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		<title>PUBLIC ENEMY &#8211; What Happened to the Music Protests &amp; Rage?</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Dec 2006 10:09:29 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Having recently released &#8220;Power to the People and the Beats: Public Enemy&#8217;s Greatest Hits&#8221;, to document their immense and far-reaching legacy to the development of hip hop music, how did Public Enemy catalyse the transition of rap music from minority interest to establishment juggernaut? Public Enemy have released a &#8216;Best of&#8217; compilation of their music [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3> <span class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/public_enemy.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="Public Enemy" height="336" width="250" />Having recently released &#8220;Power to the People and the Beats: Public Enemy&#8217;s Greatest Hits&#8221;, to document their immense and far-reaching legacy to the development of hip hop music, how did Public Enemy catalyse the transition of rap music from minority interest to establishment juggernaut?</span></h3>
<p>Public Enemy have released a &#8216;Best of&#8217; compilation of their music after near on twenty years of beats and rhymes, to consolidate a rich and pertinent legacy to the development of hip hop that helped to kick-start the whole Gangsta Rap sound and, indirectly, the co-option of hip hop by the music industry. In 1987, when Public Enemy&#8217;s impact was first heard with a resounding boom-bip, Rap music was a minority interest, either derided or patronised. Their sonic and verbal militancy caused a major shit-storm in the media, engendering the kind of outrage and moral panic that tends to surface on slow news days, and enabled hip hop music to carry the mantle of bête noire that it used so successfully to market itself beyond the urban streets to the callow youth of suburbia.</p>
<p>The concerns of hip hop music have now shifted from politicisation to accumulation; from rebel to label. Chuck D memorably coined rap music as the &#8220;Black C-N-N&#8221; whereas now it has become the &#8220;ghetto QVC&#8221; &#8211; from radical to superficial in twenty short years, leaving the once mighty PE irrelevant in its wake.</p>
<p>Hip hop music began in New York in the mid-to-late seventies when disco was still at its height and party music was the order of the day. (MC&#8217;s rapped over R&amp;B music backdrops to create a feel-good vibe amongst the revellers, the music had many parallels with reggae toasting and indeed, may have been inspired by it). It was an underground, D.I.Y. music that was a world away from the mainstream.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/public_enemy4.jpg" class="imageleft" alt="Grand Master Flash and the furious five Album Cover" align="left" height="237" width="250" />Rappers Delight by the Sugarhill Gang changed everything. Released in 1979, probably as a novelty single, it became a surprise hit and is still a favourite of a lot of people (mostly blokes) who are obsessed with being able to recite it word-for-word throughout its fifteen minute running length. It was fun, funny but, most of all, it was funky and served notice to the hip hop music community that this kind of record could sell. The many early conquistadors of rap and hip hop music came, saw and conquered the shit out of the nascent form, introducing a number of innovations; Grandmaster Flash, Mantronix, Kurtis Blow, Afrika Baambaata, Kool Herc, Sugarhill Records, Whodini, Keith LeBlanc, Stetsasonic, Marley Marl, Eric B &amp; Rakim, LL Cool J, Ice T and Run DMC all pushed hip hop forward in terms of lyrical form, cutting, scratching and sampling at a time when soul music was becoming increasingly mediocre.</p>
<p>The Message by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five was another landmark, pushing the lyrical content further than any rap record had done so far. Released in 1982, and sounding like an electro update of Stevie Wonder&#8217;s Living for the City, it was a stone cold classic relaying, in forensic detail, the lives of society&#8217;s bottom-feeders, tingeing its stories with anger and despair. The delivery of the lyrics was by-and-large less bombastic than other rap records (excepting Melle Mel who could sound dramatic reading out a shopping list) with the rappers preferring to be downbeat, cementing its documentary realism with dense passages of pithy prose (&#8220;my son said, daddy I don&#8217;t wanna go to school &#8216;cos the teacher&#8217;s a jerk, he must think I&#8217;m a fool, and all the kids smoke reefer, I think it&#8217;d be cheaper if I just got a job, learned to be a street sweeper&#8221;) and still keeping the rhyming right on point. The Message lived up to its title, providing dancefloor beats for the head as well as the feet. hip hop had now begun to carry the torch of the socially conscious agenda of 70&#8242;s soul that had been blanded out by disco and bedroom R&amp;B.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/public_enemy2.jpg" class="imageleft" alt="Public Enemy - The Best of album cover" align="left" height="170" width="170" /><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/public_enemy1.jpg" class="imageright" alt="Public Enemy" align="right" height="280" width="250" />So, rap music was considered a novelty that occasionally spiced up the charts but was still expected to die out after having been assimilated. Constantly criticised for its apparent lack of musicality, hip hop continued to break through with minor hits until Run DMC officially staked rap&#8217;s ground in the mainstream with the extremely radio-friendly Walk this Way. It&#8217;s a record that I can barely stand to hear nowadays, because of its middle-of-the-road commercialism and the fact that it was played to death, but it created the first rap superstars (if you didn&#8217;t know who Run DMC were, you needed to check in to the nearest coma ward) and ensured that hip hop would continue to have a voice. That voice would continue to speak to the party hardy, but was also the voice of the street incorporating braggadocio, bedroom entreaties and stories from urban realities.</p>
<p>In 1987 rap found a revolutionary voice that laid the foundations for the golden age of hip hop. Rebel Without a Pause was a milestone, signalling its intent with its opening sample declaring &#8220;brothers and sisters, I don&#8217;t know what this world is coming to&#8221; before slamming into a squealing saxophone break over thunderous &#8216;funky drummer&#8217; beats. This was the sound of hip hop entering its maturity, refusing to give a shit about mainstream sensibilities, the Public Enemy sound, as produced by the Bomb Squad, had an edge so sharp that it created an instant love-or-hate-it divide; blowing open Pandora&#8217;s Box for a whole generation of Black artists. The furious, dissonant mixture of beats and samples was dubbed &#8220;music&#8217;s worst nightmare&#8221; by Hank Shocklee of the Bomb Squad and as such, it played right into the hands of those who would decry Rap for its lack of musicality. Except their opinions didn&#8217;t matter anymore; the Bomb Squad&#8217;s confrontational sound created a rallying point for the future of Black music.</p>
<p>As shocking as the music was, it was matched by the emceeing of Chuck D; polemical, urgent and declamatory he took no prisoners as he cut a swathe through all the forces that would rail against him. He delivers the Public Enemy manifesto with his authoritative baritone, building thought upon thought and rhymes within rhymes, never looking back, never standing down.</p>
<p>Politically aligning himself with Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam, the radicalism was there for anyone who would care to listen. It was an untamed new voice full of righteous anger and intelligence that delivered its message in tones reminiscent of Black political leaders from Malcolm X to Stokely Carmichael to Farrakhan himself. Through Chuck D, hip hop had found a political voice that was not only lucid but embraced the radical politics of the, decidedly non-mainstream, Black Power movement.</p>
<p>The album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back followed up the promise of Rebel Without a Pause covering the politics of the Black experience thoughtfully and uncompromisingly with practically every tune a classic. This was their second album &#8211; their first, Yo! Bum Rush The Show, released only a year earlier seems almost primitive in comparison, with its beats less furious and bragging emceeing reminiscent of LL Cool J &#8211; and is now considered the greatest hip hop album ever. Flavor Flav played the fool to Chuck D&#8217;s straight man, delivering off-the-wall material that felt in perfect counterpoint to the harsher realities of Chuck D but was still weird nonetheless, often spouting complete, almost surrealist, nonsense with his own inimitable enunciation &#8211; although Flavor Flav is probably as responsible for inspiring as many emcees as Chuck D &#8211; oddball rappers abounded in the years after Nation of Millions all the way to Eminem today. &#8211; They released the almost perfect Fight the Power in 1989 as part of the soundtrack to Spike Lee&#8217;s Do The Right Thing &#8211; containing what is probably their most famous lyric soundbite &#8211; &#8220;Elvis was a hero to most but he never meant shit to me&#8221; &#8211; before releasing the much anticipated Fear of a Black Planet. Flav came into his own on this album, delivering top-class tunes such as 911 is a Joke and Can&#8217;t Do Nuttin&#8217; For Ya Man, while Chuck D pushed the manifesto message even further with tunes like Burn Hollywood Burn and Welcome to the Terrordome. The Bomb Squad, again, provided beats and samples that were pant-shittingly good.</p>
<p>Following up the work started by Public Enemy, a group emerged in 1988 called Niggaz Wit Attitude (or N.W.A. to give them their less provocative acronym) who displayed their anti-authoritarian rage with the release of their single Fuck Tha Police. This was as incendiary a statement of intent as has ever been delivered in music and N.W.A.&#8217;s notoriety was assured. Although they were less politically astute, their tales of urban resentment were still cloaked in Black Power rhetoric, warning of the consequences of creating a large Black underclass whilst revelling in the lurid violence and misogyny of their position. Gangsta rap was born and set out to hijack the mainstream through its explicit and shocking imagery both on wax and on the streets.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/public_enemy3.jpg" class="imageleft" alt="Public Enemy" align="left" height="315" width="245" />Hip hop&#8217;s greatest creative period followed, with several hip hop legends-in-the-making beginning their careers. The diversity of acts that came in the wake of Public Enemy was immense with a new act born practically every week. The roll-call of artists coming up out of this period (from 1987 to 1997) included Big Daddy Kane, Young MC, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, The Jungle Brothers, KRS-1, Gang Starr, Naughty By Nature, Cypress Hill, House of Pain, EPMD, Pete Rock, The Pharcyde, Black Moon, Mobb Deep, Jeru The Damaja, The Roots, Xzibit, Outkast and The Wu-Tang Clan. Many of these records were commercially successful and hip hop fashions were changing constantly. The various political agendas of these groups tended to revolve around the notion of Black Power and the disaffected underclass, whereas the more explicitly political groups took the liberal high-ground. The voice of rap was being dissipated amongst a multitude of talented individuals, each with their own take on society and their place therein.</p>
