Thursday, February 23, 2017
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Inna Modja - Coming to WOMAD 2017
One of the bravest, most challenging artists coming to WOMAD in 2017 is rapper, soul artist, model and human right’s activist Inna Modja. Her music covers topics like the mutilation of young women in her home country, access to clean water and the politics of its management and the plight refugees fleeing war torn Africa. The 13th Floor’s Tim Gruar was fortunate to find her free during a busy schedule on the WOMAD tour circuit and gave her a call as she was just getting ready to leave her current location in Portugal.
Born in Bamuko, Mali in 1984, Inna Bocoum, who uses the stage name ‘Modja’ now identifies herself as Malian-French. Despite the difficulties over the years she still regularly travels back to Mali to see her family. She has a Malian passport and refuses to completely absolve herself of a country that both recognizes her fame and abhors her presence as a women. “It is a real contradiction,” she tells me in a very confident African-French accent. But her English is almost perfect. She has no trouble understands my Kiwi accent and ‘congratulates me’ several times for being a courteous and considerate interview – especially as I am male.
“Modja”, her stage name, I learn means “bad, not good – or naughty” in Fulfulde, the non-tonal language spoken that’s spoken in various forms across 20 countries of Western Africa and Central Africa. It was a name given to her by her mother, who enrolled her in a choir at the age of five.
Inspired by both her parents’ Otis Redding, Ella Fitzgerald, and Ray Charles record collection, and her six siblings’ love of hip-hop, disco, and heavy metal, she decided to pursue a career in music. At one time she was mentored by legendary world musician Salif Keita (who’s also visited WOMAD Taranaki in 2010). He was her neighbor. She tells me that she didn’t directly tour with him or his band but instead learnt from him.
“I was encouraged to go over to his house and ask him to teach me, so I did. I wasn’t afraid. I knew music was the way I could get out of Bamuko, and so learning from him could help that.”
Eventually she went on to perform as a backing vocalist for the Rail Band de Bamako before relocating to Paris, via Nigeria, Togo, and the U.S., with her some of family. Over time she chose to abandon the music of her African roots in favour of a commercial soul-pop sound inspired by her globe-trotting background. Her international career started in France when she was discovered during the Fête de la musique annual music celebration and in several television shows.
In 2009, she signed to Up Music and released her debut album, Everyday Is a New World, following it up with sophomore outing Love Revolution and its hit single, French Cancan, in 2011. These albums are both upbeat and catchy, with a commercial soul vibe that would give Beyonce and Adele a run for their money. But it’s her latest album Motel Bamako is far more challenging. Her songs support Women’s rights in Africa, among other causes and she’s chosen to sing and rap in her in native Bambara and English (the official language of Donald Trump).
“For me, it (Bambara) was the most honest language to sing in. I was raised among many languages. There is the language of the oppressors in the North (she means the terrorists who implore Sharia law on women in parts of Mali) and there is French, English and many Malian dialects. Certain emotions and feelings are more firmly attached to one language than another. Because of what I want to say it was only logical to express it in Bambara. (But) I am talking to everybody, the world. When you listen to my music in my language, I feel I can take you into my home a little, to show what it is like for us, for women in Mali. I want to open a door instead of closing it. With all this fear of immigrants, the world is scared and I need to show that we are, too. But together we can succeed.”
As a musician, Modja wants to stand up for the women of her ravaged and repressed country. “Independence for women – physical, mental and financial is all important”, says Inna Modja, a singer, actor and former model from Mali. “My song Tombouctou is my way of saying enough is enough”, Modja has also become a women’s rights activist and is particularly committed to eliminating female genital mutilation (FGM). This is something personal to her. She tells me, quite candidly that “even before the age of 5, when my mother was away my grandmother and her sisters took me and mutilated me,” she says referring to the common Malian practice of female circumcision. “My parents were horrified. But, I have to say, all of my sisters went through this. We (our family) are five girls and two boys and all girls went through this.” Sometimes, someone different took them to do this. So for me, growing up it was an issue I wanted to fight. And when I went to Europe I realized that I was different from … everybody and I became an activist to stand up against it.”
