Sunday 12 September 2021

Let Robeson Sing - Manic Street Preachers



Let Robeson Sing  is a song by Welsh alternative rock  band the Manic Street Preachers that was released twenty years ago this month on September 10th in tribute to the black American actor, singer and civil rights campaigner Paul Robeson. It was the fourth single to be released from their record Know Your Enemy.It shares its title with a book by Phil Cope published by the National Library of Wales in 2001, with a reprint being published in 2008. The record also featured a cover of Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel on the B-side
The Manics have long been famous for the meaningful and political nature of many of their songs, The title of their fifth album, 1998's This Is Mt Truth Tell Me Yours lifted a quotation taken from a speech given by Labour party politician Aneurin Bevanhttps://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.com/2019/11/happy-birthday-aneurin-bevan-15.html . That albums track If  You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next took ts title from a Spanish Civil War poster.https://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.com/2020/08/if-you-tolerate-this-your-children-will.html
Paul Robeson  has been described as one of the Unites States’ greatest musicians, scholars, athletes, actors, and activists of the 20th century. Certainly, Paul Robeson’s fame on the football field, on the concert and theatre stage, in film, and through his own scholarship and activism reached around the world. T
Robeson was born in 1898 in Princeton, New Jersey, to Maria and Reverend William Robeson, an escaped slave and Union veteran. This was just two years after the Supreme Court upheld racial segregation. Robeson grew up during a period of overt racism, confronted by continual racist abuse,but always managed to rise above it and went on to achieve much success at every level of his life.Not only was he an exceptional athlete, cultural scholar, a polyglot who spoke over a dozen languages, actor and singer, he was also a man dedicated to the causes of freedom and social justice, as a fearless political activist he was hounded and persecuted in the U.S for his opinions.
Robeson earned a scholarship to Rutgers University, where being selected for the College Football All-American team in 1918 and 1919 was among his many accomplishments. In 1923, he graduated from Columbia University with a law degree, but while financing his education he played football professionally and joined a theatre company that traveled to Britain. Encountering the intense racial divides that limited his ability to practice law at the level which he desired, Robeson took his life in a more professionally artistic direction by acting in theatre, later on screen, and eventually as a musician. After moving to London for almost a decade, he began to further his interest in ethnomusicology, African culture, and politics. By the mid-1930s Robeson had fully integrated these interests into his art. Not long after, Paul Robeson began very actively to participate politically in issues of labor rights, anti-colonialism, and human rights, specifically in such political debates as Welsh unionization, British decolonization, the Spanish Civil War, and ultimately the griping violation of human rights occurring in the United States. It was during his travels in Europe that Robeson became a socialist.
Paul Robeson is regarded as one the greatest U.S. vocalists, actors, and civil and labor rights leaders. He holds the record for the longest running Shakespeare play on Broadway. He was a member of an NFL championship team as well as the 1918 and 1919 All-American college football teams (Harris 1998). He held a key to the city of Boston, three honorary doctorates, and a law degree from Columbia (Ramdin 1987). In the early 1940s, Robeson was considered one of the greatest African Americans alive, yet not ten years later, he was classified as one of the greatest “un-Americans.”
People like Robeson who refused to abandon his socialist beliefs began to be regarded with suspicion.  In a speech to the World Partisans for Peace Congress in Paris in April 1949, he stated that he didn’t believe African Americans should, or would, fight against the Soviet Union—a country which treated him, his people, and other minorities immeasurably better than America did. This speech was distorted by the American press as they ramped up anti-Communist sentiment. And, by the time Robeson returned to his country that summer, he had become a public enemy.
It was in this atmosphere that Robeson traveled to Peekskill to sing on August 27. Encouraged by the press, local militia attacked the organizers and the audience before the concert was due to start, forcing it to be cancelled. Robeson returned to New York and announced at a press conference that he would be back to sing for racial equality and peaceful relations with the Soviet Union.
Another issue Robeson faced was that of antisemitism. His wife was part-Jewish, his son had married a Jewish woman two months earlier, and Paul himself was already a strong lover of Jewish culture, to the extent that two of the many languages he spoke fluently were Hebrew and Yiddish. 
The concert went ahead on September 4, and labor unions had organized a protective guard of a few thousand trade unionists to encircle the 20,000-strong crowd. This included about a dozen guards around Robeson on stage, to shield him from any prospective sniper’s bullet. After his set, he was immediately spirited away. 
But, as audience members left, they were led by the police into an ambush, where the local militia lay in wait to attack them. Dozens of cars were damaged, and 135 people were injured, including one Black man who lost an eye. Yet again, the mainstream press reported the incident as violence initiated by Blacks, Communists, and Jewish supporters of the un-American Paul Robeson.
Another sad, striking irony here is that only two years previously, Robeson had recorded these words, to great acclaim, describing America as: "The house I live in, my neighbors, white and black / The people who just came here, or from generations back . . . The man who penned these lyrics was Abel Meeropol, writing under the alias of Lewis Allen, presumably in order to deflect attention from his Jewish heritage, his membership in the Communist Party, and to protect his position as a school teacher.

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 Robeson himself refused to hide behind anything or anybody. When a member of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (known as HUAC) asked at his hearing in June 1956 if he had once been known by the name of John Thomas, he retorted, “My name is Paul Robeson, and anything I have to say, I have said in public all over the world, and that is why I am here today.” 
In June 1946, Robeson gave a speech at Madison Square Garden which showed why he was such a threat to the Establishment:
A day or two ago, Mr. Bevin, the British Foreign Minister said . . . ‘If we do not want to have total war, we must have total peace.’ For once, I agree with him,” Robeson told the audience. “But Mr. Bevin must be totally blind if he cannot see that the absence of peace in the world is due precisely to the efforts of the British, American, and other imperialist powers to maintain their control over the peoples of Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and Africa.
As true today as they were then, such words demonstrate why Robeson’s voice, like his rendition of The House I Live In, can be considered to be the soundtrack to a lost opportunity. It is the opportunity to hear and heed messages of truth, peace, and justice such as he delivered through his art, a weapon in defense of all the oppressed people on Earth.
In 1950 Robeson's passport was withdrawn on the grounds that his right to travel was against American interests. Robeson would challenge this ban in the courts for eight years; meanwhile a campaign on his behalf was spearheaded in Britain by trades unions, artists and the Left.
With independence movements growing across the globe, MI5 were adamant that even if Robeson were allowed to travel he must be banned from the UK: "He is convinced that he has a mission to lead oppressed negroes and colonial peoples everywhere. He is a fanatical communist and intensely ambitious" [Internal memo, 13 July 1951; National Archives: KV/2/1829].
MI5 regarded the campaigners as Moscow's dupes or worse ["Plenty of thought has been given to the problem of getting suitable persons to wring tears from the Home Office on Robeson's behalf"] but support was intense and widespread.
In 1957, unable to accept countless invitations to perform abroad, Paul Robeson sang for audiences in London and Wales via the transatlantic telephone cable: "We have to learn the hard way that there is another way to sing".
Finally - in June 1958 - the Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional to deny a US passport on political grounds. The following month Robeson flew to London [Passport no.1145187]. In an intense few months, he sang to millions on television and radio; he became the first lay person - and the first non-White - to take the pulpit in St Paul's Cathedral; he revisited the USSR; and he prepared 'Othello'.
Having been blacklisted, Robeson’s passport was revoked during the McCarthyism era for his firm and outspoken Antifascist stance on social issues such as labor exploitation and racism. Before, after, and during (via mail correspondence) this period Robeson developed a widespread international influence through singing, acting, and speaking in areas such as Spain, the Soviet Union, Germany, and the United Kingdom.
Beyond any of the international relationships he formed, his bond with Wales and the Welsh people was the strongest. He developed a special bond with Wales and its people because he recognised a culture  built  around the values of community, work and church and a musical tradition born out of struggle and oppression. He also saw parallels  between the exploitation of black people in the United States and that of the Welsh coal miner..
Robeson’s association with South Wales dates from 1928 when, whilst performing in ‘Show Boat’ in London’s West End, he met a group of unemployed miners”who had walked to London from the Rhondda valley to draw attention to the hardship and suffering endured by thousands of unemployed miners and their families in South Wales. He marched and sang with them, then gave them the money for their train fare home, he recognised a shared suffering, and a mutual bond was born.


