08/07/2019

St Paul's carnival – in pictures


Bristol celebrated its diversity and Caribbean history and culture at St Paul's carnival, on 6 July.

The Carnival was created in 1968 in St Pauls by the members of the community, arrived in the area from the 1950s. It is running for the 51st year.

It has been a hotbed for Bristol's sound system culture since the 1970s, especially in and around pubs like the Star and Garter, with a boom in the early 1980s that led to the music scene we know today.




Morning: Brunch time for the member of St Paul's community at the Malcolm X Community Centre:




The programme:




Main stage in from of St Paul's Learning Centre: Windrush Stage



One of the 7 murals representing the Seven Saints of St Pauls, at the corner of City Road:


Front of the procession:

















DJs and bands came to perform, including local legend Talisman:




Iconic mural painted by local graffiti artist Inkie:


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What a marvellous day!

Here is a short video summarising:




Lifetrack Event in Bristol: Let's share Music and Stories together


 On my second night in Bristol, I had the luck to be invited to be the main guest in a special form of events: Lifetrack.

Based on the idea of the Radio 4 show 'Desert Island Disc', the idea is to share a list of track that made music special in the guest's life in order to interact with the audience.

This 4th of July, the evening took place in the Richmond Building of University of Bristol on Queen's Road.

Details:

Author of the book ‘Massive Attack – Out of the Comfort Zone’, Melissa Chemam will be our guest on 4th July. With a background in journalism and broadcasting, Melissa has travelled extensively and writes mainly on social issues. 

Her book follows the journey of the band Massive Attack into art, music and social discourse. It retraces how the history of Bristol shaped their unique sound and how the emergence of the band helped the city’s entire underground scene to arise.


Thanks to Polly Barnes, Maggie Ayre and Alison Vowles for organising such a lovely night!

Here are some photos:










Photos by Jon Craig 

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Here are the 5 tracks (among the many I wanted to put in) that made my list:

Massive Attack - 'Karmacoma' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vi76bxT7K6U

The Beatles - Eleanor Rigby https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuS5NuXRb5Y

Michael Jackson - Ain't No Sunshine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXQMrhu7eIU

Owiny Sigoma Band - Harpoon Land https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-j37zk4Mddo

 She Makes War - Stargazing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTKLKb1S0Io


The audience picked:

'Angel' by Massive Attack 



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Website:


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About the book:


Author Melissa Chemam's book is an in-depth study of the influences that led to the formation of the Wild Bunch and then Massive Attack. It looks into Bristol's past to explore how the city helped shape one of the most successful and innovative musical movements of the last 30 years. 

It goes from the wealth of the Transatlantic Trade to our days, mentioning the revolutionary bands involved in the punk movement and in Bristol's reggae scene, when the band members were young teenagers, avid for culture, change and creativity.

Melissa Chemam gives a unique insight into the creative endeavours of Massive Attack - formed by 3D, Daddy G and Mushroom. She describes their influences, collaborations and politics, as well as how they opened the door for other musicians and artists in Bristol, from Tricky to Portishead, Inkie and Banksy. 

Link:




07/07/2019

Africa Writes: Zambia seen through the eyes of a mosquito...


I arrived in Bristol a few days ago but I've been too busy to post here.

It feels like every moment is relevant, sincere and a sort of important lesson at the same time!!

I'm writing - working on two books now, reporting - a few radio pieces and articles in the making, and meeting a lot of interesting people.

Step one was the literary festival Africa Writes.
On Thursday I was at the event hosting Zambian American writer Namwali Serpell, author of a first novel inspired by Zambian history and especially the colonial period and the more recent space programme:




She was discussing with Kenyan lecturer and writer Billy Kahora, who also gave a highly interesting writing workshop last Saturday.




Zambia seen through the eyes of a mosquito...

Zambia’s space programme could be read as a satirical political mockery of colonial invasion of Africa,  Namwali thought while doing her research for her novel ‘The Old Drift’.

"It's a story with magical characters... and so much historical research for the realist details," Billy Kahora said.

It's also a "love triangle between three children", and a "racist British man in Africa", said Namwali, "with strong voices", added Billy Kahora about her debut novel.

