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	<title>music art film review - REDEFINE magazine &#187; charitable artists and musicians</title>
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		<title>Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Mar 2013 21:51:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ryan Pangilinan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charitable artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dessa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[doomtree collective]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[doomtree records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[elli reader]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hip-hop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kai benson]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=25357</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/"><strong>Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa</strong> Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand</a></p><p><p><img width="780" height="518" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/2013_Dessa.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa" /></p><div class="QuoteText">"Partnering hip-hop artists with charitable causes is nothing that I made up... but they're infrequently covered by the media, perhaps, unless they're related to a tragedy." <strong>-- Dessa</strong></div>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/2013_Dessa-02.jpg" class="alignright" /></a>

<div class="IntroText">Over the years, Dessa has been able to stand out from the Doomtree collective, which is apparent on her most recent album, <em>Castor, the Twin</em> which recalls the halcyon days of conscious hip-hop groups like The Fugees, Questionmark Asylum, and the Pharcyde. With her cemented individuality apart from the likes of P.O.S. and Lazerbeak, Dessa sees her nonprofit outreach as a bonus part of her burgeoning success.

Typically, when musicians reach out to the community, it's something that coincides with attempting to make public amends for some misdeed. With Doomtree's singer/emcee, Dessa, she's reaching out to communities in need, sans agenda or public relations retooling; she's helping people because she can and wants to. 

<iframe width="300" height="100" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 300px; height: 100px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/album=3793315083/size=grande/bgcol=FFFFFF/linkcol=666666/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"><a href="http://dessa.bandcamp.com/album/castor-the-twin">Castor, The Twin by Dessa</a></iframe>

<small>PHOTOGRAPHY BY KAI BENSON</small>
<div class="Clear"></div></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-25357"></span>
<h7>Dessa's Closing Ceremony Speech at Nobel Peace Prize Forum</h7>
<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/41419963?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0&amp;color=ffffff" width="780" height="439" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>

<div class="InterviewRight"><h3>Groups Dessa Has Worked With</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h7><strong><a href="http://www.elixery.com/" target="new">The Elixery</a></strong> (for <strong><a href="http://www.care.org">CARE.org</a></strong>)</h7>
See article for full details.

<h7><strong><a href="http://www.ssfnc.org/" target="new">Southside Family Nurturing Center</a></strong></h7>
A group that aims to build families and nurture children by finding alternatives to violence. Dessa has performed shows with proceeds going to this organization.

<h7><a href="http://www.campfireusa.org/" target="new">Camp Fire</a></h7>
Camp Fire aims to a youth-centered organization that helps youngsters prepare for life by finding "their path, their passion, their sparks".

<h7><a href="http://www.prairielakes.net/" target="new">Willmar Youth Detention Center</a></h7>
A juvenile detention center based in Willmar, Minnesota.

<h7><a href="http://www.lighthouseacademyschool.org/" target="new">Lighthouse Academy</a></h7>
A school in Grand Rapids, MI that works with at-risk youth. Dessa worked with teenage immigrants.

<h7><a href="https://www.loft.org/" target="new">Loft Literary Center</a></h7>
An organization that advances the artistic development of writers.

<h7><a href="http://www.cafac.org/" target="new">Fire Arts Center</a></h7>
A non-profit that provides niche arts programming with a focus on "fire arts". Dessa worked with homeless youth.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Schools Dessa Has Worked With</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h7><a href="http://www1.umn.edu/twincities/index.html" target="new">University of Minnesota</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.wisc.edu/" target="new">University of Wisconsin</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.csbsju.edu/" target="new">College of St. Ben's</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.css.edu/" target="new">College of St. Scholastica</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://south.mpls.k12.mn.us/" target="new">South High</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.breckschool.org/" target="new">Breck</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://southwest.mpls.k12.mn.us/" target="new">Southwest High</a></h7>
<h7><a href="https://sites.google.com/a/wmep.k12.mn.us/fair/" target="new">FAIR school</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.mcnallysmith.edu/" target="new">McNally Smith College of Music</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.ipr.edu/" target="new">IPR</a></h7>
</div>
"It's definitely a perk," she says, "finding ways to help support the causes that move me. It's pretty recent, the past two or three years. Before that, I wasn't in the position to make any cause more visible, because I was in the process of making myself as a musician more visible." 

Through the years, Dessa has worked with numerous causes, schools, and organizations – much of which has been dedicated to helping troubled youth and battered women; she has also been a speaker at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum. More recently, Dessa has teamed up with The Elixery, a makeup manufacturer that has taken her namesake and turned it into a shade of lipstick to help the needy. 

"Elixery... is cosmetics company out of Minneapolis, and they put out a shade of lipstick called ‘Dessa,' and one-hundred percent of the proceeds go to the organization CARE.org, which is dedicated to helping destitute women around the world. The proceeds of Dessa will go to help equip and educate these women to pull themselves out of poverty. 

"It feels good. It's been an unexpected, but totally appreciated [partnership]."

Another event of note that Dessa has been a part of is the "Evening with Dessa," an intimate performance at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (MIA).  The event, which happened at the end of February 2013, was held to benefit a new teen scholarship program for the area's youth, an audience typically looked at as a market niche rather than the next bastion of artists and leaders.

"The MIA was looking for an event for a scholarship program and they approached me, knowing that I've done the work," said Dessa. "It was an easy project to align with."

In the wake of public tragedies and the PR hiccups in the hip-hop community (see: <strong><a href=" http://articles.latimes.com/2013/feb/07/local/la-me-0207-chris-brown-20130207" target="new">Chris Brown's court-mandated public service controversy</a></strong> or <strong><a href="http://www.cracked.com/article/96_7-beloved-celebrities-awful-shit-you-forgot-they-did/" target="new">Dr. Dre's anti-violence PSA</a></strong>), Dessa notes that while people aren't generally aware about musicians who do give back, she assures that it happens. 

"Partnering hip-hop artists with charitable causes is nothing that I made up," she is quick to note. "I'm very much taking cues from the likes of everyone, from Nicki Minaj to 50 Cent, to Russell Simmons; [from] P.O.S. to I-Self Devine.... but they're infrequently covered by the media, perhaps, unless they're related to a tragedy.

"[Supporting community organizations] is part of the fabric of hip-hop culture."<div class="Clear"></div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/2013_Dessa.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>PHOTOGRAPHY BY ELLI READER</small>

&Omega;</p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/"><strong>Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa</strong> Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/' rel='bookmark' title='Charitable Musicians: &lt;strong&gt;Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta&lt;/strong&gt; Protests Against The Angolan Government'>Charitable Musicians: <strong>Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta</strong> Protests Against The Angolan Government</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/mae-band-interview/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians:&lt;/strong&gt; Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians:</strong> Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;The Cure&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity'><strong>The Cure</strong> Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/"><strong>Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa</strong> Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand</a></p><p><img width="780" height="518" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/2013_Dessa.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa" /></p><div class="QuoteText">"Partnering hip-hop artists with charitable causes is nothing that I made up... but they're infrequently covered by the media, perhaps, unless they're related to a tragedy." <strong>-- Dessa</strong></div>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/2013_Dessa-02.jpg" class="alignright" /></a>

<div class="IntroText">Over the years, Dessa has been able to stand out from the Doomtree collective, which is apparent on her most recent album, <em>Castor, the Twin</em> which recalls the halcyon days of conscious hip-hop groups like The Fugees, Questionmark Asylum, and the Pharcyde. With her cemented individuality apart from the likes of P.O.S. and Lazerbeak, Dessa sees her nonprofit outreach as a bonus part of her burgeoning success.

Typically, when musicians reach out to the community, it's something that coincides with attempting to make public amends for some misdeed. With Doomtree's singer/emcee, Dessa, she's reaching out to communities in need, sans agenda or public relations retooling; she's helping people because she can and wants to. 

<iframe width="300" height="100" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 300px; height: 100px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/album=3793315083/size=grande/bgcol=FFFFFF/linkcol=666666/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"><a href="http://dessa.bandcamp.com/album/castor-the-twin">Castor, The Twin by Dessa</a></iframe>

<small>PHOTOGRAPHY BY KAI BENSON</small>
<div class="Clear"></div></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-25357"></span>
<h7>Dessa's Closing Ceremony Speech at Nobel Peace Prize Forum</h7>
<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/41419963?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0&amp;color=ffffff" width="780" height="439" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>

<div class="InterviewRight"><h3>Groups Dessa Has Worked With</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h7><strong><a href="http://www.elixery.com/" target="new">The Elixery</a></strong> (for <strong><a href="http://www.care.org">CARE.org</a></strong>)</h7>
See article for full details.

<h7><strong><a href="http://www.ssfnc.org/" target="new">Southside Family Nurturing Center</a></strong></h7>
A group that aims to build families and nurture children by finding alternatives to violence. Dessa has performed shows with proceeds going to this organization.

<h7><a href="http://www.campfireusa.org/" target="new">Camp Fire</a></h7>
Camp Fire aims to a youth-centered organization that helps youngsters prepare for life by finding "their path, their passion, their sparks".

<h7><a href="http://www.prairielakes.net/" target="new">Willmar Youth Detention Center</a></h7>
A juvenile detention center based in Willmar, Minnesota.

<h7><a href="http://www.lighthouseacademyschool.org/" target="new">Lighthouse Academy</a></h7>
A school in Grand Rapids, MI that works with at-risk youth. Dessa worked with teenage immigrants.

<h7><a href="https://www.loft.org/" target="new">Loft Literary Center</a></h7>
An organization that advances the artistic development of writers.

<h7><a href="http://www.cafac.org/" target="new">Fire Arts Center</a></h7>
A non-profit that provides niche arts programming with a focus on "fire arts". Dessa worked with homeless youth.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Schools Dessa Has Worked With</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h7><a href="http://www1.umn.edu/twincities/index.html" target="new">University of Minnesota</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.wisc.edu/" target="new">University of Wisconsin</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.csbsju.edu/" target="new">College of St. Ben's</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.css.edu/" target="new">College of St. Scholastica</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://south.mpls.k12.mn.us/" target="new">South High</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.breckschool.org/" target="new">Breck</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://southwest.mpls.k12.mn.us/" target="new">Southwest High</a></h7>
<h7><a href="https://sites.google.com/a/wmep.k12.mn.us/fair/" target="new">FAIR school</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.mcnallysmith.edu/" target="new">McNally Smith College of Music</a></h7>
<h7><a href="http://www.ipr.edu/" target="new">IPR</a></h7>
</div>
"It's definitely a perk," she says, "finding ways to help support the causes that move me. It's pretty recent, the past two or three years. Before that, I wasn't in the position to make any cause more visible, because I was in the process of making myself as a musician more visible." 

Through the years, Dessa has worked with numerous causes, schools, and organizations – much of which has been dedicated to helping troubled youth and battered women; she has also been a speaker at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum. More recently, Dessa has teamed up with The Elixery, a makeup manufacturer that has taken her namesake and turned it into a shade of lipstick to help the needy. 

"Elixery... is cosmetics company out of Minneapolis, and they put out a shade of lipstick called ‘Dessa,' and one-hundred percent of the proceeds go to the organization CARE.org, which is dedicated to helping destitute women around the world. The proceeds of Dessa will go to help equip and educate these women to pull themselves out of poverty. 

"It feels good. It's been an unexpected, but totally appreciated [partnership]."

Another event of note that Dessa has been a part of is the "Evening with Dessa," an intimate performance at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (MIA).  The event, which happened at the end of February 2013, was held to benefit a new teen scholarship program for the area's youth, an audience typically looked at as a market niche rather than the next bastion of artists and leaders.

"The MIA was looking for an event for a scholarship program and they approached me, knowing that I've done the work," said Dessa. "It was an easy project to align with."

In the wake of public tragedies and the PR hiccups in the hip-hop community (see: <strong><a href=" http://articles.latimes.com/2013/feb/07/local/la-me-0207-chris-brown-20130207" target="new">Chris Brown's court-mandated public service controversy</a></strong> or <strong><a href="http://www.cracked.com/article/96_7-beloved-celebrities-awful-shit-you-forgot-they-did/" target="new">Dr. Dre's anti-violence PSA</a></strong>), Dessa notes that while people aren't generally aware about musicians who do give back, she assures that it happens. 

"Partnering hip-hop artists with charitable causes is nothing that I made up," she is quick to note. "I'm very much taking cues from the likes of everyone, from Nicki Minaj to 50 Cent, to Russell Simmons; [from] P.O.S. to I-Self Devine.... but they're infrequently covered by the media, perhaps, unless they're related to a tragedy.

"[Supporting community organizations] is part of the fabric of hip-hop culture."<div class="Clear"></div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/2013_Dessa.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>PHOTOGRAPHY BY ELLI READER</small>

&Omega;<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/"><strong>Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa</strong> Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/' rel='bookmark' title='Charitable Musicians: &lt;strong&gt;Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta&lt;/strong&gt; Protests Against The Angolan Government'>Charitable Musicians: <strong>Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta</strong> Protests Against The Angolan Government</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/mae-band-interview/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians:&lt;/strong&gt; Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians:</strong> Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;The Cure&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity'><strong>The Cure</strong> Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Leah Gordon&#8217;s Kanaval Takes A Photographic Look At Haiti&#8217;s Carnival Via Mythology, History &amp; Oral Traditions</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Feb 2013 20:34:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivian Hua</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[black and white]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charitable artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascinating]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fashion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[haitian artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[leah gordon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[multicultural]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mythology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[phi centre (montreal)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[portrait]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[quebec artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sociology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[spirituality]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the arcade fire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[united kingdom artists]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=24934</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival/"><strong>Leah Gordon&#8217;s Kanaval</strong> Takes A Photographic Look At Haiti&#8217;s Carnival Via Mythology, History &#038; Oral Traditions</a></p><p><p><img width="780" height="780" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Madanm-Lasiren.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2013_Leah-Gordon_Madanm-Lasiren" /></p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Lansekod.jpg" class="aligncenter" /></a>
<small>Lansè Kòd (The Rope Throwers) 1996</small>

<div class="IntroText">Every year, Carnaval comes and goes <strong><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnival" target="new">across the entire world</a></strong>, tantalizing everyone with its fanciful costuming and celebratory antics. But beyond the tourist circuit of Carnival lies another Carnival, in locales with a connection closer to the festival's origins. Haiti is one of many countries that celebrates Carnival at their own pace, and over the course of many years, photographer <strong><a href="http://www.leahgordon.co.uk/" target="new">Leah Gordon</a></strong> was able to capture the beauty of those festivities in Jacmel, a coastal town in the south.

<em>Kanaval</em> is a black and white photographic series, true -- but it is, more importantly, a series on awareness, about culture, and inclusive of mythology. After this series was taken, Haiti suffered its devastating earthquake and Jacmel was completely decimated. Gordon's photographs, along with her heart-felt introduction to the series and the many oral mythologies passed down to her from carnival participants, can be viewed in the full post. Together, they forever capture a wonderful space in time and call attention to Haiti's creative and spiritual existence.

We begin with a tale from Madanm Lasiren, which is just the first of many.</div>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Madanm-Lasiren.jpg" class="aligncenter" /></a>
<small>Madanm Lasirèn (Madame Mermaid) 2003</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Madanm Lasiren</em>
Andre Ferner, 59 years</h3>

Lasiren is a spirit that lives under the sea and does mystical work there, she is a Vodou spirit, I dream of Lasiren all the time. That is the reason I do Lasiren for Mardi Gras. I chose Lasiren because my grandmother, father and mother all served the spirits, I love her & honour her. The baby that I carry in my arms is the child of Lasiren who is called Marie Rose. When I walk the streets I sing her song which goes ' I am Lasiren and I cry for Lasiren, when I work mystically in the night bad luck can come my way'. 

I prepare for Lasiren by putting on a hat, a mask and carrying an umbrella.  I put on a necklace and gloves. This necklace is called Mambo Welcome, it is a fetish. Because Lasiren is a fish she has to disguise herself as a woman to be at Mardi Gras. My mask and hat cover her fish's head. And the dress she wears covers her fish's tail. The chain I wear is a sacred chain. Each year I change the disguise and fashion a new baby.  In order to get inspiration I go to the place where the big beasts live  and they instruct me how to do Mardi Gras. I have been doing this for 18 years. Before that I did another Mardi Gras call Patoko. This was a group of men who were dressed as women, with a nice dresses and high heeled shoes. We did a marriage between men and woman on the street. After that we had a group called the duck who carried brushes in their hands wearing blue trousers, white t-shirts, new sandles and a scarf around our waists. We swept the streets of Jacmel. I have always found a way of doing a Mardi Gras.
</blockquote>

<div class="IntroText"><em>Kanaval</em> will be on display for free at <strong><a href="http://phi-centre.com/" target="new">PHI Centre</a></strong> in Montreal (407, rue Saint-Pierre), from February 25th to April 27th, 2013. Opening night happens at 7:30pm on February 23rd, and its $175 ticket price (or a $400 VIP ticket) includes Haitian food, giveaways, and performances by Haitian dance groups, Haitian band Doody and Kami, and The Arcade Fire, who have <strong><a href="http://marcademire.tumblr.com/" target="new">a blog dedicated to their own trip to Haiti</a></strong>.

All proceeds will go towards <strong><a href="http://www.kanpe.org" target="new">KANPE</a></strong>, a non-profit "born of a desire to play an integral part in the fight to help Haiti break free from a vicious cycle of poverty", through programs in health, education, agriculture, counseling, and other community services. Full event details can be seen at <strong><a href="http://popmontreal.com/events-tickets/kanpe-kanaval-2/" target="new">PopMontreal</a></strong>.</div>
<small>(12 IMAGES TOTAL)</small><p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-24934"></span>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Esklav-Yo.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Esklav Yo (The Slaves) 2001</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Jij-95.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Jij (Judge) 1995</small>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
Gordon's introduction to her series, <em>Kanaval</em>:
<blockquote>"Haiti seems to be on a fault line of history. Whilst much of the rest of the world seems to have efficiently papered over any cracks where history could accidentally seep, bubble or explode with a veneer of consumerism and wage slavery. Haitian culture is a potent vessel for this history, continually transmitting, telling, retelling and reinterpreting Haitian history. Though school fees are excessive for the majority of the Haitian people, and the education standards poor, you will be hard pushed to find a Haitian who doesn’t know the vast and intimate details of their own history. 

Haiti’s history is not an easy one, but it is a significant and important one. It is the history of the decimation of the indigenous Taino Indians by the Spanish invaders. Subsequently it is the history of the most profitable, and correspondingly brutal, French colonial plantation system in the Caribbean, which was fuelled by the Transatlantic slave trade. The intensity of French barbarity in the pursuit of profit, coupled with whispers and rumours of the French Revolution in Europe, led to the Haitian revolution. This was an uprising of African and Creole <sup>1</sup> slaves against the white plantation owners. By the late 18th century dissent was rife amongst the slave population. In 1791 the dissent came to a head and turned into a rebellion which led to a 13 year struggle for the freedom from slavery and finally independence. 

Vodou was both the inspiration and precipitation of the long fight for Haiti’s independence. On 23rd August 1791 <sup>2</sup>, a Vodou priest called Boukman performed a ceremony at Bwa Kayman, in the north of Haiti. Slaves and maroons <sup>3</sup> gathered from all over the region. Boukman sacrificed a black pig for the African ancestors, and in its blood wrote the words ‘liberty or death’. Inspired and invigorated the slaves returned to their plantations and spread the message of rebellion. Within days the fertile plains of cash crops were burning with a passion for freedom that did not dampen until independence in 1804.

May 1803, former slave and rebel leader Jean-Jacques Dessalines dramatically created the flag of the black insurgents at the Congress of Arcahaie. He took the French tricolour of blue, white and red, and ripping the white out of it, declared he was ripping the white man out of the country. The red and blue were stitched together, the initials RF (Republique Française) were replaced by Liberté ou la Mort, ‘Liberty or Death’, and Haiti’s flag was born. Time was finally running out for the French rulers.

The diffusion and transmission of Haitian history uses the drums, songs, dances and possessive ritual of the Vodou religion. It uses the improvisational songs of Twobadou groups and the collective melodies and rhythms of Rara bands. Haitian history uses the words and poems of its great literary tradition and the unique visions of its painters, sculptors and flag makers. Haitian history, and not only the revolutionary history, is also replayed through the masks, costumes and narratives of the carnival in Jacmel. 

Each year, Jacmel, a coastal town in Southern Haiti, holds pre-Lenten Mardi Gras festivities. Troupes of performers act out mythological and political tales in a whorish theatre of the absurd that courses the streets, rarely shackled by traditional parade. Whatever the carnival lacks in glitz and spectacle, it makes up for in home-grown surrealism and poetic metaphor. The characters and costume partially betray their roots in medieval European carnival, but the Jacmellien masquerades are also a fusion of clandestine Vodou, ancestral memory, political satire and personal revelation. The lives of the indigenous Taino Indians, the slave’s revolt and more recently state corruption, are all played out using drama and costume on Jacmel’s streets. There have been many times that the future of Jacmel's carnival has appeared unstable, but it continues to struggle and survive. Haitian culture is tough and resilient, as it needs to be. It is a vibrant, living avatar for not only Haitian history, but for all our histories. Carnival is dead, long live Kanaval.

<center>***************************************************************************************</center>

This introduction was written two weeks before the dreadful earthquake in Haiti. I have been haunted by the almost prophetic first line. I decided I didn't want to change it. The suffering on the human level and devestation on the material level in Port au Prince is hard to contemplate. All the churches have fallen and all the morgues are still standing. Many of the houses have fallen but all the tombs in the cemetery are standing. It is as if Death has won its bet against Man and God.  The beautiful old town of Jacmel, where all these photographs have been taken, has been decimated.  As I numbly traipse along what remains of the historic Grand Rue in downtown Port au Prince I realise that architecture has always been another avatar for history. In Haiti the material was always transient and weak, and now feels almost none existent, but the imaginative and creative is fierce. If there is a positive side, perhaps it is this, that people will sit up finally and really take notice of Haiti's creativity. Haiti has so much to give and we really should be grateful that such a genuinely unique place exists. Kanaval is not Dead. Long Live Kanaval

<sup>1</sup> Caribbean born of African descent.
<sup>2</sup> Named International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition by UNESCO. 
<sup>3</sup> Runaway slaves living in remote mountainous areas in close-knit communities."</blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Kouvre-Fe-09.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Kouvrefe (Curfew) 2009</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Bounda.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Bounda Pa Bounda (Cheek by Arse) 2003</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Chaloska.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Chaloska (Charles Oscar) 1998</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Chaloska</em> (Charles Oscar)
Eugene Lamour a.k.a. Boss Cota, 61 years</h3>

The Chief Charles Oscar was a military commandant in charge of the police in Jacmel. He died here in 1912. He was tall and strong with big feet and teeth and feared by all. At a time when there was political instability in Port-au-Prince, when President Sam had just been assassinated, Charles Oscar took his chance to take 500 prisoners from the local jail and kill them all. There was so much blood it made a river of death. The population was so angry that that revolted and tore the police chief to pieces in the street and burned him down. He was killed in the same violent way that he had treated the people. 