<p>However, the one dominant voice during this time was that of Gangsta Rap with its East Coast-West Coast beefs and explicit lyrics providing the better stories, and which sound-tracked the racial unrest in America that ignited 1992&#8242;s LA riots. Its leading exponents were Ice T, Ice Cube and Dr. Dre -the latter two embarking on solo careers, having once been part of N.W.A. &#8211; but while the Ices were embroiled in the business of authority baiting, Dr. Dre took his old George Clinton records to put together The Chronic, a hip hop masterpiece, on which the main guest rapper was Snoop Doggy Dogg. The Chronic sold extremely well and created a real anticipation for Snoop Doggy Dogg&#8217;s solo project which, when Doggystyle was released in 1993, went stratospheric. The future was here and it was wearing a bubble-perm. In the post Doggystyle years, hip hop gained wider acceptance and progressively wore the mantle of mainstream mediocrity (niggas, bitches, violence, sex and bling).</p>
<p>Public Enemy&#8217;s output continued (Apocalypse 91: the Enemy Strikes Black, Greatest Misses, Muse Sick N Hour Mess Age, Chuck D&#8217;s masterly solo album The Autobiography of Mistachuck, He Got Game, There&#8217;s A Poison Going On, and Revolverlution) but the Bomb Squad were no longer taking complete control over production duties and, while the deeper and bassier production was anticipating the West Coast sound, the edge was being lost as hip hop moved on at breakneck pace. Chuck and Flav were still magnificent but were becoming increasingly irrelevant as the acts that came after them commanded more of the attention. Having put rap at the forefront of innovation, Public Enemy found they were falling behind in terms of a public that was constantly searching for the next new thing; they also lacked the killer tune that might have put them back into the limelight. At the time when hip hop was joining the mainstream, Public Enemy quit their record company and began releasing records independently, thereby leaving them without the money and marketing that might have led to a successful reinvention &#8211; their brand of agitation and polemic was no longer useful to an industry that was becoming as apolitical and bland as soul had become in the eighties.</p>

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		<title>SHOOT THE COMMUNITY? &#8211; Shoot the Messenger</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Aug 2006 15:59:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Hermann Djoumessi</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I wasn&#8217;t privy to the preview of the film &#8216;Shoot the Messenger&#8217; to a floor full of &#8216;community leaders&#8217;, leading lights, notables and other luminaries&#8230; However, what I have to say was that some organizations like Ligali, who I want to stress, usually do a good job, were quick to do the intellectual jump stating [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head">I wasn&#8217;t privy to the preview of the film &#8216;Shoot the Messenger&#8217; to a floor full of &#8216;community leaders&#8217;, leading lights, notables and other luminaries&#8230;</h3>
<p>However, what I have to say was that some organizations like Ligali, who I want to stress, usually do a good job, were quick to do the intellectual jump stating that the author Sharon Foster had engineered the whole story to get a gig at the BBC. Or was implying that unless you are willing to portray your community in a negative way you will not find employment at the BBC. Some might have divergent views on those points but I actually disagree. You can not hijack an author&#8217;s work and lay all the sins of the world on her shoulders. Her track records show that she has always focused her work on the ills of her community and society at large via Babyfathers for example, undeservedly axed from BBC&#8217;s schedule a few years ago.</p>
<p>The Sopranos in the US, was lambasted by some intellectual circles in the Italian-American community as a piece of anti-Italian propaganda trying to portray all Italians as outfit-related. However, in most circles and those circles are called viewers who simply enjoy good drama, it is revered as one of the best TV shows ever. The Babyfathers series never got the opportunity of a deserved second season and it was a shame. It was probably down to bad scheduling and those rumors coming from the sidelines asking for the show to be axed. Most of the talent on display, luckily found opportunities on other shows.</p>
<p>Reading the available news dispatches about ‘Shoot the Messenger&#8217; the same voices do seem to be at work again and are ready to bury the show and scare the schedulers by creating negative vibes around Sharon Foster&#8217;s last outing. One aspect worth noticing, is the absence of any mention of the plot, the acting, the art direction, etc..</p>
<p>I believe ‘The Crouches&#8217; was just plain bad TV, and did not deserve to see the light of day. ‘Three non-blondes&#8217; (BBC 3 or 2 sometimes) was good comedy with three talented comedians doing what they do best: entertain. In ‘Shoot the Messenger&#8217; we end-up with just one amazing negative reaction focusing on representation or message sent to the rest of the world, as opposed to self-reflection on whether the program is depicting some existing reality or might be of any good value. Sure, I might agree with some that she has been courting controversy and is reaping what she sowed. As did the authors of Jerry Springer the Opera&#8217;, ‘The passion of Christ&#8217;, ‘Behzti&#8217; (dishonour) &#8230;lately. Are we in danger of reaching a stage where ‘He who turns the camera against his community will end-up excommunicated&#8217;? I hope not.</p>
<p>The first question I want to be answered when reading a review on any show is: WAS IT A DAMN GOOD DRAMA? If yes, then it is worth talking about representation and the consequences or its impact on a community. If it is BAD DRAMA, then we shouldn&#8217;t bother giving the project, the column inches it doesn&#8217;t DESERVE.</p>
<p>Ref:<br />
<a href="http://www.thecustard.tv/cominguppage3.html">Coming up tv</a><br />
<a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/babyfather/stories/stratford.shtml">Babyfather</a></p>

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		<title>FLIRTING AT CANNES 2006</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 May 2006 12:23:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Hermann Djoumessi</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Friday May 19th Meeting at the UK Pavilion. Dealing with passes and accreditations. Sorting out the usual mumbo-jumbo required to cruise through the festival. &#8216;Volver&#8217; from eternal &#8216;enfant-terrible&#8217; Pedro Almodovar is on show and has the usual red-carpet treatment. Penelope Cruz &#8211; gorgeous in a white Balanciagga dress, or is it? &#8211; and Carmen Maura, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Friday May 19th</h3>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/articles/movies/images/119.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="Penelope Cruz" align="right" height="400" hspace="0" vspace="0" width="242" />Meeting at the UK Pavilion. Dealing with passes and accreditations. Sorting out the usual mumbo-jumbo required to cruise through the festival.</p>
<p>&#8216;Volver&#8217; from eternal &#8216;enfant-terrible&#8217; Pedro Almodovar is on show and has the usual red-carpet treatment. Penelope Cruz &#8211; gorgeous in a white Balanciagga dress, or is it? &#8211; and Carmen Maura, the co-stars are with him. Penelope returns to our first director and says: &#8220;There is one and only one Pedro, he is my priority in all fields. He writes for women who are 14, 35, 50 or 80 years old, this film is perfect example; there are lots of female characters of all ages in his films. I&#8217;m sure that my career wouldn&#8217;t have been the same without Pedro, my life wouldn&#8217;t have been the same without him. I hope that in the future that this will continue. I am very grateful to possibilities given to me somewhere else, it is interesting, one can learn a lot, but I worked in the United States for seven years, and in Europe for about fifteen, but Pedro still remains truly exceptional for me.</p>
<p>As for Pedro Almodovar. You can&#8217;t help but feel that each film is a complex description of his obsession for his mother&#8230;A bit like Woody Allen and his New-York or Spike Lee and&#8230;well New-York too&#8230; This is what the master had to say: In Volver, I speak of the women around me when I was a child. I was brought up by women, the men being in fields, whom I practically never saw. Volver speaks of the way I grew up, listening to these women. I would hear them singing whenever I went along the riverbanks with my mother; I accompanied her from my very earliest age. That&#8217;s how I learnt a lot about dramatic art, there are many roles that I have written which were inspired by my sisters or my mother, by characters firmly anchored in reality, even if they belong to the realm of fiction. They are characters who spin extraordinary tales, which has always immensely impressed me.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another Palme d&#8217;or favorite is: Fast Food Nation which casts a critical eye on the fast food industry in the US, via the destinies of three main characters: a marketing executive of a fast food chain, an employee of the same chain, and a clandestine immigrant working for slaughterhouse. For this movie, Richard Linklater has been able to recruit A-list cast with Ethan Hawke, Greg Kinnear, Patricia Arquette, Catalina Sandino Moreno, Patricia Arquette and Bruce Willis.</p>
<p>Apparatchiks aplenty in sight for the tribute paid to Russian filmmaker Sergei M. Eisenstein yesterday with the screening of two of his films &#8211; Bezhin Meadow and October &#8211; Headed by the Cannes Film Festival President Gilles Jacob, the director of the Russian State Archives for Literature and the Arts Tatiana Goriaeva, the director of the Eisenstein Memorial Naum Kleiman, and the vice-president of the Russian Film Festival Kinotavr, Igor Tolstounov, a stellar night devoted to the director of the masterpieces The Battleship Potemkin and Ivan The Terrible.</p>
<h3>20th &amp; 21st May</h3>
<p>We have been given a lot of business cards and collected a more impressive number. As always in Cannes, during the festival, we have late, late nights and early mornings (12:00 AM). The mix of sleep depravation, the crowd, the expectation, open the floodgate to a huge array of emotions from fascinating to scary, to fun, dull, exciting all in one. The mood changes minute by minute. Survival is the key here.<br />