Robeson visited South Wales many times between 1929 and 1939, singing in various towns including Cardiff, Neath and Swansea. In 1938, he sang to the 7,000 people who attended the Welsh International Brigades Memorial at Mountain Ash to commemorate the 33 Welshmen who had died in Spain. He addressed the audience thus :- 'I am here because I know these brave fellows fought not only because I know these brave fellows fought not only for me but for the freedom of the people of the whole world, I feel it's my duty to be here.'
Robeson’s links with South Wales were reinforced when in 1939, he starred in The Proud Valley, a film about life in a mining community in the Rhondda. He starred as a Black American coal miner and singer  named David Goliath who gets a job there and joins a male voice choir.It documents the harsh realities of coal miners' lives, which Goliath shares. He becomes a hero as he helps to better their working conditions, and ultimately, during a mining accident, sacrifices himself to save fellow miners. One of the most iconic parts of the film occurs when he encounters racism from a fellow miner who refuses to work alongside a black man. This is quickly challenged by a Welsh miner who leaps to David's defence with the fantastic line: "Damn it, well aren't we all black down the mine?" also said it was the “first time he felt human dignity” because of the lack of racial prejudice.He was once recorded as saying about Wales: “It was there I first understood the struggles of white and negro together – when I went down into the coal mine in the Rhondda Valley, lived amongst them.


Every year between 1952 and 1957, Robeson was invited to sing at the Miners' Eisteddfod in Porthcawl but he was unable to travel because n 1950 Robeson's passport was withdrawn on the grounds that his right to travel was against American interests. Robeson would challenge this ban in the courts for eight years; meanwhile outrage ensured  with a campaign on his behalf Let Robeson Sing spearheaded in Britain by trades unions, artists and the Left.
With independence movements growing across the globe, MI5 were adamant that even if Robeson were allowed to travel he must be banned from the UK: "He is convinced that he has a mission to lead oppressed negroes and colonial peoples everywhere. He is a fanatical communist and intensely ambitious" [Internal memo, 13 July 1951; National Archives: KV/2/1829].
MI5 regarded the campaigners as Moscow's dupes or worse ["Plenty of thought has been given to the problem of getting suitable persons to wring tears from the Home Office on Robeson's behalf"] but support was intense and widespread.
In October 1957,  however Robeson was able to participate in the Miners’ Eisteddfod by means of a transatlantic telephone link to a secret recording studio in New York.unable to accept countless invitations to perform abroad, Paul Robeson sang for audiences in London and Wales via the transatlantic telephone cable: "We have to learn the hard way that there is another way to sing".
This occasion  was an  important gesture of international solidarity with Robeson, a fierce critic of American capitalism and imperialism, and it is supremely ironic that the attempts of the Eisenhower Government to silence Robeson, actually achieved the opposite of their obective, and secured his plce in history.. I  just happen to have a copy of this lgendary  recording, which is one of the most spine tingling things I've ever heard. 
The South Wales miners added their voice and signatures to the international petitions that eventually forced the US Supreme Court to reinstate his passport in June 1958, ruling that it was unconstitutional to deny a US passport on political grounds. The following month Robeson flew to London [Passport no.1145187]. When Paul arrived he added his voice of support to the Musicians’ Union who at the time were witholding the services of its members from The Scala Ballroom in Wolverhampton after the colour ban by its owners.
 In an intense few months, he sang to millions on television and radio; he became the first lay person - and the first non-White - to take the pulpit in St Paul's Cathedral; he revisited the USSR; and he prepared 'Othello'.
On 4th August 1958 he attended the National Eisteddfod of Wales in Ebbw Vale,where he was presented with a Welsh hymn book to mark his visit, he sat alongside Aneurin Bevan a long term friend and delivered an address to the people of Wales.Significantly was the first man to be granted permission to speak English on the llwyfan (eisteddfod stage) He spoke of the importance of his Welsh links:"You have shaped my life - I have learned from you.I am part of the working class.Of all the films I have made the one I will preserve is Proud Valley"
Having been blacklisted, Robeson’s passport was revoked during the McCarthyism era for his firm and outspoken Antifascist stance on social issues such as labor exploitation and racism. Before, after, and during (via mail correspondence) this period Robeson developed a widespread international influence through singing, acting, and speaking in areas such as Spain, the Soviet Union, Germany, and the United Kingdom.
Sadly Robeson’s health deteriorated during the 1960s and after his wife’s death in 1965, he stayed out of the public eye.He lived the final years of his life in seclusion in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and died there on January 23rd, 1976.
The Manics powerful, beautiful  and respectful tribute is  found over a recording of Robeson's wounded and soulful  baritone. In the song, James Dean Bradfield expresses his (and presumably, his bandmate Nicky Wire’s) admiration for and desire to emulate Robeson’s extraordinary life, It is a lesson for artists everywhere, In a very clever touch is the brief snippet of applause heard at the end of the track is actually a recording of Welsh miners clapping for Robeson when, he had sung their anthem to them through the telephone. Let Robeson Sing  also contains a lyrical premonition, as the band like Paul Robeson  in later months  would also go "to Cuba and meet Castro."
The beauty of the  art and the ballet dancers  in the video accompanying the song gracefully making this song even more powerful. A great song by a great band about a truly great man. Sing it loud, sing it proud.
Robeson's  connection with Wales has never been forgotten, he is fondly remembered because he not only stood up for the injustices that African-Americans faced, but also was able to empathize and connect with other people’s struggles, he funded Jews escaping Nazi Germany, spoke out against the fascists in Spanish Civil War, campaigned against colonialism in African countries and stood with laborers in the United States and proudly with the people of Wales, an internationalist who identified with the most important issues of freedom and social justice of his time, and practiced what he preached. Because of all this and his constant solidarity with the Welsh people he remains forever etched in the nations heart. A powerful rich courageous presence in our collective history.
Here is a link to a petition calling for a statue of Paul Robeson to be installed in the South Wales valleys to ceebrate his love of Wales and the mining communities that "shaped his life"  Like the Manics great song it would be a truly great way of honouring Paul Robeson's rich legacy. After all the words and music of this legendary activist and singer are more relevant than ever in the era of Black Lives Matter.  Paul Robeson recognised the need to fight racism and fascism with solidarity and socialism. This giant man's lifelong struggle serves as an inspiration as we carry on the same fight today.
 
 
Let Robeson Sing - Manic Street Preachers 
 

Where are you now?
Broken up or still around?
The CIA says you're a guilty man
Will we see the likes of you again?
 