This story has always been very striking to me, and in 1962, I decided to create the character of Chaloska for Carnival. I designed the military uniform and made the big false teeth with bull’s teeth bought from the market. Each year I change the costume a little by designing a different hat for the group to wear. 

When I created Chaloska I also wanted to create some other characters to go along with him. I created Master Richard and Doctor Calypso. Master Richard is a rich man with a big bag full of money and a huge fat stomach. He walks with the group of Chaloska buying justice and paying the judges. He represents the impunity and corruption that hides behind Chaloska and is the real chief of the city. Doctor Calypso is an old hunch back with a black suit and a stick in his hand. He works for Chaloska and checks on the health of the prisoners, always reporting that they are healthy when they are dying. 

These characters are still here in Haitian society so it is good to parade them on the street. It is a message to all future Oscars that you will end up this way. The group goes to different places in town threatening the people. The boss Chaloska always finally dies, and the others call for mercy as they are cowards, but then another Chaloska immediately replaces him. This is to show the infinite replication of Chaloska  which continue to produce the same system. There will be Chaloska until the end of the world. They started with the beginning and will not end until the end.</blockquote>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Pa-Roro.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Pa Wowo (The Way of Wowo) 2004</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Pa Wowo</em> (The dance steps of Roro)
Edmond Paul, 30 years</h3>

Pa Wowo is a Mardi Gras that I’ve been doing for a long time. It is part playing around and part theatre on the streets of Jacmel. We try to create an ambiance of festivity. Pa Wowo has created a character, a role he plays scenes just like theatre, as it's an ancient Mardi Gras. He has a pipe because in the past all peasants had pipes in their mouths. He has a skirt of leaves because it is part of his disguise. The skirt is a symbol and the skirt means everything. It is the best symbolic costume for the Pa Wowo because he doesn’t have any family, he doesn’t have any thing, no-one to help him, not even the possibility of his own clothes to wear. So Pa Wowo represents someone who has nothing, no-one, nowhere to stay and no money. Truly people understand my message,  which is if you have something you must help those with nothing.  I have done this Mardi Gras for 15 years. I decided to do it to give continuity when the last person that used to do it died.  I’m not sure it will continue after I am gone but I am always fighting to do it whilst I still can. Over the years Mardi Gras has a lot of sections missing and I’m doing Pa Wowo to make sure that carnival has a good power and to make sure that Jacmel shows a good face to the world. Because firstly I am a Jacmellian. But you know exactly if we keep trying perhaps Jacmel carnival is the best in the world. We feel that carnival in Jacmel is important for the face of Haiti in the world but it is always a fight as the government never supports us. 
</blockquote>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Zel-Maturin.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Zèl Maturin (The Wings of Maturin) 1995</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Zel Maturin</em> (The Wings of Mathurin: character from the St. Michel Mardi Gras)
Ronald Bellevue, 40 years</h3>

We did not invent this story. It came from older people, but we are keeping the tradition going. As a child I was scared to death of the Zel Maturin but the very next thing I wanted to see was to see them again. My favorite Zel Maturin is the red devil as he is always the strongest, most resistant and goes on until the end of the play.

The play is a fight between good and evil. The first scene has people with suits, ties, tuille masks and bibles all kneeling and praying. In the second scene St Michel the Archangel come from heaven to give them protection. With him are other angels in pink satin dresses and a small angel in blue and white. Then the Zel Maturin arrive to steal the angels.

There is a long procession of Zel Maturin but St Michel kills them by using his mighty sword. The strongest devil, the red devil, myself, arrives. This devil fights much harder but after a long struggle he is finally killed. All the devils lie dead on the street conquered by St Michel the Archangel. But then the black devil arrives. He is bigger than the others and wearing chains. He is chained mystically because his mystic powers are so strong that he must be restrained. He carries a skull and presents it to the four cardinal points and hits the red devil three times. Once the red devil is revived all the other devils leap awake. The black devil is a Vodou devil whereas the other devils are just Christian devils. The Vodou devil has greater forces than the Christian devils. As you can see from the masks on the wall I am not exactly a bible person, well you don’t play the part if you don’t like the part. 
</blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Gason-Bo-Kote-Lame.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Gason Bo Kote Lanmè-a (Boy by the Sea) 2000</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Neg-Ak-Lambi.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Nèg ak Konk (Man with Conch Shell Horn) 2001</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Fantom.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Fantonm (The Phantom) 2009</small>

All photographs are shot on black and white film on a Roleiicord 2 ¼ sq camera and are 95cm sq Giclee Prints on Hahnemuhle Fine Art Paper mounted onto di-bond aluminium.

<a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0955481732/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=redefinemagaz-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0955481732&adid=01PZJKB320BCEZ6DTB7K&" target="new"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon-Book.jpg" class="aligncenter" /></a>

Gordon's book, <em>Kanaval: Vodou, Politics and Revolution on the Streets of Haiti</em> is also available for purchase on <strong><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0955481732/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=redefinemagaz-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0955481732&adid=01PZJKB320BCEZ6DTB7K&" target="new">Amazon</a></strong>.

&Omega;</p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival/"><strong>Leah Gordon&#8217;s Kanaval</strong> Takes A Photographic Look At Haiti&#8217;s Carnival Via Mythology, History &#038; Oral Traditions</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival/"><strong>Leah Gordon&#8217;s Kanaval</strong> Takes A Photographic Look At Haiti&#8217;s Carnival Via Mythology, History &#038; Oral Traditions</a></p><p><img width="780" height="780" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Madanm-Lasiren.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2013_Leah-Gordon_Madanm-Lasiren" /></p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Lansekod.jpg" class="aligncenter" /></a>
<small>Lansè Kòd (The Rope Throwers) 1996</small>

<div class="IntroText">Every year, Carnaval comes and goes <strong><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnival" target="new">across the entire world</a></strong>, tantalizing everyone with its fanciful costuming and celebratory antics. But beyond the tourist circuit of Carnival lies another Carnival, in locales with a connection closer to the festival's origins. Haiti is one of many countries that celebrates Carnival at their own pace, and over the course of many years, photographer <strong><a href="http://www.leahgordon.co.uk/" target="new">Leah Gordon</a></strong> was able to capture the beauty of those festivities in Jacmel, a coastal town in the south.

<em>Kanaval</em> is a black and white photographic series, true -- but it is, more importantly, a series on awareness, about culture, and inclusive of mythology. After this series was taken, Haiti suffered its devastating earthquake and Jacmel was completely decimated. Gordon's photographs, along with her heart-felt introduction to the series and the many oral mythologies passed down to her from carnival participants, can be viewed in the full post. Together, they forever capture a wonderful space in time and call attention to Haiti's creative and spiritual existence.

We begin with a tale from Madanm Lasiren, which is just the first of many.</div>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Madanm-Lasiren.jpg" class="aligncenter" /></a>
<small>Madanm Lasirèn (Madame Mermaid) 2003</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Madanm Lasiren</em>
Andre Ferner, 59 years</h3>

Lasiren is a spirit that lives under the sea and does mystical work there, she is a Vodou spirit, I dream of Lasiren all the time. That is the reason I do Lasiren for Mardi Gras. I chose Lasiren because my grandmother, father and mother all served the spirits, I love her & honour her. The baby that I carry in my arms is the child of Lasiren who is called Marie Rose. When I walk the streets I sing her song which goes ' I am Lasiren and I cry for Lasiren, when I work mystically in the night bad luck can come my way'. 

I prepare for Lasiren by putting on a hat, a mask and carrying an umbrella.  I put on a necklace and gloves. This necklace is called Mambo Welcome, it is a fetish. Because Lasiren is a fish she has to disguise herself as a woman to be at Mardi Gras. My mask and hat cover her fish's head. And the dress she wears covers her fish's tail. The chain I wear is a sacred chain. Each year I change the disguise and fashion a new baby.  In order to get inspiration I go to the place where the big beasts live  and they instruct me how to do Mardi Gras. I have been doing this for 18 years. Before that I did another Mardi Gras call Patoko. This was a group of men who were dressed as women, with a nice dresses and high heeled shoes. We did a marriage between men and woman on the street. After that we had a group called the duck who carried brushes in their hands wearing blue trousers, white t-shirts, new sandles and a scarf around our waists. We swept the streets of Jacmel. I have always found a way of doing a Mardi Gras.
</blockquote>

<div class="IntroText"><em>Kanaval</em> will be on display for free at <strong><a href="http://phi-centre.com/" target="new">PHI Centre</a></strong> in Montreal (407, rue Saint-Pierre), from February 25th to April 27th, 2013. Opening night happens at 7:30pm on February 23rd, and its $175 ticket price (or a $400 VIP ticket) includes Haitian food, giveaways, and performances by Haitian dance groups, Haitian band Doody and Kami, and The Arcade Fire, who have <strong><a href="http://marcademire.tumblr.com/" target="new">a blog dedicated to their own trip to Haiti</a></strong>.

All proceeds will go towards <strong><a href="http://www.kanpe.org" target="new">KANPE</a></strong>, a non-profit "born of a desire to play an integral part in the fight to help Haiti break free from a vicious cycle of poverty", through programs in health, education, agriculture, counseling, and other community services. Full event details can be seen at <strong><a href="http://popmontreal.com/events-tickets/kanpe-kanaval-2/" target="new">PopMontreal</a></strong>.</div>
<small>(12 IMAGES TOTAL)</small><p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-24934"></span>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Esklav-Yo.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Esklav Yo (The Slaves) 2001</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Jij-95.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Jij (Judge) 1995</small>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
Gordon's introduction to her series, <em>Kanaval</em>:
<blockquote>"Haiti seems to be on a fault line of history. Whilst much of the rest of the world seems to have efficiently papered over any cracks where history could accidentally seep, bubble or explode with a veneer of consumerism and wage slavery. Haitian culture is a potent vessel for this history, continually transmitting, telling, retelling and reinterpreting Haitian history. Though school fees are excessive for the majority of the Haitian people, and the education standards poor, you will be hard pushed to find a Haitian who doesn’t know the vast and intimate details of their own history. 

Haiti’s history is not an easy one, but it is a significant and important one. It is the history of the decimation of the indigenous Taino Indians by the Spanish invaders. Subsequently it is the history of the most profitable, and correspondingly brutal, French colonial plantation system in the Caribbean, which was fuelled by the Transatlantic slave trade. The intensity of French barbarity in the pursuit of profit, coupled with whispers and rumours of the French Revolution in Europe, led to the Haitian revolution. This was an uprising of African and Creole <sup>1</sup> slaves against the white plantation owners. By the late 18th century dissent was rife amongst the slave population. In 1791 the dissent came to a head and turned into a rebellion which led to a 13 year struggle for the freedom from slavery and finally independence. 

Vodou was both the inspiration and precipitation of the long fight for Haiti’s independence. On 23rd August 1791 <sup>2</sup>, a Vodou priest called Boukman performed a ceremony at Bwa Kayman, in the north of Haiti. Slaves and maroons <sup>3</sup> gathered from all over the region. Boukman sacrificed a black pig for the African ancestors, and in its blood wrote the words ‘liberty or death’. Inspired and invigorated the slaves returned to their plantations and spread the message of rebellion. Within days the fertile plains of cash crops were burning with a passion for freedom that did not dampen until independence in 1804.

May 1803, former slave and rebel leader Jean-Jacques Dessalines dramatically created the flag of the black insurgents at the Congress of Arcahaie. He took the French tricolour of blue, white and red, and ripping the white out of it, declared he was ripping the white man out of the country. The red and blue were stitched together, the initials RF (Republique Française) were replaced by Liberté ou la Mort, ‘Liberty or Death’, and Haiti’s flag was born. Time was finally running out for the French rulers.

The diffusion and transmission of Haitian history uses the drums, songs, dances and possessive ritual of the Vodou religion. It uses the improvisational songs of Twobadou groups and the collective melodies and rhythms of Rara bands. Haitian history uses the words and poems of its great literary tradition and the unique visions of its painters, sculptors and flag makers. Haitian history, and not only the revolutionary history, is also replayed through the masks, costumes and narratives of the carnival in Jacmel. 

Each year, Jacmel, a coastal town in Southern Haiti, holds pre-Lenten Mardi Gras festivities. Troupes of performers act out mythological and political tales in a whorish theatre of the absurd that courses the streets, rarely shackled by traditional parade. Whatever the carnival lacks in glitz and spectacle, it makes up for in home-grown surrealism and poetic metaphor. The characters and costume partially betray their roots in medieval European carnival, but the Jacmellien masquerades are also a fusion of clandestine Vodou, ancestral memory, political satire and personal revelation. The lives of the indigenous Taino Indians, the slave’s revolt and more recently state corruption, are all played out using drama and costume on Jacmel’s streets. There have been many times that the future of Jacmel's carnival has appeared unstable, but it continues to struggle and survive. Haitian culture is tough and resilient, as it needs to be. It is a vibrant, living avatar for not only Haitian history, but for all our histories. Carnival is dead, long live Kanaval.

<center>***************************************************************************************</center>

This introduction was written two weeks before the dreadful earthquake in Haiti. I have been haunted by the almost prophetic first line. I decided I didn't want to change it. The suffering on the human level and devestation on the material level in Port au Prince is hard to contemplate. All the churches have fallen and all the morgues are still standing. Many of the houses have fallen but all the tombs in the cemetery are standing. It is as if Death has won its bet against Man and God.  The beautiful old town of Jacmel, where all these photographs have been taken, has been decimated.  As I numbly traipse along what remains of the historic Grand Rue in downtown Port au Prince I realise that architecture has always been another avatar for history. In Haiti the material was always transient and weak, and now feels almost none existent, but the imaginative and creative is fierce. If there is a positive side, perhaps it is this, that people will sit up finally and really take notice of Haiti's creativity. Haiti has so much to give and we really should be grateful that such a genuinely unique place exists. Kanaval is not Dead. Long Live Kanaval

<sup>1</sup> Caribbean born of African descent.
<sup>2</sup> Named International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition by UNESCO. 
<sup>3</sup> Runaway slaves living in remote mountainous areas in close-knit communities."</blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Kouvre-Fe-09.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Kouvrefe (Curfew) 2009</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Bounda.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Bounda Pa Bounda (Cheek by Arse) 2003</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Chaloska.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Chaloska (Charles Oscar) 1998</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Chaloska</em> (Charles Oscar)
Eugene Lamour a.k.a. Boss Cota, 61 years</h3>

The Chief Charles Oscar was a military commandant in charge of the police in Jacmel. He died here in 1912. He was tall and strong with big feet and teeth and feared by all. At a time when there was political instability in Port-au-Prince, when President Sam had just been assassinated, Charles Oscar took his chance to take 500 prisoners from the local jail and kill them all. There was so much blood it made a river of death. The population was so angry that that revolted and tore the police chief to pieces in the street and burned him down. He was killed in the same violent way that he had treated the people. 

This story has always been very striking to me, and in 1962, I decided to create the character of Chaloska for Carnival. I designed the military uniform and made the big false teeth with bull’s teeth bought from the market. Each year I change the costume a little by designing a different hat for the group to wear. 

When I created Chaloska I also wanted to create some other characters to go along with him. I created Master Richard and Doctor Calypso. Master Richard is a rich man with a big bag full of money and a huge fat stomach. He walks with the group of Chaloska buying justice and paying the judges. He represents the impunity and corruption that hides behind Chaloska and is the real chief of the city. Doctor Calypso is an old hunch back with a black suit and a stick in his hand. He works for Chaloska and checks on the health of the prisoners, always reporting that they are healthy when they are dying. 

These characters are still here in Haitian society so it is good to parade them on the street. It is a message to all future Oscars that you will end up this way. The group goes to different places in town threatening the people. The boss Chaloska always finally dies, and the others call for mercy as they are cowards, but then another Chaloska immediately replaces him. This is to show the infinite replication of Chaloska  which continue to produce the same system. There will be Chaloska until the end of the world. They started with the beginning and will not end until the end.</blockquote>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Pa-Roro.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Pa Wowo (The Way of Wowo) 2004</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Pa Wowo</em> (The dance steps of Roro)
Edmond Paul, 30 years</h3>

Pa Wowo is a Mardi Gras that I’ve been doing for a long time. It is part playing around and part theatre on the streets of Jacmel. We try to create an ambiance of festivity. Pa Wowo has created a character, a role he plays scenes just like theatre, as it's an ancient Mardi Gras. He has a pipe because in the past all peasants had pipes in their mouths. He has a skirt of leaves because it is part of his disguise. The skirt is a symbol and the skirt means everything. It is the best symbolic costume for the Pa Wowo because he doesn’t have any family, he doesn’t have any thing, no-one to help him, not even the possibility of his own clothes to wear. So Pa Wowo represents someone who has nothing, no-one, nowhere to stay and no money. Truly people understand my message,  which is if you have something you must help those with nothing.  I have done this Mardi Gras for 15 years. I decided to do it to give continuity when the last person that used to do it died.  I’m not sure it will continue after I am gone but I am always fighting to do it whilst I still can. Over the years Mardi Gras has a lot of sections missing and I’m doing Pa Wowo to make sure that carnival has a good power and to make sure that Jacmel shows a good face to the world. Because firstly I am a Jacmellian. But you know exactly if we keep trying perhaps Jacmel carnival is the best in the world. We feel that carnival in Jacmel is important for the face of Haiti in the world but it is always a fight as the government never supports us. 
</blockquote>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Zel-Maturin.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Zèl Maturin (The Wings of Maturin) 1995</small>

<blockquote><h3><em>Zel Maturin</em> (The Wings of Mathurin: character from the St. Michel Mardi Gras)
Ronald Bellevue, 40 years</h3>

We did not invent this story. It came from older people, but we are keeping the tradition going. As a child I was scared to death of the Zel Maturin but the very next thing I wanted to see was to see them again. My favorite Zel Maturin is the red devil as he is always the strongest, most resistant and goes on until the end of the play.

The play is a fight between good and evil. The first scene has people with suits, ties, tuille masks and bibles all kneeling and praying. In the second scene St Michel the Archangel come from heaven to give them protection. With him are other angels in pink satin dresses and a small angel in blue and white. Then the Zel Maturin arrive to steal the angels.

There is a long procession of Zel Maturin but St Michel kills them by using his mighty sword. The strongest devil, the red devil, myself, arrives. This devil fights much harder but after a long struggle he is finally killed. All the devils lie dead on the street conquered by St Michel the Archangel. But then the black devil arrives. He is bigger than the others and wearing chains. He is chained mystically because his mystic powers are so strong that he must be restrained. He carries a skull and presents it to the four cardinal points and hits the red devil three times. Once the red devil is revived all the other devils leap awake. The black devil is a Vodou devil whereas the other devils are just Christian devils. The Vodou devil has greater forces than the Christian devils. As you can see from the masks on the wall I am not exactly a bible person, well you don’t play the part if you don’t like the part. 
</blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Gason-Bo-Kote-Lame.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Gason Bo Kote Lanmè-a (Boy by the Sea) 2000</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Neg-Ak-Lambi.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Nèg ak Konk (Man with Conch Shell Horn) 2001</small>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon_Fantom.jpg" class="aligncenter" />
<small>Fantonm (The Phantom) 2009</small>

All photographs are shot on black and white film on a Roleiicord 2 ¼ sq camera and are 95cm sq Giclee Prints on Hahnemuhle Fine Art Paper mounted onto di-bond aluminium.

<a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0955481732/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=redefinemagaz-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0955481732&adid=01PZJKB320BCEZ6DTB7K&" target="new"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/2013_Leah-Gordon-Book.jpg" class="aligncenter" /></a>

Gordon's book, <em>Kanaval: Vodou, Politics and Revolution on the Streets of Haiti</em> is also available for purchase on <strong><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0955481732/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=redefinemagaz-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0955481732&adid=01PZJKB320BCEZ6DTB7K&" target="new">Amazon</a></strong>.

&Omega;<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/leah-gordon-kanaval-photography-the-arcade-fire-haiti-carnival/"><strong>Leah Gordon&#8217;s Kanaval</strong> Takes A Photographic Look At Haiti&#8217;s Carnival Via Mythology, History &#038; Oral Traditions</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2007/ghosts-of-cite-soleil/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Ghosts Of Cité Soleil&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt; (2006) Film Review'><strong><em>Ghosts Of Cité Soleil</em></strong> (2006) Film Review</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2010/stefanie-fiores-a-new-home-series/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Stefanie Fiore&lt;/strong&gt;&#8216;s A New Home Series'><strong>Stefanie Fiore</strong>&#8216;s A New Home Series</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/molly-nilsson-history-album-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Molly Nilsson &#8211; History&lt;/strong&gt; Album Review'><strong>Molly Nilsson &#8211; History</strong> Album Review</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; + &#8220;My Country&#8221; Music Videos (w/ Director Mimi Cave&#8217;s Q&amp;A)</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Aug 2012 19:39:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivian Hua</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music Videos]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[4ad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charitable artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[colorful]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mimi cave]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[percussive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[playful]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[san francisco artists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[san francisco musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tune-yards]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=19868</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave/"><strong>tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; + &#8220;My Country&#8221; Music Videos</strong> (w/ Director Mimi Cave&#8217;s Q&#038;A)</a></p><p><p><img width="730" height="395" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-00.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_tUnE-yArDs-00" /></p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-00.jpg" /></a>

<div class="IntroText">The music video for tUnE-yArDs' "Bizness" fluttered through the internet as a colorful extension of main lady Merrill Garbus' long-standing style of bridging movement, geometric facepaint, and playful insanity. It was Garbus' first video to reach the extreme masses, and it, along with the music video for "My Country", were directed by San Francisco's <strong><a href="http://www.littlecaveofwonders.com/" target="new">Mimi Cave</a></strong>. They are both exercises in give and take between dancer and creator, and spontaneity and choreography, and both give young children the opportunity to participate in a professional art project.

In the Q&A below, Cave speaks with REDEFINE about the creative process behind the videos, and we take a look backwards at the role of movement in tUnE-yArDs music videos through the years.

The music video for "Bizness" will also be featured at <strong><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/motion-movement-music-video-redefine-bumbershoot-musicfestnw-panels/">REDEFINE magazine's Motion & Movement In Music Video</a></strong> panel at Bumbershoot and MusicfestNW 2012.  <small><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/motion-movement-music-video-redefine-bumbershoot-musicfestnw-panels/">SEE FULL DETAILS</a></small></div><p>&nbsp;</p>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2010/tune-yards-band-interview/" class="featured-link">REDEFINE magazine interview with Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs</a> <a href="/tag/tune-yards" class="featured-link">See all articles related to tUnE-yArDs</a>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-01.jpg" /> <img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-02.jpg" /></a>
<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-19868"></span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Looking back on tUnE-yArDs music videos reveals that there is a longstanding tie between contemporary dance and her music. Was building off this history and maintaining a sense of cohesion important in your work with "Bizness" and "My Country"?</span>

Yes. I think Merrill and I have always connected on the grounds of movement, particularly modern dance. I got to know Merrill while I was backup dancing for her at a few shows, so elements of dance have always been there.
 <p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How was it working with children in both the "Bizness" and "My Country" music videos? Had those children worked with performing or dance-oriented music videos before?</span>

I love working with kids and think they have the capacity to be some of the most natural performers. The kids in these videos each have different backgrounds and experiences, although everyone has had a common interest and willingness to experiment with movement and expression. We had a blast.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<small>MIMI CAVE INTERVIEW CONTINUED BELOW</small>
<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "Bizness" (2011)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/YQ1LI-NTa2s" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "My Country" Music Video (2012)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/L2uW2PmVSe8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2010/tune-yards-band-interview/" class="featured-link">REDEFINE magazine interview with Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs</a> <a href="/tag/tune-yards" class="featured-link">See all articles related to tUnE-yArDs</a>

<div class="InterviewRight"><h5>About The SF Rock Project Lending Library Kickstarter
<small><a href="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/tuneyards/the-sf-rock-project-lending-library" target="new">VIEW KICKSTARTER PAGE</a></small></h5>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
"To create the "My Country" video, tUnE-yArDs had immense help from the San Francisco Rock Project, a nonprofit music school that offers musical education to kids through the experience of learning and performing rock music.