Samuel L. Jackson was dining in the Majestic on a table next to us. Al Gore on the red carpet&#8230; Otherwise you do see lots of people you think might be someone but you can never really be too sure. But that is not why we are here: We have to sell our projects and establish contacts/bridges with the industry.</p>
<p>The first French Film in the running for this year Palme d&#8217;Or, was Charlie Says It does re-introduce us to the films of filmmaker-actress Nicole Garcia, who was a Jury Member in 2000. Nicole Garcia returns to an essentially male world, twelve years after having directed the trio Gérard Lanvin/Bernard Giraudeau/Jean-Marc Barr in The Favourite Son. This time, the film revolves around a quartet of actors &#8211; Benoît Magimel, Jean-Pierre Bacri, Benoît Poelvoorde and Vincent Lindon &#8211; and a child &#8211; the famous Charlie embodied by the young Ferdinand Martin &#8211; whose destinies appear to criss-cross on screen. Not in a ‘crash&#8217; way as Benoit Poelvoorde will put it: &#8220;This film is so &#8216;Nicole&#8217;. She is the one who entirely carries the film, the actors are relieved of any pressure. That&#8217;s why we clown around!&#8221; &#8211; Benoit stole a few grins with that one.</p>
<p>Nicole has made over the years, her business of filming complex male interactions and stories. Charlie Says could be another stone brought to her body of work:</p>
<p>&#8220;Men have this photo genius, this blend of robustness and fragility which fascinates me. They bear in them contradictions which make us wonder what they are going to become. It is these contrary tendencies which interest me. In Charlie Says, it is a question of variations on various kinds of men, about corpulences and various psychologies. This is a territory which I wanted to explore.&#8221;</p>
<p>After Wesh, Wesh (2002), a highly remarked debut feature film, Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche introduces us to ‘Bled number One&#8217; in the section Un Certain Regard, the &#8220;follow-up&#8221; (or prologue) entitled Bled Number One. &#8220;The end of Wesh, Wesh,&#8221; he explains, &#8220;ends with a shot of a pond after a car chase between a cop and Kamel. We then hear a gunshot but we don&#8217;t know if Kamel has been killed or not. The only thing which I do know is that Kamel was a victim of the double punishment, therefore we could make a second film: double punishment, double film! We already foresaw a follow-up by making Wesh, Wesh. Whether it takes place before or after is of little importance. Why always consider time as something purely chronological?&#8221; Kamel is barely out of prison and is expelled to his country of origin, Algeria. This forced exile obliges him to cast a critical eye upon a country in full effervescence, transformation, torn between a youthful desire for modernity and tradition.</p>
<p>Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche wanted to show: &#8220;The energetic manner of filming can recall that of documentary cinema, but it is true that we aren&#8217;t for all that dealing with current events. It is another relationship with time, when it isn&#8217;t necessarily a question of filming some immediate reality, in realistic way. It is simply a proposal, just to present things, not to bear judgment. (&#8230;) To write Bled Number One, I didn&#8217;t return at all to Algeria to capture something about today&#8217;s youth there. I wrote this story based my holiday memories. But it is also because I felt that things hadn&#8217;t really changed, that time passes differently there. You have the time to reflect and be, faced with the elements. (&#8230;) A film is a gesture, a burst, a job, an enterprise, an action. An action in life, a pure lesson of life. It is here that we seize something alive. For it is necessary to remain alive, no matter what happens.&#8221;</p>
<p>Which leads us to what Cannes, has been famous for the world over; Parties&#8230;&#8217;Snooty&#8217; French can do parties too: The Cannes Mix program has a DJ set headed by Fred Elalouf at the Beach Cinema.</p>
<p>The Menu? :</p>
<p>- Soundtracks of French films of the 60s and 70s<br />
- Made in Bollywood</p>
<p>This didn&#8217;t give us enough opportunity to find our beds. We swapped showers for after-shaves and headed the next day. &#8211; After a brunch at the Majestic&#8230;.always Brunch there if you can afford it! &#8211; for the international village, where we crossed the borders from Maroc to the Netherlands and back again. It reminded to some of us, the town of Basel in Switzerland where you can cross three borders within walking distances (France, Germany, and Switzerland). We also saw a film by Daft Punk. Very interesting.</p>
<p>We were also moved by Nanni Moretti&#8217;s The Caiman&#8230;Great filmmaker always seem to have that obsession, they tend to film time and time again. Nanni is no different. He again speaks about politic and democracy, but avoid acting in it, which is a first, five years after having won the Palme d&#8217;Or for The Son&#8217;s Room. It&#8217;s his 10th feature film, and the 5th presented in the Official Selection. Released in Italy in the middle of the controversial elections, a few days before Romano Prodi&#8217;s victory, The Caiman is the story of a young filmmaker (played by Jasmine Trinca, also in The Son&#8217;s Room) who wants to make a film about Silvio Berlusconi, and appeals to a producer in crisis of serie &#8220;Z&#8221; movies (Silvio Orlando, Moretti&#8217;s old buddy) to finance her movie. Moretti says: &#8220;The Caiman is a love story, a homage to cinema and a political films,&#8221; resumes the director, who clarifies his intentions: &#8220;I tried to tell, using the means of the motion pictures, a reality which we are no longer able to see or perceive. I think that our problem is one of habit: we&#8217;ve become used to characters and situations however truly incredible for the sake of democracy.&#8217;</p>
<p>Another particular highlight of the day was the last piece of a trilogy about China The Orphan of Anyang (2001) and Night and Day (2005). This time, the filmmaker allows his camera in the life of a schoolteacher close to retirement, who set out to search for his son. His wife, gravely ill, would like to see their son one last time before dying. He hasn&#8217;t given any news for a long time. The father will be welcomed by his daughter who does shifts as a hostess in a nightclub&#8230;Brace yourself for a solid family drama with confrontations aplenty.</p>
<p>&#8220;Luxury Car,&#8221; explains Wang Chao, &#8220;falls within the continuance of the reflections and criticisms already expressed in my first two films, on the reality and historic and political allegories of contemporary China. Here, the gap between the rich and poor, the distance which separates people from happiness, the contradictions between the social system inherited from past and the burden of the present are so many problems which I myself, as a full-fledged member of the people, feel all the weight and intensity. That&#8217;s why it made me decide to shoot the picture.&#8221;</p>
<p>On the party radar, at the Cannes Mix. The new wave soundtracks are honored. Can&#8217;t wait for my suit and sunglasses and rehearse my JL Godard ‘A Band apart&#8217; moves&#8230;Which implies another night without sleep. I know, I know&#8230;</p>
<h3>22nd &amp; 23rd May</h3>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/articles/movies/images/capt.can22305222058.film_cannes_x_men_can223.jpg" class="imageleft" alt="Rebecca Romijn and Halle Berry" height="345" hspace="0" vspace="0" width="232" />The ‘babe&#8217;s battle&#8217;, Halle Berry and Rebecca Romijn: Sublime visions of nature&#8217;s most famous achievement on the red carpet. For your eyes only&#8230;Their presence allegedly being required for the promotion of the third X-Men movie&#8230; As for the film, wait for the DVD release, or PSP, or Podcast, or Palm, or&#8230;On a more serious note, ‘Bamako&#8217; by Abderrahmane Sissako. Born in Mauritania, raised in Mali, read film at the prestigious VGIK in Moscow before releasing his first work in 1990 (Le Jeu). After string of international awards (Fespaco, Perugia,&#8230;) Cannes awaited to be seduced in 2002 by Waiting for Happiness. ‘Bamako&#8217; is out of competition&#8230;As is the seminal film about French ‘demi-god&#8217; Zinedine Zidane. Helmed by Douglas Gordon and Philippe Parreno, acted by none other than double Z or ‘ZZ&#8217; himself. The film celebrates the bizarre cult of Zidanemania, shot in real time during a Madrid game supported by no less than 17 high-tech HD cameras, aimed solely at the artist Thierry Henry refers to as ‘the man who do stuff with his foot, you could only dream of doing with your hands&#8217;&#8230;It&#8217;s a pity the film didn&#8217;t really try to develop a narrative we would follow but rather lays on the technological foundations pitched to us beforehand. But if you enjoy seeing master at work, be my guest!<br />
To the International village and another trip to Germany and Canada, then South Korea&#8230;That&#8217;s where the buzz is at the moment&#8230;<br />
Kidulthood by Menjah Huda from the UK was also screened over there at 12:00 PM&#8230;Couldn&#8217;t make it, but should be up for DVD viewing, back in London&#8230;</p>
<p>ON THE PARTY RADAR: For two nights, the Didier Riey Group, a gypsy jazz collective will take over the Cannes Mix programme opening for the outdoors screening, made of a selection of twelve animation-shorts by Canadian Norman McLaren, featuring Horizontal Lines, Stars and Stripes, and The Grey Hen. On Wednesday, The Holy Mountain a tale about a quest for immortality by Chilean director/artist Alejandro Jodorowsky. A student of the mime Marcel Marceau (other prestigious alumni include Michael Jackson&#8230;.), friend of the surrealists Topor &amp; Arrabal. ‘El Topo&#8217; his first mainstream movie, became a cult classic in 1970. When work dried out in films for the Chilean director, he went into comic books, working with fellow cult author Jean ‘Moebius&#8217; Giraud &#8211; Lieutenant Blueberry, adapted for the silver screen by Jan Koonen of ‘Doberman&#8217; fame in 2004 &#8211; Van Hamme, Gal,&#8230;achieving cult-status within the comic book fraternity when releasing l&#8217;Incal and working on its follow-up: ‘The Meta-Barons saga&#8217;. If you want to grasp his influence in modern western comic-books, you would have to speak of him in the same breath as a Hayao Miyazaki(Nausicaa), Akira Toriyama (Dragonball), Katsuhiro Otomo, (Akira) or a Chris Claremont (X-men)&#8230;</p>
<h3>24th &amp; 25th May</h3>
<p>TELEGRAM:</p>
<p>Was in Monaco. /Stop/ couldn&#8217;t be bothered to be in Cannes. /Stop/ had a few business dealings to handle. /Stop/. Didn&#8217;t have time to blog lately, sorry. /Full Stop/</p>