Can anyone make a difference anymore?
Can anyone write a protest song?
Pinky lefty revolutionary
Burnt at the stake for
 
A voice so pure, a vision so clear
I've got to learn to live like you
Learn to sing like you
 
Went to Cuba to meet Castro
Never got past sleepy Moscow
A giant man with a heavenly voice
MK Ultra turned you paranoid
 
No passport 'til 1958
McCarthy poisoned through with hate
Liberty lost still buried today
Beneath the lie of the USA
 
Say what you want
Say what you want
 
A voice so pure, a vision so clear
I've got to learn to live like you
Learn to sing like you
 
"Now let the Freedom Train come zooming down the track
Gleaming in the sunlight for white and black
Not stopping at no stations marked coloured nor white
Just stopping in the fields in the broad daylight
 
Stopping in the country in the wide open air
Where there never was a Jim Crow sign nowhere
And no lilly-white committees, politicians of note
Nor poll tax layer through which coloured can't vote
 
And there won't be no kinda colour lines
The Freedom Train will be yours
And mine"
 
A voice so pure, a vision so clear
I've got to learn to live like you
Learn to sing like you
 
Sing it loud, sing it proud
I will be here, I will be found
Sing it loud, sing it proud
I will be here, I will be found
 
 Songwriters: James Bradfield / Nicholas Jones / Sean Moore
 
 FURTHER READING:

Freedomways. Paul Robeson: The Great Forerunner. (New York, 1965).

Paul Robeson Cymru Committee. Let Paul Robeson Sing! : a celebration of the life of Paul Robeson and his relationship with Wales. (Bevan Foundation, 2001).

Robeson, Paul. Here I stand: by Paul Robeson. (Boston, 1971, reprint of 1958 ed.)

Thompson, Allan Lord. Paul Robeson: artist and activist, on records, radio and television. (Wellingborough, 2000).

Friday 10 September 2021

World Suicide Prevention Day : Creating Hope Through Action


 Every year on 10 September, World Suicide Prevention Day is observed which is aimed to provide worldwide commitment and measures to prevent suicides. As per World Health Organisation (WHO), every 40 seconds there is someone who ends his or her life. When calculated, it is almost 8,00,000 individuals per year worldwide who die by suicide which accounts for more than 75 percent of all suicide cases.Today, most of us are aware,  we are currently in the grips of a mental health crisis. An epidemic. killing indiscriminately.
Organized by the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP) and co-sponsored by the WHO, the observance day was first implemented in 2003.   
The initial goal was to amplify the message that “suicide is preventable.” Over the years, though, World Suicide Prevention Day has grown and evolved its messaging to include themes such as “Suicide Prevention: One World Connected” and “Take a Minute, Change a Life.
Various events and activities will be held today to raise awareness that suicide is a major preventable cause of premature death. World Suicide Prevention Day gives organizations, government agencies and individuals a chance to promote awareness about suicide, mental illnesses associated with suicide, as well as suicide prevention. Organizations such as the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP) and World Health Organization (WHO) play a key role in promoting this event.
 We should not  forget that mental illness doesn't discriminate, touching the lives of people in every corner of society - from the homeless and unemployed to builders and doctors, reality stars and footballers. and within the monopoly-capitalist nations, mental-health disorders are the leading cause of life expectancy decline behind cardiovascular disease and cancer. In the European Union, 27.0 percent of the adult population between the ages of eighteen and sixty-five are said to have experienced mental-health complications.
Recent estimates by the World Health Organization suggest that more than three hundred million people suffer from depression worldwide. And it is important to note that most of the medications currently available  fail to manage symptoms at all.
Coming off the back of an incredibly difficult 18 months, with the pandemic compounding, for many, feelings of isolation, exhaustion, and economic and public health-related anxieties. Increased rates of depression have sparked concern that we will see a further increase in suicide rates, and  it's no surprise that a growing number of people in the UK are coming forward with mental health issues, however there is still a lingering stigma around mental health that prevents people from sharing their experiences.
Shockingly  and utterly saddening nearly 3000 people on average commit suicide daily, according to WHO. For every person who completes a suicide, 20 or more may attempt to end their lives. About one million people die by suicide each year. Suicide is a major preventable cause of premature death which is influenced by psycho-social, cultural and environmental risk factors that can be prevented through worldwide responses that address these main risk factors. There is strong evidence indicating that adequate prevention can reduce suicide rates.
There were 5,691 suicides in England and Wales in 2019, which is 321 more compared to the year before. The suicide rate has remained the same as in 2018 – 11 deaths per 100,000 people, but the rates are still higher than in recent years.Approximately eight hundred thousand individuals commit suicide globally each year. In the UK in 2018, there were 6,507 deaths by suicide (a rate of 11.2 deaths per 100,000 people).
Suicide and suicide attempts can have lasting effects on individuals and their social networks and communities. The causes of suicide are many, and it is important to understand the psychological processes that underlie suicidal thoughts, and the factors that can lead to feelings of hopelessness or despair. 
Suicide behaviours are complex, there is no single explanation of why people die by suicide. Social, psychological, and cultural factors can all interact to lead a person to suicidal thoughts or behaviour. For many people, an attempt may occur after a long period of suicidal thoughts or feelings, while in other cases, it may be more impulsive.
 Despite some excellent media guidelines produced by Samaritans and Mind, journalists often still revert to outdated language and stereotypes when reporting suicide. There is a difficult balance between reporting known facts and introducing elements of the story into the public domain which may encourage others to emulate what they have read, as is described in the Werther effect - so called because of the spate of imitational suicides that were said to have taken place after the publication of Goethe’s novel The Sorrows of Young Werther. Research carried out across the world over the last five decades shows that when specific methods of suicide are reported – details of types and amounts of pills, for example – it can lead to vulnerable people copying them.
Young people in particular are more influenced by what they see and hear in the media than other age groups and are more susceptible to what is often referred to as suicide contagion.
We should not describe a suicide as ‘easy’, ‘painless’, ‘quick’ or ‘effective’, and we should remember to look at the long-term consequences of suicide attempts, not forgetting the significant life-long pain for those left behind when someone does take their own life.
It is also important to bear in mind that reports of celebrity deaths carry greater risk of encouraging others to take their own lives, due to the increased likelihood of over-identification by vulnerable people. A recent study, which examined news reports covering the suicide of US actor Robin Williams, identified a 10% increase in people taking their own lives in the months following his death. This emphasises the responsibility that we all have when it comes to talking about suicide. 
We often read speculation about the cause of suicide, linking a death to a previous event such as the loss of a job, the break-up of a relationship or bullying. It is impossible to say with any certainty why someone takes their own life and is often the culmination of a complex set of factors. As Samaritans state: ‘there is no simple explanation for why someone chooses to die by suicide, and it is rarely due to one particular factor.'
But  often thoughts can be overwhelming and prevent you from feeling anything else. Sharing or expressing these feelings can be helpful and talking to a trained provisional can save a life. The theme to this years World Suicide Prevention Day is ‘Creating Hope Through Action’ to stress the importance of collective action to address this issue. A positive message that motivates people to come out of problems and cooperate with this complicated issue,  after all hope is like oxygen for our mental health. It is the vital ingredient in supporting people to hold on. and is a timely a reminder that there is an alternative to suicide and aims to inspire confidence and light in all of us; that our actions, no matter how big or small, may provide hope to those who are struggling. Preventing suicide is often possible and you are a key player in its prevention. Through action, you can make a difference to someone in their darkest moments – as a member of society, as a child, as a parent, as a friend, as a colleague or as a neighbour. We can all play a role in supporting those experiencing a suicidal crisis or those bereaved by suicide.
Suicides can also  have a ripple effect on an individual’s family, friends, colleagues and communities. It is, however, preventable and several steps can be taken to help those who are vulnerable. To raise awareness,
Let us today think of people suffering untold mental anguish leading them to take this step. and the relatives and friends  who are bereaved  their lives often left in tatters. The  mind is a very delicate place, It's good to talk or to be listened to.
We should not be so scared of suicide that we can't talk about it. Suicide is a devastating and gut-wrenching tragedy that ends a life and shatters countless others. But we also know that we can all help prevent such deaths, as individuals and as a society. We are not powerless. Far better to say something that feels awkward than to stay silent, whether you're worried about another person or needing help yourself. Sometimes we need to talk about suicide.
I will  add that I personally feel that the alleviation of mental distress is only possible in a society without exploitation and oppression. All members of society are affected by the inhumane nature of capitalism, and for many who suffer  it is the consequence of  concrete inequalities and hardships  that are a direct product of our economic system . As the basis on which society’s superstructural formation is erected, capitalism is a major determinant of poor mental health leading to discontent and alienation. As the Marxist professor of social work and social policy Iain Ferguson has argued, 
“it is the economic and political system under which we live—capitalism—which is responsible for the enormously high levels of mental-health problems which we see in the world today.
But, slowly and determinedly, the fight is being to end this  led most explicitly by the most oppressed and exploited. So lets keep fighting and  spreading awareness, and be kind to the people that are around  us, but for fucks sake don't just tell anyone to simply cheer up. Don’t pass judgment  just be present. Understand that we all experience mental health differently, and that’s OK. Try your best to release compassion, empathy and care, and please seek medical advice if needed, and If you are worried someone is suicidal, it is okay to ask them directly. Research shows that this helps - because it gives them permission to tell you how they feel, and shows that they are not a burden.
We  can all make a difference to someone in their darkest moments – whether our child, a parent, a friend, a colleague or a neighbour. We can also play a role in supporting those experiencing a suicidal crisis or those bereaved by suicide.While mental health professionals have education, tools, and resources to support individuals struggling with their mental health, we can all play a critical role in suicide prevention. Having an open, authentic conversation about mental health with loved ones is a great first step. Remember that the quality of our health is linked to our connection with others. Preventing suicide is a group effortOverall we are stronger together.Let’s all make a habit of checking on each other. Check on your strong friends today. Check on your struggling friends. Don’t be fooled by smiles or tough exteriors. Pain can manifest itself in many ways and have many different faces.  Check on yourself too. If you are struggling, please know that there are resources available. And, know that there is no shame in needing help. The world needs you to stay. The world needs us to help each other find our way back to being okay. If you are  currently struggling, remember your not alone. Much love.
 
