
I feel incredibly proud to be collaborating with Massive Attack on this - but more importantly I think together we are raising awareness about this incredibly important, tragic and desperate issue. This is a defining moment, and we must all come together to act." Giles Duley

How you can support:

http://donate.unhcr.org/international/massiveattack


Giles Duley's incredible work:

http://tracks.unhcr.org/2015/12/war-survivor-focuses-lens-on-refugees#_ga=1.258504073.2076231035.1446650151


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PJ Harvey - The Hope Six Demolition Project



PJ Harvey Announces New Album The Hope Six Demolition Project


Watch a trailer featuring "The Community of Hope" and "The Wheel"

By Amy Phillips and Evan Minsker on January 21, 2016 at 11:52 a.m. EST

PJ Harvey Announces New Album The Hope Six Demolition Project
Photo by Seamus Murphy
PJ Harvey has announced her new album, The Hope Six Demolition Project. The follow-up to 2011's Let England Shake will be released on April 15 on Island Records. Watch a new trailer for the album below. Directed by Seamus Murphy, it features the songs "The Community of Hope" and "The Wheel." Also find the tracklist and album cover below. Update (3:52 p.m.): The song has surfaced in full on BBC, as Consequence of Sound points out. Hear it at the 51:35 mark here.
The first single, "The Wheel", premiered today on Steve Lamacq's show on BBC Radio 6 Music
The Hope Six Demolition Project was created in sessions open to the public as part of a London museum exhibition last year. While writing the songs (as well as her poetry book The Hollow of the Hand), Harvey traveled to Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Washington D.C. with photographer/filmmaker Seamus Murphy
Last fall, she debuted 10 new songs as part of a multimedia show in London with Murphy.

The Hope Six Demolition Project:
01 The Community of Hope
02 The Ministry of Defence
03 A Line in the Sand
04 Chain of Keys
05 River Anacostia
06 Near the Memorials to Vietnam and Lincoln
07 The Orange Monkey
08 Medicinals
09 The Ministry of Social Affairs
10 The Wheel
11 Dollar, Dollar
Harvey is touring this summer in support of the album. Check out those dates below.
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21/01/2016

"Promises, Promises"... PJ's back




Music with a real - human - heart. 

PJ's new single is out this afternoon, and on BBC 6 Music. For anyone with a simple radio set...

Waiting for it, here's an old one:




PJ Harvey - 'The darker days of me and him' - Beautifully Live, 2004 - HQ

-- "The Darker Days Of Me & Him"
Promises, promises

I'm feeling burned


You taught me a lesson


I didn't want to learn



Why did I come here?


Please tell me again


Why did you ask me?


Don't say you forget



I long for, I long for


I long for my home


I long for a land where


No man was ever known



With no neurosis


No psychosis


No psychoanalysis


And no sadness



I'll pick up the pieces


I'll carry on somehow


Tape the broken parts together


And limp this love around



Limp this love around
-- link:

Massive Attack reveals its new music application


Massive Attack release new EP via interactive app

A new age calles for new distribution ideas, right?

article by


http://nbhap.com/daily/massive-attack-release-new-ep-via-interactive-app/





British trip-hop pioneers MASSIVE ATTACK finally shared new music but in a quite unusual way. The band released their new EP via an interactive app called FantomYou can download it right here and the product description explains the whole thing in the following way.
The Fantom app is designed for use on iPhone 5s (not the 5c) and upwards.
Fantom features the brand new EP from Massive Attack and lets you play back both the ‘original’ mixes of songs as composed by the band but also dynamically produce your very own ‘personal’ dub mixes.
‘Personal’ mixes reflect your movement and balance, the time of day or night, your location and surroundings (as captured by your device’s camera). Try moving around and pointing your camera and recording the effects as it generates a live mix from your unique set of inputs.
For those of you with Apple Watch, tap the Fantom watch app Heart Rate mode and your heartbeat will vary the harmonic and rhythmic cadences of the songs. Moving your wrist will also create different effects on tracks. If you are stationary then the mix will also reflect this.
Live social media events also trigger interesting sets of mix events. Your individual Fantom audio mix data can be shared with others by sending pictures or video clips of your current mixes to your contacts – in turn their app will open and playback your personalised mix.
Fantom utilises the advanced sensors and Health Kit capabilities of iPhone and Apple Watch. Fantom integrates with the health app.
We still try to figure out how it fully works and we’re pretty sure that ‘normal’ listeners or Android users will also get the chance to experience the new MASSIVE ATTACK material soon. We’ll keep you updated.