<p>Telegram, heh? What a funny thing&#8230;How many of you remember what it was to send a telegram at the other end of the world? Here we are taking this world for granted. Anyone who&#8217;s been on the French Riviera during that period of the year is aware of the fact that we are reaching the high points of the season with the Monte-Carlo tennis tournament, the Cannes festival, the Monaco grand prix, then Avignon festival in Provence, (equivalent to the Edinburgh theater festival&#8230;) and so on&#8230;We stopped in Grace and St-Tropez too&#8230;bumped into Michael Stipe, Robin Aubert, the director and lost our lawyer inside a casino&#8230;in Monaco&#8230;also known as the ‘Millionaire&#8217;s playground&#8217; &#8230;<br />
Formula One is the toy here&#8230;The noise, the smell, the gas, the sheer pollution it creates and with the little amount of overtaking opportunities, due to the tight confines of the roads, the Monaco Grand Prix must be an ecologist idea of hell.</p>
<p>With preparations in full swing it is quite difficult to drive through the city. Remember, the Monaco grand prix is the last of its kind, as the race track is made of the principality&#8217;s own streets. It&#8217;s the world&#8217;s most famous street track&#8230;</p>
<p>An open city as was Rome in January 1945 when the remnants of the German army occupying the ‘eternal city&#8217; are about to surrender &#8230;A priest and a communist worker, the two pillars of post-war anti-fascism in Italy will join together to defeat Nazism. The movie buffs among you will recognize the pitch for ‘Rome, open city&#8217; and the birth of Italian neo-realism. Black and white movies, with strong ‘real&#8217; characters shot in the streets, as Cinecitta the babylonesque studios built by Mussolini had been bombed during the war. Serge July, editor of left-wing daily newspaper Liberation, directed a short-documentary called ‘Once upon a time&#8230;Rome open city&#8217; showing in Cannes&#8230;</p>
<p>Another graceful vision, Barbie Hsu. Her sensual and timeless interpretation left very few moviegoers untouched. The actress is the lead in ‘Silk&#8217; by Taiwanese director, Chao Pin Su: &#8220;We tried to make the best possible feature film on all levels,&#8221; explains the director. &#8220;Usually, in all Taiwanese films, the action is relatively slow and the atmosphere rather dark. I believe that we impose limits on ourselves due to various points of view, even when due to creative talent. This time, we had the good fortune of securing solid financing, which allowed us to develop our ideas with complete serenity. The entire crew is very satisfied with it. This picture is really different from the rest of Taiwanese productions.&#8221;<br />
As for Barbie: &#8220;It was a true challenge to take on this character, I had a lot of fun playing her. Furthermore, there are terrible deaths in the film, which I greatly enjoyed from this point of view. Not to mention the end, it really touched me.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another timeless vision, but this one celebrates a movie dynasty. Like the Douglas, the Van Peebles, etc&#8230;Here come the Coppolas! Sofia, the daughter of Francis is back in Cannes with Marie-Antoinette (Her third movie after ‘Virgin Suicides&#8217; &#8211; Director&#8217;s fortnight &#8211; and ‘Lost in translation&#8217;). The film charts the life of. ..&#8217;Marie-Antoinette&#8217;, queen of France during the 1789 revolution and famous for answering to a starving crowd asking for bread: ‘Let them eat cake!&#8217;<br />
For me, Marie Antoinette has remained, first and foremost, the symbol of a totally decadent style. I didn&#8217;t realize to what point these people, who were called upon to govern a country, were in point of fact no more than teenagers. Daily life in the Château de Versailles is also, for these adolescents, a form of apprenticeship set in a tense, difficult environment. It is this position and the complexity of the character of Marie Antoinette which interested me.&#8221; (Sofia C.)<br />
A few recognizable faces in the casting like Steve Coogan (yes&#8230;I know!), Marianne Faithfull, Kirsten Dunst and Aurore Clement&#8230;However, Sofia is adamant she never tried to make a political statement: ‘I wasn&#8217;t making a political movie about the French Revolution, I was doing a portrait of the character Marie Antoinette and my themes are in the film. She was a symbol of decadence. It was very interesting to read and research more about Marie Antoinette, more about the human experience of this young girl who went to Versailles when she was 14 and how she developed in the Cour de Versailles. I thought she was an interesting character. I have always been attracted to the 18th century in France. I knew so little about the personal side of her. The story is about teenagers in Versailles so I wanted it to have the energy of youth, a teenage feeling to it.&#8221; I am making one if I tell you that the movie is adapted from a book written by Antonia Margaret Caroline Pakenham also known as CBE lady Antonia Fraser&#8230;?</p>
<p>Anyone who&#8217;s been on the French Riviera during that period of the year is aware of the fact that we are reaching the high points of the season with the Monte-Carlo tennis tournament, the Cannes festival, the Monaco grand prix, then Avignon festival in Provence, (equivalent to the Edinburgh theater festival&#8230;) and so on&#8230;We stopped in Grace and St-Tropez too&#8230;bumped into Michael Stipe, Robin Aubert, the director and lost our lawyer inside a casino&#8230;in Monaco&#8230;also known as the ‘Millionaire&#8217;s playground&#8217; &#8230; Formula One is the toy here&#8230;The noise, the smell, the gas, the sheer pollution it creates and with the little amount of overtaking opportunities, due to the tight confines of the roads, the Monaco Grand Prix must be an ecologist idea of hell.</p>
<p>With preparations in full swing it is quite difficult to drive through the city. Remember, the Monaco grand prix is the last of its kind, as the race track is made of the principality&#8217;s own streets. It&#8217;s the world&#8217;s most famous street track&#8230;</p>
<p>An open city as was Rome in January 1945 when the remnants of the German army occupying the ‘eternal city&#8217; are about to surrender &#8230;A priest and a communist worker, the two pillars of post-war anti-fascism in Italy will join together to defeat Nazism. The movie buffs among you will recognize the pitch for ‘Rome, open city&#8217; and the birth of Italian neo-realism. Black and white movies, with strong ‘real&#8217; characters shot in the streets, as Cinecitta the babylonesque studios built by Mussolini had been bombed during the war. Serge July, editor of left-wing daily newspaper Liberation, directed a short-documentary called ‘Once upon a time&#8230;Rome open city&#8217; showing in Cannes&#8230;</p>
<p>Another graceful vision, Barbie Hsu. Her sensual and timeless interpretation left very few moviegoers untouched. The actress is the lead in ‘Silk&#8217; by Taiwanese director, Chao Pin Su: &#8220;We tried to make the best possible feature film on all levels,&#8221; explains the director. &#8220;Usually, in all Taiwanese films, the action is relatively slow and the atmosphere rather dark. I believe that we impose limits on ourselves due to various points of view, even when due to creative talent. This time, we had the good fortune of securing solid financing, which allowed us to develop our ideas with complete serenity. The entire crew is very satisfied with it. This picture is really different from the rest of Taiwanese productions.&#8221; As for Barbie: &#8220;It was a true challenge to take on this character, I had a lot of fun playing her. Furthermore, there are terrible deaths in the film, which I greatly enjoyed from this point of view. Not to mention the end, it really touched me.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another timeless vision, but this one celebrates a movie dynasty. Like the Douglas, the Van Peebles, etc&#8230;Here come the Coppolas! Sofia, the daughter of Francis is back in Cannes with Marie-Antoinette (Her third movie after ‘Virgin Suicides&#8217; &#8211; Director&#8217;s fortnight &#8211; and ‘Lost in translation&#8217;). The film charts the life of. ..&#8217;Marie-Antoinette&#8217;, queen of France during the 1789 revolution and famous for answering to a starving crowd asking for bread: ‘Let them eat cake!&#8217; For me, Marie Antoinette has remained, first and foremost, the symbol of a totally decadent style. I didn&#8217;t realize to what point these people, who were called upon to govern a country, were in point of fact no more than teenagers. Daily life in the Château de Versailles is also, for these adolescents, a form of apprenticeship set in a tense, difficult environment. It is this position and the complexity of the character of Marie Antoinette which interested me.&#8221; (Sofia C.) A few recognizable faces in the casting like Steve Coogan (yes&#8230;I know!), Marianne Faithfull, Kirsten Dunst and Aurore Clement&#8230;However, Sofia is adamant she never tried to make a political statement: ‘I wasn&#8217;t making a political movie about the French Revolution, I was doing a portrait of the character Marie Antoinette and my themes are in the film. She was a symbol of decadence. It was very interesting to read and research more about Marie Antoinette, more about the human experience of this young girl who went to Versailles when she was 14 and how she developed in the Cour de Versailles. I thought she was an interesting character. I have always been attracted to the 18th century in France. I knew so little about the personal side of her. The story is about teenagers in Versailles so I wanted it to have the energy of youth, a teenage feeling to it.&#8221; I am making one if I tell you that the movie is adapted from a book written by Antonia Margaret Caroline Pakenham also known as CBE lady Antonia Fraser&#8230;?</p>
<p>Left the sea, s&#8230; and sun&#8230;for gritty, rainy London. But Cannes is not over yet. I have to give you a few tips for the ‘Palme d&#8217;Or&#8217; &#8230;This year&#8217;s festival has been very ‘serious&#8217; and has featured movies with ‘gravitas&#8217;. The president of the jury is Wong-Kar-Wai filmmaker renown for his uncompromising style. Two films spring to mind, when thinking about the Palme d&#8217;or or Jury&#8217;s prize. The two have wars at their core: ‘The wind that shakes the barley&#8217; by Ken Loach and the excellent ‘Day of glory&#8217;&#8230;</p>
<p>The movie is about the Algerian, Moroccans, and Tunisians, Senegalese soldiers or goumiers dead and forgotten during the Second World War, who liberated France from Nazism. The director, Rachid Bouchareb, has assembled a stellar ensemble cast, made of some of France&#8217;s finest actors: Sami Bouajila, Rochdy Zem, and the two icons of French&#8217;s suburbs youth culture, Sami Naceri (Taxi 1 to 3) and Djamel Debbouze (Amelie&#8230;).</p>
<p>Rachid Bouchared, the director knew straight from the get-go what would be the major stumbling block for such a movie and forecasted it in his approach: the cinema is a vehicle for encounters and emotions, perceived by audiences first as feelings, even if it gives them more to discover. It was only in this way that I could carry the story and creates a tie with the audience,&#8221; he adds. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t want to be didactic, which serves nothing. We developed the screenplay over two and a half years. We needed 25 versions to be able to step beyond history and concentrate on the human subject matter, on all the tiny details of daily life which reflect life far better than any speech.&#8221;</p>