If  you need to talk:- 

Samaritans – offers 24 hours a day, 7 days a week support service

116 123

Shout 85258 This is a free, confidential 24/7 text messaging service provided to anyone who is struggling to cope. The service was launched in May 2019 and since then it has had more than 750,000 conversations with people who are depressed, suicidal, anxious or stressed. 

 The contact information is in its name: text Shout to 85258.

CALM (Campaign Against Living Miserably) As well as supporting those who are struggling with suicidal thoughts, this charity also helps those bereaved by suicide. Its helpline is available 365 days of the year 5pm-midnight.

The contact information is in its name: text Shout to 85258.

Papyrus Many young suicides are preventable and Papyrus believes that talking about suicide can help end the stigma around it. The charity provides confidential support and advice to young people struggling with suicidal thoughts and anyone who is concerned about a young person going through this.

The charity also stands with the LGBTQIA+ community and its support service HOPELINEUK is available for everyone and is accessible 24/7.

If you need to talk to anyone from Papyrus, call this number: 0800 068 4141.

MindOutThis charity is dedicated to supporting the LGBTQIA+ community going through a mental health crisis. It runs a Suicide Prevention Project and is accessible to anyone in the community who is struggling to cope.

You can contact MindOut on this number: 01273 234839

CALM (Campaign Against Living Miserably)As well as supporting those who are struggling with suicidal thoughts, this charity also helps those bereaved by suicide. Its helpline is available 365 days of the year 5pm-midnight.

You can contact the helpline number by calling: 0800 585858


Thursday 9 September 2021

Geronimo Test Negative


31st August 2021 is a day I will never forget. The day Geronimo the Alpaca was murdered by  government officials from DEFRA after a much disputed claim that he has bovine tuberculosis.
The scenes of this poor bewildered animal being led away by a group of Brutish clowns will haunt me for the rest of my days on this planet. So thank you DEFRA for making my life that much sadder. What a fine example you are for young children NOT.
They saw a government organisation take away a family pet that was always kept separate from other animals with no compassion whatsoever. What I saw that day was reminiscent of a satanic ritual but more demonic.
British government veterinarians on Tuesday killed  Geronimo, whose sentence of death for carrying bovine tuberculosis made international headlines and pitted animal activists against the state.  
The scene was witnessed by animal activists and journalists who had camped out at the farm in Wickwar, 175 kilometers (110 miles) west of London, pledging to stop the killing.
The Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs confirmed the animal had been euthanised, 
The controversial camelid was sentenced to death after twice testing positive for bovine .
His owner, Helen Macdonald, argued the tests had produced false positives and fought for a third test.
Macdonald, a veterinary nurse,  said the alpaca was negative when he was bought in from New Zealand and she had spent thousands of pounds in a failed court battle to save the animal. 
Several veterinarians backed her case, but earlier this month a High Court  judge rejected Macdonald's request for a temporary injunction to stop the killing and reopen the case
Bovine TB can devastate cattle herds and hurt farm revenues.
The Unite Kingdom has been culling animals, chiefly badgers, to stop its spread for a decade, but the practice remains contentious.
Initial results have now revealed that  Geronimo the alpaca did NOT have Bovine TB. People pleaded for one final test but the Government bloody went on ahead and dragged Geronimo to his death. Despite this Defra contemptibly dissemble & try to say we won't know for 5 months; by then  aided by a corrupt dishonest government they will find a way to  either cover up or fix it to show  that Geronimo did have TB, even though he didn't.
Utterly disgraceful. I support any attempt in those who choose to take legal action against the Government  and the calls for Secretary of State George Eustice to immediately resign. Supporters of Geronimo's owner Helen Macdonald are already disgusted and rightfully angry about how the animal was taken away from his farm and the suggestion that he did not have TB is only adding to their anger. Hoping 5 months from  now  that the public will forget by then, shows how deluded they are, there is not a chance in fucking hell that the people will let this drop.
Surrounded by supporters outside Defra's Westminster offices Helen Macdonald said "Geronimo was a blessing in my life. He touched the world. He was loved and precious to very many people and he lives on.
" I miss him. But I will do him the honour of fighting for him and making sure his legacy lives on for all animals. "
There are no boundaries with DEFRA. they have no limits. They will run roughshod over your land and take your animals without a care. They cannot and must not be allowed to continue. With their extraordinary degree of  arrogance they think they are beyond accountability. Heads must roll and prosecutions must be put into place. A bit of a departure from the manic street preachers original but if you tolerate this your pet will be next.

Thursday 2 September 2021

In Birth And After Death They Are In Chains.

 

In Palestine since the Nakba, a land is imprisoned

Harsh collective punishment, military aggression inflicted,

A deluge of misfortune  pouring down, sowing misery 

Rights of humanity violated, darkness daily altering feeling,

A  26  year old mother is fighting for the right to give birth 

Without being shackled  and confined in a jail cell.

162 parents are fighting for the right to bury their children 

Whose bodies are held hostage by the Israeli military

In birth and after death they are in chains

As the world sits back and watches silently

And the oppressor steals from them, the beauty of life

Tries to steal victims will with endless persecution 

Homes bulldozed, bombs dropped with no mercy 

But in the depth of profound misery and hurt

Will not gain the subservience of proud people

Who continue to take a stand against  cruel  system

For there is no other choice, when answering freedoms call

Resisting the urge to cower, with unbroken pride rise

In time of struggle release sumud,, to soften  pain

I will not forget, offer my voice as solidarity

While my heartbeat becomes part of  them. 