Many of the kids you see in the video are Rock Project kids: they've taken private lessons in electric guitar, bass guitar, drums, keyboards and vocals from working musicians, they've rehearsed in bands made up of kids of all ages, and they've learned the art of performance through regular live, public shows in legitimate music venues.  They learn the basics through performing rock music, and as a result, they develop into original, confident, inspired musicians...

SF Rock Project would like to start a "lending library" of instruments to offer students.  If our Kickstarter campaign succeeds, they will be able to reach even more young people with their unique form of music education. The school will use the funds to purchase guitars, bass guitars, ukuleles, percussion instruments, a keyboard, and more to be used in the SF Rock Project LIVE SHOW this summer, which will be a celebration of this campaign!"

<hr />

<div class="QuoteText">"I just feel like I'm finally seeing an intersection of a way where you can be an activist and concerned with your community. [But] it's hard; I want to live my life and have money, but it's good to... question yourself... like, 'Am I giving back enough?' or, 'Am I doing enough?'"

<strong>-- Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs, in a <a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2010/tune-yards-band-interview/">REDEFINE magazine Interview</a></strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div>
<span class="InterviewQ">Are the children in the "Bizness" and "My Country" music videos both from Brightworks and San Francisco Rock Project? Can you tell me a bit about those organizations and how they were benefited from these videos?</span>

Each video had a different cast of kids. The "Bizness" cast was mainly students from a public elementary school in San Francisco, while the cast from "My Country" came mainly from Brightworks and SF Rock Project. After the "My Country" video, Merrill started a Kickstarter campaign to raise money that would go towards purchasing instruments for kids. She exceeded her goal and I feel like the best thing that resulted from the video was the generous participation in that fundraiser.
<p>&nbsp;</p> 

<span class="InterviewQ">Is there an underlying narrative or concept to the two pieces? How closely did you and Merrill work together on those themes?</span>

Although they both incorporate kids, to me they are very different pieces. "Bizness" was a narrative I had in my head that morphed and transformed as the production went on, whereas "My Country" has a more direct, visual correlation to the lyrics in the song. Merrill and I worked together to make sure each idea represented the music music in a way that she felt excited about. Outside of that, Merrill was extremely trusting and encouraging of my direction throughout both processes.
<p>&nbsp;</p> 
<span class="InterviewQ">Who was responsible for the choreography?</span>

In "Bizness", I was lucky to work with my great friend Sonia Reiter developing choreography for the dancers. A lot of the movement you see in "Bizness" is improvised as well. "My Country" is almost all improvised movement from both Merrill and the kids. Often we will improvise together -- them in front of the camera, me off-screen, building something as we go. I like working with performers that aren't afraid to experiment and push themselves a little. Merrill has a fantastic energy and is easy to work with.
<p>&nbsp;</p><div class="Clear"></div>
<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "Gangsta" Music Video (2011)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/EbkMPHW67xM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "Real Live Flesh" Music Video (2010)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/AwDEQWaSiEU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

&Omega;</p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave/"><strong>tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; + &#8220;My Country&#8221; Music Videos</strong> (w/ Director Mimi Cave&#8217;s Q&#038;A)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/tune-yards-bizness/' rel='bookmark' title='tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; Music Video'>tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; Music Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/elephant-castle-en-memoria-music-video-merrill-garbus-tune-yards/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Elephant &amp; Castle&lt;/strong&gt; &#8211; &#8220;En Memoria&#8221; Music Video (ft. tUnE-yArDs) + &#8220;I Will&#8221; Live Video'><strong>Elephant &#038; Castle</strong> &#8211; &#8220;En Memoria&#8221; Music Video (ft. tUnE-yArDs) + &#8220;I Will&#8221; Live Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/tune-yards-buke-gass-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='tUnE-yArDs, Buke &amp; Gass Live Show Review'>tUnE-yArDs, Buke &#038; Gass Live Show Review</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave/"><strong>tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; + &#8220;My Country&#8221; Music Videos</strong> (w/ Director Mimi Cave&#8217;s Q&#038;A)</a></p><p><img width="730" height="395" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-00.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_tUnE-yArDs-00" /></p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-00.jpg" /></a>

<div class="IntroText">The music video for tUnE-yArDs' "Bizness" fluttered through the internet as a colorful extension of main lady Merrill Garbus' long-standing style of bridging movement, geometric facepaint, and playful insanity. It was Garbus' first video to reach the extreme masses, and it, along with the music video for "My Country", were directed by San Francisco's <strong><a href="http://www.littlecaveofwonders.com/" target="new">Mimi Cave</a></strong>. They are both exercises in give and take between dancer and creator, and spontaneity and choreography, and both give young children the opportunity to participate in a professional art project.

In the Q&A below, Cave speaks with REDEFINE about the creative process behind the videos, and we take a look backwards at the role of movement in tUnE-yArDs music videos through the years.

The music video for "Bizness" will also be featured at <strong><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/motion-movement-music-video-redefine-bumbershoot-musicfestnw-panels/">REDEFINE magazine's Motion & Movement In Music Video</a></strong> panel at Bumbershoot and MusicfestNW 2012.  <small><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/motion-movement-music-video-redefine-bumbershoot-musicfestnw-panels/">SEE FULL DETAILS</a></small></div><p>&nbsp;</p>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2010/tune-yards-band-interview/" class="featured-link">REDEFINE magazine interview with Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs</a> <a href="/tag/tune-yards" class="featured-link">See all articles related to tUnE-yArDs</a>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-01.jpg" /> <img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/2012_tUnE-yArDs-02.jpg" /></a>
<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-19868"></span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Looking back on tUnE-yArDs music videos reveals that there is a longstanding tie between contemporary dance and her music. Was building off this history and maintaining a sense of cohesion important in your work with "Bizness" and "My Country"?</span>

Yes. I think Merrill and I have always connected on the grounds of movement, particularly modern dance. I got to know Merrill while I was backup dancing for her at a few shows, so elements of dance have always been there.
 <p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How was it working with children in both the "Bizness" and "My Country" music videos? Had those children worked with performing or dance-oriented music videos before?</span>

I love working with kids and think they have the capacity to be some of the most natural performers. The kids in these videos each have different backgrounds and experiences, although everyone has had a common interest and willingness to experiment with movement and expression. We had a blast.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<small>MIMI CAVE INTERVIEW CONTINUED BELOW</small>
<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "Bizness" (2011)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/YQ1LI-NTa2s" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "My Country" Music Video (2012)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/L2uW2PmVSe8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2010/tune-yards-band-interview/" class="featured-link">REDEFINE magazine interview with Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs</a> <a href="/tag/tune-yards" class="featured-link">See all articles related to tUnE-yArDs</a>

<div class="InterviewRight"><h5>About The SF Rock Project Lending Library Kickstarter
<small><a href="http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/tuneyards/the-sf-rock-project-lending-library" target="new">VIEW KICKSTARTER PAGE</a></small></h5>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
"To create the "My Country" video, tUnE-yArDs had immense help from the San Francisco Rock Project, a nonprofit music school that offers musical education to kids through the experience of learning and performing rock music.

Many of the kids you see in the video are Rock Project kids: they've taken private lessons in electric guitar, bass guitar, drums, keyboards and vocals from working musicians, they've rehearsed in bands made up of kids of all ages, and they've learned the art of performance through regular live, public shows in legitimate music venues.  They learn the basics through performing rock music, and as a result, they develop into original, confident, inspired musicians...

SF Rock Project would like to start a "lending library" of instruments to offer students.  If our Kickstarter campaign succeeds, they will be able to reach even more young people with their unique form of music education. The school will use the funds to purchase guitars, bass guitars, ukuleles, percussion instruments, a keyboard, and more to be used in the SF Rock Project LIVE SHOW this summer, which will be a celebration of this campaign!"

<hr />

<div class="QuoteText">"I just feel like I'm finally seeing an intersection of a way where you can be an activist and concerned with your community. [But] it's hard; I want to live my life and have money, but it's good to... question yourself... like, 'Am I giving back enough?' or, 'Am I doing enough?'"

<strong>-- Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs, in a <a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2010/tune-yards-band-interview/">REDEFINE magazine Interview</a></strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div>
<span class="InterviewQ">Are the children in the "Bizness" and "My Country" music videos both from Brightworks and San Francisco Rock Project? Can you tell me a bit about those organizations and how they were benefited from these videos?</span>

Each video had a different cast of kids. The "Bizness" cast was mainly students from a public elementary school in San Francisco, while the cast from "My Country" came mainly from Brightworks and SF Rock Project. After the "My Country" video, Merrill started a Kickstarter campaign to raise money that would go towards purchasing instruments for kids. She exceeded her goal and I feel like the best thing that resulted from the video was the generous participation in that fundraiser.
<p>&nbsp;</p> 

<span class="InterviewQ">Is there an underlying narrative or concept to the two pieces? How closely did you and Merrill work together on those themes?</span>

Although they both incorporate kids, to me they are very different pieces. "Bizness" was a narrative I had in my head that morphed and transformed as the production went on, whereas "My Country" has a more direct, visual correlation to the lyrics in the song. Merrill and I worked together to make sure each idea represented the music music in a way that she felt excited about. Outside of that, Merrill was extremely trusting and encouraging of my direction throughout both processes.
<p>&nbsp;</p> 
<span class="InterviewQ">Who was responsible for the choreography?</span>

In "Bizness", I was lucky to work with my great friend Sonia Reiter developing choreography for the dancers. A lot of the movement you see in "Bizness" is improvised as well. "My Country" is almost all improvised movement from both Merrill and the kids. Often we will improvise together -- them in front of the camera, me off-screen, building something as we go. I like working with performers that aren't afraid to experiment and push themselves a little. Merrill has a fantastic energy and is easy to work with.
<p>&nbsp;</p><div class="Clear"></div>
<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "Gangsta" Music Video (2011)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/EbkMPHW67xM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<h3>tUnE-yArDs - "Real Live Flesh" Music Video (2010)</h3>
<iframe width="730" height="411" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/AwDEQWaSiEU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

&Omega;<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/tune-yards-bizness-my-country-music-video-mimi-cave/"><strong>tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; + &#8220;My Country&#8221; Music Videos</strong> (w/ Director Mimi Cave&#8217;s Q&#038;A)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/tune-yards-bizness/' rel='bookmark' title='tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; Music Video'>tUnE-yArDs &#8211; &#8220;Bizness&#8221; Music Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/elephant-castle-en-memoria-music-video-merrill-garbus-tune-yards/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Elephant &amp; Castle&lt;/strong&gt; &#8211; &#8220;En Memoria&#8221; Music Video (ft. tUnE-yArDs) + &#8220;I Will&#8221; Live Video'><strong>Elephant &#038; Castle</strong> &#8211; &#8220;En Memoria&#8221; Music Video (ft. tUnE-yArDs) + &#8220;I Will&#8221; Live Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/tune-yards-buke-gass-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='tUnE-yArDs, Buke &amp; Gass Live Show Review'>tUnE-yArDs, Buke &#038; Gass Live Show Review</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
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		<title>Charitable Musicians: Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta Protests Against The Angolan Government</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jul 2012 19:45:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivian Hua</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[angolan artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charitable artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dark]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hip-hop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ikonoklasta]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[multicultural]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[portuguese artists and musicians]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=18911</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/">Charitable Musicians: <strong>Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta</strong> Protests Against The Angolan Government</a></p><p><p><img width="340" height="227" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/2012_Angola.png" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Angola" /></p><div class="InterviewRight"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/2012_Angola.png" />

<strong>Background On The 2011 Angolan Demonstrations</strong><iframe width="340" height="255" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/x7QiK0pN9p8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="300" height="100" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 300px; height: 100px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/track=460534989/size=grande/bgcol=FFFFFF/linkcol=666666/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"><a href="http://akwaabamusic.bandcamp.com/track/l-vai-mar-a-feat-ikonoklasta">Lá Vai María feat. Ikonoklasta by Batida</a></iframe>

<strong>Luaty DaSilva On His Airport Experience</strong>
<iframe width="340" height="255" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/_EGVH5cwt2w" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></div><div class="IntroText">In early 2011, as the turmoil from the Arab Spring protests made their way into pockets of Africa, Angolan youth began taking to the streets themselves. At the heart of their ongoing dissatisfaction remains the 32-year reign of President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, who protesters cite as the cause of mismanaged oil revenues, suppressed human rights, and widespread poverty, amongst other corruptions. <sup><a href="#sources">1</a></sup>

One early advocate for the protests include hip-hop musician Luaty DaSilva, aka Ikonoklasta, who openly voiced his support for the uprising during one of his February 2011 concerts, listing government officials as "exploiters of the oppressed" while the crowd responded to push them "out!"

In June 2012, DaSilva departed Angola for Lisbon, Portugal, to play with the Kuduro band Batida. DaSilva's supporters at the Angolan airport warned him that his luggage had been tampered with by the National Crime Investigation Department, and DaSilva decided that upon arrival in Lisbon, he would tell customs that he suspected foul play. But he never made it there, as the police were upon him as soon as he got his luggage. A kilogram of cocaine was discovered in DaSilva's luggage, but the presiding judge of the case set him free, because, in Luaty's words, "the framing was so gross that not even the judge bought it." <sup><a href="#sources">2</a></sup>

For the following month-and-a-half, DaSilva stayed in Portugal, and has only just returned to Angola. As he shares in the interview below, he suspects that the government "must have something ready for me, some sort of "warm welcome home" for when I return on the 25th of July." He is just one of a handful of musicians known to have faced persecution. <sup><a href="#sources">3</a></sup>

The 2012 parliamentary elections are to be held in Angola on August 31st -- hypothetically the first time the government will respect the constitutional deadline of having four years between elections. Yet despite this fact, which ostensibly seems to be an improvement, demonstrators both young and old have seen an intense increase in violence in the past year, much of which has been captured on video and disseminated widely via the internet. As recently as July 15th, several hundred protestors, knowing very well the potential dangers which faced them, risked likely violence from security forces and protested in the Sao Paolo market. Twelve were arrested, including two journalists working for Portuguese publications, sparking a call for the postponement of the August elections until free and fair polls can be guaranteed. <sup><a href="#sources">4</a></sup>

<strong>In the following Q&A with REDEFINE, DaSilva gives his perspective on the situation in Angola, offering a point of view from the young and frustrated underclass, in both Portuguese and English.</strong></div>

<strong>September 2012 Headlines</strong>
<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-08-31/slow-start-in-angola-elections" target="new">Thousands stay away from Angolan elections</a> (AP News - 2012, August 31)
<a href="http://articles.cnn.com/2012-09-02/africa/world_africa_angola-elections_1_unita-president-jose-eduardo-alcides-sakala" target="new">Angola's ruling party declared election winner</a> (CNN - 2012, September 2)
<a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/09/19/us-angola-election-idUSBRE88I18320120919" target="new">Angola court rejects UNITA appeal, says vote was fair</a> (Reuters - 2012, September 19)
<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-18911"></span>
<div class="QuoteText">"In 2011 President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, in power for 32 years, faced an unprecedented wave of criticism. Inspired by the pro-democracy Arab Spring movements, Angola witnessed an incipient movement of anti-government protests. In response, authorities used excessive force to crack down on the protests, most of which were organized via the internet, and curtailed media coverage of the demonstrations." <strong>-- <a href="http://www.hrw.org/angola" target="new">Human Rights Watch</a></strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<strong>Protestors Facing Violence From Angolan Security Forces</strong>
<iframe width="730" height="548" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/tfYCXO895Nc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">You encouraged protestors to speak out against the government at one of your concerts. What was your role in the protests prior to and after that? Was there a particular point when you decided that enough was enough, or have you long been dissatisfied with the government?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Num dos teus concertos, incentivaste a plateia a sair em protesto contra o governo. Qual foi o teu papel nas manifestações antes e depois desse dia? Existe algum momento particular em que tenhas decidido bater com o punho e dizer basta, ou o descontentamento com o governo já é antigo?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">I will start from the second half of this question: I have always been dissatisfied with governments in general, mine in particular. I grew up under the impression that politicians were the biggest crooks walking the earth, their cynical and pompous behaviour having always raised suspicions that they were not to be trusted to manage whole population's resources. The more I grew, the more I solidified the impression, that grew into a blind certainty, that politicians are foul, looking after the interests of the rich and powerful whilst finding ways of elluding the rest of us with neatly written and celebrated concepts of democracy and freedom that are not applied in day-to-day life. 

Now, how active was I before that concert? That March 7th demonstration was the beggining of a new era where, symbolically, the youth broke the mold of fear and took it to the streets, without beating around the bush to what the purpose were: decomissioning of this never elected, senile president. Before this demonstration, I was just making music; I'm an hip hop artist and my lyrics are very often socially/politically inclined. I've been doing it since 1994, but it wasn't until 2002 that I started speaking out against the government.
<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Começo pela segunda parte desta questão: desde miúdo que desconfio dos governos e da classe política em geral, dos meus em particular. Cresci com a impressão que os políticos são os maiores ladrões à face da Terra. O seu jeito cínico e pomposo nunca me convenceu, antes pelo contrário, despertava em mim agudizadas suspeitas de que não seria gente a quem se deveria confiar a gestão dos recursos pertencentes à Nação. Quanto mais cresci, mais cimentei a impressão, entretanto tornada certeza, de que os políticos são facínoras que tomam conta dos interesses dos ricos e poderosos, desenvolvendo táticas cada vez mais refinadas de ilusionismo, para fazer crer aos comuns mortais que gozam de conceitos bem enfabulados de liberdade e democracia.

Quanto a primeira parte da questão: o dia 7 de Março de 2011 foi o início de uma nova era para Angola, foi o momento em que um grupo pequeno de pessoas rompeu com a barreira opressiva do medo e saíu à rua sem dissimular o seu verdadeiro objetivo: a destituição de um presidente caduco, jamais sufragado por voto popular. Antes dessa manifestação eu limitava-me a fazer música e, sendo um artista de hip-hop, muitas das minhas músicas têm um forte cariz social e político, mas nunca tinha participado de nenhuma manifestação no meu país porque elas eram virtualmente inexistentes.<div class="Clear"></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div class="QuoteText">"What I feel is: everyone is fed up but most people are terrified of losing whatever little commodity they have conquered by publicly admitting it. I was told that even within the MPLA (the ruling party which we fight against) there are many people who silently support us. To what extent is that true I cannot say."

"Se é verdade ou não, não posso confirmar, mas em jeito de sustentação deixe-me só acrescentar que dois generais na reserva de uma influente família do MPLA, abandonaram recentemente o partido, tendo um deles associado-se a uma nova agremiação partidária e vindo à público tomar o nosso partido."

<strong>-- Luaty DaSilva (Ikonoklasta)</strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">What role would you say influential people and technology have played in the creation and subsequent growth of this particular movement?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Qual terá sido na tua ótica o papel de personalidades influentes e da tecnologia na criação e subsequente engrandecimento deste movimento em particular?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">Considering the fact that Angola has an education deficit reflected by its catastrophic literacy rate (aprox. 70%) <sup><a href="#sources">5</a></sup> and that only a mere 10% of the population has access to the internet <sup><a href="sources">6</a></sup>, I'd say technology played a small part in mobilization from within. It did help keep both the lucky 10% inland and the rest of the immense diaspora abroad [informed], something that wouldn't be conceivable a few years back where everyone had to rely on perfectly controlled, manipulated Angolan media. The videos we've captured on protest days were simply divulged on the internet, which helped spreading the sense of indignation amongst our fellow countrymen and foreigners who cared about what was taking place in Angola.

As far as the "influential people" are concerned, I don't think any of them have played pivotal roles, since most of the people that are somewhat trusted by certain segments of the general population (amongst them one of the country's ex-prime minister), did little more than voice their support for the youngsters in very limited public means. Few people had access to it. There's a huge information clot in Angola promoted by the government either by state media or by coercive/dissuasive methods employed within "privately-owned" media, which is the only explanation (besides illiteracy) for the effectiveness of archaic tools used by the regime to hold on to power for so long. <sup><a href="#sources">7</a></sup>
 
<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Tendo em conta que somos um país onde a informação ainda é controlada e deturpada pelo partido de forma que já roça a infantilidade de tão grotesca, que Angola tem um dos seus maiores flagelos na sua elevadíssima taxa de analfabetismo (aprox. 70%) <sup><a href="sources">5</a></sup> e que uns escassos 10% da população angolana tem acesso à internet <sup><a href="sources">6</a></sup>, eu diria que a tecnologia desempenhou um papel menos preponderante em Angola do que nos países irmãos da África do Norte. Os vídeos que captámos das agressões sofridas em dias de protesto, por exemplo, foram divulgados unicamente na internet, o que limita o potencial de indignação que teria perto da população que sofre diariamente as agruras de uma governação que não lhes contempla. 