20/01/2016

Massive Attack Live - Dublin, January 19, 2016



The more than perfect alliance between music, visual and more...


First part: Young Fathers.

Wondrously energetic. Great voices. Best album of 2015 (to me at least). Powerful presence on stage.
Not a first act, an act in itself. What a present to the crowd!

"When I look at them, I see the future", 3D stated.






Massive Attack.

Dublin
21:04:15
Tue Jan 19 2016




Miss Martina Topley-Bird, one of the most beautiful voices born in Bristol, here singing 'Battle Box':




Into the light...






Red lights from above:



Living legend Horace Andy, singing the powerful 'Girl I love You':





Martina is back for 'Psyche' and later some new tracks:






One of my favourite songs in Live events - 'Future Proof':



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Massive Attack also plays new songs including: with Azekel 'Ritual Spirit', name of their coming new EP, 'Clock Forward' with Martina, and 'Voodoo in My Blood' with Young Fathers.

They also played famous hits 'Paradise Circus', 'Risingson', 'Teardrop', 'Angel', 'Inertia Creeps' and more recent tracks 'Dead Editors', as well as always-great-live 'United Snakes'.

They did play any song from Blue Lines, and only one from Protection: 'Karmacoma', in the Massive Attack versus Adam Curtis version, projecting extracts from the film on the screens in an hypnotic and in-your-face manner.

This shows a bold decision to move on and not stick to the too-expected classic hits from the past, in a renewed version of the where the band is now.

 The show wouldn't be their show without the amazing visuals and messages created with United Visual Artists. This time, they also used powerful, meaningful and indispensable work from photographer Giles Duley, who worked all year long for the UNHCR, on the refugee crisis we witness the year, mainly due to the war in Syria and the raise of the Islamic State.

Main message: refugees should be welcome, while this crisis has been the worst worldwide one since World War II.

Here are some of the photographs:









19/01/2016

French-Moroccan photographer Leila Alaoui has died after Burkina Faso attacks



Very sad news...
After loosing Camille Lepage in Central African Republic in Amy 2014, Leila Alaoui.

Photographers, you have all my respect. Writing the world with light is one of the most beautiful work in the world and we've seen this past year again how importance it can be to raise attention on the right issues.

Rest in peace, beautiful Leila.



French-Moroccan photographer Leila Alaoui dies after Burkina Faso attacks


PUBLISHED MON, JANUARY 18, 2016 - 8:07PM EST
  Photo: Leila Alaoui

French-Moroccan photographer Leila Alaoui, who was injured last week when al-Qaeda gunmen attacked a restaurant and hotel in Burkina Faso's capital, has died of her injuries, raising the death toll to 30. She was 33 years old. 

Alaoui was having dinner at the Cappuccino restaurant in Ouagadougou on Friday night when gunmen stormed the building, shooting her multiple times at a close range. Her mother, Christine Alaoui, said her daughter had suffered gunshot wounds to her lung, abdomen, arm, leg and kidney.

Alaoui underwent a six-hour-long operation over the weekend at a local hospital and was expected to be flown back to France soon, but she succumbed to her injuries on Monday night after suffering several heart attacks. Her death was confirmed by French Culture and Communications Minister Fleur Pellerin.

According to Alaoui's website, she was born in Paris in 1982 and studied photography at City University of New York (CUNY) before spending time in Morocco and Lebanon. Her work had been exhibited internationally in recent years, including at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris, and was featured in newspapers and magazines including The New York Times and Vogue.

With Alaoui's passing, the death toll from Friday's attacks rises to 30, many of whom were foreigners.

18/01/2016

About travels and expectations



Travels  are often linked with some expectations for most wanderers, don't you think? 

When planning to visit a place, there is always a large spectre of dreams and projections involved, sometimes just embodied by a person to meet or to interview.

The reasons why some journeys bring more than expected, others only disappointment, and many of them bring something totally different to one's expectations remain a bit mysterious. But that's the whole beauty of it.

My trips to Bristol, the past twelve months, happened to belong to the first first category. So many wonderful and meaningful encounters and discoveries. As my journeys to Prague or Mexico did. 