<p>Sami Naceri as always very intense, took the bait with hesitation first, before putting ‘a lot into this film, to the point of even learning Arabic. I literally charged into the story. It isn&#8217;t a vindictive picture, nor political. But those in school should learn that these North Africans were the first to fall under German bullets for the liberation of Marseilles, Toulon and Corsica.&#8221; Djamel Debbouze, who is considered as one &#8211; if not the one &#8211; of the most bankable actor in France at the moment had to chip in to get the project going: ‘On the one hand, we come up with budgets in the several million euros to produce comedies where audiences want to see me slipping on banana peels, and on the other hand, I see that a project such as Rachid&#8217;s which was non-stop revised downwards. France still has difficulty in coping with its own past.&#8221;</p>
<p>Djamel Debbouze, the actor has fulfilled most of his dreams emerging as a disabled kid from the suburbs to one of France&#8217;s most recognizable face but the producer was looking for a strong project to sink his teeth in, refusing the usual farces, he is now renowned for: ‘ After Asterix &amp; Obelix: Mission Cleopatra, I received a multitude of scripts of the kind Asterix vs. the North Africans or Rabin Hood, and I was extremely skeptical. While Rachid&#8217;s film presented pleasant and noble challenges to be defended. It was therefore perfectly normal and logical to go all the way for such a film. As co-producer, I am proud that Days of Glory is presented at Cannes, it&#8217;s all the better for us. To put together funds for this film, I was even compelled to go meet Sarkozy, which really taught me a lesson!&#8221;</p>
<p>R. Bouchardeb went one step further, by asking rai icon Khaled (worldwide hit, ‘Didi&#8217;) to score the music for the film, despite early reservations: ‘in normal times, I sing of love and peace, so I was somewhat taken aback when Rachid suggested to me working on the music of a film about war. He then explained to me that it wasn&#8217;t really a war picture, its goal was rather to honor those people who helped lead to the Liberation and who brought us the joy of doing certain things. It is out of respect for his people who died for us that I joined Rachid.&#8221;</p>
<p>From one master to another: Sydney Pollack, the American director and actor with more than 40 years in the trade and 20 films under his belt. His filmography includes ‘Out of Africa&#8217;, ‘Three days of the condor&#8217; and as an actor, the last Kubrick&#8217;s work ‘Eyes wide shut&#8217;. The night is called ‘A Film master class with Sydney Pollack&#8217;. His first words were: ‘I just have to say that anything I am presenting that has the name&#8221; master class &#8221; is enough to ring every alarm bell in my brain,&#8221;. A master-raconteur, Sydney Pollack cruise through the night dispensing words of wisdom like: To be absolutely honest, I don&#8217;t think of myself as a visual director. That&#8217;s an area that I work very hard in because it&#8217;s my weaker muscle. My stronger muscles are with performance. Because I feel that I am stronger in performance, I try to concentrate as hard as I can on the visual aspects of the movie because it isn&#8217;t my forte. There are great visual styles that I admire immensely like Bertolucci. The danger with somebody like me who comes from the theatre as an actor is to follow along with two-people talk scenes and I like to do those. My films are full of them.&#8221; Sydney Pollack was also presenting out of competition ‘Sketches of Frank Gehry&#8217;, the patron of the arts and founder of the Guggenheim museum in Bilbao among other things&#8230;</p>

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		<title>JOHN MCLAUGHLIN &#8211; Johnny&#8217;s Language of Music</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 13 May 2006 10:24:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[John McLaughlin, quite simply, is an eloquent. A guitarist whose musical vocabulary is both fluent and succinct; a musician who has proved he can work on equal terms with players from around the world and in any context. The language of music has rarely been expressed better. He is also the guitar hero&#8217;s guitar hero; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3><span class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar..jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="John McLaughlin" align="right" height="250" width="250" />John McLaughlin, quite simply, is an eloquent. A guitarist whose musical vocabulary is both fluent and succinct; a musician who has proved he can work on equal terms with players from around the world and in any context. The language of music has rarely been expressed better.</span></h3>
<p>He is also the guitar hero&#8217;s guitar hero; admired by Johnny Marr, Jeff Beck and Robert Fripp amongst many others &#8211; there are very few serious guitar players who cannot have been influenced by his virtuoso technique. John is currently recording a new album, with a group of invited musicians, which will incorporate ideas from Asian underground music that originated here in the U.K.</p>
<p>&#8220;Asian music and culture have played a pivotal role in my life, whether from a musical or philosophical/spiritual viewpoint. About 12-15 years ago, Jungle music appeared and coincided with a very strong retrospective movement in Jazz. I was never a fan of retrospective music, and I became intrigued by Jungle only to find out that it had its roots in Jazz-Rock, Reggae and Indian music. Drum &#8216;n Bass is a derivative of Jungle, but for my ears Jungle is more unpredictable and consequently more enjoyable.</p>
<p>&#8220;Asian Dub Foundation, Nitin Sawhney, and Talvin Singh have experimented with either Jungle or Drum &#8216;n Bass, and in addition have introduced a vast array of Indian percussion with it and Indian vocalists. I&#8217;ve even heard Shakti influences in some of their recordings.</p>
<p>&#8220;Some of the recordings they have done are very interesting from the conceptual point of view, and the sometimes very tasteful use of synthesizers.</p>
<p>&#8220;With these artists, there are some really interesting groups such as D Note and Lemon D, who have also made some excellent recordings.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now while the music might not be as &#8216;rich&#8217; as jazz music, for me, some of them are more interesting musically.</p>
<p>&#8220;The other aspect of &#8216;Underground&#8217; is the world we live in, insofar as it is now extremely industrialised. We live surrounded by the sound of industry, and my idea is to incorporate this &#8216;industrial music&#8217; into new forms of music. That&#8217;s the tricky part. The other part is putting together some of the world&#8217;s finest musicians, from East and West, and placing them in a musical situation where their particular musical conventions might not work. In other words it makes them think in different ways, and then putting all of this together.&#8221;</p>
<p>Born in Yorkshire on January the 4th 1942, John McLaughlin grew up in a musical family but was essentially self-taught as a guitarist and took on various influences from blues, flamenco, jazz and classical music. His love of music informed his dedication and has led him to being one of the foremost talents in the world today.</p>
<p>&#8220;On my iPod I have a selection from:- Miles (early &amp; late period), Coltrane (early &amp; late period), Bill Evans, Charles Lloyd, Cannonball Adderly, Joshua Redman, Brad Meldhau, Sly and the Family Stone, D Note, Lemon D and other UK &#8216;underground&#8217; groups, Bluth, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Vinnie Colaiuta, Massive Attack. The list is endless.&#8221;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar3..jpg" class="imageleft" alt="miles Davies" align="right" height="258" width="255" />He emerged publicly during the British blues revival of the Sixties, featuring in bands such as Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames and the Graham Bond Organisation, before cementing his reputation in avant-garde jazz with the similarly brilliant John Surman and Dave Holland. Drumming legend, Tony Williams picked John to play in his group Lifetime, with Jack Bruce and Larry Young, after hearing a tape of his playing and soon after Miles Davis came a&#8217; calling. Miles was moving into his Jazz-Fusion period and was sweeping up the cream of young musical talent to join him; even though Miles risked alienating Tony Williams, a man he respected and admired, by asking John to join him on the recording of In A Silent Way, his move was vindicated by John&#8217;s beautiful, soulful playing on what has now become a landmark recording. John continued to perform with Williams and Davis but soon formed his own band, The Mahavishnu Orchestra, playing jazz-rock fusion that was by turns muscular and contemplative. John&#8217;s career since then has found him in varied musical environments with a succession of dazzlingly accomplished partners from the screaming jazz-rock of his work with Carlos Santana to the exhilarating indo-jazz of Shakti to the exuberant flamenco work-out of his trio guitar work with Paco DeLucia and Al DiMeola. John gives the impression that, like Miles, he never wants to sit on his laurels.</p>
<p>&#8220;My first band was formed while I was still at school. After that I became a kind of permanent side-man until 1970. I had just played a gig with Miles and we were speaking together in the band room. All of a sudden he said &#8216;John, now&#8217;s the time to form your own band&#8217;. Since he was the most honest man I&#8217;d ever met, and my hero since the age of 15, I had to justify his faith in me, even though at that time I didn&#8217;t feel ready to be a leader. Since then I haven&#8217;t stopped. As far as ‘feeling comfortable&#8217; is concerned, I love all great musicians and great music wherever they may come from so I&#8217;m delighted to play with Spanish, Indian, Western musicians, whatever. However, in a way I am against being &#8216;comfortable&#8217; in music. I need to be provoked in music, and of course I also provoke in my turn. For me, it is somewhat dangerous to be too comfortable in music. Human nature quickly becomes indolent.&#8221;</p>