Quanto às personalidades influentes, dentre os quais contamos um ex-primeiro ministro, também vejo a sua intervenção como limitada e logo, não terão pesado muito, pelo menos não até agora, na agregação de massa popular ao movimento. Infelizmente, mesmo tendo tornado públicos os seus posicionamentos, estes não foram divulgados pelos mídia angolanos, todos muito dependentes do poder vigente. <sup><a href="#sources">7</a></sup><div class="Clear"></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">After the incident at the airport, has the Angolan government tried to threaten you in other ways?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Depois do incidente no aeroporto o governo angolano voltou a tentar ameaçar-te de alguma outra forma?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">Not yet. I'm still in Europe where is a bit harder to do me wrong without making too much of a fuss. They must have something ready for me, some sort of "warm welcome home" for when I return on the 25th of July [to my jungle].<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Não. Ainda estou na Europa. Se têm alguma coisa planeada, deverão estar a espera do meu regresso para me fazer a folha. Dia 25 de Julho volto à minha selva.<p>&nbsp;</p><div class="Clear"></div>

<strong>Batida - "Cuka" feat. Ikonoklasta (English Subtitled)</strong>
<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/24440736?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0&amp;color=66fcff" width="730" height="584" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>

<span class="InterviewQ">Youth and war veterans have been two groups of particular note in the Angolan protests. Asides from them, what would you say public opinion is generally like?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Os jovens e os veteranos de guerra são dois grupos a destacar nos protestos que se desencadearam em Angola. Para além deles, o que dirias da opinião pública em geral?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">I wish I could speak of this matter being able to sustain my theory with undeniable evidence, but the fact is I can only speak about my own experiences and from what I observe daily -- from interacting with other people and hearing their private opinions, or from surfing the internet, a place where people maintain a relative anonymity and speak more freely. What I feel is: everyone is fed up but most people are terrified of losing whatever little commodity they have conquered by publicly admitting it. I was told that even within the MPLA (the ruling party which we fight against) there are many people who silently support us. To what extent is that true I cannot say.<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div>Gostaria de poder sustentar a minha resposta com provas documentadas, mas o facto é que só posso referir a minha impressão pessoal, derivada das conversas que tenho com os meus concidadãos e das tendências para as intervenções nos portais angolanos na internet, onde felizmente, as pessoas se sentem menos inseguras de assumirem as suas verdadeiras opiniões. O que eu sinto é o seguinte: está toda a gente farta mas, simultaneamente, aterrorizada de meter em risco as parcas comodidades que conseguiram assegurar, assumindo publicamente as suas posições. Disseram-me que dentro do próprio MPLA há um enorme grupo de pessoas que silenciosamente se regozigam com as nossas ações. Se é verdade ou não, não posso confirmar, mas em jeito de sustentação deixe-me só acrescentar que dois generais na reserva de uma influente família do MPLA, abandonaram recentemente o partido, tendo um deles associado-se a uma nova agremiação partidária e vindo à público tomar o nosso partido.<div class="Clear"></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">The election in Angola will be held on August 31st. Violence and action taken against protestors seems to be ramping up. What do you envision happening between now and then, and what is the ideal scenario you hope for?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">A eleição em Angola será realizado em 31 de Agosto. A violência e as medidas tomadas contra os manifestantes parece estar incrementando. O que você imagina acontecer entre agora e depois, e qual é o cenário ideal que você espera?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">I have no hope in ideal scenarios. There are none. The ideal scenario is Dos Santos stepping down, the elections being delayed for a few months in order to make the whole process transparent (which is everything but up until now), but this would be pure wishful thinking. Violence will carry on as long as there is dissent, and taking into account the escalation of violence we've been witnessing lately, homicide is not to be discarded. <sup><a href="#sources">8, 9</a></sup><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Não tenho nem uma ponta de esperança em cenários ideais. Não há um cenário ideal que se perfile no horizonte. O cenário ideal seria o Jose Eduardo dos Santos desistir da ideia de ser cabeça de lista pelo MPLA e adiarem-se as eleições até estarem criadas as condições que garantam a total transparência na sua realização, o que não é DE TODO o cenário atual. Esse cenário é pura fantasia tendo em conta os desenvolvimentos dos últimos meses. Prevejo que a violência vá continuar a aumentar e não se deve descartar a possibilidade de entrarmos em práticas de homicídios, tendo em conta os sinais que nos têm sido enviados por parte do governo. <sup><a href="#sources">8, 9</a></sup><div class="Clear"></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">What issues and government wrongdoings are people most fired up about?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Que problemas e erros do governo são as pessoas mais raiva?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">People are weary of (mis)governance by the same party, 37 after gaining independence. Moreover, people finally have realized that war was a pretext to justify the incompetence of the government in managing public affairs. Generals and government officials have become pornographically enriched by the many years of civil war and are completely shameless in their shameful display that, judging by their arrogance, seems to give them the feeling of being untouchable, superior beings. People are tired of systematically seeing their most basic rights appropriated by those who must enforce them, charging them fees known as "gas" to earn them. I speak essentially of the right to health, education and employment. In every country there is corruption that is only controlled by counter-powers among them -- perhaps most importantly, the pressure of public opinion. In Angola is controlled by public opinion or misinformation or psychological terror, thus creating the feeling that people are resigned to the rhythm of "work" of the government, accepting that they can not go faster, tolerating that they continue to use to war as an excuse. But that's a lie; anyone walks in the street know that the population does not fall in this trap.<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
As pessoas estão exaustas da (des)governação do mesmo partido, 37 após a conquista da independência. Mais, as pessoas finalmente deram-se conta que a guerra era um pretexto para justificar a incompetência dos governantes na gestão da coisa pública. Generais e membros do governo enriqueceram pornograficamente ao longo dos muitos anos de guerra civil e são completamente despudorados na sua vergonhosa ostentação que, julgando pela sua arrogância, lhes parece conferir a sensação de intocáveis, seres superiores. As pessoas estão fartas de verem sistematicamente os seus direitos mais elementares apropriados por quem devia garanti-los, cobrando-lhes taxas conhecidas como "gasosas", para deles auferirem. Falo claro essencialmente do direito à saúde, educação e ao emprego. Em todos os países existe corrupção que só é controlada por contra-poderes dentre os quais, talvez o mais importante, a pressão da opinião pública. Em Angola controla-se a opinião pública ou pela desinformação ou pelo terror psicológico, criando-se assim a sensação que as pessoas estão conformadas com o ritmo de "trabalho" do governo, aceitando que não podem ir mais rápido, tolerando que continue a usar-se a guerra como desculpa. Mas é mentira, quem anda na rua sabe que a população já não cai nesse engodo.<div class="Clear"></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How can people within Angola, and people outside Angola, help?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Como podem as pessoas dentro e fora de Angola ajudar?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">Everyone, having contact with interviews like these, is spreading the information and must act according to what your conscience dictates, and you do what you can. I will not enumerate the various ways that exist to help, because I believe that each person is aware of their ability to interfere. I am glad if there is sufficient disclosure so that the number of people aware of what is happening in Angola, in widely different countries, is more comprehensive.<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Cada um, tendo contacto com a informação que, com entrevistas como estas, se está a disseminar, deve agir de acordo com o que a sua consciência lhe ditar e fazer o que pode. Eu não vou enumerar as várias maneiras que existem para ajudar, porque acredito que cada pessoa tem noção das suas capacidades de interferir. Fico satisfeito se houver divulgação suficiente para que o número de pessoas conscientes do que se está a passar em Angola, nos mais distintos países, seja mais abrangente.<div class="Clear"></div><a name="sources"></a><p>&nbsp;</p>

<h3>Sources</h3>
<sup>1</sup> <small>Reuters Africa, July 2012. <a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/angolaNews/idAFL6E8IE30O20120714" target="new">Angolan Police Arrest 12 At Anti-Government Rally</a>
<sup>2</sup> <small>YouTube, June 2012. <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EGVH5cwt2w" target="new">Luaty revela detalhes do "caso cocaína"</a></small>
<sup>3</sup> <small>Global Voices, March 2012. <a href="http://globalvoicesonline.org/2012/03/11/angola-violence-protest-elections/" target="new">Violence Against Protest for Fair Elections</a></small>
<sup>4</sup> <small>Novo Jornal(Luanda), February 2012.</small>
<sup>5</sup> <small>Angola Statistics, UNICEF. <a href="http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html" target="new">http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html</a>
<sup>6</sup> <small>Angola Statistics, UNICEF. <a href="http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html" target="new">http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html</a>; Google (data from World Bank). <a href="http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=d5bncppjof8f9_&met_y=it_net_user_p2&idim=country:AGO&dl=en&hl=en&q=internet+users+angola" target="new">World Development Indicators and Global Development Finance</a></small>
<sup>7</sup> <small>Aljazeera, March 2012. <a href="http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/03/201231314184398261.html" target="new">Angola's Police Raid Newspaper Office</a></small>
<sup>8</sup> <small>Human Rights Watch, July 2012. <a href="http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/05/angola-protesters-detained-disappeared" target="new">Protestors Detained, Disppeared: Pre-Election Environment Marred By Crackdown</a></small>
<sup>9</sup> <small>Human Rights Watch, April 2012. <a href="http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/04/02/angola-violent-crackdown-critics" target="new">Violent Crackdown on Critics: Increasing Violence and Threats Raise Concerns about 2012 Elections</a>

&Omega;</p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/">Charitable Musicians: <strong>Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta</strong> Protests Against The Angolan Government</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/">Charitable Musicians: <strong>Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta</strong> Protests Against The Angolan Government</a></p><p><img width="340" height="227" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/2012_Angola.png" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Angola" /></p><div class="InterviewRight"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/2012_Angola.png" />

<strong>Background On The 2011 Angolan Demonstrations</strong><iframe width="340" height="255" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/x7QiK0pN9p8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="300" height="100" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 300px; height: 100px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/track=460534989/size=grande/bgcol=FFFFFF/linkcol=666666/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"><a href="http://akwaabamusic.bandcamp.com/track/l-vai-mar-a-feat-ikonoklasta">Lá Vai María feat. Ikonoklasta by Batida</a></iframe>

<strong>Luaty DaSilva On His Airport Experience</strong>
<iframe width="340" height="255" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/_EGVH5cwt2w" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></div><div class="IntroText">In early 2011, as the turmoil from the Arab Spring protests made their way into pockets of Africa, Angolan youth began taking to the streets themselves. At the heart of their ongoing dissatisfaction remains the 32-year reign of President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, who protesters cite as the cause of mismanaged oil revenues, suppressed human rights, and widespread poverty, amongst other corruptions. <sup><a href="#sources">1</a></sup>

One early advocate for the protests include hip-hop musician Luaty DaSilva, aka Ikonoklasta, who openly voiced his support for the uprising during one of his February 2011 concerts, listing government officials as "exploiters of the oppressed" while the crowd responded to push them "out!"

In June 2012, DaSilva departed Angola for Lisbon, Portugal, to play with the Kuduro band Batida. DaSilva's supporters at the Angolan airport warned him that his luggage had been tampered with by the National Crime Investigation Department, and DaSilva decided that upon arrival in Lisbon, he would tell customs that he suspected foul play. But he never made it there, as the police were upon him as soon as he got his luggage. A kilogram of cocaine was discovered in DaSilva's luggage, but the presiding judge of the case set him free, because, in Luaty's words, "the framing was so gross that not even the judge bought it." <sup><a href="#sources">2</a></sup>

For the following month-and-a-half, DaSilva stayed in Portugal, and has only just returned to Angola. As he shares in the interview below, he suspects that the government "must have something ready for me, some sort of "warm welcome home" for when I return on the 25th of July." He is just one of a handful of musicians known to have faced persecution. <sup><a href="#sources">3</a></sup>

The 2012 parliamentary elections are to be held in Angola on August 31st -- hypothetically the first time the government will respect the constitutional deadline of having four years between elections. Yet despite this fact, which ostensibly seems to be an improvement, demonstrators both young and old have seen an intense increase in violence in the past year, much of which has been captured on video and disseminated widely via the internet. As recently as July 15th, several hundred protestors, knowing very well the potential dangers which faced them, risked likely violence from security forces and protested in the Sao Paolo market. Twelve were arrested, including two journalists working for Portuguese publications, sparking a call for the postponement of the August elections until free and fair polls can be guaranteed. <sup><a href="#sources">4</a></sup>

<strong>In the following Q&A with REDEFINE, DaSilva gives his perspective on the situation in Angola, offering a point of view from the young and frustrated underclass, in both Portuguese and English.</strong></div>

<strong>September 2012 Headlines</strong>
<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-08-31/slow-start-in-angola-elections" target="new">Thousands stay away from Angolan elections</a> (AP News - 2012, August 31)
<a href="http://articles.cnn.com/2012-09-02/africa/world_africa_angola-elections_1_unita-president-jose-eduardo-alcides-sakala" target="new">Angola's ruling party declared election winner</a> (CNN - 2012, September 2)
<a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/09/19/us-angola-election-idUSBRE88I18320120919" target="new">Angola court rejects UNITA appeal, says vote was fair</a> (Reuters - 2012, September 19)
<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-18911"></span>
<div class="QuoteText">"In 2011 President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, in power for 32 years, faced an unprecedented wave of criticism. Inspired by the pro-democracy Arab Spring movements, Angola witnessed an incipient movement of anti-government protests. In response, authorities used excessive force to crack down on the protests, most of which were organized via the internet, and curtailed media coverage of the demonstrations." <strong>-- <a href="http://www.hrw.org/angola" target="new">Human Rights Watch</a></strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<strong>Protestors Facing Violence From Angolan Security Forces</strong>
<iframe width="730" height="548" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/tfYCXO895Nc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">You encouraged protestors to speak out against the government at one of your concerts. What was your role in the protests prior to and after that? Was there a particular point when you decided that enough was enough, or have you long been dissatisfied with the government?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Num dos teus concertos, incentivaste a plateia a sair em protesto contra o governo. Qual foi o teu papel nas manifestações antes e depois desse dia? Existe algum momento particular em que tenhas decidido bater com o punho e dizer basta, ou o descontentamento com o governo já é antigo?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">I will start from the second half of this question: I have always been dissatisfied with governments in general, mine in particular. I grew up under the impression that politicians were the biggest crooks walking the earth, their cynical and pompous behaviour having always raised suspicions that they were not to be trusted to manage whole population's resources. The more I grew, the more I solidified the impression, that grew into a blind certainty, that politicians are foul, looking after the interests of the rich and powerful whilst finding ways of elluding the rest of us with neatly written and celebrated concepts of democracy and freedom that are not applied in day-to-day life. 

Now, how active was I before that concert? That March 7th demonstration was the beggining of a new era where, symbolically, the youth broke the mold of fear and took it to the streets, without beating around the bush to what the purpose were: decomissioning of this never elected, senile president. Before this demonstration, I was just making music; I'm an hip hop artist and my lyrics are very often socially/politically inclined. I've been doing it since 1994, but it wasn't until 2002 that I started speaking out against the government.
<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Começo pela segunda parte desta questão: desde miúdo que desconfio dos governos e da classe política em geral, dos meus em particular. Cresci com a impressão que os políticos são os maiores ladrões à face da Terra. O seu jeito cínico e pomposo nunca me convenceu, antes pelo contrário, despertava em mim agudizadas suspeitas de que não seria gente a quem se deveria confiar a gestão dos recursos pertencentes à Nação. Quanto mais cresci, mais cimentei a impressão, entretanto tornada certeza, de que os políticos são facínoras que tomam conta dos interesses dos ricos e poderosos, desenvolvendo táticas cada vez mais refinadas de ilusionismo, para fazer crer aos comuns mortais que gozam de conceitos bem enfabulados de liberdade e democracia.

Quanto a primeira parte da questão: o dia 7 de Março de 2011 foi o início de uma nova era para Angola, foi o momento em que um grupo pequeno de pessoas rompeu com a barreira opressiva do medo e saíu à rua sem dissimular o seu verdadeiro objetivo: a destituição de um presidente caduco, jamais sufragado por voto popular. Antes dessa manifestação eu limitava-me a fazer música e, sendo um artista de hip-hop, muitas das minhas músicas têm um forte cariz social e político, mas nunca tinha participado de nenhuma manifestação no meu país porque elas eram virtualmente inexistentes.<div class="Clear"></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div class="QuoteText">"What I feel is: everyone is fed up but most people are terrified of losing whatever little commodity they have conquered by publicly admitting it. I was told that even within the MPLA (the ruling party which we fight against) there are many people who silently support us. To what extent is that true I cannot say."

"Se é verdade ou não, não posso confirmar, mas em jeito de sustentação deixe-me só acrescentar que dois generais na reserva de uma influente família do MPLA, abandonaram recentemente o partido, tendo um deles associado-se a uma nova agremiação partidária e vindo à público tomar o nosso partido."

<strong>-- Luaty DaSilva (Ikonoklasta)</strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">What role would you say influential people and technology have played in the creation and subsequent growth of this particular movement?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Qual terá sido na tua ótica o papel de personalidades influentes e da tecnologia na criação e subsequente engrandecimento deste movimento em particular?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">Considering the fact that Angola has an education deficit reflected by its catastrophic literacy rate (aprox. 70%) <sup><a href="#sources">5</a></sup> and that only a mere 10% of the population has access to the internet <sup><a href="sources">6</a></sup>, I'd say technology played a small part in mobilization from within. It did help keep both the lucky 10% inland and the rest of the immense diaspora abroad [informed], something that wouldn't be conceivable a few years back where everyone had to rely on perfectly controlled, manipulated Angolan media. The videos we've captured on protest days were simply divulged on the internet, which helped spreading the sense of indignation amongst our fellow countrymen and foreigners who cared about what was taking place in Angola.

As far as the "influential people" are concerned, I don't think any of them have played pivotal roles, since most of the people that are somewhat trusted by certain segments of the general population (amongst them one of the country's ex-prime minister), did little more than voice their support for the youngsters in very limited public means. Few people had access to it. There's a huge information clot in Angola promoted by the government either by state media or by coercive/dissuasive methods employed within "privately-owned" media, which is the only explanation (besides illiteracy) for the effectiveness of archaic tools used by the regime to hold on to power for so long. <sup><a href="#sources">7</a></sup>
 
<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Tendo em conta que somos um país onde a informação ainda é controlada e deturpada pelo partido de forma que já roça a infantilidade de tão grotesca, que Angola tem um dos seus maiores flagelos na sua elevadíssima taxa de analfabetismo (aprox. 70%) <sup><a href="sources">5</a></sup> e que uns escassos 10% da população angolana tem acesso à internet <sup><a href="sources">6</a></sup>, eu diria que a tecnologia desempenhou um papel menos preponderante em Angola do que nos países irmãos da África do Norte. Os vídeos que captámos das agressões sofridas em dias de protesto, por exemplo, foram divulgados unicamente na internet, o que limita o potencial de indignação que teria perto da população que sofre diariamente as agruras de uma governação que não lhes contempla. 

Quanto às personalidades influentes, dentre os quais contamos um ex-primeiro ministro, também vejo a sua intervenção como limitada e logo, não terão pesado muito, pelo menos não até agora, na agregação de massa popular ao movimento. Infelizmente, mesmo tendo tornado públicos os seus posicionamentos, estes não foram divulgados pelos mídia angolanos, todos muito dependentes do poder vigente. <sup><a href="#sources">7</a></sup><div class="Clear"></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">After the incident at the airport, has the Angolan government tried to threaten you in other ways?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Depois do incidente no aeroporto o governo angolano voltou a tentar ameaçar-te de alguma outra forma?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">Not yet. I'm still in Europe where is a bit harder to do me wrong without making too much of a fuss. They must have something ready for me, some sort of "warm welcome home" for when I return on the 25th of July [to my jungle].<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Não. Ainda estou na Europa. Se têm alguma coisa planeada, deverão estar a espera do meu regresso para me fazer a folha. Dia 25 de Julho volto à minha selva.<p>&nbsp;</p><div class="Clear"></div>

<strong>Batida - "Cuka" feat. Ikonoklasta (English Subtitled)</strong>
<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/24440736?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0&amp;color=66fcff" width="730" height="584" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>

<span class="InterviewQ">Youth and war veterans have been two groups of particular note in the Angolan protests. Asides from them, what would you say public opinion is generally like?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Os jovens e os veteranos de guerra são dois grupos a destacar nos protestos que se desencadearam em Angola. Para além deles, o que dirias da opinião pública em geral?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">I wish I could speak of this matter being able to sustain my theory with undeniable evidence, but the fact is I can only speak about my own experiences and from what I observe daily -- from interacting with other people and hearing their private opinions, or from surfing the internet, a place where people maintain a relative anonymity and speak more freely. What I feel is: everyone is fed up but most people are terrified of losing whatever little commodity they have conquered by publicly admitting it. I was told that even within the MPLA (the ruling party which we fight against) there are many people who silently support us. To what extent is that true I cannot say.<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div>Gostaria de poder sustentar a minha resposta com provas documentadas, mas o facto é que só posso referir a minha impressão pessoal, derivada das conversas que tenho com os meus concidadãos e das tendências para as intervenções nos portais angolanos na internet, onde felizmente, as pessoas se sentem menos inseguras de assumirem as suas verdadeiras opiniões. O que eu sinto é o seguinte: está toda a gente farta mas, simultaneamente, aterrorizada de meter em risco as parcas comodidades que conseguiram assegurar, assumindo publicamente as suas posições. Disseram-me que dentro do próprio MPLA há um enorme grupo de pessoas que silenciosamente se regozigam com as nossas ações. Se é verdade ou não, não posso confirmar, mas em jeito de sustentação deixe-me só acrescentar que dois generais na reserva de uma influente família do MPLA, abandonaram recentemente o partido, tendo um deles associado-se a uma nova agremiação partidária e vindo à público tomar o nosso partido.<div class="Clear"></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">The election in Angola will be held on August 31st. Violence and action taken against protestors seems to be ramping up. What do you envision happening between now and then, and what is the ideal scenario you hope for?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">A eleição em Angola será realizado em 31 de Agosto. A violência e as medidas tomadas contra os manifestantes parece estar incrementando. O que você imagina acontecer entre agora e depois, e qual é o cenário ideal que você espera?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">I have no hope in ideal scenarios. There are none. The ideal scenario is Dos Santos stepping down, the elections being delayed for a few months in order to make the whole process transparent (which is everything but up until now), but this would be pure wishful thinking. Violence will carry on as long as there is dissent, and taking into account the escalation of violence we've been witnessing lately, homicide is not to be discarded. <sup><a href="#sources">8, 9</a></sup><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Não tenho nem uma ponta de esperança em cenários ideais. Não há um cenário ideal que se perfile no horizonte. O cenário ideal seria o Jose Eduardo dos Santos desistir da ideia de ser cabeça de lista pelo MPLA e adiarem-se as eleições até estarem criadas as condições que garantam a total transparência na sua realização, o que não é DE TODO o cenário atual. Esse cenário é pura fantasia tendo em conta os desenvolvimentos dos últimos meses. Prevejo que a violência vá continuar a aumentar e não se deve descartar a possibilidade de entrarmos em práticas de homicídios, tendo em conta os sinais que nos têm sido enviados por parte do governo. <sup><a href="#sources">8, 9</a></sup><div class="Clear"></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">What issues and government wrongdoings are people most fired up about?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Que problemas e erros do governo são as pessoas mais raiva?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">People are weary of (mis)governance by the same party, 37 after gaining independence. Moreover, people finally have realized that war was a pretext to justify the incompetence of the government in managing public affairs. Generals and government officials have become pornographically enriched by the many years of civil war and are completely shameless in their shameful display that, judging by their arrogance, seems to give them the feeling of being untouchable, superior beings. People are tired of systematically seeing their most basic rights appropriated by those who must enforce them, charging them fees known as "gas" to earn them. I speak essentially of the right to health, education and employment. In every country there is corruption that is only controlled by counter-powers among them -- perhaps most importantly, the pressure of public opinion. In Angola is controlled by public opinion or misinformation or psychological terror, thus creating the feeling that people are resigned to the rhythm of "work" of the government, accepting that they can not go faster, tolerating that they continue to use to war as an excuse. But that's a lie; anyone walks in the street know that the population does not fall in this trap.<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
As pessoas estão exaustas da (des)governação do mesmo partido, 37 após a conquista da independência. Mais, as pessoas finalmente deram-se conta que a guerra era um pretexto para justificar a incompetência dos governantes na gestão da coisa pública. Generais e membros do governo enriqueceram pornograficamente ao longo dos muitos anos de guerra civil e são completamente despudorados na sua vergonhosa ostentação que, julgando pela sua arrogância, lhes parece conferir a sensação de intocáveis, seres superiores. As pessoas estão fartas de verem sistematicamente os seus direitos mais elementares apropriados por quem devia garanti-los, cobrando-lhes taxas conhecidas como "gasosas", para deles auferirem. Falo claro essencialmente do direito à saúde, educação e ao emprego. Em todos os países existe corrupção que só é controlada por contra-poderes dentre os quais, talvez o mais importante, a pressão da opinião pública. Em Angola controla-se a opinião pública ou pela desinformação ou pelo terror psicológico, criando-se assim a sensação que as pessoas estão conformadas com o ritmo de "trabalho" do governo, aceitando que não podem ir mais rápido, tolerando que continue a usar-se a guerra como desculpa. Mas é mentira, quem anda na rua sabe que a população já não cai nesse engodo.<div class="Clear"></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How can people within Angola, and people outside Angola, help?</span>