My short trip to Sicily falls into the third category: a completely unexpected series of encounters and messages, with awaited people not coming, and other filling beautifully that left-emptied space.

Very few trips ended in disappointments in my life. And even these ones were never complete disappointments, only a person did act in a disappointing way.

As most revealing moments in a lifetime, travels always teach us lessons, even if one we were not quite ready to learn. 

As for me, what I've learnt deeply is to turn failure and disappointments into new challenges and often sweeter outcomes. 



Bristol in a few shots



Campbell Street, Saint Pauls:




Spike Island Gallery from Southville:







Southville at dusk:





Bristol's stunning harbour: 






John Akomfrah's talk at the Arnolfini Gallery:







Musical winter Sunday with Lady Nade and Seb Gutiez




All pictures by my travelling self.


11/01/2016

MY INTERVIEW WITH MOCHA, FROM THE SOUND COLLECTIVE CHECKPOINT 303



INTERVIEW WITH MOCHA, 

FROM COLLECTIVE SOUND CUTTERS CHECKPOINT 303





Article en anglais publié dans le cadre du Dossier Résistance de la rédaction de Toute la Culture :

Checkpoint 303 is an international musical collective of “sound catchers” or “sound cutters”, known in the electronic music world as SCs. They are mainly working on a not-for-profit basis, as their goal is to maintain an artistic independence. The band centres on Tunisian musical artist, oud player and SC MoCha and includes artists working inside and outside of Palestine, like Yosh and Miss K SuShi. Checkpoint 303 is inspired by the sounds of the daily lives of millions of people in the Middle East. They came to international fame in 2007 when they played in a series of supporting acts for the British band Massive Attack. They since have had their work cited in publications as diverse as the UK’s Channel 4 TV, French daily newspaper Le Monde and British Airways’ guide to Tunisia. Their latest album, The Iqrit Files, is a mix of Palestinian songs, poetry, history and landscapes, combined with exciting and joyful sounds of drum and bass, minimal techno and ambient electronic. They share the idea that art doesn’t mean much without resistance, an idea at the core of everything they’re doing.
Interview with Melissa Chemam