<p>The list of partners that John has chosen to collaborate with has been a catalogue of the world&#8217;s best and most innovative artists: Billy Cobham, Jerry Goodman, Zakir Hussain, L. Shankar, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Jan Gabarek, Trilok Gurtu, Kai Eckhardt, Joey DeFrancesco as well as the aforementioned Carlos Santana, Paco DeLucia and Al DiMeola. Also, John&#8217;s work as a &#8220;side-man&#8221; has enabled him to work with the last great Miles-influenced generation of jazz legends (or &#8220;Miles&#8217; Boys&#8221;) including Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Joe Zawinul, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams, Dave Holland, Keith Jarrett, Jack DeJohnette, and Airto Moreira.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar1..jpg" class="imageleft" alt="John Mclaughin" height="344" width="470" />&#8220;Music is a communicative art: firstly amongst the musicians performing, and secondly with the audience. One of my main criticisms of the &#8216;Retrospective&#8217; Jazz I spoke about earlier, was the lack of interactionbetween musicians which is to me one of the principal criteria in good Jazz, or good music in general. Jazz and Indian music are essentially collaborative or interactive musics because improvisation plays such an important role &#8211; the most important role. What this means is spontaneity, but there&#8217;s no spontaneity without other humans to be spontaneous with.</p>
<p>&#8220;I will never be able to repay my debt to Miles for his &#8216;influence&#8217;. Since the age of 15 he has been influencing me in the most marvellous way musically. Being able to play and record with him was critical for me in being able to learn his way of playing and leading, recording, whatever. His way was simply masterly. &#8216;My Goals Beyond&#8217; half of which contains several, quite exceptional, acoustic guitar pieces was an exception to what I&#8217;ve just written, but of course, there is always room for the &#8216;solo&#8217; artist to produce great works. Since this was the only &#8216;solo&#8217; recording I ever made in my life, this is indicative of my interest in solo work.&#8221;</p>
<p>The work for which John may be most fondly remembered, certainly on the Indian Sub-Continent, is his collaboration with Indian classical maestros who formed the heart of Shakti. John found himself in conversation with the powerhouse talents of L. Shankar, Zakir Hussain, and T.H. Vinayakram (and later, the sublime Hariprasad Chaurasia) and was completely at ease in this exalted company. The Shakti recordings sum up everything that is good about music; the breadth, subtlety and shades of emotion that are contained within are, quite simply, breathtaking. Shakti are the only Indo-jazz fusion group that has gained widespread acceptance in India and is a testament to the universality of the musical language that exists with great musicians and to John&#8217;s musical honesty that he immersed himself entirely within an idiom that other western musicians find difficult to engage with except on a superficial level.</p>
<p>&#8220;My relationship with Asia in general, and India in particular has been very long and until now, a wonderful adventure. My life, and as a consequence, my work also, would be dramatically different without these influences. Actually unthinkable!</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t agree entirely that western musicians engage superficially with Indian classical music. Yes it&#8217;s true that lots of the new &#8216;World Musicians&#8217; use the sounds of Asia simply for effect and to add colour. This is unfortunate, but then again, there are lots of people who want to hear this kind of music, whether for ambient sound or otherwise. It&#8217;s not at all demanding. Joe Harriott was certainly an exception. To say clearly what drew me to Indian music or to Indian culture for that matter, is unknown to me.</p>
<p>&#8220;However, from a musical point of view, there is a deep connection between jazz and Indian music. They are the only two schools of developed rhythmic improvisation on the planet. The foundations are different since the western way is harmonic, but since the advent of modal music by the late 1950&#8242;s (Miles again), and the outstanding work done subsequently by John Coltrane in modal music, we have even more in common.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar2..jpg" class="imageright" alt="Remembering Shakti" align="left" height="208" width="250" /><br />
&#8220;My work with Shakti is not to learn how to play Indian music, (though I have studied it seriously for many years), my work with Shakti is simply the desire to play with these absolutely fantastic musicians. I am first and foremost a western musician, but I have benefited in countless ways from my association with these musicians.&#8221;</p>
<p>John&#8217;s relationship with Eastern philosophy began in the early 70&#8242;s, when he became a disciple of Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghosh (Sri Chinmoy gave John the name Mahavishnu), and John&#8217;s spirituality can be felt quite clearly in his work. Music has always been able to express emotion with more fecundity and nuance than the spoken word will ever be able to bear or, to put it another way, a jazz musician&#8217;s job will always be to make a tune sound not like itself but himself. Like Miles, Coltrane, Rollins, Bill Evans and all the other greats too numerous to mention, John expresses a profound emotional resonance and beauty through the notes he plays that is served by his astounding technique rather than enslaved by it; he has never reduced himself to the empty verbosity that technical expertise can engender in less articulate musical linguists.</p>
<p>&#8220;We may think that music operates only on the emotional, spiritual and aesthetic levels, but politics and the intellect are there all the time. The reverse is also true insofar as the world&#8217;s politicians are concerned only with the economic and political ramifications of their actions. As a result, they forget, or are unconscious, of the corrosive influence they have generally on the hearts and minds of people by ignoring these essential aspects of human existence.&#8221;</p>
<p>John McLaughlin has been at the peak of his creative powers for over 30 years and a generation of guitarists are beholden to him in demonstrating the splendour that lies at the heart of the instrument and an indefatigable spirit that keeps him moving forward.</p>
<p>&#8220;There is so much left to do, and I really don&#8217;t know what keeps me going creatively. Passion???&#8221;</p>
<p>Jazz guitar legend John McLaughlin has recently released an educational box-set about improvisation called This is the Way I Do It.</p>

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		<title>THE GODS ARE NOT TO BLAME &#8211; A Timeless Story</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 18:54:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Currently playing at the Arcola Theatre as part of the Africa &#8217;05 celebrations this is the second time the UK has seen this remarkable performance. Previously staged at Riverside Studios in 1978 to exceptional reviews, it is now restaged by Tiata Fahodzi ( Theatre of the Emancipated ), Britains&#8217; leading African theatre company, under the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/theatre/the_gods_are_not_to_blames.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="The Gods are not to Blame Pictue" height="320" width="475" /><br />
Currently playing at the Arcola Theatre as part of the Africa &#8217;05 celebrations this is the second time the UK has seen this remarkable performance. Previously staged at Riverside Studios in 1978 to exceptional reviews, it is now restaged by Tiata Fahodzi ( Theatre of the Emancipated ), Britains&#8217; leading African theatre company, under the watchful eye of its&#8217; director Femi Elufowoju, jr.</h3>
<p>The story is an old one, the thought of a mother marrying her son and bearing him children is difficult to swallow, as is humorously portrayed by Alaka (Nick Oshiklanlu) in his cries of &#8220;pray woman let me eat in peace.&#8221; The horror of discovering that the wife you loved is in fact your mother is a burden too horrific to bear, King Odewales frenzied paranoia is an anguish to watch. The suffocating pain of the Queens sobs as she realises the husband she married is in fact her son and her silent, resolute exit from the room heightens the sheer force of the drama enfolding. Even through this most shocking of stories there is humour, in the tradition of Shakespearian tragedies, pathos is found. We laugh at the King and his Yoruba proverbs handed out in copious amounts, for instance &#8220;is it not ignorance that makes the rat attack the cat?&#8221; Led by Mo Sesay playing King Odewale the cast gave tantalising performances. The intimacy of the Arcola theatre, the still, stifling heat did not detract from the dynamic, energetic performance. The lilting, soul stirring chanting and melodies composed by Akintayo Akinbode evoked the senses and helped transport the audience to another time in a Nigerian place.</p>
<p>All great stories are timeless, as is this one. Rotimi was a master storyteller, cleverly placing the Oedipus Rex tragedy in Nigeria where it easily lends itself to the nuances and intricacies of the plot. Having written the play in the 1960s, Rotimis&#8217; essential message is emphasised in King Odewales&#8217; emphatic reply, &#8220;no, don&#8217;t blame the Gods,&#8221; to his brother, Aderopo (Kwaku Ankomah). It was an allegory to the devastating Nigerian civil war that Rotimi, writing in the 1960s was referring to, but the message is just as potent today: we are masters of our own destinies.</p>
<p>The Gods are not to blame: 8th June &#8211; 2nd July 2005 Arcola Theatre, 27 Arcola St, E8</p>

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		<title>JAZZ IN THE CITY &#8211; Exploration of Jazz &amp; Art</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 14:57:11 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Nina considers the musical language of jazz to be one of her greatest inspirations. Her exhibition, Jazz in the City is the culmination of a life’s work for this innovative and unique artist. It also begins a tour featuring Nina as an artist in residence, to include The International Jazz Festival in Moscow, during which [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3><span class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/jazz_in_the_city.jpg" class="imageleft" alt="Old Vinyl" align="right" height="297" width="250" />Nina considers the musical language of jazz to be one of her greatest inspirations. Her exhibition, Jazz in the City is the culmination of a life’s work for this innovative and unique artist.</span></h3>
<p>It also begins a tour featuring Nina as an artist in residence, to include The International Jazz Festival in Moscow, during which Nina’s work will be exhibited at the State Museum for Contemporary Art, Moscow.</p>
<p>Nina was born in the Russian city of St. Petersburg and obtained a Masters Degree from Moscow’s Gubkin Academy. In 1991 after</p>
<p>she moved to Germany, Nina started her career as an artist where she studied under teacher and artist Margarita Budini. From 1994 to 1998 she established her studio in The Netherlands and in 2000 she moved to London where she has been living and working as an artist. Now based in Richmond, Nina finds artistic inspiration for her paintings in music, poetry and philosophy. The powerful colours and dramatic shapes in her paintings reflect her own experience of living in different cultures, while still infused within her Russian heritage. Nina says of her traveling experience, “I have found the most success in London, because London is a cultural centre and a major port. Kinky-Kalinki Transrussian Express is a tribute to London&#8217;s art scene, to show how you can be poor and foreign in London and still be accepted.”</p>