<span class="InterviewQ">Como podem as pessoas dentro e fora de Angola ajudar?</span>
<div class="InterviewRight">Everyone, having contact with interviews like these, is spreading the information and must act according to what your conscience dictates, and you do what you can. I will not enumerate the various ways that exist to help, because I believe that each person is aware of their ability to interfere. I am glad if there is sufficient disclosure so that the number of people aware of what is happening in Angola, in widely different countries, is more comprehensive.<p>&nbsp;</p></div>
Cada um, tendo contacto com a informação que, com entrevistas como estas, se está a disseminar, deve agir de acordo com o que a sua consciência lhe ditar e fazer o que pode. Eu não vou enumerar as várias maneiras que existem para ajudar, porque acredito que cada pessoa tem noção das suas capacidades de interferir. Fico satisfeito se houver divulgação suficiente para que o número de pessoas conscientes do que se está a passar em Angola, nos mais distintos países, seja mais abrangente.<div class="Clear"></div><a name="sources"></a><p>&nbsp;</p>

<h3>Sources</h3>
<sup>1</sup> <small>Reuters Africa, July 2012. <a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/angolaNews/idAFL6E8IE30O20120714" target="new">Angolan Police Arrest 12 At Anti-Government Rally</a>
<sup>2</sup> <small>YouTube, June 2012. <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EGVH5cwt2w" target="new">Luaty revela detalhes do "caso cocaína"</a></small>
<sup>3</sup> <small>Global Voices, March 2012. <a href="http://globalvoicesonline.org/2012/03/11/angola-violence-protest-elections/" target="new">Violence Against Protest for Fair Elections</a></small>
<sup>4</sup> <small>Novo Jornal(Luanda), February 2012.</small>
<sup>5</sup> <small>Angola Statistics, UNICEF. <a href="http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html" target="new">http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html</a>
<sup>6</sup> <small>Angola Statistics, UNICEF. <a href="http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html" target="new">http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/angola_statistics.html</a>; Google (data from World Bank). <a href="http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=d5bncppjof8f9_&met_y=it_net_user_p2&idim=country:AGO&dl=en&hl=en&q=internet+users+angola" target="new">World Development Indicators and Global Development Finance</a></small>
<sup>7</sup> <small>Aljazeera, March 2012. <a href="http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/03/201231314184398261.html" target="new">Angola's Police Raid Newspaper Office</a></small>
<sup>8</sup> <small>Human Rights Watch, July 2012. <a href="http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/05/angola-protesters-detained-disappeared" target="new">Protestors Detained, Disppeared: Pre-Election Environment Marred By Crackdown</a></small>
<sup>9</sup> <small>Human Rights Watch, April 2012. <a href="http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/04/02/angola-violent-crackdown-critics" target="new">Violent Crackdown on Critics: Increasing Violence and Threats Raise Concerns about 2012 Elections</a>

&Omega;<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/hip-hop-rapper-ikonoklasta-angolan-government-protests/">Charitable Musicians: <strong>Hip-Hop Rapper Ikonoklasta</strong> Protests Against The Angolan Government</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
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		<title>Charitable Musicians: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 17:34:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Peter Woodburn</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=16360</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)</a></p><p><p><img width="730" height="394" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/2012_Red-Fang-01.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Red-Fang-01" /></p><div class="IntroText">It is no secret that the economic depression that has commanded the nation for the past four years has taken its toll on everyone. School districts nationwide are especially feeling the budget crisis, as falling tax revenues has forced some to get creative. Be it via hacking a month off of the school year or forcing teachers to take furlough days, it is, in the end, students who lose out most from these funding struggles.

Portland's favorite beard metal band <strong><a href="/tag/red-fang">Red Fang</a></strong> are more known for their <strong><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/red-fang-prehistoric-dog/">PBR-swilling music videos</a></strong> and heavy riffs than they are their level of social engagement. But when the Grant High School art department needed some funds to keep the art flowing, Red Fang did what all good metal bands would do: threw a benefit show. Like a carwash fundraiser, only with less bikinis, more beer, and more beards.

In this interview, Red Fang's vocalist and bassist Aaron Beam talks about why the band got involved, and Maliq Rogers, a Sophomore at Grant High School, explains what impact the budget cuts have on his band, Hell's Parish, and the other students at the school.</div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/2012_Red-Fang-01.jpg" alt="" title="2012_Red-Fang-01" width="730" height="394" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-16954" />

<div class="QuoteText">"I think we need to re-program society to put a bigger emphasis on the arts, so that it would be inexcusable to cut an arts programs funding in the public schools." <strong>-- Aaron Beam</strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-16360"></span>

<div class="InterviewRight" style="margin-bottom: 20px;"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/2012_Red-Fang.jpg" alt="" title="Red Fang" />

<em>A Benefit For Grant High Art Department</em> is scheduled to take place Friday May 25th at the Hawthorne Theater in Portland, Oregon. Red Fang will be headlining the event with support coming from Lopez, Nether Regions and Grant High's own Hell's Parrish. Doors for the show at are 7:00 pm with the first band hitting the stage at 7:30 pm. Tickets can be purchased for the show <strong><a href="http://www.cascadetickets.com/apps/calendar/performer.php?performer_id=2445" target="new">HERE</a></strong>.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>A Note From Hell's Parish</h3>
<blockquote style="margin: 0px;">My name is Maliq Rodgers, and I am the drummer of Hell's Parish and a sophomore at Grant [High School].  Grant is facing cuts in many elective classes, especially the arts.  Our art classes are already running low on supplies and we have to change plans to work with our lack of supplies.  Language classes are being cut as well.  An active arts program helps kids find new ways to express themselves and have fun, and to explore different activities that they wouldn't have in other places.  I've been taking some form of art through every year of school, and it's something that lets you branch out and express yourself in new ways and have fun [while] doing.  The emphasis on standardized testing takes away from the arts in some ways, because core classes are the main priority of the education system, and that isn't going to change.  Schools typically focus on English, Social Studies, and Sciences. 

Art isn't something you can always put into numbers and scores, but for someone who wants to pursue a career in some form of art, these classes can hold lots of value.  Schools often hold fundraisers and benefits like the one we're playing, but that's not enough to fund the art programs. The economic struggles are nothing that a small group of people can fix, and the budget cuts aren't something that can change instantly.  Personally, I think that everyone should try to share the knowledge that education is losing money.  Maybe if enough people talk about it, someone in power will do something to change the situation.  Nothing's easy, but people need to know what's going on and the more support the schools have, the better.</blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
For more opinions on the topic, please visit any of the following links and articles:

<strong>- <a href="http://www.oregoned.org/atf/cf/%7B3F7AF7EC-F984-4631-A411-148CD1FB8421%7D/2011-04%20Voices-Funding.pdf" target="new">Educator Voices: Impacts Of Budget Cuts On Oregon's Public Schools And Students</a>
- <a href="http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/may2012/port-m15.shtml" target="new">Thousands Rally Against Education Cuts In Portland, Oregon</a> (May 2012)
- <a href="http://blog.oregonlive.com/my-portland/2012/04/pps_students_speak_out_about_t.html" target="new">PPS Students Speak Out About The Value Of Arts In Education</a> (April 2012)
- <a href="http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2011/08/vanishing_arts_budget_cuts_or.html" target="new">Vanishing Arts: Budget Cuts Or Lack Of Vision?</a> (August 2011)
- <a href="http://www.pps.k12.or.us/departments/curriculum/" target="new">PPS Website</a></strong></div><h3>An Interview With Red Fang</h3>
Answers from bassist and vocalist Aaron Beam
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How important is an active arts program in a kid's youth? Was it important in your youth?</span>

Extremely important. It develops the creative part of the brain which is useful in all aspects of life, whether you end up being an artist or not. It was utterly essential for me as a youth, considering I was not a very communicative person [and] felt very separate from my peers... the arts were really my only real form of emotional expression.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">With such an emphasis being placed on standardized testing and such, do you see ways for schools to try and place any emphasis on arts with such limited funding available?</span>

I love <em>The Economist</em> newspaper, but in their views about American public education, I believe they are dead wrong. They repeatedly tout school programs (such as the ones Jeb Bush put in place in Florida) which tend to improve the metrics used for evaluating students' success. But those metrics always involve standardized tests, so what is really being measured is the effectiveness of teachers at training kids for tests that are most likely irrelevant to their future contributions to society. The impact of an arts education cannot be measured directly, so there is no way to justify its necessary expenditures in a board meeting.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">School districts across the nation (and super especially in Oregon) are facing such extreme budget cuts in the face of the economic struggles, do you see any ways to make arts programs more self-sustaining?</span>

There probably are ways to make arts programs more self-sustaining, but I think that is not the direction we should be heading. I think we need to re-program society to put a bigger emphasis on the arts, so that it would be inexcusable to cut an arts programs funding in the public schools.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">What will the funds for this benefit go towards, and how has the reception been on-campus with students, staff, etc.? Is the plight a shared and known one?</span>

I think most parents of high school-aged kids in Portland know about what is happening at Grant. I cannot answer specifically where the funds will go, but I have heard they will benefit all arts programs at Grant High (photography, sculpture, painting, etc.). As far as the reception goes, the art students are very excited, and some of the kids from one of the sculpture classes have a heavy metal band called Hell's Parish who will be performing at the benefit. The whole thing came about because a friend of mine is a teacher at the school, and she brought the funding issue to my attention.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">I read that while you were in high school, you helped set up music programs for schools due to lack of funding. How was that accomplished then, what does this twenty year difference in contrast feel like?</span>

That is not quite what happened. While I was in school, we got wind that due to budget cuts, the marching band at my school (Fort Collins High School) was going to be cut. A group of students got together and attended the school board meeting at which the final decision was to be made, and we each stood up and presented our arguments for keeping the marching band program. The board ended up voting to keep the marching band.

In all honesty, I sort of hated marching band (which was required for anyone who wished to play in concert band), but I was proud of the fact that we had one of the more successful bands in the region, and I also felt that regardless of my personal feelings about participating in marching band, that A) it is not fair to deprive other people who might want to participate, B) cutting any part of a high school's music program would set a very bad, dangerous precedent, and I could not allow that to happen.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Have you guys been involved with other benefits/charities, and/or do you have any plans to?</span>

We have performed a few other benefits, mostly for friends who have gone through trying times. Unfortunately, we cannot spend all our time doing benefits/charity shows since we need to be able to feed our families with income from this band, but whenever the circumstances allow and the cause is a good one, we re eager and willing to help in whatever way we can.

<p>&nbsp;</p> 
<iframe width="730" height="401" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/UgV7hnjoyt0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<span class="InterviewQ">What is your creative process for coming up with THE BEST MUSIC VIDEOS EVER?</span>

100% credit goes to <strong><a href="http://www.whiteyfilms.com/" target="new">Whitey McConnaughy</a></strong>, who writes, directs, and edits all of our videos.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/red-fang-prehistoric-dog/" class="featured-link">See Video for Red Fang's "Prehistoric Dog"</a>

&Omega;</p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa&lt;/strong&gt; Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand'><strong>Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa</strong> Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians&lt;/strong&gt;: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/aural-devastation-red-fangs-crows-in-swine-belgiums-kabul-golf-club/' rel='bookmark' title='Aural Devastation: &lt;strong&gt;Red Fang&#8217;s &#8220;Crows In Swine&#8221;, Belgium&#8217;s Kabul Golf Club&lt;/strong&gt;'>Aural Devastation: <strong>Red Fang&#8217;s &#8220;Crows In Swine&#8221;, Belgium&#8217;s Kabul Golf Club</strong></a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)</a></p><p><img width="730" height="394" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/2012_Red-Fang-01.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Red-Fang-01" /></p><div class="IntroText">It is no secret that the economic depression that has commanded the nation for the past four years has taken its toll on everyone. School districts nationwide are especially feeling the budget crisis, as falling tax revenues has forced some to get creative. Be it via hacking a month off of the school year or forcing teachers to take furlough days, it is, in the end, students who lose out most from these funding struggles.

Portland's favorite beard metal band <strong><a href="/tag/red-fang">Red Fang</a></strong> are more known for their <strong><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/red-fang-prehistoric-dog/">PBR-swilling music videos</a></strong> and heavy riffs than they are their level of social engagement. But when the Grant High School art department needed some funds to keep the art flowing, Red Fang did what all good metal bands would do: threw a benefit show. Like a carwash fundraiser, only with less bikinis, more beer, and more beards.

In this interview, Red Fang's vocalist and bassist Aaron Beam talks about why the band got involved, and Maliq Rogers, a Sophomore at Grant High School, explains what impact the budget cuts have on his band, Hell's Parish, and the other students at the school.</div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/2012_Red-Fang-01.jpg" alt="" title="2012_Red-Fang-01" width="730" height="394" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-16954" />

<div class="QuoteText">"I think we need to re-program society to put a bigger emphasis on the arts, so that it would be inexcusable to cut an arts programs funding in the public schools." <strong>-- Aaron Beam</strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-16360"></span>

<div class="InterviewRight" style="margin-bottom: 20px;"><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/2012_Red-Fang.jpg" alt="" title="Red Fang" />

<em>A Benefit For Grant High Art Department</em> is scheduled to take place Friday May 25th at the Hawthorne Theater in Portland, Oregon. Red Fang will be headlining the event with support coming from Lopez, Nether Regions and Grant High's own Hell's Parrish. Doors for the show at are 7:00 pm with the first band hitting the stage at 7:30 pm. Tickets can be purchased for the show <strong><a href="http://www.cascadetickets.com/apps/calendar/performer.php?performer_id=2445" target="new">HERE</a></strong>.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>A Note From Hell's Parish</h3>
<blockquote style="margin: 0px;">My name is Maliq Rodgers, and I am the drummer of Hell's Parish and a sophomore at Grant [High School].  Grant is facing cuts in many elective classes, especially the arts.  Our art classes are already running low on supplies and we have to change plans to work with our lack of supplies.  Language classes are being cut as well.  An active arts program helps kids find new ways to express themselves and have fun, and to explore different activities that they wouldn't have in other places.  I've been taking some form of art through every year of school, and it's something that lets you branch out and express yourself in new ways and have fun [while] doing.  The emphasis on standardized testing takes away from the arts in some ways, because core classes are the main priority of the education system, and that isn't going to change.  Schools typically focus on English, Social Studies, and Sciences. 

Art isn't something you can always put into numbers and scores, but for someone who wants to pursue a career in some form of art, these classes can hold lots of value.  Schools often hold fundraisers and benefits like the one we're playing, but that's not enough to fund the art programs. The economic struggles are nothing that a small group of people can fix, and the budget cuts aren't something that can change instantly.  Personally, I think that everyone should try to share the knowledge that education is losing money.  Maybe if enough people talk about it, someone in power will do something to change the situation.  Nothing's easy, but people need to know what's going on and the more support the schools have, the better.</blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
For more opinions on the topic, please visit any of the following links and articles:

<strong>- <a href="http://www.oregoned.org/atf/cf/%7B3F7AF7EC-F984-4631-A411-148CD1FB8421%7D/2011-04%20Voices-Funding.pdf" target="new">Educator Voices: Impacts Of Budget Cuts On Oregon's Public Schools And Students</a>
- <a href="http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/may2012/port-m15.shtml" target="new">Thousands Rally Against Education Cuts In Portland, Oregon</a> (May 2012)
- <a href="http://blog.oregonlive.com/my-portland/2012/04/pps_students_speak_out_about_t.html" target="new">PPS Students Speak Out About The Value Of Arts In Education</a> (April 2012)
- <a href="http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2011/08/vanishing_arts_budget_cuts_or.html" target="new">Vanishing Arts: Budget Cuts Or Lack Of Vision?</a> (August 2011)
- <a href="http://www.pps.k12.or.us/departments/curriculum/" target="new">PPS Website</a></strong></div><h3>An Interview With Red Fang</h3>
Answers from bassist and vocalist Aaron Beam
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How important is an active arts program in a kid's youth? Was it important in your youth?</span>

Extremely important. It develops the creative part of the brain which is useful in all aspects of life, whether you end up being an artist or not. It was utterly essential for me as a youth, considering I was not a very communicative person [and] felt very separate from my peers... the arts were really my only real form of emotional expression.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">With such an emphasis being placed on standardized testing and such, do you see ways for schools to try and place any emphasis on arts with such limited funding available?</span>

I love <em>The Economist</em> newspaper, but in their views about American public education, I believe they are dead wrong. They repeatedly tout school programs (such as the ones Jeb Bush put in place in Florida) which tend to improve the metrics used for evaluating students' success. But those metrics always involve standardized tests, so what is really being measured is the effectiveness of teachers at training kids for tests that are most likely irrelevant to their future contributions to society. The impact of an arts education cannot be measured directly, so there is no way to justify its necessary expenditures in a board meeting.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">School districts across the nation (and super especially in Oregon) are facing such extreme budget cuts in the face of the economic struggles, do you see any ways to make arts programs more self-sustaining?</span>

There probably are ways to make arts programs more self-sustaining, but I think that is not the direction we should be heading. I think we need to re-program society to put a bigger emphasis on the arts, so that it would be inexcusable to cut an arts programs funding in the public schools.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">What will the funds for this benefit go towards, and how has the reception been on-campus with students, staff, etc.? Is the plight a shared and known one?</span>

I think most parents of high school-aged kids in Portland know about what is happening at Grant. I cannot answer specifically where the funds will go, but I have heard they will benefit all arts programs at Grant High (photography, sculpture, painting, etc.). As far as the reception goes, the art students are very excited, and some of the kids from one of the sculpture classes have a heavy metal band called Hell's Parish who will be performing at the benefit. The whole thing came about because a friend of mine is a teacher at the school, and she brought the funding issue to my attention.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">I read that while you were in high school, you helped set up music programs for schools due to lack of funding. How was that accomplished then, what does this twenty year difference in contrast feel like?</span>

That is not quite what happened. While I was in school, we got wind that due to budget cuts, the marching band at my school (Fort Collins High School) was going to be cut. A group of students got together and attended the school board meeting at which the final decision was to be made, and we each stood up and presented our arguments for keeping the marching band program. The board ended up voting to keep the marching band.

In all honesty, I sort of hated marching band (which was required for anyone who wished to play in concert band), but I was proud of the fact that we had one of the more successful bands in the region, and I also felt that regardless of my personal feelings about participating in marching band, that A) it is not fair to deprive other people who might want to participate, B) cutting any part of a high school's music program would set a very bad, dangerous precedent, and I could not allow that to happen.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Have you guys been involved with other benefits/charities, and/or do you have any plans to?</span>

We have performed a few other benefits, mostly for friends who have gone through trying times. Unfortunately, we cannot spend all our time doing benefits/charity shows since we need to be able to feed our families with income from this band, but whenever the circumstances allow and the cause is a good one, we re eager and willing to help in whatever way we can.

<p>&nbsp;</p> 
<iframe width="730" height="401" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/UgV7hnjoyt0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<span class="InterviewQ">What is your creative process for coming up with THE BEST MUSIC VIDEOS EVER?</span>

100% credit goes to <strong><a href="http://www.whiteyfilms.com/" target="new">Whitey McConnaughy</a></strong>, who writes, directs, and edits all of our videos.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/red-fang-prehistoric-dog/" class="featured-link">See Video for Red Fang's "Prehistoric Dog"</a>

&Omega;<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2013/charitable-musicians-doomtree-collective-rapper-dessa-interview/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa&lt;/strong&gt; Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand'><strong>Charitable Musicians: Doomtree Collective Rapper Dessa</strong> Says Hip-Hop and Charity Go Hand-In-Hand</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians&lt;/strong&gt;: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/aural-devastation-red-fangs-crows-in-swine-belgiums-kabul-golf-club/' rel='bookmark' title='Aural Devastation: &lt;strong&gt;Red Fang&#8217;s &#8220;Crows In Swine&#8221;, Belgium&#8217;s Kabul Golf Club&lt;/strong&gt;'>Aural Devastation: <strong>Red Fang&#8217;s &#8220;Crows In Swine&#8221;, Belgium&#8217;s Kabul Golf Club</strong></a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Charitable Musicians: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Apr 2012 18:19:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivian Hua</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></p><p><p><img width="725" height="541" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan" /></p><div class="IntroText">In April 2012, La Dispute announced their latest charity benefit project, <em>Conversations</em>, a packet consisting of a hand-assembled and multi-dimensional collection of items courtesy of La Dispute themselves, writers involved with 826michigan, and the band's artist friends. All proceeds from <em>Conversations</em> benefit <a href="http://www.826michigan.org/" target="new">826michigan</a>, a branch of Dave Eggers' literacy organization, <a href="http://826national.org/" target="new">826 National</a>. 
 
In this feature, we speak with vocalist Jordan Dreyer about their work with 826michigan and highlight all of the organizations they have worked with in-depth. As La Dispute continue to use their youth and energy to benefit the less fortunate, this on-going article will be updated to reflect their continued humanitarianism.</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div class="QuoteText">"Everything goes a long way. Every little thing counts." <strong>-- Jordan Dreyer</strong></div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan.jpg" alt="" title="2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan" />
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/tag/non-profit-&-charity/" class="featured-link">See all articles related to Non-profit and Charity work</a>

<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-15161"></span><span class="InterviewQ">Why did La Dispute choose to work with 826Michigan?</span>

I've known about 826 nationally and 826 San Francisco for some years now, kind of the obvious route, through reading Dave Eggers when I was in high school, and I've always been pretty attracted to the organization itself because I think it's unique, in that it has a really creative approach to what it does -- a very youth-oriented approach. It's not like it's just a program for creative youth; it is a program that is creative and youthful, I guess, kind of bizarrely and redundantly. So that was appealing to us, and trying to work with organizations that promote literacy has always been another important thing for us, so it kind of encapsulated multiple things we hold close to our hearts, and we also wanted to do something that was local, so we would see a more immediate impact. So rather than going through the national organization, we decided to work specifically with the one in Michigan.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Was there one particular point in La Dispute's career that you guys decided you were doing well enough or you were influential enough as a band that you wanted to start supporting organizations you cared about? Was it something you thought about from the beginning or something that just kind of popped up?</span>

It's always been important to us to utilize the resources that we have as best we can. The first thing we did that was charity[-oriented] was we put <em>Here, Hear III</em> up for download by donation a few years ago for Christmas. That was really our first foray into charity, and it was really rewarding to be able to... we didn't raise a <em>ton</em> of money, but to put it out there and give people the opportunity to help and raise awareness, no matter how much you're raising fiscally, is a really satisfying thing. Everything goes a long way. Every little thing counts, I guess, so it's been kind of how we operate as a band, as we just now have more resources to utilize. It's expanded the ways in which we help out. We did stuff on our last European tour; we gave [a portion of] the merch we sold to an organization there, and when we were in Australia, we did the same thing, and the 826 thing has kind of been a work-in-progress for a long time. It's kind of invariably woven into us right now, I think...