From its earliest messages, Checkpoint 303 has appealed to music to transport a message of resistance to violence, how has your message evolved since you launched your project?
The sound artwork of Checkpoint 303 is a call for human rights and above all, justice and the right to freedom and self-determination. As a result our music conveys a message of resistance to violence in all its forms, in particular illegal occupation and state-terror. Sadly, this message has not changed throughout the years, simply because the situation on the ground, be it in occupied Palestine or elsewhere across the globe, has not improved…on the contrary it has become worse.
The electro-acoustic compositions of Checkpoint 303 are literally inspired by the sounds of daily life across the Middle East and the Arab streets. Our music often takes the form of experimental audio-collages that remix sounds recorded in the streets of Ramallah, Gaza, Tunis, Cairo, Hama, Beirut, or Sao Paolo and Istanbul, to speak up against oppression and in support of basic rights for civil societies across the globe. As such the music of Checkpoint 303 is an ode to resistance in the face of violence in all its forms, ranging from brutal and illegal occupation, outright theft of land and violation of international law, to denial of basic human rights such as the right to dignity, security and freedom of expression.
How did you start the project and convince partners to follow you with such a daring idea?
The project started naturally from a need to raise international awareness about the ongoing injustice in Palestine and the suffering of the civilian population under illegal occupation. We deliberately chose to do this mainly by using field recordings of ambient sounds in Palestine (traffic jams, a wedding celebration, a checkpoint crossing, radio broadcasts, etc.) that simultaneously convey the sense of emergency and the persistence of hope which takes the form of resistance in the face of oppression and humiliation. We felt it was important to support hope, using art, and in particular electronica, breakbeats and experimental sound art because of their universal dimension (bypassing some limitations of more traditional activist music that relies on lyrics in a specific language), but also because these are art forms we enjoy.
The name Checkpoint 303 was originally inspired by the name of a military checkpoint that separates Bethlehem from Jerusalem, known as Checkpoint 300. Our latest Checkpoint 303 CD « The Iqrit Files », released on Nakba day in May 2015, features collaborations with Palestinian singers Jawaher Shofani and Wardeh Sbait, and poet Jihad Sbeit. These voices represent the living memory of the Palestinian village of Iqrit whose inhabitants were driven out by force in 1948 and which was then destroyed by Israeli forces on Christmas Eve in 1951. The story of this village is representative of the tragedy of hundreds of other Palestinian villages. The CD was recently selected best album of the year 2015 by UK’s New Internationalist magazine.
To spread our message for justice and resistance, our music is released via several media outlets and is available through free downloads through our own website and soundcloud pages. Checkpoint 303 performs electronic audio-visual sets as well as live electro-acoustic gigs with guest musicians and activist artists. Checkpoint 303 has performed shows in Palestine, Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon, Europe, Australia, USA, Canada, Japan, Chile, etc. Checkpoint 303 was also invited by Massive Attack as supporting act for several shows in the UK and France.
This past two months, terrorist attacks have happened in Beirut, Baghdad, Paris and Bamako; there are on going in Northern Nigeria, Mali, Syria, and Palestine, what do you believe is the role of artists and musicians in an era facing such a crisis?
Musicians and artists are often closer to the truth and reality on the ground than politicians will ever be, in addition – compared to politicians – activist artists can describe the situation as it is felt/experienced by civil society, without getting stuck into mind-numbing political correctness or worse: electoral political tactics. The reactions of politicians, be it in the Arab world or in the west, following terror attacks in their respective countries if often very similar. The mix of rhetoric calls for « unity » in the face of terror and vows « to destroy those who hate us and our way of life » is a stance that we have seen over and over again. It stems from a sad combination of short-sighted vision and egocentric individual political ambitions, and generally leads to dramatic failure.
Fear has become a political tool that has led to more division within and between our societies and to drastic restrictions on civil liberties. By contrast, the voice of activist artists is closer to the people. Politically involved artwork in its various forms, including music, often reflects the origin of the crisis. Rather than being ideological, in most cases, the roots of most modern-day conflicts and wars are rooted in injustice in all its forms: economical, social, legal and moral. It seems to me that the focus on the roots of a problem is a more intelligent and promising approach in order to solve it.
Are you anyhow concerned that a part of our youth, in Europe, in Africa and in the Arab World, seems to be more sensitive to appeal to violence than to messages of respect and political awareness?
Although they are important, these « messages of respect and political awareness » that you mention have an inherent limitation: they do not change the situation on the ground. If you’re living in poverty or suffer from social or economical discrimination or exclusion, you will need more than a good song to help you feel better about your life, its value and your role in society. This does not mean that art activism is useless. There is no doubt that raising awareness is crucial. But we should not be naive: the key is an improvement in the quality of life, increases in hope for a better future, the feeling that justice, equality and freedom are around the corner. Activist music can play a role in pinpointing towards the injustices and in supporting hope and encouraging politically informed socially driven non-violent resistance to oppression, i.e. Ghandi-style!
Do you believe art can be a form of resistance? How do you still try to incarnate this value?
Definitely. Art can be a form of resistance. Actually, in some places on earth mere existence is a form of resistance: breathing becomes a political statement. There are many ways by which art can embody resistance. Probably one of the most important ones is resistance to brainwashing in various forms (ranging from brainwash by mainstream media to brainwash by ignorance and obscurantism). Checkpoint 303 tries to do this by avoiding the same trap, in other words, avoiding propaganda. Our music and art work does not try to tell people what they should think, instead we hope that we can trigger enough curiosity for our listeners to feel compelled to find out more by themselves and make up their own mind up about what is going on in today’s world. Do not rely on your main media outlets or your prime minister to tell you what is actually happening and what needs to be done, find out yourself. We hope our music and our activism will inspire people from the west to travel to the Middle-East or other Arab countries, or any other part of the world (Turkey, Iran, Africa, Asia, etc) and discover for themselves what life looks like when explored in real rather then by watching TV. If you can’t pack your bags and leave, start by talking to your neighbours and interacting with foreigners in your city.
In parallel, from the perspective of the Arab civil society, we hope that our music will inspire people to resist by creating art and to explore news ways of standing-up in the face of injustice.
What are your next projects in that matter?
We have a bunch of exciting new releases planned for 2016, including collaborations with musicians and documentary filmmakers. To hear about all of this when it’s ready, please stay tuned via Checkpoint 303′s website, mailing list, twitter and facebook accounts.
Link to official website:
Soundcloud:
Facebook:

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