Tuesday 31 August 2021

Bertrand Russell's Advice for Future Generations


Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) was a British philosopher, mathematician, essayist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950. In addition to being one of the founding fathers of analytical philosophy, he was best known for his campaign against war, nuclear bombs and racial discrimination.
From the beginning to the end of his active life, Russell engaged himself with the great issues of his day. pacifism. right for women, civil liberty. trial marriage, new methods of education, the nuclear peril and war and peace, for he was at bottom a moralist and a humanist.
In the following rare 1959 interview from BBC’s 1959 Face to Face interview, Russell articulates in just under two minutes one of the most important and admirable aspirations we could hope to live up to, both individually and as a society. Russell is asked to pass along advice to a later generation. In just under two minutes he articulates  with calm wisdom  two things: one intellectual and one moral that still resonates today and cuts with clarity through our noisy world.

 Interviewer:"'Suppose Lord Russell that this film were to be looked at by our descendants, like a dead sea scroll in a thousand years time. What would you think it’s worth telling that generation about the life you’ve lived and the lessons you’ve learned from it?'"

Russell:"I should like to say two things, one intellectual and one moral. The intellectual thing I should want to say to them is this: When you are studying any matter or considering any philosophy, ask yourself only what are the facts and what is the truth that the facts bear out. Never let yourself be diverted either by what you wish to believe, or by what you think would have beneficent social effects if it were believed. But look only, and solely, at what are the facts.
The moral thing I should wish to say to them is very simple. I should say love is wise, hatred is foolish. In this world, which is getting more and more interconnected, we have to learn to tolerate each other, we have to learn to put up with the fact that some people say things that we don’t like. We can only live together in that way. And if we are to live together and not die together, we should learn the kind of tolerance which is absolutely vital to the continuation of human life on this planet. "

 To summarize: Our decisions must be made on truth; not wishful thinking, and we need to learn to be tolerant of people whom we disagree with or we will end up destroying one another. It’s simple advice, and bloody easier said than done, but it bears repeating. 
We must not give up on truth and tolerance. Because, as Russell mentions, they are “absolutely vital” to society. Adhering to this advice is not a passive process.
 We must be critical of the messages we see on a daily basis, and resist the spread of messages that contain inaccuracies.
Here's two earlier  messages from him :- 


 