Looking back she’s philosophical about her grandmother’s role in it all. “I don’t blame her, it was ignorance, I suppose. The sister of my grandmother (who had insisted on the practice taking place) thought she was doing the right thing and traditions would be lost if it wasn’t don’t. It was the way it was. It was tradition. Sometimes they say it’s to take away the male part so you can be a woman, to get a husband. Sometimes they say it’s a very sensitive part and women walk along way to get water. All these crazy reasons. Mainly it’s to control women. It’s a way of putting women in a box. To deny pleasure, the only thing left after you strip a woman of her reproductive rights and her economic power, her place. I wanted to get out of the box. I refuse to stay at that place where they have put me.”
According to US State Department website the most common forms of female genital mutilation (FGM) or female genital cutting (FGC) throughout Mali are “Type I (commonly referred to as clitoridectomy) and Type II (commonly referred to as excision), despite the fact that Malian women’s groups have been actively campaigning against this practice for over a decade. The more radical form, Type III (commonly referred to as infibulation), is practiced in some of the southern areas of the country. The incidence of these procedures among the women varies very little by age, religion or level of education. A recent survey found that three-quarters of the women between the ages of 15 and 49 favoured continuing this practice.”
Even more horrifying is that according to the (US State Department funded) Commission for the Promotion of Women it is estimated that as many as 96% of women and girls living in rural areas and 92 percent of women and girls living in urban areas (of Mali) have been subjected to one of these procedures. The practice is found among more than 95% of the women and girls in the southern half of Mali, predominately populated by the Bambara, Soninke, Peul, Dogon and Senoufo ethnic groups. These groups include Muslims and Christians, as well as Animists. In Bamako and Koulikoro in southern Mali, the rates reported at around 95% or higher.”
As mentioned by Modja, the practice is so deeply rooted in tradition and culture that any challenge to it runs into strong social opposition and repercussions. Women who have not been subjected to one of the procedures or parents who refuse to subject their daughters to it face social pressures and potential ostracism from society. Often women who have not undergone the procedure cannot marry, as Malian society considers an individual (male or female) to be a child until circumcised. This is another way to keep women in a box, argues Modja. Some Bambara and Dogon believe that if the clitoris comes in contact with the baby’s head during birth, the child will die.
At its most explicit, it is their deeply held belief that both the female and the male sex exist within each person at birth and it is necessary to rid the female body of vestiges of maleness to overcome any sexual ambiguity. The clitoris represents the male element in a young girl while the foreskin represents the female element in a young boy. Both must be removed to clearly demarcate the sex of the person. Another extreme belief of the Bambara men is that upon entering an unexcised woman, a man could be killed by the secretion of a poison from the clitoris upon its contact with the penis. This folk belief acts as a rationale for clitoral excision.
This is a highly dangerous ‘procedure’, too. The risk of hemorrhage and infection is high. The State Department have reports that only about 4% of these operations are performed in hospitals by health professionals, with anesthesia. In some areas of the country, extended families excise all of the girls.
Even though she’s now had reconstructive surgery, she doesn’t shy away from it. During International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation (8 February 2016) where she performed during a special event on “Mobilizing to achieve the global goals through the elimination of female genital mutilation by 2030”.
“As an African woman I went through female genital mutilation. I know what it is and I know how harmful it is”, she said at the time, “And I want to protect those younger girls and those generations coming, because FGM has to end,” Modja said. “I say this a lot but it is true,” she tells me, upbeat, but you can hear only too clearly. “I was totally broken by FGM. I was not going to stay that way. I wasn’t going to be a victim of something that simply is wrong. I won’t be boxed and told what to do, or why I can’t even feel.” Modja considers herself a feminist, for equal rights not against men. “It’s just for women”, she says.