‘The Old Drift’ is the name a colonial settlement by the Zambia river, that David Livingstone claimed to have discovered...

Billy introduced her at Waterstones Bristol, as part of Africa Writes, partnered by the  Festival of Ideas  and the Royal African Society:




Namwali read the first pages:





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'The Old Drift' by Namwali Serpell can be found here:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Old-Drift-Namwali-Serpell/dp/1781090491/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=%27The+Old+Drift%27+by+Namwali+Serpell&qid=1562499201&s=books&sr=1-1



05/07/2019

ITV interview with a man introducing himself as Banksy... in 2003


Would you forget you have interviewed Banksy??

This journalist from ITV News apparently did :) 





ITV News has uncovered what experts say could be the only televised interview with the secretive Bristol artist Banksy. The recording, from 2003, is the only-known time he has spoken on camera, and was found in the tape vaults of ITV News. But is it the elusive graffiti artist known around the world for 'Girl with the Balloon', 'The mild, mild west', and lately Stormzy's outfit at Glastonbury.


30/06/2019

My latest article on Bristol music venues


For Bristol 24/7


FEATURES / LIVE MUSIC

BETWEEN DEATH AND REBIRTH: BRISTOL’S MUSIC VENUES AT A CROSSROADS

By MELISSA CHEMAM, Friday Jun 28, 2019


In the past few years, several Bristol music venues and pubs have been threatened with closure, and many have shut their doors. But recently, new venues have also appeared. So is the city’s music scene at risk? Or is the city undergoing a new transformation?