The other thing that's important with us is to work with organizations that seem to have a lot of transparency and have people we can actually meet and talk to, rather than helping faceless multi-million-dollar non-profits. To be on ground-level, I guess... it's been pretty cool.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Do you guys get any kind of a feedback loop, other than the profits you raise, regarding listeners who are encouraged to get involved because of your demonstrations?</span>

Here and there. We did the thing a Well House a couple years ago; we played a show in Grand Rapids, our hometown, over Christmas, and we invited a representative from the Board of Directors and also one of the people who was living in one of the houses to come to the show and hand out information. We actually had a couple people volunteer, or offer to volunteer – I don't know what ever came of it – but they were interested enough that they want and talked and collected information and applied to volunteer. Here and there, you'll get it, I think, but it's interesting this time around [with the 826Michigan project]; it really depends where we are. Sometimes we'll sell a lot of packets and get a lot of feedback, and other times, I don't think people know they're there. It does happen, which is cool.

<p>&nbsp;</p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-band-interview-full-album-stream-wildlife-lyrics/" class="featured-link">Read our interview with La Dispute's Jordan Dreyer about Wildlife</a> <a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-live-show-review/" class="featured-link">Read our live show review of La Dispute</a>
<hr />
<h3>A Timeline Of La Dispute's Charitable History</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h5>826michigan</h5>
<strong><a href="http://www.826michigan.org/" target="new">www.826michigan.org</a>
April 2012 -- USA Tour + December 2011</strong><div style="width: 350px; float: right; margin-left: 30px; padding-left: 20px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0;">"826michigan is a volunteer-driven non-profit writing and tutoring center that offers after-school tutoring, creative writing workshops, publishing opportunities, field trips, and in-class support to local schools, all free of charge. It is part of the 826 National network founded by writer Dave Eggers, with locations in Ann Arbor, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington, D.C."
<strong>-- Brad Vander Lugt, in a <a href="http://www.ladisputemusic.com/2012/03/conversations-826michigan/" target="new">blog post</a></strong></div>

<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">On December 25th, 2011, for a 24-hour period, the band <a href="http://www.ladisputemusic.com/2011/12/holiday-spirit/" target="new">offered up their entire discography for free</a>, with all donations going towards the organization. All proceeds from their sales of <em>Conversations</em> (see above) will benefit the organization as well.</div>
<div class="Clear"></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
Included in the limited edition packet for <em>Conversations</em> (pictured above), as described by <a href="http://www.ladisputemusic.com/2012/03/conversations-826michigan/" target="new">a post made by La Dispute drummer Brad Vander Lugt</a>:
<blockquote>- "Conversations" - an audio interview with Jordan about the stories and themes presented in Wildlife. The interview is also coupled with movements from Chad's "Mixtapes" (which were ideas recorded on a dictaphone that would later shape some of the songs on Wildlife). Everything is open for interpretation by the listener, of course, but it does give a little more insight into the concept of the record.
- "Snapshots" -- a zine of polaroids I've taken on various tours and studio sessions surrounding Wildlife.
- Screen printed poster designed by Mr. Adam Vass.
- 4 postcards: a Departure, a Letter, a Poem, a Broken Jar.
- The 826michigan OMNIBUS  Vol. 2 -- A fantastic and very unique collection of short stories and poems written collaboratively by 826michigan students. (Seriously, it's awesome. There's a story called A Shark Named Pistachio.)
- a select few will also include our "First Drafts + Sketches" zine.

There are only 150 of these packets, and when they're gone, that's it. $20 each. All proceeds go to 826michigan.</blockquote>
<hr />
<h3>Headspace</h3>
<strong><a href="http://www.headspace.org.au/" target="new">www.headspace.org.au</a>
February 2012 -- Australia</strong>

<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">On their Australian tour 2012, La Dispute collected donations for Headspace, the national organization that aids young people aged 12 to 25 who are suffering from mental health issues.</div><p></p>
<hr />
<h5>Teenage Cancer Trust</h5>
<strong><a href="http://www.teenagecancertrust.org/" target="new">www.teenagecancertrust.org</a>
January 2012 -- United Kingdom</strong>
<div style="width: 350px; float: right; margin-left: 30px; padding-left: 20px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0;">"[They work] to create stable living environments for young people living with cancer, so they don't need to sacrifice the normalcy of being young, I guess. We got to visit some of their wards and meet with kids, and that was a pretty interesting experience and a lot of fun." <strong>-- Jordan Dreyer</strong>

"Teenage Cancer Trust aims to ensure that every young person with cancer and their family receive the best possible care and professional support throughout their cancer journey. We know how damaging it is to take a young person away from their everyday life, their friends, their environment, their family – and put them in a cancer ward with small children or older people. Young people have a much better chance in their fight against cancer if they are treated by teenage cancer experts, in an environment tailored to their needs. So we’re working every day to make that happen."
<strong>– <a href="http://www.teenagecancertrust.org/" target="new">Teenage Cancer Trust's website</a></strong>

<iframe width="350" height="208" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/VwKoeZGGQAo" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">During the United Kingdom portion of their 2012 European tour, La Dispute gave all of their profits from sales to Teenage Cancer Trust, as well as plastered venues with posters to raise awareness about the organization.</div>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_La-Dispute_Teenage-Cancer-Trust.jpg" />
<hr />
<h5>Well House Community Living Of Grand Rapids</h5>
<strong><a href="http://www.wellhousegr.org/" target="new">www.wellhousegr.org</a>
December 2009 -- Grand Rapids, MI</strong>

<div style="width: 350px; float: right; margin-left: 30px; padding-left: 20px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0;">"It [provides] permanent residency for people who have struggled with homelessness problems. They do organic farming and... raise income [so they can be] financially independent. That was the first thing we did, and we're all still reasonably close to everyone at Well House, so that's cool, too." <strong>– Jordan Dreyer</strong>

"Well House Seeks to help provide a transition to permanent housing for homeless women and families, and to provide activities that foster new directions and goals. Well House has offered temporary emergency shelter to women and families since 1978 and is now in the process of transitioning to permanent community living. Over 5,000 people have been assisted over the last 27 years."
<strong>– <a href="http://www.wellhousegr.org/" target="new">Well House's website</a></strong></div>
<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">La Dispute's <em>Here, Hear</em> series consisted of three spoken-word EPs released over the course of a year-and-a-half. With the release of the series' third installment, <em>Here, Hear III</em>, the band offered the EPs for download on Bandcamp, in exchange for donations that would benefit Well House. Between December 24th, 2009 and January 27th, 2010, they raised $1755.44 for Well House <sup><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Here,_Hear." Target="new">1</a></sup>.</div>
<div style="clear: right;"></div><p></p>
<div class="QuoteText">"Homelessness is not a simple lack of house. It has to do with a lack of <em>connections</em>." <strong>-- Marian Clements, founder of Well House</strong><p></p></div><p>&nbsp;</p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-band-interview-full-album-stream-wildlife-lyrics/" class="featured-link">Read our interview with La Dispute's Jordan Dreyer about Wildlife</a> <a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-live-show-review/" class="featured-link">Read our live show review of La Dispute</a><p>&nbsp;</p>

Ω</p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-band-interview-full-album-stream-wildlife-lyrics/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;La Dispute Band Interview&lt;/strong&gt; : &lt;em&gt;It&#8217;s Like Medicine. It&#8217;s Self-Discovery.&lt;/em&gt; (w/ Full Album Stream &amp; Lyrical Analysis)'><strong>La Dispute Band Interview</strong> : <em>It&#8217;s Like Medicine. It&#8217;s Self-Discovery.</em> (w/ Full Album Stream &#038; Lyrical Analysis)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/wetlands-interview-guatemala-xela-aid-charity/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians&lt;/strong&gt;: Wetlands Support Guatemala&#8217;s Xela AID (w/ Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Wetlands Support Guatemala&#8217;s Xela AID (w/ Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/mae-band-interview/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians:&lt;/strong&gt; Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians:</strong> Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></p><p><img width="725" height="541" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan" /></p><div class="IntroText">In April 2012, La Dispute announced their latest charity benefit project, <em>Conversations</em>, a packet consisting of a hand-assembled and multi-dimensional collection of items courtesy of La Dispute themselves, writers involved with 826michigan, and the band's artist friends. All proceeds from <em>Conversations</em> benefit <a href="http://www.826michigan.org/" target="new">826michigan</a>, a branch of Dave Eggers' literacy organization, <a href="http://826national.org/" target="new">826 National</a>. 
 
In this feature, we speak with vocalist Jordan Dreyer about their work with 826michigan and highlight all of the organizations they have worked with in-depth. As La Dispute continue to use their youth and energy to benefit the less fortunate, this on-going article will be updated to reflect their continued humanitarianism.</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div class="QuoteText">"Everything goes a long way. Every little thing counts." <strong>-- Jordan Dreyer</strong></div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan.jpg" alt="" title="2012_La-Dispute_826-Michigan" />
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/tag/non-profit-&-charity/" class="featured-link">See all articles related to Non-profit and Charity work</a>

<p>&nbsp;</p><span id="more-15161"></span><span class="InterviewQ">Why did La Dispute choose to work with 826Michigan?</span>

I've known about 826 nationally and 826 San Francisco for some years now, kind of the obvious route, through reading Dave Eggers when I was in high school, and I've always been pretty attracted to the organization itself because I think it's unique, in that it has a really creative approach to what it does -- a very youth-oriented approach. It's not like it's just a program for creative youth; it is a program that is creative and youthful, I guess, kind of bizarrely and redundantly. So that was appealing to us, and trying to work with organizations that promote literacy has always been another important thing for us, so it kind of encapsulated multiple things we hold close to our hearts, and we also wanted to do something that was local, so we would see a more immediate impact. So rather than going through the national organization, we decided to work specifically with the one in Michigan.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Was there one particular point in La Dispute's career that you guys decided you were doing well enough or you were influential enough as a band that you wanted to start supporting organizations you cared about? Was it something you thought about from the beginning or something that just kind of popped up?</span>

It's always been important to us to utilize the resources that we have as best we can. The first thing we did that was charity[-oriented] was we put <em>Here, Hear III</em> up for download by donation a few years ago for Christmas. That was really our first foray into charity, and it was really rewarding to be able to... we didn't raise a <em>ton</em> of money, but to put it out there and give people the opportunity to help and raise awareness, no matter how much you're raising fiscally, is a really satisfying thing. Everything goes a long way. Every little thing counts, I guess, so it's been kind of how we operate as a band, as we just now have more resources to utilize. It's expanded the ways in which we help out. We did stuff on our last European tour; we gave [a portion of] the merch we sold to an organization there, and when we were in Australia, we did the same thing, and the 826 thing has kind of been a work-in-progress for a long time. It's kind of invariably woven into us right now, I think...

The other thing that's important with us is to work with organizations that seem to have a lot of transparency and have people we can actually meet and talk to, rather than helping faceless multi-million-dollar non-profits. To be on ground-level, I guess... it's been pretty cool.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Do you guys get any kind of a feedback loop, other than the profits you raise, regarding listeners who are encouraged to get involved because of your demonstrations?</span>

Here and there. We did the thing a Well House a couple years ago; we played a show in Grand Rapids, our hometown, over Christmas, and we invited a representative from the Board of Directors and also one of the people who was living in one of the houses to come to the show and hand out information. We actually had a couple people volunteer, or offer to volunteer – I don't know what ever came of it – but they were interested enough that they want and talked and collected information and applied to volunteer. Here and there, you'll get it, I think, but it's interesting this time around [with the 826Michigan project]; it really depends where we are. Sometimes we'll sell a lot of packets and get a lot of feedback, and other times, I don't think people know they're there. It does happen, which is cool.

<p>&nbsp;</p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-band-interview-full-album-stream-wildlife-lyrics/" class="featured-link">Read our interview with La Dispute's Jordan Dreyer about Wildlife</a> <a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-live-show-review/" class="featured-link">Read our live show review of La Dispute</a>
<hr />
<h3>A Timeline Of La Dispute's Charitable History</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h5>826michigan</h5>
<strong><a href="http://www.826michigan.org/" target="new">www.826michigan.org</a>
April 2012 -- USA Tour + December 2011</strong><div style="width: 350px; float: right; margin-left: 30px; padding-left: 20px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0;">"826michigan is a volunteer-driven non-profit writing and tutoring center that offers after-school tutoring, creative writing workshops, publishing opportunities, field trips, and in-class support to local schools, all free of charge. It is part of the 826 National network founded by writer Dave Eggers, with locations in Ann Arbor, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington, D.C."
<strong>-- Brad Vander Lugt, in a <a href="http://www.ladisputemusic.com/2012/03/conversations-826michigan/" target="new">blog post</a></strong></div>

<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">On December 25th, 2011, for a 24-hour period, the band <a href="http://www.ladisputemusic.com/2011/12/holiday-spirit/" target="new">offered up their entire discography for free</a>, with all donations going towards the organization. All proceeds from their sales of <em>Conversations</em> (see above) will benefit the organization as well.</div>
<div class="Clear"></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
Included in the limited edition packet for <em>Conversations</em> (pictured above), as described by <a href="http://www.ladisputemusic.com/2012/03/conversations-826michigan/" target="new">a post made by La Dispute drummer Brad Vander Lugt</a>:
<blockquote>- "Conversations" - an audio interview with Jordan about the stories and themes presented in Wildlife. The interview is also coupled with movements from Chad's "Mixtapes" (which were ideas recorded on a dictaphone that would later shape some of the songs on Wildlife). Everything is open for interpretation by the listener, of course, but it does give a little more insight into the concept of the record.
- "Snapshots" -- a zine of polaroids I've taken on various tours and studio sessions surrounding Wildlife.
- Screen printed poster designed by Mr. Adam Vass.
- 4 postcards: a Departure, a Letter, a Poem, a Broken Jar.
- The 826michigan OMNIBUS  Vol. 2 -- A fantastic and very unique collection of short stories and poems written collaboratively by 826michigan students. (Seriously, it's awesome. There's a story called A Shark Named Pistachio.)
- a select few will also include our "First Drafts + Sketches" zine.

There are only 150 of these packets, and when they're gone, that's it. $20 each. All proceeds go to 826michigan.</blockquote>
<hr />
<h3>Headspace</h3>
<strong><a href="http://www.headspace.org.au/" target="new">www.headspace.org.au</a>
February 2012 -- Australia</strong>

<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">On their Australian tour 2012, La Dispute collected donations for Headspace, the national organization that aids young people aged 12 to 25 who are suffering from mental health issues.</div><p></p>
<hr />
<h5>Teenage Cancer Trust</h5>
<strong><a href="http://www.teenagecancertrust.org/" target="new">www.teenagecancertrust.org</a>
January 2012 -- United Kingdom</strong>
<div style="width: 350px; float: right; margin-left: 30px; padding-left: 20px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0;">"[They work] to create stable living environments for young people living with cancer, so they don't need to sacrifice the normalcy of being young, I guess. We got to visit some of their wards and meet with kids, and that was a pretty interesting experience and a lot of fun." <strong>-- Jordan Dreyer</strong>

"Teenage Cancer Trust aims to ensure that every young person with cancer and their family receive the best possible care and professional support throughout their cancer journey. We know how damaging it is to take a young person away from their everyday life, their friends, their environment, their family – and put them in a cancer ward with small children or older people. Young people have a much better chance in their fight against cancer if they are treated by teenage cancer experts, in an environment tailored to their needs. So we’re working every day to make that happen."
<strong>– <a href="http://www.teenagecancertrust.org/" target="new">Teenage Cancer Trust's website</a></strong>

<iframe width="350" height="208" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/VwKoeZGGQAo" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">During the United Kingdom portion of their 2012 European tour, La Dispute gave all of their profits from sales to Teenage Cancer Trust, as well as plastered venues with posters to raise awareness about the organization.</div>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_La-Dispute_Teenage-Cancer-Trust.jpg" />
<hr />
<h5>Well House Community Living Of Grand Rapids</h5>
<strong><a href="http://www.wellhousegr.org/" target="new">www.wellhousegr.org</a>
December 2009 -- Grand Rapids, MI</strong>

<div style="width: 350px; float: right; margin-left: 30px; padding-left: 20px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0;">"It [provides] permanent residency for people who have struggled with homelessness problems. They do organic farming and... raise income [so they can be] financially independent. That was the first thing we did, and we're all still reasonably close to everyone at Well House, so that's cool, too." <strong>– Jordan Dreyer</strong>

"Well House Seeks to help provide a transition to permanent housing for homeless women and families, and to provide activities that foster new directions and goals. Well House has offered temporary emergency shelter to women and families since 1978 and is now in the process of transitioning to permanent community living. Over 5,000 people have been assisted over the last 27 years."
<strong>– <a href="http://www.wellhousegr.org/" target="new">Well House's website</a></strong></div>
<div style="font-size: 15px; font-family: Georgia;">La Dispute's <em>Here, Hear</em> series consisted of three spoken-word EPs released over the course of a year-and-a-half. With the release of the series' third installment, <em>Here, Hear III</em>, the band offered the EPs for download on Bandcamp, in exchange for donations that would benefit Well House. Between December 24th, 2009 and January 27th, 2010, they raised $1755.44 for Well House <sup><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Here,_Hear." Target="new">1</a></sup>.</div>
<div style="clear: right;"></div><p></p>
<div class="QuoteText">"Homelessness is not a simple lack of house. It has to do with a lack of <em>connections</em>." <strong>-- Marian Clements, founder of Well House</strong><p></p></div><p>&nbsp;</p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-band-interview-full-album-stream-wildlife-lyrics/" class="featured-link">Read our interview with La Dispute's Jordan Dreyer about Wildlife</a> <a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-live-show-review/" class="featured-link">Read our live show review of La Dispute</a><p>&nbsp;</p>

Ω<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/la-dispute-band-interview-full-album-stream-wildlife-lyrics/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;La Dispute Band Interview&lt;/strong&gt; : &lt;em&gt;It&#8217;s Like Medicine. It&#8217;s Self-Discovery.&lt;/em&gt; (w/ Full Album Stream &amp; Lyrical Analysis)'><strong>La Dispute Band Interview</strong> : <em>It&#8217;s Like Medicine. It&#8217;s Self-Discovery.</em> (w/ Full Album Stream &#038; Lyrical Analysis)</a></li>
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</ol>
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		<title>Sister Crayon Band Interview: Emerging From Watery Depths, Victorious</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/sister-crayon-band-interview-bellow/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/sister-crayon-band-interview-bellow/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Apr 2012 20:13:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivian Hua</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music Features]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=14964</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/sister-crayon-band-interview-bellow/"><strong>Sister Crayon Band Interview</strong>: Emerging From Watery Depths, Victorious</a></p><p><p><img width="725" height="483" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_Sister-Crayon.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Sister-Crayon" /></p><div class="IntroText">Like a whale call bubbling forth from oceanic depths, Sister Crayon's 2011 release on Manimal Vinyl, <em>Bellow</em>, is an album dense with emotional weight.

"When I think of someone bellowing, I just see a sad, really powerful thing coming out of someone," explains vocalist Terra Lopez. "Years of an... exhausting type of feeling."

<em>Bellow</em> is an aural manifestation of such exhaustion -- a collective "bellow" from a group of Nothern California musicians who do not shy away from the fascinations which arise from darkness. Filled with trip-hop beats, soaring operatic vocals, distorted guitars, and delicate synth lines, the sonic universe of Sister Crayon is a varied and complex one. What holds consistent, though, is the band's fortitude, as they explore parallel emotional states through individualized experiences.</div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_Sister-Crayon.jpg" alt="" title="Sister Crayon" />
<span id="more-14964"></span>
<div style="width: 350px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0; padding-left: 20px; float: right; margin-left: 30px;"><h3>Listening Station</h3>
<strong>Listen to Sister Crayon's "Arcane"
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/mp3/downloads/Sister-Crayon_Arcane.mp3">DOWNLOAD MP3</a></strong><br /> <script language="JavaScript" src="http:a//www.redefinemag.com/music/mp3/audio-player.js"></script> <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" data="http://www.redefinemag.com/music/mp3/player.swf" id="audioplayer1" height="24" width="290"><param name="movie" value="http://www.redefinemag.com/music/mp3/player.swf"><param name="FlashVars" value="playerID=1&amp;soundFile=http://www.redefinemag.com/mp3/downloads/Sister-Crayon_Arcane.mp3"><param name="quality" value="high"><param name="menu" value="false"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></object>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h5>Full Album Stream: <em>Bellow</em></h5>
<iframe width="300" height="410" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 300px; height: 410px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/album=908748481/size=grande3/bgcol=FFFFFF/linkcol=666666/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"></iframe>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="http://sistercrayon.bandcamp.com/album/bellow" class="featured-link" target="new">Buy + Download Bellow On Bandcamp</a>

<a href="https://www.facebook.com/sistercrayon?sk=app_178091127385" target="new" class="featured-link">Download Sister Crayon's Covers EP (Free)</a>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/tag/sister-crayon/" target="new" class="featured-link">See all articles related to Sister Crayon</a>

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<h3>It Gets Better Project</h3>
In September 2010, Dan Savage and his partner, Terry, posted a message on a message on YouTube for LGBT teens everywhere who were facing harassment. The message was simple: "It gets better. However bad it is now, it gets better." The video was just a small response to a series of bully-induced suicides by LGBT youth.

Since then, The <a href="http://www.itgetsbetter.org/" target="new">It Gets Better Project</a> has turned into a worldwide movement, inspiring politicians, celebrities, organizations, activists, and personalities alike to submit their own story.

Below is Sister Crayon's recent contribution to MTV's It Gets Better special -- a reminder to LGBTQ youth that life can and will get better. 