Her own response is the song Tombochou. Historically, Tombouctou Region is one of the administrative regions of Mali. It is the largest of Mali’s eight regions and includes a large section of the Sahara Desert. The region is world-famous for its capital, the ancient city Timbuktu (in French: Tombouctou), synonymous to 19th-century Europeans as an elusive, hard-to-reach destination. The city gained world fame in 1390 when its ruler, Mansa Musa, went on a pilgrimage to Mecca, stopping with his entourage in Egypt and dispensing enough gold to devalue the Egyptian currency. This started the legend of a city in the interior of Africa, where roads were said to be paved with gold and buildings topped with roofs of gold.
But Modja’s song tells a different story about the life of women in Mali, especially in its northern parts that include this eponymous city and the constant war that has been tearing the place apart. It’s also a prayer for peace in her homeland.
So if this is the case, I ask her, why does she appear topless on the single’s sleeve? She explains that this is not to be intentionally sexy but to be political provocative. Because much of Mali is now under enforced Sharia law women must cover up. Her cover was a statement against this. I’m expressing my right to show my body – I’ve modeled and had the freedom to do this if I want. It’s a statement. Also. It’s very common in Africa that when a woman is truly hurt or angry, by a devastating thing she takes her clothes off in the street and everybody in the town knows that she is going through something really terrible. She does this when it’s serious. All of that is behind the photo.”
But there’s even more to it. On the cover and in the accompanying video she also wears a bandanna across her face as a statement of silence. Her mother, grandmother, sister, niece and one of her cousins – all of them appear in the new yet old-school. “So many women are silenced and they have no voice. I am letting people know about this.”
I ask her about the state of Mali. She goes back to see family regularly. She says the situation is improving, slowly. But it’s unpredictable. As many who attend WOMAD regularly may already know, Islam as practiced in Mali, at least until recently, recently was commonly reported to be relatively tolerant and adapted to local conditions. And so, women participated in economic and political activity, engaged in social interaction, and generally did not wear veils.
Many aspects of Malian traditional society encourage norms consistent with democratic citizenship, including tolerance, trust, pluralism, the separation of powers and the accountability of the leader to the governed. Relations between the Muslim majority and the Christian and other religious minorities—including practitioners of African Traditional Religion were reported to be generally stable until recently, although there have been several cases of instability and tension in the past. But, sadly music has become another victim of the changing political landscape.
Since the 2012 imposition of Sharia rule in northern parts of the country, persecution of Christians in the north increased significantly and was described as severe by the organization Open Doors (non-denominational mission supporting persecuted Christians in over 60 countries) which publishes the Christian persecution index; Mali appears as number 7 in the 2013 index list.
Implementation of Sharia in the rebel-controlled north included banning of music, cutting off of hands or feet of thieves, stoning of adulterers and public whipping of smokers, alcohol drinkers and women who are not properly dressed. Many towns in Mali are falling victim to extremist groups’ implementation of Sharia law, by which many African cultures and enjoyments have been denied. A recent report I found in UK newspaper The Guardian revealed that extremist groups have banned music in certain regions and were known to turn up randomly in villages, armed with weaponry, to burn musical instruments and musical items on bonfires. One guitarist was threatened that his fingers would be chopped off if he ever showed his face in one town again.
Her new album covers a number of other issues, too. Like water rights which she covers in the song Water. “It should be something so basic. I go back to Mali frequently, and I visited my grandmother and we must buy water because she there was no basic tap water (like in New York and France where I have been recently). This was common. Through my work with the UN I find out that it’s common for women and children are walking up to 6kms to get water. It’s time that could be used for work. Children could go to school. And is it clean (this water)? There’s the people who store it and sell it from trucks because they are greedy. Or the water source is in a war zone. It’s crazy. We need more equality in the world.”
Another issue she feels strongly about is addressed in her song Boat People, which acknowledges the plight of Syrian refugees. “It’s terrible what’s happening right now. I think all these people getting on all these boats and not knowing if they are going to make it. Just fleeing a war zone.” As an immigrant herself Modja sees poor treatment of refugees – especially those who are victims of extremist Islam vigilantes. Many thousands who have fled Mali because of them but she acknowledges that the problem is bigger than just Europe – it’s a problem for the whole world. “They’re human beings. We must help them. We need to make this world a better place by showing compassion. We must care more about what’s going on outside of our towns, our homes. History will look back on this and it won’t look good. I don’t think that being born in a country means others who don’t deserve less than anyone else.”