<p>Kinky-Kalinki Transrussian Express is a documentary film charting London’s art, music and club scene from 2000 to 2005, the length of time that Nina has lived here. “I have focused on one east London club in this film,” says Nina, “Rhythm Factory on Whitechapel road where it is possible to have live music, art on the walls and a club night all in one. East London is a buzzing area, that’s not to say that Richmond where I am based is not buzzing, but East London has a modern and contemporary feel.”<br />
Old Vinyl.</p>
<p>Nina has exhibited her work in both solo and group shows and has begun to exhibit her work across Europe and overseas. In December 2003 Nina represented the UK at The Florence Bienniale and in November 2004 was invited to be Artist in Residence for Black History Month at the National Opera Studios in London. Other artistic residencies include River Walk at The OXO Tower and The Players Theatre in The West End.</p>
<p>Carol Cordrey will be in conversation with Nina on the 22nd of September at the Glass House Gallery and comments, &#8220;Jazz was once the music of yesteryear. Now, it is growing in popularity in cities the world over. Its powerful rhythm and improvisation have always appealed to performers with strong characters. Using instruments or voices, passion or pathos, they have used jazz to stir the human spirit. Nina Gruschwitz has an expressive personality, loves jazz and imbues all her work with a plethora of emotions. With brushes for instruments, this artist reinforces the contemporary impact of jazz. It is now seen and not just heard.&#8221;</p>
<p>Nina Gruschwitz’s exploration of Jazz and its influence on her art is to be exhibited at the Glass House gallery from the 13th of September.</p>
<p>The Glass House Gallery<br />
2-3 Bull’s Head Passage, Leadenhall Market, London EC3, 13 Sept &#8211; 9 Oct<br />
In Conversation: Artist talk with Carol Cordrey: Thu. 22 Sept 6 &#8211; 8pm<br />
Special event: Kinky-Kalinki Transrussian Express: Wed 21 Sept 8pm-midnight<br />
Rhythm Factory<br />
16-18 Whitechapel Rd, London E1 1EW<br />
info@thecynthiacorbettgallery.com<br />
www.thecynthiacorbettgallery.com</p>

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		<title>SPICE FESTIVAL 2005 &#8211; Music, Painting, Poetry &amp; Drama</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 12:28:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The opening night sees an evening of classical opera extracts performed, including Carmen, Nessun Dorma, The Barber of Seville, The Marriage of Figaro and many others at The Hackney Empire. East London Metropolitan Opera continues to bring together top professional musicians with members of the local community and children from Hackney schools accompanied by a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/editorial/spice_festival_2005_hilighted.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="Spice Festival 2005 Hilighted Image" align="left" />The opening night sees an evening of classical opera extracts performed, including Carmen, Nessun Dorma, The Barber of Seville, The Marriage of Figaro and many others at The Hackney Empire.</h3>
<p>East London Metropolitan Opera continues to bring together top professional musicians with members of the local community and children from Hackney schools accompanied by a full orchestra.</p>
<p>For those with more contemporary, independent tastes, a hip triple bill on the 13th July with Billy Childish and the Buff Medways, Ed Harcourt and Paul The Girl, is not to be missed. A cult figure in America, Europe and Japan, Billy Childish is arguably the most prolific painter, poet and songwriter of his generation. In a twenty-year period he has published 30 collections of his poetry, recorded over 90 full-length independent LP&#8217;s and produced over 2000 paintings. High praise comes from Alternative Press, USA, &#8220;Of all the &#8217;70s punk survivors Childish is one of the select few who didn&#8217;t sell out, or end up sucking.&#8221; Whilst Time Out describes Billy as &#8220;terse, gutsy and powerfully humane.&#8221; Ed Harcourt, reviewed by the Observer Music Monthly, has been praised also, &#8220;the blissful sound of a besotted drunk in love&#8230;Harcourt retains a composer&#8217;s eye for detail which repays whatever attention you care to give it.&#8221; British artist, Paul The Girl is an admired and accomplished musician; The Guardian review wrote,&#8221;&#8230;on her own tiny label, Paul is making the most original music of any British artist, of either gender.&#8221; Spice festival goers will be spoilt for choice with the line-up of drama performances. From Cardboard Citizens; an clectic mix of theatre, circus and music developed and devised by This Way Up, the UK&#8217;s largest arts performance programme for homeless people, to Rajni Shah Theatres&#8217; story of Queen Elizabeth I, a traditional Indian bride and according to the synopsis, &#8220;&#8230;the relationships we have to the land we live on, and the theatres we all invent.&#8221;</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s not forget the little people for whom the Movingstage Marionette Company bring double bill, Captain Grimy and The Three Little Pigs, a charming puppet show re-telling these familiar, timeless tales. Also presented by Spice Festival is Richard Pinner, Gold Star BAFTA award winner who will be performing, &#8220;excellent close-up magic,&#8221; as described by The Stage.</p>
<p>The diverse drama available includes internationally renowned theatre company Rotozaza presenting their unique and innovative acts without any rehearsal. Actors perform by following live instructions. ROMCOM or The Distance Love Can Be Maintained Between Any Two Fixed Points, by Glen Neath is performed by two unprepared actors with headphones telling them what to say and do. The Glasgow Herald likens it to,&#8221;&#8230;one of Godards movies&#8230;as well as comedy it&#8217;s a complex study of compatibility and communication.&#8221;</p>
<h4>2005 Events</h4>
<p><strong>Opera Gala Evening:</strong><br />
Hackney Empire:<br />
Tuesday 12th July: 8pm, Tickets: £8, concessions £2.50</p>
<p><strong>Billy Childish and The Buff Medways, Ed Harcourt, Paul The Girl:</strong><br />
Hackney Empire:<br />
13 July: Doors 8.15pm Tickets: £10, conc. £7.50</p>
<p><strong>Cardboard Citizens:</strong><br />
Acorn Theatre:<br />
Thursday 21st July: 7.30pm</p>
<p><strong>Rotozaza: </strong><br />
Hackney Empire:<br />
17th July: 3pm: Tickets: £12/£8</p>
<p>Rajni Shah Theatre:<br />
Acorn Theatre: Sunday 24th July: 4pm &amp; 7.30pm: Tickets:£10/ £7</p>
<p><strong>Movingstage Marionette Company:</strong><br />
Acorn Theatre:<br />
16th July. 11am &amp; 2pm: Tickets:£6, children £4.50.</p>
<p><strong>Richard Pinner:</strong><br />
Bullion Theatre:<br />
Sunday 24th July: 2.30pm: Tickets: £6 children, £4.50.</p>

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		<title>BARBICAN &#8211; Folk Art Special</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 06:11:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Two artists dismayed by the Millennium Dome&#8217;s corporate presentation of Britain have created their own snapshot of British artistic creativity. Five years after the Dome presented its shiny, clean vision of Britain, there is now a smaller, cheaper and more democratic snapshot of the UK on show at the Barbican Gallery. A life-size mechanical elephant [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head">Two artists dismayed by the Millennium Dome&#8217;s corporate presentation of Britain have created their own snapshot of British artistic creativity. Five years after the Dome presented its shiny, clean vision of Britain, there is now a smaller, cheaper and more democratic snapshot of the UK on show at the Barbican Gallery.</h3>
<p>A life-size mechanical elephant from Oswestry, trades union banners, snack shop signs, paintings on vans and hot pants from the Notting Hill Carnival can be seen in the gallery as part of a collection looking at the state of British creativity.</p>
<p>Turner Prize winner Jeremy Deller and artist Alan Kane are the masterminds behind the show, which tries to update what we understand as folk art. They have collected images from around the country which are not normally considered art, or shown in galleries.</p>
<p>Some of the works are rooted in the past such as Devon&#8217;s Tar Barrel Rolling celebrations or &#8220;Well Dressing&#8221; from Derbyshire. Others are entirely modern such as homemade web page designs or a collection of fake parking tickets which are left on the windows of unwelcome 4&#215;4 vehicles.</p>
<p>The exhibition reflects Deller&#8217;s work as an &#8216;enabler&#8217; and curator of other people&#8217;s work. His staging of a re-enactment of the Battle of Orgreave, the most dramatic conflict between miners and police during the miners&#8217; strike in the 1980s, was one of his most celebrated works.<br />
As an artist who freely accepts he can neither draw nor paint, Deller says his work is to document, enable and &#8220;re-direct the flow&#8221; of other people&#8217;s work. His main work in the year he won the Turner Prize was Memory Bucket, a video documentary of a trip through George Bush&#8217;s Texas.</p>
<p>Some of the pieces in the exhibition have appeared before, but much of it is new. It is a reappraisal of the &#8220;overlooked and undervalued&#8221; objects which have been created by people simply for the love of making something beautiful rather than making a profit.</p>
<p>The Barbican&#8217;s Contemporary Popular Art from the UK exhibition runs to 24 July.</p>

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		<title>LEIGH LIGHTING &#8211; My Aqueous Resonance</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Sep 2005 14:44:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Royal National Theatre eagerly and protectively awaits the title and production of Mike Leigh&#8217;s new play, as do we, excited by the mystery and fascination of it all. Will it cause a tempest, flooding the South Bank venue with honour or derision? &#8220;I want you to get an interview with Mike Leigh!&#8221; The assertion [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/mike_leigh_000.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/mike_leigh_000.jpg" />The Royal National Theatre eagerly and protectively awaits the title and production of Mike Leigh&#8217;s new play, as do we, excited by the mystery and fascination of it all. Will it cause a tempest, flooding the South Bank venue with honour or derision?</h3>
<p>&#8220;I want you to get an interview with Mike Leigh!&#8221; The assertion in my editor&#8217;s voice told me he wasn&#8217;t kidding. I should have realised then that I was in for a rough write, but buoyed by the confidence suddenly bestowed upon me, I naively skipped out of the office, only to be met head on by lightning, thunder and an unholy summer afternoon deluge that instantly killed the spring in my step, reducing not only my soddened sneakers but my enthusiasm for this assignment into an amorphous squelching mass.</p>