<iframe src="http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtv.com:734272/cp~vid%3D734272%26instance%3Dmtv%26uri%3Dmgid%3Auma%3Avideo%3Amtv.com%3A734272" width="350" height="197" frameborder="0"></iframe><p style="text-align:left;background-color:#FFFFFF;padding:4px;margin-top:4px;margin-bottom:0px;font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:12px;">Get More: <a href="http://www.mtv.com/music/artist/sister_crayon/artist.jhtml" style="color:#439CD8;" target="_blank">Sister Crayon</a>, <a href="http://www.mtv.com/ontv/" style="color:#439CD8;" target="_blank">MTV Shows</a></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Q&A</h3>
<span class="InterviewQ">Since your music draws from such dark places, do you guys think that music helped you out of a lot of problems?</span>

<strong>Terra Lopez:</strong> Oh yeah.
<strong>Dani Fernandez:</strong> The number-one remedy.
<strong>Lopez:</strong> For me, writing is a form of therapy, because I can't really afford it, to be honest. There are so many unresolved things, just in life in general, that I’m still trying to process. And the only way to really feel comfortable or okay about it is by singing every night. If we have a tough night or tough day beforehand, I’ll look forward to playing a show because it’s a huge form of some kind of release. And I know for me, if I don't play a show, I start – if there’s too much of a time period in-between shows, I don’t feel okay; I don’t feel normal. Something’s missing.
<strong>Fernandez:</strong> It definitely shows, too, when we haven’t been playing music. We just feel that there’s a huge part of us missing, and I feel that we all turn to music to help us from day-to-day. In my own feeling about that is that, it definitely has helped me through every part of my life.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How did the band name come about?</span>

<strong>Lopez:</strong> I have [synesthesia]. So colors have always meant something really prominent but really promising at the same time... that name came about because at the time, it was just a solo project, and it was really quiet; it was under a different name, which was much more reserved. I knew the music I wanted to make, and it wasn’t what I was doing. so I just thought, you know, I wanna make something more powerful and more intense because that’s how I’m feeling, so I wanna somehow find a way to be able to do that, so Sister Crayon was like an alter-ego. I was like, “So that means bold, so I’m going to have to step it up.” You know what I mean? Be more intense. And then yeah, the band just eventually grew, and finally I was able to make that sound that I was looking for.</div><div class="IntroText">"Whether or not it starts with something Terra's written lyrically, or if it's just a tone or whatever, we kind of agree on the general... vibe or the mood of the song, and we pour any kind of relative feelings or emotions into our instruments and into our voice or our everything," says guitarist and keyboardist Jeffrey Letour.</div><p></p>

"I think our moods all feed off of each other's," keyboardist Dani Fernandez continues. She describes how she and Lopez, long-time friends, have always had a complementary artistic relationship. "If one person is feeling something, we all just kind of do... it determines on how the song is written from that point on."

Early on in <em>Bellow</em>, Sister Crayon lay the foundations for an album of emotionally turbulent material, with both music and lyrics following suit. On opening track, "I'm Still The Same Person," Lopez evokes morbid imagery, singing, "She showed me what death was like/ She said: take mine, take mine, take mine, like everyone." Subsequent tracks like "Here We Never Die" and "(In) Reverse" feel nebulous yet suffocating in their use of restraint, as they seem to describe tense bedroom moments and symbolically holding in one's own blood.  Poetic and mythological, Lopez's lyrics are quite cryptic, making them applicable for any number of hopeless circumstances. Yet, it is only with her admittance that many of her lyrics are personal confessions -- words easier for her to set to music than to discuss openly in day-to-day interactions -- that one gains a deeper insight into their actual context.
 
"[Almost] all of the lyrics are mini-conversations to people [who] I could never really tell [things] face-to-face," Lopez explains, "so the song's going to be what I really want to tell you, though I may never tell you this was written for you."

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div class="QuoteText">"We just focused and put all of our worries, frustrations, confusions, sadness into [music]... and whatever that outlet is for you -- whether it be music, arts, writing, whatever it is -- just try to focus on that and become a better person through that frustration."
<strong>- Terra Lopez</strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>

"Here We Never Die," for example, was written for Lopez's former girlfriend, as a passive way for Lopez to declare her love and express the sentiment, "Here is our little universe, [in] this 3-minute song." "Anti-Psalm," likewise, was written to her father to covertly express the disdain they have for one another. It contains just a few of the many religious and spiritual references on <em>Bellow</em>, and is partially telling of Lopez's fascinating relationship to religion.

"I grew up in two completely different households," she explains. "One household was my mother's, which was very free when it came to religion; and [one was] my father's, [who was] a Jehovah's Witness, so it was very strict, very rigid... I grew up conflicted about religion, in general, and not wanting to believe in any of it. As I'm getting older, that's why I reference it a lot in lyrics, because I want to believe in a religion or in a spiritual realm, but I'm not quite sure what to believe in yet, so I'm just trying to dissect it and write about it; I'm still looking for it, I guess."

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<div class="IntroText">A sense of oneness -- of the almost psychically-bonded type that grows out of sharing a band and a living space -- allows for the members of Sister Crayon to <em>feel</em> their way into their sound with ease. Their songwriting process is what they would describe as organic and natural.</div><p></p>

"The rawness of those emotions or feelings is something that we don't always need to think about; it's just always something that happens," Letour adds. "There's a connection; it's chemistry, and it's happening individually [and] those things are all shared in a melting pot of everyday life," Letour shares. "Because we experience it together, we pull ourselves out of it together. So even if it's something very dark and intense, we can all go to that spot together and rise out of it."

It is a special and long-standing relationship, of viewing creation as a healing mechanism, that allows for the members of Sister Crayon to understand one another on a deeper level than words. Thanks to music, every member has found a way to express, understand, and sometimes transcend life's most intense and difficult experiences. To continue the cycle, they encourage others who feel lost in their own skins to find their own paths towards satisfaction.

"The way that [Dani and I] got through [being bullied in high school], was we found an outlet -- which was music," Lopez explans in an interview with MTV for the It Gets Better Project. "We just focused and put all of our worries, frustrations, confusions, sadness into it... and whatever that outlet is for you -- whether it be music, arts, writing, whatever it is -- just try to focus on that and become a better person through that frustration."

<em>Bellow</em> is just the beginning of Sister Crayon's journey as a band.

"There's a story for each song that kind of builds the premise for what <em>Bellow</em> is," Lopez explains. "It's a cool introduction to the band. For the next record, it will be more thorough."

Ω

<div class="QuoteText">"We are very passionate people with a lot of ideas and opinions so we would love to become more involved in the future in the various issues that we believe in. Dani and I have worked in the past for the Marriage Equality initiative in our hometown of Sacramento. All of the members of this band fully support Human Rights, Gay Rights, Marriage Equality, etc. We would love to become more involved in this issue as there is still a long way to go not only for individuals in the United States but all over the world."
<strong>-- Terra Lopez</strong></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3><a href="http://www.sistercrayon.com/" target="new">www.sistercrayon.com</a></h3>

<iframe width="725" height="398" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/BklxcL7li_o" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="725" height="398" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/qTqPPDGozs4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="725" height="398" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/LyTu2wqsY1k" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/sister-crayon-band-interview-bellow/"><strong>Sister Crayon Band Interview</strong>: Emerging From Watery Depths, Victorious</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/sister-crayon-thief-boxer-asleep-live-nyc/' rel='bookmark' title='Sister Crayon &#8211; &#8220;Thief-Boxer, Asleep&#8221; Live Show Video'>Sister Crayon &#8211; &#8220;Thief-Boxer, Asleep&#8221; Live Show Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/twin-sister-bad-street/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Twin Sister &#8211; &#8220;Bad Street&#8221;&lt;/strong&gt; Music Video'><strong>Twin Sister &#8211; &#8220;Bad Street&#8221;</strong> Music Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/musicfestnw-2011-twin-sister-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;MusicfestNW&lt;/em&gt; 2011 : Twin Sister&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong><em>MusicfestNW</em> 2011 : Twin Sister</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
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]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/sister-crayon-band-interview-bellow/"><strong>Sister Crayon Band Interview</strong>: Emerging From Watery Depths, Victorious</a></p><p><img width="725" height="483" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_Sister-Crayon.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Sister-Crayon" /></p><div class="IntroText">Like a whale call bubbling forth from oceanic depths, Sister Crayon's 2011 release on Manimal Vinyl, <em>Bellow</em>, is an album dense with emotional weight.

"When I think of someone bellowing, I just see a sad, really powerful thing coming out of someone," explains vocalist Terra Lopez. "Years of an... exhausting type of feeling."

<em>Bellow</em> is an aural manifestation of such exhaustion -- a collective "bellow" from a group of Nothern California musicians who do not shy away from the fascinations which arise from darkness. Filled with trip-hop beats, soaring operatic vocals, distorted guitars, and delicate synth lines, the sonic universe of Sister Crayon is a varied and complex one. What holds consistent, though, is the band's fortitude, as they explore parallel emotional states through individualized experiences.</div>

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/2012_Sister-Crayon.jpg" alt="" title="Sister Crayon" />
<span id="more-14964"></span>
<div style="width: 350px; border-left: 1px solid #c0c0c0; padding-left: 20px; float: right; margin-left: 30px;"><h3>Listening Station</h3>
<strong>Listen to Sister Crayon's "Arcane"
<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/mp3/downloads/Sister-Crayon_Arcane.mp3">DOWNLOAD MP3</a></strong><br /> <script language="JavaScript" src="http:a//www.redefinemag.com/music/mp3/audio-player.js"></script> <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" data="http://www.redefinemag.com/music/mp3/player.swf" id="audioplayer1" height="24" width="290"><param name="movie" value="http://www.redefinemag.com/music/mp3/player.swf"><param name="FlashVars" value="playerID=1&amp;soundFile=http://www.redefinemag.com/mp3/downloads/Sister-Crayon_Arcane.mp3"><param name="quality" value="high"><param name="menu" value="false"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></object>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h5>Full Album Stream: <em>Bellow</em></h5>
<iframe width="300" height="410" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 300px; height: 410px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/album=908748481/size=grande3/bgcol=FFFFFF/linkcol=666666/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"></iframe>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="http://sistercrayon.bandcamp.com/album/bellow" class="featured-link" target="new">Buy + Download Bellow On Bandcamp</a>

<a href="https://www.facebook.com/sistercrayon?sk=app_178091127385" target="new" class="featured-link">Download Sister Crayon's Covers EP (Free)</a>

<a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/tag/sister-crayon/" target="new" class="featured-link">See all articles related to Sister Crayon</a>

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<h3>It Gets Better Project</h3>
In September 2010, Dan Savage and his partner, Terry, posted a message on a message on YouTube for LGBT teens everywhere who were facing harassment. The message was simple: "It gets better. However bad it is now, it gets better." The video was just a small response to a series of bully-induced suicides by LGBT youth.

Since then, The <a href="http://www.itgetsbetter.org/" target="new">It Gets Better Project</a> has turned into a worldwide movement, inspiring politicians, celebrities, organizations, activists, and personalities alike to submit their own story.

Below is Sister Crayon's recent contribution to MTV's It Gets Better special -- a reminder to LGBTQ youth that life can and will get better. 

<iframe src="http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtv.com:734272/cp~vid%3D734272%26instance%3Dmtv%26uri%3Dmgid%3Auma%3Avideo%3Amtv.com%3A734272" width="350" height="197" frameborder="0"></iframe><p style="text-align:left;background-color:#FFFFFF;padding:4px;margin-top:4px;margin-bottom:0px;font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:12px;">Get More: <a href="http://www.mtv.com/music/artist/sister_crayon/artist.jhtml" style="color:#439CD8;" target="_blank">Sister Crayon</a>, <a href="http://www.mtv.com/ontv/" style="color:#439CD8;" target="_blank">MTV Shows</a></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Q&A</h3>
<span class="InterviewQ">Since your music draws from such dark places, do you guys think that music helped you out of a lot of problems?</span>

<strong>Terra Lopez:</strong> Oh yeah.
<strong>Dani Fernandez:</strong> The number-one remedy.
<strong>Lopez:</strong> For me, writing is a form of therapy, because I can't really afford it, to be honest. There are so many unresolved things, just in life in general, that I’m still trying to process. And the only way to really feel comfortable or okay about it is by singing every night. If we have a tough night or tough day beforehand, I’ll look forward to playing a show because it’s a huge form of some kind of release. And I know for me, if I don't play a show, I start – if there’s too much of a time period in-between shows, I don’t feel okay; I don’t feel normal. Something’s missing.
<strong>Fernandez:</strong> It definitely shows, too, when we haven’t been playing music. We just feel that there’s a huge part of us missing, and I feel that we all turn to music to help us from day-to-day. In my own feeling about that is that, it definitely has helped me through every part of my life.
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<span class="InterviewQ">How did the band name come about?</span>

<strong>Lopez:</strong> I have [synesthesia]. So colors have always meant something really prominent but really promising at the same time... that name came about because at the time, it was just a solo project, and it was really quiet; it was under a different name, which was much more reserved. I knew the music I wanted to make, and it wasn’t what I was doing. so I just thought, you know, I wanna make something more powerful and more intense because that’s how I’m feeling, so I wanna somehow find a way to be able to do that, so Sister Crayon was like an alter-ego. I was like, “So that means bold, so I’m going to have to step it up.” You know what I mean? Be more intense. And then yeah, the band just eventually grew, and finally I was able to make that sound that I was looking for.</div><div class="IntroText">"Whether or not it starts with something Terra's written lyrically, or if it's just a tone or whatever, we kind of agree on the general... vibe or the mood of the song, and we pour any kind of relative feelings or emotions into our instruments and into our voice or our everything," says guitarist and keyboardist Jeffrey Letour.</div><p></p>

"I think our moods all feed off of each other's," keyboardist Dani Fernandez continues. She describes how she and Lopez, long-time friends, have always had a complementary artistic relationship. "If one person is feeling something, we all just kind of do... it determines on how the song is written from that point on."

Early on in <em>Bellow</em>, Sister Crayon lay the foundations for an album of emotionally turbulent material, with both music and lyrics following suit. On opening track, "I'm Still The Same Person," Lopez evokes morbid imagery, singing, "She showed me what death was like/ She said: take mine, take mine, take mine, like everyone." Subsequent tracks like "Here We Never Die" and "(In) Reverse" feel nebulous yet suffocating in their use of restraint, as they seem to describe tense bedroom moments and symbolically holding in one's own blood.  Poetic and mythological, Lopez's lyrics are quite cryptic, making them applicable for any number of hopeless circumstances. Yet, it is only with her admittance that many of her lyrics are personal confessions -- words easier for her to set to music than to discuss openly in day-to-day interactions -- that one gains a deeper insight into their actual context.
 
"[Almost] all of the lyrics are mini-conversations to people [who] I could never really tell [things] face-to-face," Lopez explains, "so the song's going to be what I really want to tell you, though I may never tell you this was written for you."

<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div class="QuoteText">"We just focused and put all of our worries, frustrations, confusions, sadness into [music]... and whatever that outlet is for you -- whether it be music, arts, writing, whatever it is -- just try to focus on that and become a better person through that frustration."
<strong>- Terra Lopez</strong></div><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>

"Here We Never Die," for example, was written for Lopez's former girlfriend, as a passive way for Lopez to declare her love and express the sentiment, "Here is our little universe, [in] this 3-minute song." "Anti-Psalm," likewise, was written to her father to covertly express the disdain they have for one another. It contains just a few of the many religious and spiritual references on <em>Bellow</em>, and is partially telling of Lopez's fascinating relationship to religion.

"I grew up in two completely different households," she explains. "One household was my mother's, which was very free when it came to religion; and [one was] my father's, [who was] a Jehovah's Witness, so it was very strict, very rigid... I grew up conflicted about religion, in general, and not wanting to believe in any of it. As I'm getting older, that's why I reference it a lot in lyrics, because I want to believe in a religion or in a spiritual realm, but I'm not quite sure what to believe in yet, so I'm just trying to dissect it and write about it; I'm still looking for it, I guess."

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<div class="IntroText">A sense of oneness -- of the almost psychically-bonded type that grows out of sharing a band and a living space -- allows for the members of Sister Crayon to <em>feel</em> their way into their sound with ease. Their songwriting process is what they would describe as organic and natural.</div><p></p>

"The rawness of those emotions or feelings is something that we don't always need to think about; it's just always something that happens," Letour adds. "There's a connection; it's chemistry, and it's happening individually [and] those things are all shared in a melting pot of everyday life," Letour shares. "Because we experience it together, we pull ourselves out of it together. So even if it's something very dark and intense, we can all go to that spot together and rise out of it."

It is a special and long-standing relationship, of viewing creation as a healing mechanism, that allows for the members of Sister Crayon to understand one another on a deeper level than words. Thanks to music, every member has found a way to express, understand, and sometimes transcend life's most intense and difficult experiences. To continue the cycle, they encourage others who feel lost in their own skins to find their own paths towards satisfaction.

"The way that [Dani and I] got through [being bullied in high school], was we found an outlet -- which was music," Lopez explans in an interview with MTV for the It Gets Better Project. "We just focused and put all of our worries, frustrations, confusions, sadness into it... and whatever that outlet is for you -- whether it be music, arts, writing, whatever it is -- just try to focus on that and become a better person through that frustration."

<em>Bellow</em> is just the beginning of Sister Crayon's journey as a band.

"There's a story for each song that kind of builds the premise for what <em>Bellow</em> is," Lopez explains. "It's a cool introduction to the band. For the next record, it will be more thorough."

Ω

<div class="QuoteText">"We are very passionate people with a lot of ideas and opinions so we would love to become more involved in the future in the various issues that we believe in. Dani and I have worked in the past for the Marriage Equality initiative in our hometown of Sacramento. All of the members of this band fully support Human Rights, Gay Rights, Marriage Equality, etc. We would love to become more involved in this issue as there is still a long way to go not only for individuals in the United States but all over the world."
<strong>-- Terra Lopez</strong></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3><a href="http://www.sistercrayon.com/" target="new">www.sistercrayon.com</a></h3>

<iframe width="725" height="398" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/BklxcL7li_o" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="725" height="398" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/qTqPPDGozs4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="725" height="398" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/LyTu2wqsY1k" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/sister-crayon-band-interview-bellow/"><strong>Sister Crayon Band Interview</strong>: Emerging From Watery Depths, Victorious</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/sister-crayon-thief-boxer-asleep-live-nyc/' rel='bookmark' title='Sister Crayon &#8211; &#8220;Thief-Boxer, Asleep&#8221; Live Show Video'>Sister Crayon &#8211; &#8220;Thief-Boxer, Asleep&#8221; Live Show Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/twin-sister-bad-street/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Twin Sister &#8211; &#8220;Bad Street&#8221;&lt;/strong&gt; Music Video'><strong>Twin Sister &#8211; &#8220;Bad Street&#8221;</strong> Music Video</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/musicfestnw-2011-twin-sister-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;MusicfestNW&lt;/em&gt; 2011 : Twin Sister&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong><em>MusicfestNW</em> 2011 : Twin Sister</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
</ol>
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		<title>Charitable Musicians: Wetlands Support Guatemala&#8217;s Xela AID (w/ Interview)</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/wetlands-interview-guatemala-xela-aid-charity/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/wetlands-interview-guatemala-xela-aid-charity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 11 Mar 2012 20:08:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Vivian Hua</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Columns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charitable artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[guatemalan artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[indie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mahatma gandhi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[punk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[self-released]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sociology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[southern california musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wetlands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[xela aid]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=13958</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/wetlands-interview-guatemala-xela-aid-charity/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Wetlands Support Guatemala&#8217;s Xela AID (w/ Interview)</a></p><p><p><img width="359" height="350" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Wetlands.gif" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Wetlands" /></p><div class="IntroText">Though they are currently on hiatus, Wetlands are taking their time off to do what they can to evenly disperse wealth and spread compassion. Vocalist and keyboardist Jeremy Reineck explains to us why all proceeds for the band's <em>intheraw</em> EP will be going towards the non-profit organization, Xela AID.</div>
<p></p><p></p><p></p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Why did you choose to benefit the specific charity you chose?</span>
<div style="width: 400px; float: right; margin: 0px 0px 30px 30px;"><iframe width="400" height="100" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 400px; height: 100px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/album=3346909864/size=venti/bgcol=666666/linkcol=666666/transparent=true/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"><a href="http://wetlands1.bandcamp.com/album/intheraw">intheraw by wetlands</a></iframe></div>The drummer -- Justin Flint -- and I spent the summer of 2011 in Guatemala working directly with <a href="http://www.xelaaid.org/" target="new">Xela AID</a> high up in the mountains of Quetzaltenango.  We would travel back and forth between the rustic mountain village of San Martin Chiquito and the wild hum of Guatemala's cultural center Xela. By day, we assisted locals in the Xela AID clinic and witnessed San Martin's poverty close-up (sanitation issues, widespread parasitic infection, poor housing conditions, little access to education/medicine) all the while happily fumbling through Spanish with the Guatemalan locals -- all curiously serene, gentle, pure of heart.  By night, we explored the throbbing, cobbled alleyways of Xela, making merry with the Xela AID family -- truly the most genuinely compassionate and worldly people I've ever met -- and making deep connections with the country itself.  After much hard work, we came to see Xela AID as a non-profit with close, real ties to the people they were helping.  Their focus is very much on assimilating in and creating a dialogue with the community rather than forcing any particular standard on them.  This way, problems are met with the local way of life in mind, wherein progress can continue to be made through sustainable methods that the people are in tune with.

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Wetlands-02.jpg" /> <img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Wetlands-01.jpg" />

<span class="InterviewQ">Considering the whole "starving artist" mentality, what led you guys to decide to give all proceeds to a charity rather than keeping some yourselves? Was there a specific moment that it became clear this was the idea you wanted to embark on?</span>

We'd never made much money to begin with and that was fine by us. Sometimes we would take on shows for free.  We had a kind of a punk rock attitude about the whole thing, playing anywhere with little regard for promotion and making sure we gave that venue and the people there [got] absolutely everything we had.  We weren't necessarily "rocking out"; we were projecting our energy honestly... dancing, screaming, improvising songs for 20 minutes, coaxing the audience into doing bizarre things, having random folks up on stage singing, drumming, etc. -- essentially just letting it all go.  We were really engaging in the moment, free from set-lists and general 'stage etiquette.'

Over time, all of this built in us a spirit that was incompatible with commercialization.  Trying to "brand" the band as a business just had no romantic appeal, no energy, and though it can certainly be rewarding in the long run, I think it often gets in the way of milking the truly transcendent moments that music allows us.  As such, it seemed like the obvious choice to direct any money from <em>intheraw</em> to Xela AID -- a business with the same goal -- not of running people through the system, but of engaging them directly, compassionately, and energetically.
<p></p><p></p><p></p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Xela-AID.jpg" alt="" title="2012_Xela-AID" width="725" height="233" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-13963" />
<p></p><p></p><p></p>
<h3>About Xela AID</h3>
Xela AID empowers children and their families to break the cycle of poverty and to live healthier, more abundant lives through the opportunities afforded by education. They aspire to ensure that every child in our focus area is educated, and every family is safe, healthy, well-nourished, and equipped to be self-reliant by providing educational scholarships, tutoring, leadership training, and local partnerships to remove the health, environmental and socioeconomic barriers to well-being and learning. Their integrated models of community development provide solutions that are comprehensive, sustainable, scalable and transferable.