It’s here that I reveal that most New Zealanders are immigrants of some kind. She asks how we get on and I must confess that we have our problems but overall there’s a feeling that we must help in some way. “You are lucky, to be like that. The colour of your skin doesn’t mean anything. We all come from somewhere else. I am in New York now – and here in Portugal today – everyone is an immigrant. We have to see differently what immigrants are because generations before have been immigrants…Today we travel everywhere, we are from everywhere. That’s the world is – we have to start accepting others and their differences.”
As a final question, I ask her if she knows much about New Zealand and in the process end up telling her that this is the place where women were first given the vote. This comes as a bit of a shock to her, as if she doesn’t believe me. “Really, I want to find out more. This is incredible. Such a different place than in Mali. Or even France. I am so please to hear this. I am very passionate about equality for women. There is still so much more we need to do because people still think that women are capable of less than men. Little girls need to be able to learn at school and do the same jobs as men and be leaders, too, and be independent in life. Without independence, you haven’t got a voice. How can you have your say?”
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Make mine Myers
This delight ful advert from 1961 says:
"Communication is a mutual delight enhanced by the accompaniment of a drink that is stimulating and yet relaxing to both mind and body. 'Myers' is the spirit of congeniality; it is a well tempered rum produced by men who know their craft and enjoy what they know"
Friday, February 10, 2017
Sinkane Womad Interview - Sinkane
Ahead of WOMAD 2017 The CoffeeBar Kid interviews Ahmed Gallab over the phone in new York. With a falsetto voice drifting over driving beats and layered synth lines, the compelling sound of Sinkane defines Ahmed Gallab’s journey from a childhood in London and Sudan to Brooklyn, where his music took flight. His style-hopping sonic influences embrace Afrobeat, pop and soul grooves and the result is a seamless and seductive cross-cultural mesh.
www,womad.co.nz
Thursday, February 09, 2017
Water at WOMAD
WATER AT WOMAD
Womad wants to encourage people to choose reusable commodities and minimise the amount of waste going to landfills. They're also believe water is a resource that people should always have free access to.
So, in 2017 we've teamed up with Globelet to rework water at WOMAD. They'll no longer be selling disposable water bottles, WOMAD will now feature a number of water fountains.Festival goers can either buy a Globelet reusable drink bottle or bring their own (non-glass, empty) drink bottle and fill up for free at one of the water fountains.
In the mood for something a bit fancy? Sparkling water and filtered, chilled water will also be available at the Aqua+ station at a cost of $2 per 500mLs.
Globelet resuable drink bottles can be purchased from the WOStore and the Aqua+ station and will be $5 each.
Festival Tip: Look out for the black tap image on the WOMAD Map - this will show you where the free water fountains are located on-site!
FESTIVAL CO2 OFFSETS
We've been offsetting our carbon emissions since 2012 and have contributed to a number of initiatives including tree planting across Australasia and India.
For 2017 we've made the move to offset our emissions solely in New Zealand and have partnered with Ekos to support the Rarakau Rainforest, located on Māori land in the South Island.
The Māori landowners at Rarakau have given up the right to sell rainforest timber in exchange for the opportunity to sell carbon credits. This project is certified and is New Zealand's first and only rainforest carbon project that protects tall indigenous forest!
We buy carbon credits with Ekos to offset the festival's carbon footprint, this includes everything from waste, freight, electricity, accommodation, artist and stall holder travel, our merchandise and wristband manufacturing - even the cable ties we use!
You can offset your carbon emissions too
Ekos have estimated the average WOMAD participant causes just under 0.35 tCO2e emissions from travel, accommodation and off-site waste. $6 buys 0.35 tCO2e carbon offsets to 'neutralise' these emissions so that your WOMAD experience does not contribute to climate change. By offsetting your emissions you'll also be helping to save the Rarakau Rainforest.