The first time I wrote about Bristol four years ago, I settled in Stokes Croft. With popular venues like the Full Moon and Attic Bar, Blue Mountain, Lakota, The Love Inn and the Canteen, the street has been the heart of the underground music scene since the 1980s. But today many of these places are threatened with closure.
At Blue Mountain, a powerful developer is planning to demolish and redevelop the site. The campaign Save Bristol Nightlife, created by Annie McGann and Leighton De Burca, aims to ensure that the city council allows new licenses to open up other places “to present the music Bristol loves”.
Stokes Croft is situated within a designated Cumulative Impact Area, which means it’s incredibly hard to get a new a music license for another building. Save Bristol Nightlife thinks that if we are to lose our music venues to developers, we need assurances that new places will be allowed to open to take their place.
The Stokes Croft area has lost the equivalent of a capacity of 10,000 people in the last seven years and that doesn’t count Blue Mountain. Now, Lakota and the old coroners court are also due to be redeveloped.
The planning decision, however, regarding the end of these two historic venues has been put off until July 31, “while the developers tinker with their plans to try and get round the objections”, according to the Save Bristol Nightlife campaign.
McGann said that it is therefore not too late to tell the powers that be that “Lakota and Coroner’s Court are important places for people to celebrate music, dance and have fun”.
She added: “The impact of losing these spaces will be to add to the death of the area as a vibrant centre for independent music and culture, as well as loss of jobs and amenity, especially with the loss of so many other venues within a minute’s walk from these old buildings.”
Stokes Croft nightclub Blue Mountain’s days look to be numbered
But elsewhere in Bristol, good news has emerged for the music scene. On a recent sunny Thursday afternoon near the harbourside, the team behind The Den Dockside was as busy as can be, before a very anticipated triple opening, starting by a concert by Bristol legends Laid Blak.
This new multi-levelled, multi-purpose venue had been in the planning for more than six months by a strong team of creative people, all connected for years in their businesses of barbering, tattooing, food, music and art.
Andy Compton is the musical director at The Den and the founder of the Peng music label. Also a house producer and programmer, Andy has released more than 30 albums and some 135 EPs under many names from his own to his group The Rurals, Compton or LAMP.
Rebecca du Plessis of Beets n Roots cafe on Cotham Hill, has opened the new cafe at The Den. “We’re old school Bristolians, all of us, and we wanted to create a place that could remain genuine and truly communal,” she told me.
Matt Haile is in charge of the barbershop corner, on the mezzanine, with his own business, Level, and was also one of the founders of the unusual collective project, which began after a friend of his offered to rent him the space as a salon.
He decided to team up for other creative to offer a venue that could host many events and services, including album and book launches in the afternoons and private after-parties for future members. That’s when he brought in Andy for the music and Rebecca for the food.
“We’re a strong collective now, with a similar ethos in all the different things we offer, from cocktail to food or music,” Rebecca said. “This is a dream we didn’t know we had. We were inspired by original music venues in Bristol like The Dug Out in the old days, that’s how we brainstormed out name, The Den.”
In the crowd on the opening night were Roni Size, Peter D Rose (the “and” in Smith & Mighty, as Rebecca describes him) and his decade-long friend Mushroom, a former member of Massive Attack, as well as graffiti legend Inkie, who has created a large mural inside.
The opening party of the newly reopened Star & Garter in Montpelier
On the first day of June, the legendary Star & Garter in Montpelier reopened. Run for years by Dutty Ken, In the late 1970s, it hosted many influential DJs, including DJ Derek many nights a week until it had to close in 2018 after the sudden death of Dutty Ken in February 2017.
The pub has now undergone a major refurbishment, removing the colourful graffiti from the front wall but keeping its original feel inside, with photos of the likes of Tony Bullimore and Horace Andy.
New landlord Malcolm Haynes, who set up the Dance Village at Glastonbury Festival and has been a promoter in Bristol for the last two decades, invited Laid Blak and Roni Size to the pub’s opening party, alongside surprise guests comedian Dave Chappelle, musician Damien Marley and magician Dynamo; with Massive Attack’s Grant Marshall and his family among the partygoers in the pub’s front garden.
The Strange Brew team
Another venue due to open soon on the ground floor of a carpark on Fairfax Street is Strange Brew, a project launched by Kerry Patterson, Shaun Tennant, Robert Needham and Leigh Dennis. Their plan is to bring to life “an independent 330-capacity music and arts venue, offering an eclectic programme of live music, exhibitions, club nights and performances with a late-night cafe-bar and record shop”.
The team has secured their alcohol licence and planning permission, and are currently crowdfunding to raise money for the essential building works to get it open, hopefully at the start of October.
“We’re behind SWX, just across from the Island, and close to The Lanes and Rough Trade,” said Kerry. “It feels a bit like a little community is flowering up in that area which is great!”
The team has been putting on parties in Bristol for the last nine years under the name of Dirtytalk. Finding that a lot of the standard club spaces in Bristol didn’t quite work for them, they turned to doing our events in more unusual places to have more creative freedom.
“But it is precarious doing things in one-off spaces,” Kerry added. “And the venue situation in Bristol, i.e. a lack of mid-sized spaces, lots of places closing or under threat, has been a very frequent topic of conversation amongst us, friends and other promoters for years.”
If these new venues bring a breath of fresh air for Bristol’s nightlife, a lot of nightclubs are still threatened to disappear because of real estate projects and property development mainly. Meanwhile, many Bristol music lovers are still passionate about the debate around a potential arena that now looks most likely to be built in Filton.
Hopefully, the positive trend is the result of an organic response to major challenges faced by the night-time economy of Bristol, a city with a particularly strong musical heritage. It is a response that will see a new generation become invested in the music venues of the city to keep live music alive.
Melissa Chemam is the author of Massive Attack: Out Of The Comfort Zone, published by Tangent Books
Main photo: Laid Black play the opening night of Den Dockside – photo by Jon Craig



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link to the website: https://www.bristol247.com/news-and-features/features/between-death-and-rebirth-bristols-music-venues-at-a-crossroads/



29/06/2019

Summer of writing


AGENDA UPDATED


Dear friends and music/book lovers, 

I hope this finds you well.

I'm settling in Bristol for the next three weeks, ready for a beautiful - let's hope - summer, before a bit of itinerancy in the rest of Europe...

Here are a few events coming next!!


I'm in town this Saturday for AFRICA WRITES! A Festival celebrating contemporary literature from Africa and the African diaspora with a series of performances, book launches, panels and workshops.