<p>After floating down Brick Lane I washed up inside the entrance of a dimly lit bohemian café and slumping onto an overripe leather sofa, not keen to be used as a nappy, I slurped through a strong, bitter cappuccino, murdered some lung cells with a crude roll-up, assessed my thoughts and when my lights finally switched themselves back on, I&#8217;d found I&#8217;d come up against a brick wall, and a damp one at that. I don&#8217;t think being in Brick Lane had any coincidence or connection.</p>
<p>To what extent the sobering rain, coffee and properties of smoked tobacco leaf, helped kick-start the luminous realisation that I hadn&#8217;t a chance in HELL of getting an interview with Mike Leigh, based on what knowledge I possessed of this British auteur, I&#8217;ll never know.</p>
<p>But I certainly know now. &#8220;He doesn&#8217;t do interviews and has told us, even, to respect his working methods during this period. In fact, he&#8217;s not even working in any of our rehearsal spaces&#8230;etc etc,&#8221; informed one of the marketing staff at the Royal National Theatre on London&#8217;s Southbank, where Leigh will, on the 15th September, present his dramatic piece, a full length play, something he hasn&#8217;t done in more than a decade. The natural process is to request a &#8216;press pack&#8217; but I didn&#8217;t feel there was any point. The piece is currently billed as A New Play (working title only) by Mike Leigh, for the Cottesloe stage.</p>
<p>Leigh was once quoted as saying, &#8220;As long as I&#8217;m making movies I&#8217;m very happy to have nothing to do with the theatre. I find it boring and sterile.&#8221; What has revived his interest, I wonder. Intrigue arises then for anyone who is familiar with the clandestine modus operandi of this seemingly quiet and demur man, whose award winning films usually bellow with refreshing depth and imagination that belies his seniority of 62 years; films such as Secrets and Lies, Naked and most recently Vera Drake.</p>
<p>Born in Salford, Lancashire in 1943, Leigh was a doctors&#8217; son of Russian origin, whose grandfather, a miniaturist painter had the name, Lieberman who then changed it to Leigh when he emigrated in 1902. The 40&#8242;s and 50&#8242;s saw Leigh&#8217;s interest develop on a diet of Hollywood and British films, then later the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (for acting studies), served his purposes, as well as the Camberwell School of Art, London International School of Film Technique, the Central School of Art and Design and experimental theatre for the BBC in 1970.</p>
<p>We know that the characters of his play will be well rounded, with the creation of an atmosphere that really does exist, with everything to know about the characters and their lives, the key factor to this being extensive research and improvisation.</p>
<p>One can only imagine the rehearsal process Leigh is subjecting his actors to at the moment. The devising of a theatrical piece, any actor will tell you, is demanding, self-sacrificing and soul stripping. Here it could both be a blessing and a curse in the hands of a great director, some say the greatest living British director, and the third greatest of all time after Alfred Hitchcock and Michael Powell.</p>
<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/mike_leigh_vera_drake_001.jpg" class="imageright" alt="Vera Drake" align="right" height="207" width="300" /></h3>
<p>The pressure must be inconceivable even for Leigh himself who has to find the strength to establish trusting relationships with each individual cast member, then intuition and navigational dexterity to guide them as a newly formed family back to shore from a monstrous sea of words and ideas laden with the sumptuous treasure of a story to tell. The cast are: John Burgess, Ben Caplan, Allan Corduner, Adam Godley, Caroline Gruber, Nitzan Sharron, Samantha Spiro, Alexis Zegerman</p>
<p>Past treasures include Abigail&#8217;s Party, a slice of 70&#8242;s suburban boredom, also made for TV starring Alison Steadman. Other plays include A Great Big Shame, Greek Tragedy, Smelling A Rat, Goose Pimples, Stacy, Silent Majority, Babies Grow Old and Bleak Moments. The Royal National Theatre eagerly and protectively awaits the title and production of Mike Leigh&#8217;s new play, as do we, excited by the mystery and fascination of it all. Will it cause a tempest, flooding the South Bank venue with honour or derision? Either way, more rain is coming.</p>
<p>And if my story seems to have an aqueous resonance to it, maybe I&#8217;m still waterlogged from the elemental deluge I encountered, but if Leigh&#8217;s work is anything to go by we are in for a treat like a good fresh bitter cappuccino, something to stir the senses and light up our conscience.</p>
<p>The Play runs at the Cottesloe Theatre until 31st January 2006.</p>

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		<title>FLIGHT 5065 &#8211; Live Arts Festival at the London Eye</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jul 2005 14:01:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[This is the first time ever that the London Eye has been used for a live arts festival and was sold out well in advance of its opening. It seems an African summer breeze has blown in over the UK, with weather temperatures soaring, bringing with it a feast of unforgettable experiences. How ironic then [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/theatre/flight_50651.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="Flight 50651" align="right" />This is the first time ever that the London Eye has been used for a live arts festival and was sold out well in advance of its opening. It seems an African summer breeze has blown in over the UK, with weather temperatures soaring, bringing with it a feast of unforgettable experiences.</h3>
<p>How ironic then that, as we gorge on a culinary assortment of creative drama, music and art for AFRICA 05 this year, we are reminded that the Gleneagles G8 political summit in July in Scotland is set to highlight pressing topics of man-made proportions such as poverty and trade justice issues, especially on the African continent.</p>
<p>In the back of our minds we are all wondering what our politicians will do to bring about improvement in these stricken areas.</p>
<p>For the moment celebrity power seems to have the edge and is welcomed as events such as the LIVE 8 concerts and the extraordinary one day mini festival FLIGHT 5065, just taken place on the London Eye, bring about the awareness of unnecessary hardships through the expression of diverse influential art forms.</p>
<p>Created by Cafédirect, a fair-trade organisation set up by charities to directly benefit coffee, tea and cocoa farmers and their communities, Flight 5065 hoped, on our summer&#8217;s solstice, to raise the profile of fair trade issues and bring them towards the mainstream as part of the Make Poverty History campaign. It was also designed to celebrate Africa in the fortnight immediately before the crucial G8 summit.</p>
<p>This is the first time ever that the London Eye has been used for a live arts festival and was sold out well in advance of it&#8217;s opening. 2000 ticket holders swarmed into the 32 capsules on the revolving monolithic wheel over a three half hour cycle period, to be entertained by over 135 artists performing specially commissioned pieces of drama, music and comedy whilst soaring over the London skyline.</p>
<p><font size="2">                                Theatre highlights included contributions from the National and Royal                                 Court Theatres; the latter producing up to 27 one-minute plays, from                                 leading dramatists such as Roy Williams, Joe Penhall, Simon Stephens,                                 Anthony Neilson and Tanika Gupta.</font></p>
<p><font size="2">The world of music was represented by Blur&#8217;s Damon Albarn who&#8217;ll be                                 curating new African music with his Honest Jon label, as well as Beth                                 Orton, Turin Brakes and hip-hop artist, Jonzi D; while Arthur Smith and                                 new political comics Andy Zaltsman and John Oliver added their own                                 inimitable style of humour.</font></p>
<p><font size="2"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/theatre/flight_50652.jpg" class="imageright" alt="Flight 5065 2" align="right" /></font></p>
<p><font size="2">                                 British celebrities Colin Macfarlane, Junior Simpson, Jo Brand, Jonzi D                                  and established companies The National and Royal Court Theatres including                                 a host of African talent with artists representing Ghana, Nigeria, Sudan,                                 Congo, Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mali, Senegal and Sierra                                 Leone took off on Flight 5065 to a rapturous response.                                 Segun Lee-French, a Manchester based writer and performance poet, once                                 given the challenge, wrote a 25-minute satirical critique based on                                 colonial reversal. What if Africa had colonised England? A witty and                                 thought-provoking offering of alternative perception and dimension was the                                 result.</font></p>
<p><font size="2">                                 Called Ayo and Ade’s Big London Safari, it charts the moment when Ayo, the                                 new Governor of London comes from Nigeria and is escorted on one of the                                 ‘safest’ safari rides in the capital of Blankland by an influential                                 business official, Ade.</font></p>
<p><font size="2">                                 Hoping to edify and impress his governor for the purpose of securing                                 lucrative business deals, Ade takes Ayo, who as a child had always dreamt                                 of seeing Blankland, aboard the London Eye to show him the extent of his                                 new governance.</font></p>
<p><font size="2">                                 Naïve in his ideals, Ayo hopes to empower the ‘natives’ of this land with                                 a bit more self-sufficiency, until an encounter in the capsule with a                                 Blanklander renegade, Fred, a ‘disobedient breed’ of savage, refuses to be                                 treated as a ‘colourful’ subservient when Ayo attempts to take his picture                                 for the album. This sparks a conflict of interest between Ayo and Ade                                 after Ade unexpectedly recognises Fred as his fugitive and fraudulent                                 ex-office clerk and wants immediate recompense. The affect of this                                 volatile exchange makes Ayo see that his reforms will not be ideally                                 realised if he is to maintain any sense of supremacy over this particular                                 colony.</font></p>

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