Sunday 29 August 2021

Legendary Reggae icon Lee "Scratch" Perry, the Mighty Upsetter has died


Arguably the most influential force in Jamaican music, legendary Reggae icon Lee "Scratch" Perry, the Mighty Upsetter has died.The eccentric artiste/producer died in the Noel Holmes Hospital in Lucea Western Jamaica after battling illness on Sunday morning. He was 85.The Grammy awardee who is regarded as one of the most important creative, artistic and musical figures of the second half of the 1900s, is revered across Europe, where he was constantly booked for tours.
Jamaica’s Prime Minister Andrew Holness confirmed his passing.
My deep condolences to the family, friends, and fans of legendary record producer and singer, Rainford Hugh Perry OD, affectionately known as “Lee Scratch” Perry,” Holness wrote in one Tweet this morning. “Undoubtedly, Lee Scratch Perry will always be remembered for his sterling contribution to the music fraternity. May his soul Rest In Peace.
Perry was born Rainford Hugh Perry in March 20, 1936 in Kendal, Hanover. He grew up in the countryside of the island, the third of four children. After a tough and very poor childhood, he started working as a tractor driver, helping to build the first road in Negril, emerging in response to the rise of tourism in the mid-1950s. Perry later said this was the formative sonic impetus of his life. “I was working with rock and hearing the sonic vibrations. I’m sure that’s where everything comes from,” Perry explains on the 2008 documentary The Upsetter. “I learnt everything from stone.” In 1961, he left for Kingston, the heart of the country’s music scene.
In 1962, Jamaica declared independence from UK, and a sense of new freedom pervaded the island. At that point, ska was the native sound, booming with mobile sound systems. Perry worked at all the local studios,initially as a handy man, before working his way up to producing and writing tracks. At Clement Coxsone Dodd's sound system, a sometimes turbulent relationship with Dodd developed, he found himself performing a variety of important tasks at Dodd's Studio One hit factory, going on to record nearly 30 songs for the label. Disagreements between the pair due to personality and financial conflicts, a recurring theme throughout Perry's career, led him to leave the studio and seek new musical outlets. He soon found a new home at Joe Gibbs's Wirl records.
Working with Joe Gibbs, Perry continued his recording career, but once again, financial problems caused conflict. Perry broke ranks with Gibbs and formed his own label, Upsetter, in 1968. His first single "People Funny Boy", which was an insult directed at Gibbs, sold very well. It is notable for its innovative use of a sample (a crying baby) as well as a fast, chugging beat that would soon become identifiable as "reggae" (the new sound did not really have a name at this time). From 1968 until 1972 he worked with his studio band The Upsetters.
The Black arc studio owner made his name in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s known for his innovative production techniques as well as his eccentric character. he produced  more than 1000 cutting-edge recordings by revolutionary artistes during his career. From 1968 until 1972, Perry worked with his studio band, the Upsetters. The band backed Bob Marley on a full-time basis, especially with his 1969 groundbreaking works Soul Rebels and Soul Revolution albums as well as the Small AxeDuppy Conqueror, Jah Live, Punky Reggae Party, and Rastaman Live Up singles. 
Marley and Perry’s collaborations also addressed the socio-political experience of contemporary Jamaican life,something innovative at the time. Marcus Garvey’s rhetoric in particular had a huge impact on Jamaica during Perry’s life. Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) was founded in 1914 in his native Jamaica and established in Harlem in 1916, where he had moved from Kingston. Reflecting a desire to unite and lift the African diaspora “New World,” Garvey glorified African civilization and Black superiority, and even began practical projects for repatriation to the continent. Although a controversial figure who believed in Black separatism and had even collaborated with the KKK, Garvey still had a huge image. He looked to Black Christian churches that saw Ethiopia as the biblical center of the world; Ethiopia in turn embraced this allegorical image of spiritual fulfillment, “Zion.” Garvey had reportedly said, “Look to Africa for the crowning of a Black King; he shall be the Redeemer.” Haile Selassie was crowned as King of Ethiopia in 1930, seen by many in Jamaica as a living god whose bloodline was supposed to link to King Solomon. Rastafarianism was born. Perry was a true believer, and was among the crowds that greeted Selassie on his visit to Jamaica in 1966. Many of his lyrics and references draw from his religious beliefs.
He was among the first Jamaican producer to use the studio as an instrument, and he pioneered the reggae instrumental form known as dub.Dub was not just a new kind of sound or genre,it was an entirely new methodology. As Erik Davis has written, “dub is not only a musical style, but also an artistic discourse, in the aesthetic act of making dub—a type of remixing that emphasizes the phatic effects of sonic space.” 
His nickname came from his debut recording in the early 1960s, “The Chicken Scratch”.The Kendal, Hanover native also pioneered beat-making strategies including recording garden implements for beats.  He would also bury microphones under trees to get different sounds and blow ganja smoke over tapes and even run the tapes backwards.
It was the following year that Perry got his second nickname. In “I am the Upsetter,” Perry sings, “I am the avenger, you’ll never get away from me / I am the Upsetter.” His vengeful lyrics are a fascinating contrast to an almost upbeat melody. Perry was making a statement, however, as someone revolutionary and radical, not afraid to upset perceptions and transform experience. On the back of the song's massive popularity, he set up a label and group called The Upsetters. In 1970, Bob Marley joined the label's record shop on Charles Street and began to collaborate with the producer. They had known each other since the early days at Studio One; the singer had minor success with The Wailers, but that was waning. Together, they invented a new sound that would transform Marley’s career. Marley had moved in with Perry while they recorded the singles “Soul Rebel” (1970), “Duppy Conqueror” (1971) and “Sun is Shining” (1971)—arguably Marley’s best works. The sound was spacious, layered, and fresh. As Perry later recalled, “I was playing the part of the prophet, and Bob was playing the part of the king to establish the music.” The magical combination fell apart but nonetheless, it did introduce Marley and reggae itself to an international audience.
Marley and Perry’s collaborations also addressed the socio-political experience of contemporary Jamaican life—something innovative at the time. Marcus Garvey’s rhetoric in particular had a huge impact on Jamaica during Perry’s life. Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) was founded in 1914 in his native Jamaica and established in Harlem in 1916, where he had moved from Kingston. Reflecting a desire to unite and lift the African diaspora “New World,” Garvey glorified African civilization and Black superiority, and even began practical projects for repatriation to the continent. Although a controversial figure who believed in Black separatism and had even collaborated with the KKK, Garvey still had a huge image. He looked to Black Christian churches that saw Ethiopia as the biblical center of the world; Ethiopia in turn embraced this allegorical image of spiritual fulfillment, “Zion.” Garvey had reportedly said, “Look to Africa for the crowning of a Black King; he shall be the Redeemer.” Haile Selassie was crowned as King of Ethiopia in 1930, seen by many in Jamaica as a living god whose bloodline was supposed to link to King Solomon. Rastafarianism was born. Perry was a true believer, and was among the crowds that greeted Selassie on his visit to Jamaica in 1966. Many of his lyrics and references draw from his religious beliefs.
Dub was not just a new kind of sound or genre, it was an entirely new methodology. As Erik Davis has written, “dub is not only a musical style, but also an artistic discourse, in the aesthetic act of making dub—a type of remixing that emphasizes the phatic effects of sonic space.” The studio became an instrument. Perry pioneered the use of phasers and drum machines, patching together sound with scratches, feedback, and distortion. The tracks were layered with echo, reverb, guitars, and samples, with voices hovering in space above the backing tracks. The multiple layers of rhythm echoed the polyrhytmic approach of West African religious drumming. Perry’s work fused ideas around identity, history, and religion, reflecting the complexities of the Afrodiasporic experience.
In 1973, Perry built a studio in his back yard, The Black Ark, to have more control over his productions and continued to produce notable musicians such as Bob Marley & the Wailers, Junior Byles, The Heptones, and Max Romeo. With his own studio at his disposal, Perry's productions became more lavish, as the energetic producer was able to spend as much time as he wanted on the music he produced. It is important to note that virtually everything Perry recorded in The Black Ark was done using rather basic recording equipment; through sonic sleight-of-hand, Perry made it sound completely unique. Perry remained behind the mixing desk for many years, producing songs and albums that stand out as a high point in reggae history.
From the start, Perry saw the Ark as a religious space. “I see myself rebuilding the temple of King Solomon,” he said. It was named after the Ark of the Covenant carried by the tribes of Israel to Canaan, the promised land of Rastafarianism. The studio was covered in art and graffiti, a portrait of Haile Selassie above the entrance. Dreadlocks moved in to the space en masse, and vast quantities of white rum and ganja were consumed; more than hedonism, however, the focus was on peace, love, and a positive shift. The mid-1970s was a period of economic distress, gang violence, and social upheaval for Jamaica: cocaine encouraged by South American cartels was flooding the country; Americans in their “war on drugs” were arming the opposition; there was a high level of police corruption. Perry was not afraid to address this in the music he was making, like “War Inna Babylon” and “Chase the Devil” by Max Romeo and Junior Murvin’s iconic “Police and Thieves.
By 1978, stress and unwanted outside influences began to take their toll: both Perry and The Black Ark quickly fell into a state of disrepair. Eventually, the studio burned to the ground. Perry has constantly insisted that he burned the Black Ark himself in a fit of rage, but it has also been said that fire could have been an accident due to faulty wiring.
 After the demise of the Black Ark in the early 1980s, Perry spent time in England and the United States, performing live and making records with a variety of collaborators. It was not until the late 1980s, when he began working with British producers Adrian Sherwood and Neil Fraser (who is better known as Mad Professor), that Perry's career began to get back on solid ground again. Perry also has attributed the recent resurgence of his creative muse to his deciding to quit drinking alcohol and smoking cannabis. Perry stated in an interview that he wanted to see if "it was the smoke making the music or Lee Perry making the music. I found out it was me and that I don't need to smoke."
The Grammy awardee who is regarded as one of the most important creative, artistic and musical figures of the second half of the 1900s, is revered across Europe, where he was constantly booked for tours.
He won a Reggae Grammy award in 2002 for the album, Jamaican E.T.
 and was nominated on four other occasions; in 2014 for Back on the ControlsRevelation in 2010; Repentance in 2008 and The End Of An American Dream in 2007.He was also the recipient of a Jamaican national honour, the Order of Distinction at the rank of Officer.
Regarded with awe throughout the music world, Lee “Scratch” Perry holds status as one of the most enduring and original reggae producers and artists of all time. One of reggae’s undisputed pioneers, Lee “the Upsetter” Perry  worked with almost everyone from the Heptones to the Skatalites, Junior Murvin, the Congos, Max Romeo, the Clash the Beastie Boys and the Orb.
In December 2019, he released his Heavy Rain album, a 12-track compilation that debuted at number one on the Billboard Reggae Albums Charts. The compilation was his first number one album in his 60-year career, and also made him a record-holder as the oldest artist to top the charts. 
 In his later years, Perry resided in Switzerland with his wife Mireille and their two children. He had four other children.
In December 2020,  however the Upsetter had announced that he would be returning to Jamaica to, among other things,to establish an off the grid community,to enable him to get away from what he described as “this Babylon Madness” in Switzerland, where he lived for several years. He made his return to the island in January 2021 and revealed that he needed Jamaica’s sunshine, that Switzerland was now “too cold” and that the “energy was not right”.
Speaking with The Guardian in 2016, for a piece celebrating his 80th birthday, Perry reflected on the power of music, stating: ‘Music is magic. If you have good music you have good magic. If you have good magic you will be followed by good people. Then they can be blessed by the one God.’ 
Speaking in rhythmic, rhyming nonsense, dressed like a traveling magician-slash-holy man, he could easily come across as the proverbial madman. He is, however, arguably the most important music producer and innovator Jamaica ever produced. It is not hyperbole to say that without Perry, there would not have been Bob Marley, hip hop, or electronic music as we know it today. By accident or intention, he changed the face of modern sound. 
Always one to follow the beat of his own drummers, a huge influence on my musical tastes. the eccentric genius Perry continued to break new ground with the hardest rebel Rasta tunes and the most unpredictable instrumental dubs. Such sad news,but this visionary's magical music which I thank him for,  lives on, and will continue to transform lives. 
May the Mighty Upsetter's' soul fly high and Rest In Peace You can hear some of  his  timeless classic productions and vocal tracks below.
 