You can offset your CO2 emissions as a WOMAD 2017 participant for $6.00 per person. Each participant will receive an official certificate:
See more at www.womad.co.nz
Wednesday, February 08, 2017
Spoken Word at WOMAD 2017
Havana Coffee Works - By Geoff Marsland and With Tom Scott
The Havana Coffee Works Story is a biography of a home-grown business, from its beginnings in Cuba Street, Wellington to its current coffee empire status. A visual symphony of cars, cigars, cafes and coffee roasters. It is also a social history of Cuba Street and Wellington over the last three decades, with larger-than-life personalities, guts, determination and turf wars.
The Groove Book Review - Hand Coloured New Zealand - The Photographs of Whites Aviation
Leo White was born in Auckland on 4 July 1906. His lifelong love of photography was sparked as a young boy when he acquired a Brownie box camera. Before he turned 20, White was a photographic contributor to major major New Zealand periodicals - The NZ Herald, The Auckland Star and The Christchurch Weekly Press.
He also knew the importance of being first off the mark in publishing. When he covered important events outside of Auckland, White would always take his 'baby Austin' car to seal his chance at the first image. It meant he could race home and beat the competition, who generally travelled by train.
White captured some of the first images of Auckland from the air in 1921, beginning a lifelong passion for flying which he combined with his love of photography. By 1945 White established the now famous Whites Aviation Ltd.
In the early 1950s, White began shooting photos for a book he published in 1952, Whites Pictorial Reference of New Zealand. The book became a bestseller and encouraged White to take more photographs in various sizes as artworks for New Zealand homes and businesses.
Today the hand tinted photographs captured by Leo White are highly sought after and are a great reference to the history of New Zealand. Every single photo coloured by hand? Using cotton wool? Yes, such was the era of hand-coloured photography – a painting and photograph in one – the way you got a high-quality colour photo before colour photography became mainstream. Some of New Zealand’s best hand-coloured photos were produced by Whites Aviation from 1945. For over 40 years, the glorious scenic vistas were a sensation, adorning offices and lounges around the land; patriotic statements within New Zealand’s emerging visual arts. Now, despite massive changes in society and photography, the stunning scenes and subtle tones still enchant, as coveted collectibles; decorations on screen; and as respected pieces of photographic art.
But, until now, the inspirational story has not been told; nor have the full stories of Leo White (company founder); Clyde Stewart (chief photographer and head of colouring); and the mission-critical ‘colouring girls’. Hand-Coloured New Zealand also presents New Zealand’s first published collection of hand-coloured photography, and the most extensive published collection of such photography in the world.
Whites Aviation Ltd was established 1945 by Leo White (1906-1967) to produce a series of popular illustrated publications of aviation history and aerial photography. White began to freelance as a photographer in the 1920s, and later worked for the Weekly News. He was closely involved with aviation in Auckland 1920s-1930s, and pioneered aerial photography in the region. He compiled Wingspread, a history of New Zealand aviation, in 1941; and served as a photographer with the RNZAF during WWII. During the early 1950s he covered New Zealand by air, taking photographs for Whites pictorial reference of New Zealand. In 1988 the business was purchased by Air Logistics.
http://www.pottonandburton.co.nz/store/hand-coloured-new-zealand
What an absolutely fabulous book. A large coffee table format, biographical information about not only White, himself but his 'ladies' in the studio. I learned that to further his company's income many of their commissioned photos were used not only for commercial and civic purposes but also recoloured for display on the walls of good homes all around New Zealand.
The photos of both iconic and lesser known landscapes are simply breath taking if you consider the planes used at the time - many not much more than what Jean Batten would have flown. This book presents in A3 format many famous images including mountains and landscapes from the South Island and cith scapes like Christchurch - now forever changed. This is the kind of book that will never date and you'll treasure it to return again and again to look and discover new things. I'd recommend reading with a latte and a good record. it's that kind of book, Groovers.