<iframe width="725" height="521" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/_9DnHSGU3Y4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/wetlands-interview-guatemala-xela-aid-charity/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Wetlands Support Guatemala&#8217;s Xela AID (w/ Interview)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/mae-band-interview/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians:&lt;/strong&gt; Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians:</strong> Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians&lt;/strong&gt;: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians&lt;/strong&gt;: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/wetlands-interview-guatemala-xela-aid-charity/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Wetlands Support Guatemala&#8217;s Xela AID (w/ Interview)</a></p><p><img width="359" height="350" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Wetlands.gif" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Wetlands" /></p><div class="IntroText">Though they are currently on hiatus, Wetlands are taking their time off to do what they can to evenly disperse wealth and spread compassion. Vocalist and keyboardist Jeremy Reineck explains to us why all proceeds for the band's <em>intheraw</em> EP will be going towards the non-profit organization, Xela AID.</div>
<p></p><p></p><p></p>
<span class="InterviewQ">Why did you choose to benefit the specific charity you chose?</span>
<div style="width: 400px; float: right; margin: 0px 0px 30px 30px;"><iframe width="400" height="100" style="position: relative; display: block; width: 400px; height: 100px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/v=2/album=3346909864/size=venti/bgcol=666666/linkcol=666666/transparent=true/" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0"><a href="http://wetlands1.bandcamp.com/album/intheraw">intheraw by wetlands</a></iframe></div>The drummer -- Justin Flint -- and I spent the summer of 2011 in Guatemala working directly with <a href="http://www.xelaaid.org/" target="new">Xela AID</a> high up in the mountains of Quetzaltenango.  We would travel back and forth between the rustic mountain village of San Martin Chiquito and the wild hum of Guatemala's cultural center Xela. By day, we assisted locals in the Xela AID clinic and witnessed San Martin's poverty close-up (sanitation issues, widespread parasitic infection, poor housing conditions, little access to education/medicine) all the while happily fumbling through Spanish with the Guatemalan locals -- all curiously serene, gentle, pure of heart.  By night, we explored the throbbing, cobbled alleyways of Xela, making merry with the Xela AID family -- truly the most genuinely compassionate and worldly people I've ever met -- and making deep connections with the country itself.  After much hard work, we came to see Xela AID as a non-profit with close, real ties to the people they were helping.  Their focus is very much on assimilating in and creating a dialogue with the community rather than forcing any particular standard on them.  This way, problems are met with the local way of life in mind, wherein progress can continue to be made through sustainable methods that the people are in tune with.

<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Wetlands-02.jpg" /> <img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Wetlands-01.jpg" />

<span class="InterviewQ">Considering the whole "starving artist" mentality, what led you guys to decide to give all proceeds to a charity rather than keeping some yourselves? Was there a specific moment that it became clear this was the idea you wanted to embark on?</span>

We'd never made much money to begin with and that was fine by us. Sometimes we would take on shows for free.  We had a kind of a punk rock attitude about the whole thing, playing anywhere with little regard for promotion and making sure we gave that venue and the people there [got] absolutely everything we had.  We weren't necessarily "rocking out"; we were projecting our energy honestly... dancing, screaming, improvising songs for 20 minutes, coaxing the audience into doing bizarre things, having random folks up on stage singing, drumming, etc. -- essentially just letting it all go.  We were really engaging in the moment, free from set-lists and general 'stage etiquette.'

Over time, all of this built in us a spirit that was incompatible with commercialization.  Trying to "brand" the band as a business just had no romantic appeal, no energy, and though it can certainly be rewarding in the long run, I think it often gets in the way of milking the truly transcendent moments that music allows us.  As such, it seemed like the obvious choice to direct any money from <em>intheraw</em> to Xela AID -- a business with the same goal -- not of running people through the system, but of engaging them directly, compassionately, and energetically.
<p></p><p></p><p></p>
<img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2012_Xela-AID.jpg" alt="" title="2012_Xela-AID" width="725" height="233" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-13963" />
<p></p><p></p><p></p>
<h3>About Xela AID</h3>
Xela AID empowers children and their families to break the cycle of poverty and to live healthier, more abundant lives through the opportunities afforded by education. They aspire to ensure that every child in our focus area is educated, and every family is safe, healthy, well-nourished, and equipped to be self-reliant by providing educational scholarships, tutoring, leadership training, and local partnerships to remove the health, environmental and socioeconomic barriers to well-being and learning. Their integrated models of community development provide solutions that are comprehensive, sustainable, scalable and transferable.

<iframe width="725" height="521" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/_9DnHSGU3Y4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/wetlands-interview-guatemala-xela-aid-charity/"><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Wetlands Support Guatemala&#8217;s Xela AID (w/ Interview)</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/mae-band-interview/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians:&lt;/strong&gt; Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians:</strong> Mae Choose To Self-Release And Aid Charity (w/ Band Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/la-dispute-826michigan-conversations-charity-non-profits/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians&lt;/strong&gt;: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: La Dispute Collect For Youth And Poverty, Locally And Abroad (w/ Interview)</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/charity-benefit-red-fang-hells-parish-grant-high-school/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Charitable Musicians&lt;/strong&gt;: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)'><strong>Charitable Musicians</strong>: Red Fang Benefit Portland Arts Education (w/ Interview)</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
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		<title>Title Fight Band Interview : Space For Memories</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/title-fight-band-interview-shed-redwood-arts-space/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/title-fight-band-interview-shed-redwood-arts-space/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jan 2012 23:15:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Peter Woodburn</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blink-182]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charitable artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gorilla biscuits]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hardcore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jawbreaker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lifetime]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pennsylvania artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[punk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[redwood arts space]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sideonedummy records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[title fight]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=12128</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/title-fight-band-interview-shed-redwood-arts-space/"><strong>Title Fight Band Interview</strong> : <em>Space For Memories</em></a></p><p><p><img width="725" height="294" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/2012_Title-Fight.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Title-Fight" /></p><div class="IntroText">Most of the world probably has no idea why bands like Title Fight spend a majority of their formative years traveling in vans that break down, sleeping on floors, and hawking merchandise to get gas money for the next long haul. Unless you've been to a hardcore show, you probably have no idea of its madness.

But ask any of the members why they keep at it, and you are bound to get the response you get from most hardcore bands: they just love what they do.</div><p></p>

<small>ARTICLE CONTINUED BELOW</small>
<iframe width="725" height="521" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/BcKDSC7c-0M" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<h3>Growing Older On The Road</h3>
<strong>Title Fight aren't all about heavy blast beats and screaming into microphones. The band members are young – the oldest is 22 – but they've been at it since they were 13, releasing 7-inches from the confines of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, a city more known for its proximity to a certain fictional paper company in a real town than anything else (hint: Scranton, PA).</strong>

"I definitely think we aren't a stereotypical hardcore band," bassist and vocalist Ned Russin agrees. "Some people think hardcore is something like Hatebreed: the toughest stuff, [with] people beating the crap out of each other. There are hardcore bands like that, but at the same time, hardcore is a lot more than just being tough, de-tuning your guitar, and playing breakdowns."

As a quartet of 13-year-olds listening to both Blink-182 and Gorilla Biscuits, Title Fight combined all the music they enjoyed into one tidal wave of hardcore authenticity. That hardcore ideal is what fuels incessant touring, even when the going gets tough and the road gets even longer. 

<blockquote>"A lot of the inspiration for [<em>Shed</em>] came from us being on tour and us growing up the last couple of years on the road – [which is] pretty much in the most unconventional way possible."
<strong>-- Ned Russin, Title Fight bassist and vocalist</strong></blockquote>

"On our first European tour, on our last day, I got a call that my grandmother passed away," Russin recalls. "Anything you miss out on is something you can never go back and fix. So even if it is... 'Oh man, I wish I could've seen my friend's band,' [or] spending one more day with my grandmother, it sucks no matter what."

Russin is a self-proclaimed hardcore kid at heart and those DIY ethics come hardcoded into his DNA. While he appreciates bands that are able to write lyrics containing stories or political themes, he chooses to write from a more personal approach because that is what he knows best. The lyrics on Title Fight's latest album, <em>Shed</em>, clearly come from the point of view of someone who has been in a band most his life.

"We just write about what we know," Russin says. "A lot of the inspiration for the record came from us being on tour and us growing up the last couple of years on the road -- [which is] pretty much in the most unconventional way possible. It is just a weird experience." <p></p>
<p></p>
[caption align="alignright" width="300" caption="<strong><small>SAMPLE FLYER</small></strong><br /><br /><br /><strong>REDWOOD ARTS SPACE<br />740 Jumper Rd.<br />Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702</strong><br /><br /><a href='http://www.facebook.com/redwoodartspace' target='new'>FACEBOOK</a><br /><a href='http://redwoodartspace.tumblr.com/' target='new'>TUMBLR</a>
<p>"]<a href='http://redwoodartspace.tumblr.com/' target='new'><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/2012_Redwood-Arts-Space.jpg" /></a>[/caption]
<h3>Growing Community At Home</h3>
<strong>In his hometown of Wilkes-Barre, Russin and friends have had a hand in starting a new venue after the last all-ages venue, Café Metropolis, closed down in September 2010. Nobody from the city showed any sympathy to the local arts community, Russin says. As is often the case with all-ages venues, even in large metropolitan areas across the nation, the city failed to realize the importance of providing a space for youth to congregate.</strong>

"There are venues if you want to call them that, but they are just bars that are having open mic nights. If you are a 13-year-old kid and trying to go see live music, it doesn't make any sense to go there," says Russin. "We just took the initiative because we realized that nobody else was going to."

Russin and a few others opened up Redwood Arts Space, an all-ages venue modeled off of the famous Berkeley venue, Gilman St. They poured their own money into the venue, painted it, and installed the PA system to give youth in Wilkes-Barre a place to go and bands a place to play.

"When we were growing up that was the most important thing for us," Russin recalls. "We are just trying to carry that tradition. I'm really proud of where we're from and what is going on."

Right now, Title Fight appear to be proudly carrying the banner of the only non-hardcore band that hardcore kids adore, serving a role similar to that of Lifetime and Jawbreaker in the '80s and '90s. Much of this adoration comes from the DIY approach that Title Fight bring to the table, but the band also play a brand of hardcore that speaks well to the special misfits segment of the population that listens. 

Russin grew up in a small down removed from standard tour routing, and does not take anything he's given for granted. As someone who has participated in a non-mainstream arts scene for most of his life, he realizes how crucial a vibrant arts scene is to an entire community.

"Not everybody wants to go play football, and not everybody wants to go to a bar and get drunk," Russin says. "I don't see why you don't help to give kids and adults an opportunity to have another positive outlet. I think it is really important. That is why we had no problem funding the venue, and supporting the venue, and booking shows. Because I think it is such a crucial asset to a community. And I hope other people feel the same way about it and continue to support it, too."

<small>END</small>

<iframe width="700" height="386" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/fKqKM-gvK_w" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/title-fight-band-interview-shed-redwood-arts-space/"><strong>Title Fight Band Interview</strong> : <em>Space For Memories</em></a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/aural-devastation-baroness-title-fight-mp3-downloads-streams/' rel='bookmark' title='Aural Devastation: &lt;strong&gt;Baroness, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; MP3 Downloads &amp; Streams'>Aural Devastation: <strong>Baroness, Title Fight</strong> MP3 Downloads &#038; Streams</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/alt-press-four-year-strong-gallows-title-fight-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;The AP Tour&lt;/em&gt; 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong><em>The AP Tour</em> 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/rise-against-a-day-to-remember-title-fight-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Rise Against, A Day To Remember, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong>Rise Against, A Day To Remember, Title Fight</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/title-fight-band-interview-shed-redwood-arts-space/"><strong>Title Fight Band Interview</strong> : <em>Space For Memories</em></a></p><p><img width="725" height="294" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/2012_Title-Fight.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2012_Title-Fight" /></p><div class="IntroText">Most of the world probably has no idea why bands like Title Fight spend a majority of their formative years traveling in vans that break down, sleeping on floors, and hawking merchandise to get gas money for the next long haul. Unless you've been to a hardcore show, you probably have no idea of its madness.

But ask any of the members why they keep at it, and you are bound to get the response you get from most hardcore bands: they just love what they do.</div><p></p>

<small>ARTICLE CONTINUED BELOW</small>
<iframe width="725" height="521" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/BcKDSC7c-0M" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<h3>Growing Older On The Road</h3>
<strong>Title Fight aren't all about heavy blast beats and screaming into microphones. The band members are young – the oldest is 22 – but they've been at it since they were 13, releasing 7-inches from the confines of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, a city more known for its proximity to a certain fictional paper company in a real town than anything else (hint: Scranton, PA).</strong>

"I definitely think we aren't a stereotypical hardcore band," bassist and vocalist Ned Russin agrees. "Some people think hardcore is something like Hatebreed: the toughest stuff, [with] people beating the crap out of each other. There are hardcore bands like that, but at the same time, hardcore is a lot more than just being tough, de-tuning your guitar, and playing breakdowns."

As a quartet of 13-year-olds listening to both Blink-182 and Gorilla Biscuits, Title Fight combined all the music they enjoyed into one tidal wave of hardcore authenticity. That hardcore ideal is what fuels incessant touring, even when the going gets tough and the road gets even longer. 

<blockquote>"A lot of the inspiration for [<em>Shed</em>] came from us being on tour and us growing up the last couple of years on the road – [which is] pretty much in the most unconventional way possible."
<strong>-- Ned Russin, Title Fight bassist and vocalist</strong></blockquote>

"On our first European tour, on our last day, I got a call that my grandmother passed away," Russin recalls. "Anything you miss out on is something you can never go back and fix. So even if it is... 'Oh man, I wish I could've seen my friend's band,' [or] spending one more day with my grandmother, it sucks no matter what."

Russin is a self-proclaimed hardcore kid at heart and those DIY ethics come hardcoded into his DNA. While he appreciates bands that are able to write lyrics containing stories or political themes, he chooses to write from a more personal approach because that is what he knows best. The lyrics on Title Fight's latest album, <em>Shed</em>, clearly come from the point of view of someone who has been in a band most his life.

"We just write about what we know," Russin says. "A lot of the inspiration for the record came from us being on tour and us growing up the last couple of years on the road -- [which is] pretty much in the most unconventional way possible. It is just a weird experience." <p></p>
<p></p>
[caption align="alignright" width="300" caption="<strong><small>SAMPLE FLYER</small></strong><br /><br /><br /><strong>REDWOOD ARTS SPACE<br />740 Jumper Rd.<br />Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702</strong><br /><br /><a href='http://www.facebook.com/redwoodartspace' target='new'>FACEBOOK</a><br /><a href='http://redwoodartspace.tumblr.com/' target='new'>TUMBLR</a>
<p>"]<a href='http://redwoodartspace.tumblr.com/' target='new'><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/2012_Redwood-Arts-Space.jpg" /></a>[/caption]
<h3>Growing Community At Home</h3>
<strong>In his hometown of Wilkes-Barre, Russin and friends have had a hand in starting a new venue after the last all-ages venue, Café Metropolis, closed down in September 2010. Nobody from the city showed any sympathy to the local arts community, Russin says. As is often the case with all-ages venues, even in large metropolitan areas across the nation, the city failed to realize the importance of providing a space for youth to congregate.</strong>

"There are venues if you want to call them that, but they are just bars that are having open mic nights. If you are a 13-year-old kid and trying to go see live music, it doesn't make any sense to go there," says Russin. "We just took the initiative because we realized that nobody else was going to."

Russin and a few others opened up Redwood Arts Space, an all-ages venue modeled off of the famous Berkeley venue, Gilman St. They poured their own money into the venue, painted it, and installed the PA system to give youth in Wilkes-Barre a place to go and bands a place to play.

"When we were growing up that was the most important thing for us," Russin recalls. "We are just trying to carry that tradition. I'm really proud of where we're from and what is going on."

Right now, Title Fight appear to be proudly carrying the banner of the only non-hardcore band that hardcore kids adore, serving a role similar to that of Lifetime and Jawbreaker in the '80s and '90s. Much of this adoration comes from the DIY approach that Title Fight bring to the table, but the band also play a brand of hardcore that speaks well to the special misfits segment of the population that listens. 

Russin grew up in a small down removed from standard tour routing, and does not take anything he's given for granted. As someone who has participated in a non-mainstream arts scene for most of his life, he realizes how crucial a vibrant arts scene is to an entire community.

"Not everybody wants to go play football, and not everybody wants to go to a bar and get drunk," Russin says. "I don't see why you don't help to give kids and adults an opportunity to have another positive outlet. I think it is really important. That is why we had no problem funding the venue, and supporting the venue, and booking shows. Because I think it is such a crucial asset to a community. And I hope other people feel the same way about it and continue to support it, too."

<small>END</small>

<iframe width="700" height="386" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/fKqKM-gvK_w" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/title-fight-band-interview-shed-redwood-arts-space/"><strong>Title Fight Band Interview</strong> : <em>Space For Memories</em></a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/aural-devastation-baroness-title-fight-mp3-downloads-streams/' rel='bookmark' title='Aural Devastation: &lt;strong&gt;Baroness, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; MP3 Downloads &amp; Streams'>Aural Devastation: <strong>Baroness, Title Fight</strong> MP3 Downloads &#038; Streams</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/alt-press-four-year-strong-gallows-title-fight-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;The AP Tour&lt;/em&gt; 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong><em>The AP Tour</em> 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2012/rise-against-a-day-to-remember-title-fight-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;Rise Against, A Day To Remember, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong>Rise Against, A Day To Remember, Title Fight</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
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		<title>The Cure Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity</title>
		<link>http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Dec 2011 19:08:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charitable artists and musicians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychology]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redefinemag.com/?p=9793</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/"><strong>The Cure</strong> Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity</a></p><p><p><img width="324" height="324" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/2011_Bestival.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2011_Bestival" /></p><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/2011_Bestival.jpg" alt="" title="2011_Bestival" width="324" height="324" class="alignright size-full wp-image-9795" />
<em>The Cure: Bestival Live</em> 2011 saw a release on December 6th via Sunday Best Recordings, and today the band is sharing a live video for "A Forest." The video was filmed during their epic Bestival performance, and is one of the thirty-two tracks that comprise the career-spanning live album.

Of the live album, Robert Smith of The Cure says "We had such a great time in the Isle of Wight at Bestival that we wanted to release this show as a way of thanking fans and islanders alike. Bestival is the best!"

<strong><a href="http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/bestival-live-2011/id482960886?utm_source=Girlie+Action+Master+List&utm_campaign=0dd8489273-The_Cure_A_Forest12_12_2011&utm_medium=email" target="new">CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE THE ALBUM</a></strong>

All proceeds from album sales benefit the <strong><a href="http://www.iowyouthtrust.co.uk/" target="new">Isle of Wight Youth Trust</a></strong>, which is a charitable, independent and professional organization offering counseling, advice, information and support services to young people aged 25 and under on the Isle of Wight (the home of Bestival). The Youth Trust has been working on the Isle of Wight for 27 years and has made a positive input to the wellbeing of people locally.

Their mission statement is as follows:<div class="Clear"></div>

<blockquote>The Isle of Wight Youth Trust offers young people the opportunity to talk in complete confidence about any issues or problems they may have. This means that what is said between the young person and the counsellor will not be discussed with other people (including parents, teachers, friends or anyone) unless the client, i.e. the young person or child, wants others to know. The only exception to this is IF the young person or counsellor is concerned that a young person or child may be at risk of harm or if the young person has been sent to the Youth Trust by their GP (the GP will then receive a report after the counselling process).

Counsellors do not advise, but help young people understand their problems through encouraging them to share their thoughts and feelings and help find ways of dealing with them. In short, the Youth Trust counselors help clients to find a positive way forward, treating them with care, consideration and respect.</blockquote>

<iframe width="700" height="505" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/1NYQo8OJAY4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p></p><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/"><strong>The Cure</strong> Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>

Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/an-intro-to-something-quite-nice-motion-turns-it-on/' rel='bookmark' title='An Intro To Something Quite Nice: Motion Turns It On Live Show Footage'>An Intro To Something Quite Nice: Motion Turns It On Live Show Footage</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/alt-press-four-year-strong-gallows-title-fight-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;The AP Tour&lt;/em&gt; 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong><em>The AP Tour</em> 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/goodbye-rabbits-i-hardly-knew-thee/' rel='bookmark' title='Goodbye Rabbits, I Hardly Knew Thee&#8230; Live Show Footage'>Goodbye Rabbits, I Hardly Knew Thee&#8230; Live Show Footage</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
</div>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/"><strong>The Cure</strong> Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity</a></p><p><img width="324" height="324" src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/2011_Bestival.jpg" class="attachment-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="2011_Bestival" /></p><img src="http://www.redefinemag.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/2011_Bestival.jpg" alt="" title="2011_Bestival" width="324" height="324" class="alignright size-full wp-image-9795" />
<em>The Cure: Bestival Live</em> 2011 saw a release on December 6th via Sunday Best Recordings, and today the band is sharing a live video for "A Forest." The video was filmed during their epic Bestival performance, and is one of the thirty-two tracks that comprise the career-spanning live album.

Of the live album, Robert Smith of The Cure says "We had such a great time in the Isle of Wight at Bestival that we wanted to release this show as a way of thanking fans and islanders alike. Bestival is the best!"

<strong><a href="http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/bestival-live-2011/id482960886?utm_source=Girlie+Action+Master+List&utm_campaign=0dd8489273-The_Cure_A_Forest12_12_2011&utm_medium=email" target="new">CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE THE ALBUM</a></strong>

All proceeds from album sales benefit the <strong><a href="http://www.iowyouthtrust.co.uk/" target="new">Isle of Wight Youth Trust</a></strong>, which is a charitable, independent and professional organization offering counseling, advice, information and support services to young people aged 25 and under on the Isle of Wight (the home of Bestival). The Youth Trust has been working on the Isle of Wight for 27 years and has made a positive input to the wellbeing of people locally.

Their mission statement is as follows:<div class="Clear"></div>

<blockquote>The Isle of Wight Youth Trust offers young people the opportunity to talk in complete confidence about any issues or problems they may have. This means that what is said between the young person and the counsellor will not be discussed with other people (including parents, teachers, friends or anyone) unless the client, i.e. the young person or child, wants others to know. The only exception to this is IF the young person or counsellor is concerned that a young person or child may be at risk of harm or if the young person has been sent to the Youth Trust by their GP (the GP will then receive a report after the counselling process).

Counsellors do not advise, but help young people understand their problems through encouraging them to share their thoughts and feelings and help find ways of dealing with them. In short, the Youth Trust counselors help clients to find a positive way forward, treating them with care, consideration and respect.</blockquote>

<iframe width="700" height="505" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/1NYQo8OJAY4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><p><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com">music art film review - REDEFINE magazine</a> <br /><br /><a href="http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/the-cure-live-show-footage-bestival-2011-live-album/"><strong>The Cure</strong> Live Show Footage From Bestival, Live Album Benefits Charity</a></p><div class='yarpp-related-rss'>
<p>Related posts:</p><ol>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/an-intro-to-something-quite-nice-motion-turns-it-on/' rel='bookmark' title='An Intro To Something Quite Nice: Motion Turns It On Live Show Footage'>An Intro To Something Quite Nice: Motion Turns It On Live Show Footage</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2011/alt-press-four-year-strong-gallows-title-fight-live-show-review/' rel='bookmark' title='&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;The AP Tour&lt;/em&gt; 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight&lt;/strong&gt; Live Show Review'><strong><em>The AP Tour</em> 2011 : Four Year Strong, Gallows, Title Fight</strong> Live Show Review</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.redefinemag.com/2009/goodbye-rabbits-i-hardly-knew-thee/' rel='bookmark' title='Goodbye Rabbits, I Hardly Knew Thee&#8230; Live Show Footage'>Goodbye Rabbits, I Hardly Knew Thee&#8230; Live Show Footage</a></li>
</ol>
<img src='http://yarpp.org/pixels/1ead557aea21b3deba7c43761d92eb81'/>
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