Lee Scratch Perry - Disco Devil

 

Lee Scratch Perry
-Roast Fish and Cornbread 



Lee Scratch  Perry - I am a Madman
 
 
Lee Scratch Perry - I am a Psychiatrist


Max Romeo - War Inna Babylon


Max Romeo - Chase the devil

Junior Murvin - Police and Thieves

The Heptones - Sufferers Time



Max Romeo-  One Step Forward

The Clash - Pressure Drop

Lee Scratch Perry and Mad Professor -  Mad Man Dubwise


Lee Scratch Perry - Scary Politicians


Thursday 26 August 2021

Happy birthday Guillaume Apollinaire: Godfather of Cubism



Guillaume Apollinaire was a French poet, playwright and art critic born in Italy on this day in 1890 to Angelica de Kostrowitzky  who registered the infant who would become France’s greatest war poet. as Guglielmo Alberto Wladimiro Alessandro Apollinare
Angelica hailed from Lithuanian-Polish petty aristocracy. Her grandfather had been wounded while fighting with the czar’s troops at Sebastopol. Her father was a valet to the pope. Angelica was a demimondaine, kept by wealthy lovers.
Family legend claimed that Guillaume’s father was a Roman aristocrat. But in the first decade of the 20th century, when Apollinaire was a writer and art critic at the heart of the pre-war cultural revolution in Paris, his friends believed him to be the illegitimate son of a Roman prelate. 
“He was registered as the son of an unknown father and remained so,” says Laurence Campa, the author of the definitive biography of Apollinaire, published by Gallimard in Paris.Officially, Apollinaire was a citizen of Russia
 Angelica took Guillaume and his half- brother Albert to the Côte d’Azur, where she haunted the gambling dens of Nice and Monaco.  
In his youth Apollinaire assumed the identity of a Russian prince.  He received a French education at the Collège Saint-Charles in Monaco, and afterwards in schools in Cannes and Nice.
At the age of 20 he traveled to Paris before traveling to Germany where he fell in love with the countryside and wrote several poems. He also fell in love with an English girl, whom he followed to London only to be rebuffed, which caused him to write his poem, “Chanson du mal-aimé” (“Song of the Poorly Loved”).
In to Paris he earned a reputation as a writer and befriended many of the city’s struggling artists, many of whom went on to some acclaim, including Alfred Jarry, https://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.com/2011/06/alfed-jarry-891877-11107-life-as-riot.html Andre Derain, Raoul Dufy and Maurice de Vlaminck. He championed the work of the folk artist Henri Rousseau. Apollinaire introduced the artists to African art, which was beginning to become popular in France. His influence on the young artists of the time is immeasurable. Through him the artists became Cubists, as an art critic Apollinaire was the first to champion Cubist painting;he wrote the preface to their catalogue, producing his own “Peinture cubist” (Cubist Painters) in 1913,which explored the theory of cubism and analysed psychologically the chief cubists and their works.  According to Apollinaire, art is not a mirror held up to nature, so cubism is basically conceptual rather than perceptual.  By means of the mind, one can know the essential transcendental reality that subsists 'beyond the scope of nature.
The term Orphism (1912) is also his and described 'the art of painting new structures out of elements that have not been borrowed from the visual sphere but have been created entirely by the artist himself, and have been endowed by him with the fullness of reality.' Among Orphicist artist were Robert Delaunay, Fernand Léger, Francis Picabia, and Frantisek Kupka.. Apollinaire also wrote one of the earliest Surrealist literary works, the play The Breasts of Tiresias (1917), which became the basis for the 1947 opera Les mamelles de Tirésias.
Apollinaire’s writing on art was more than simple review. He captured the spirit of the movements. Of Picasso, he wrote in the March issue of Montjoie!, “He is a new man and the world is as he represents it. He has enumerated its elements, its details, with a brutality that knows, on occasion, how to be gracious.” Apollinaire, in 1918, wrote of Matisse, “With the years, his art has perceptibly stripped itself of everything that was non-essential; yet its ever-increasing simplicity has not prevented it from becoming more and more sumptuous.”
 While producing a large quantity of art criticism, he also found time to publish a book of poetry, “The Rotting Magician” in 1909, a collection of stories, “L’Hérésiarque et Cie” (“The Heresiarch and Co.”), in 1910, a collection of quatrains called “Le Bestiaire” in 1911, and what is considered his masterpiece, “Alcools,” The prose-poem depicted the entombment of Merlin the Enchanter by his love.  From his sufferings Merlin creates a new world of poetry.  Alcools combined classical verse forms with modern imagery, involving transcriptions of street conversations overheard by change and the absence of punctuation.  It opened with the poem Zone, in which the tormented poet wanders through streets after the loss of his mistress.  Among its other famous poems are 'Le pont Mirabeau' and 'La chanson du mal-aime.'
 “Alcools” is pronounced “al-coal,” meaning “spirits,” although it is also an obvious pun on “alcohol.” Indeed, the original title was “Brandy.”
Apollinaire was caught up, along with Picasso, in the theft of the “Mona Lisa” from the Louvre in 1911, an incident that would indirectly lead to his death. His reputation as a radical and as a foreigner, led to his being arrested in August 1911, on suspicion of stealing the painting and a number of Egyptian antiquities, although he was released five days later for lack of evidence. The Egyptian sculptures had been taken by Apollinaire’s former secretary Honoré Joseph Géry Pieret. In order to protect himself, as he was also considered a suspicious foreigner, Picasso publicly denied that he and Apollinaire were friends, causing a rift in the friendship.In 1911.
Apollinaire had a rebellious spirit and seemed an unlikely solider, but in December 1914 he voluntarily joined the French army, much to the surprise of many of his friends, and was posted to the front in April 1915.While in military training, Apollinaire met Louise de Châtillon-Coligny, for whom he wrote many of his best war poems:

If I died over there on the army front
You would cry for a day oh Lou my beloved
And then my memory would fade as dies
A shell bursting on the army front
A beautiful shell like flowering mimosa

 Apollinaire loved military life. He loved his training in arms and horseback riding, and learning to use and care for the famous French 75 cannon. He loved the camaraderie of barracks life, and the infinite number of new sights and sounds and experiences that the war brought. “Soldiering is my true profession,” he wrote his Parisian friends. To another he wrote, from training camp, “I love art so much, I have joined the artillery.
But as his biographer Campa points out, Apollinaire had not yet seen any shells exploding. He would continue to use childlike imagery, and to preserve an inner world of beauty, even in the trenches. But Apollinaire’s experience of war also changed his poetry. In Bleuet (the equivalent of the poppy in Britain), Apollinaire described the psychological ravages of battle:

Young man
of the age of twenty
who has seen such terrible things . . .
 

.looked death in the face more

than a hundred times and you don’t

know what life is...