I'll also be at Bristol's Waterstones on 3 July, as a volunteer for this event:
Namwali Serpell discusses her new genre-bending novel The Old Drifttracing three Zambian families across centuries and borders...

Then I'll be at St. Paul's Carnival on the 6th, we all look forward to it.

As I mentioned previously, on Thursday 4 July 2019, I'm invited to the Lifetrack Event run by two lovely women from BBC Bristol and Radio 4, it will be in Richmond Buildings, near the Triangle, from 7pm, with Ali Vowles as a host:
We'll talk about writing about music, the role of music in our lives (not only my life, but yours as well!) and we'll stay along to dance around and chat further :) 
There are still some tickets available, come along! 

And on 18 July, I'm invited in Exeter, With Literature Works:



In between, if you want to organise another event, feel free to contact me.

On my way back from Exeter, on 19 July, I'd like to organise a drink/gathering with you all in Monteplier/Stokes Croft to celebrate... you know, summer, and surviving all that's going on out there! Let me know if you're around.

Then I'll go to Paris, Nantes (for a writing retreat!), Marseille (for a podcast project...), and a few locations in Greece throughout the second part of August, notably to volunteer at a film festival: BEYOND BORDERS.






Latest articles:

In the meantime, let me share a bit of my current work.

After working on two BBC podcasts these past 9 months - the latest will be audible here early July: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0006bch

I spent most of my time writing this past few weeks. 
Here are some links for those interested:

-On street art's beginning in Bristol, from Massive Attack's 3D to Banksy: 



-On refugee rights in the UK:

On African and European music: 

On "greening" our local economies:

On the aftermath of the Windrush scandal, work in progress:

On human rights in Malaysia:

And I've been ask to review a book for the Times Literary Supplement for the first time, review coming soon, and to write an essay on Bristol's reggae scene by Palgrave Macmillan, normally out in 2020.

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To finish: my new profile on Medium:


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Many thanks!

A bientôt


26/06/2019

'Once Opened'



Missing you, dearest...



'Once Opened'


I once was open
And one with a travelling heart
I loved with disregard
Just like the fiction
Rushing in your riverbed
Arise like applause in my head
And in the half-light
Where we both stand
This is the half-light
See me as I am
Just like the ocean
Always in love with the moon
It's overflowing now
Inside you
We fly right over
The minds of so many in pain
We are the smile of light that brings them rain
In the half light
Where we both stand
In the half light
You saw me as I am
I am a railroad track abandoned
With the sunset
Forgetting
I ever happened
That I ever happened


25/06/2019

"The Unwanted: The Secret Windrush Files"


 This comes just on time as I'm working on the issue: 
"The Unwanted: The Secret Windrush Files" 
 https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/live/bbctwo




I reported on the "Windrush scandal" when it happened last year but getting the whole picture over decades so strongly and deeply is a heartbreak. Hostile environments are made by people in power more than any voters, but with Brexit this has escalated so high I begin to despair... 

My country and my parents' country are hostile as well to so many people: Arabs, Muslims, Africans, economic migrants there; women, political activists, freedom fighters, truth seekers on the other side... 

How long are we supposed to live this way, like second class citizens? 

No one chooses where they are born or to flee conflicts/oppression/utter poverty.  

The Guardian review is title:

The Unwanted: The Secret Windrush Files review – who could feel proud of Britain after this?

Anything to add?




23/06/2019

#WindrushDay



Hello dear readers,

today is Windrush Day in the UK, a new date, 22 June, which celebrates the contribution of migrants from the Caribbean in the UK and its culture.

I'm currently reporting on the Windrush generation and Caribbean migrants in the UK in general, but especially in the context of the hostile environment created by Theresa May's immigration policy a few years ago.

Today I went to Lambeth for the Walk and Talk tour lead by the Jamaican "Walking Jukebox" Barrington, and to the Migration Museum Project, for a day of celebration.

Here are a few photos. More words to come...




















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To listen to my reportage from last year on DW, you can go here:

https://www.dw.com/fr/angela-merkel-en-maison-de-retraite-les-descendants-de-windrush-toujours-discriminés-au-royaume-uni/av-44715354

Second part in August.

Many thanks

melissa