Apollinaire realised quickly that his “beloved Lou” was playing with him. He continued to write to her, but also began a correspondence with Madeleine Pagès, a literature teacher whom he met on a train in January 1915.
 In 1918, Apollinaire published “Calligrammes: Poems of Peace and War 1913-1916,” a collection that was both visual and verbal. Calligrams are poems where the arrangement of the words on the page adds meaning to the text. In a letter to André Billy, Apollinaire writes, “The Calligrammes are an idealisation of free verse poetry and typographical precision in an era when typography is reaching a brilliant end to its career, at the dawn of the new means of reproduction that are the cinema and the phonograph.” 
 Apollinaire arranged words on the page to form patterns resembling objects: a drunken man, a watch, the Eiffel Tower. At the time this eccentric use of typography was thought to have stretched poetry to its limit. 
His other works include the novella "The Poet Assassinated" (1916) and the play "The Breasts of Tiresias" (1917). The latter was made into an opera (1947) by composer Francis Poulenc, who also set many of Apollinaire's poems to music.
Letters to Madeleine combine the three strains of Apollinaire’s poetry: sex, love and war. His eroticism is often humorous and ironic, as when he writes of midwives fantasising about priapic cannons. Some of it is so explicit that one is amazed it passed the military censors: “My tense flesh, hardened by desire will penetrate your flesh,” he wrote to Madeleine on October 22nd, 1915.
Apollinaire’s letters are equally explicit about the war. In July 1915 he wrote of “the horrible horror of millions of big, blue flies,” of “holes so filthy you want to vomit.” Four months later, it was “mud, what mud, you cannot imagine the mud you have to have seen it here, sometimes the consistency of putty, sometimes liked whipped cream or even wax and extraordinarily slippery.
In December, Apollinaire told Madeleine that “the heart jumps with every thunder” of the Germans’ 105mm.
While in hospital, Apollinaire gave an interview to a cultural magazine in which, with his usual prescience, he predicted that cinema would soon become the most popular form of art.
In November 1915, Apollinaire was transferred at his request to the 96th Infantry Regiment and was promoted to 2nd lieutenant. It was a matter of “virile pride,” writes Campa. Living conditions were better for officers, and “something in him wanted to go to the limit of his commitment. He believed that being a poet meant taking risks.
He suffered a serious head injury in March 1916, which required him being trepanned. He never really recovered from the wound.
Picasso portrayed the convalescent soldier with his head in bandages and the medal of the Legion of Honour pinned to his chest. 
 Apollinaire;s epistolary engagement to Madeleine had faded after he visited her on Christmas leave in 1915.
In his last letter to Madeleine , in September 1916, he wrote: “Almost all my friends from the war are dead. I don’t dare write to the colonel to ask him the details. I heard he himself was wounded.
Apollinaire remained in Paris, still in uniform, as a military censor. He was afraid of being sent back to the front, and the job allowed him to frequent publishing circles. Campa, who studied his work in French archives, says he was a lenient censor.
In May 1918, Apollinaire married Jacqueline Kolb, “the pretty redhead” for whom he wrote the last poem in Calligrammes. Kolb’s lover had been killed on the same battlefield where Apollinaire was wounded. Picasso and the art dealer Ambroise Vollard were witnesses to the marriage.
Six months later, on November 9th, Apollinaire was killed by the Spanish flu epidemic that claimed more lives than the entire war itself. He was 38 years old, and the French language was deprived of untold riches.
Apollinaire died on the day Kaiser Wilhelm abdicated. Legend has it that from his top floor apartment at 202 Boulevard St Germain he heard people shouting “À bas Guillaume!” In his delirium, the poet believed they referred to him.artillery. “It jumps not from fear or emotion – those things no longer exist after 15 months of war – but it jumps because the change in air pressure shakes everything.
In November 1915, Apollinaire was transferred at his request to the 96th Infantry Regiment and was promoted to 2nd lieutenant. It was a matter of “virile pride,” writes Campa. Living conditions were better for officers, and “something in him wanted to go to the limit of his commitment. He believed that being a poet meant taking risks.
Although he continued to write and promote the avant-garde on his return to Paris, coining the term “Surrealism” in the program notes for the ballet “ Cemetary,” created by Picasso, Erik Satie, Sergie Diaghilev and Jean Cocteau.
Weakened by his war wound, Apollianaire succumbed to Spanish Flu on Nov. 9, 1918, at the age of 38 and the French language was deprived of untold riches He is buried in Pere Lachaise Cemetarym in Paris. By the time of his death, his reputation was secure as one of the great French poets and art critics.
Apollinaire's stature has continued to grow since his death, as the precursor of surrealism and as a modernist his influence on modern art is incredible. He inspired, cajoled, encouraged and supported many of the early 20th century’s most influential artists through his writings, as well as being a poet that captured the zeitgeist of the period. There has rarely, if ever, been a single man who has been the central of so many artistic spokes.
 “Through his innovation and inventiveness, Apollinaire initiated 20th-century poetry,” says Campa. “By embracing cubism and abstraction, he also opened the artistic century . . . Now he’s become a symbol of the more than 500 French writers who perished in the first World War, whose names are engraved on the walls of the Pantheon. He also symbolises the many foreigners who sacrificed their lives for France.”
The following poem  “The Stunned Dove and the Water Jet.” is a translation, rearranged conventionally, by Charles Bernstein. Its image features a bleeding dove with spread wings, followed by a fountain with the water coming out of a vase that is reminiscent of the dove’s wings.
 
 

Sweet stabbed faces dear floral lips

Mya Mareye

Yette and Lorie

Annie and you Marie

Where are you, oh young girls

But near a crying jet of water and praying

This dove is ecstatic

All the memories of yesteryear

O my friends gone to war

Well up to the firmament

And your eyes in the sleeping water

Die melancholy

Where are they Braque and Max Jacob

Derain with gray eyes like dawn

Where are Raynal Billy Dalize

Whose names are melancholisent

Like steps in a church

Where is Cremnitz who engaged

Maybe they are already dead

From memories my soul is full

The stream of water cries over my pain.

Those who went to the war

in the North are now fighting

The evening falls O bloody sea

Gardens where bleed abundantly

laurel rose flower warrior.

Wednesday 25 August 2021

So long Charlie Watts: A Star Now Beating In Eternity


Another sad day the self-effacing and unshakeable beloved drummer of the legendary rock band The Rolling Stones, Charlie Watts, is dead. Watts died peacefully on Tuesday with his family at the age of 80 in a London hospital, as his agent Bernard Doherty announced to the British news agency PA.  “It is with immense sadness that we announce the death of our beloved Charlie Watts,” it read. “He passed away peacefully in a London hospital earlier today surrounded by his family.” The statement referred to Watts as “one of the greatest drummers of his generation” and closed by requesting that “the privacy of his family, band members, and close friends is respected at this difficult time.
 A few weeks ago it was announced that Watts would not take part in his band’s upcoming US tour. He was recovering from unspecified medical treatment, according to a PA spokesman. According to the BBC broadcaster, Watts had already been treated for throat cancer in 2004.
Charles "Charlie" Robert Watts was born in Kingsbury, now a district of London, in 1941. The son of a truck driver, he studied art and graphics at Harrow Art College, then took a job in a West End advertising agency and  joined Alexis Korner's band Blues Incorporated as a drummer.The loose blues collective also included singer Mick Jagger and guitarists Brian Jones and Keith Richards, who all dropped out of the band to form the Rolling Stones in 1962.
Just one year later, Watts quit his job as a graphic artist when Stones guitarist Richards insisted he play drums in the new band. Watts kept  keeping his metronomic time for the legendary rockers ever since.
With typical understatement, Watts was often been the overlooked man in the background, letting his band mates take center stage.
"Charlie Watts gives me the freedom to fly on stage," Keith Richards once said of the taciturn drummer with perfect timing. 
While most rock stars tend to make headlines for their erratic lifestyles, his lifestyle while on the road was in direct contrast to that of other band members. He famously rejected the charms of the hordes of groupies that dogged the band on all their tours, remaining faithful to his wife Shirley, who he had married in 1964. However in the mid-1980s, during what he put down to a mid-life crisis, Watts went off the rails with drink and drugs, leading to heroin addiction.“It got so bad,” he later quipped, “that even Keith Richards, bless him, told me to get it together.”
Watts’ relations with Jagger, too, had reached an all-time low.
On one famous occasion, in an Amsterdam hotel in 1984, a drunken Jagger reportedly woke Watts up by bellowing down the phone “Where’s my drummer?”
Watts responded by going round to the singer’s room, hitting him with a left hook, and saying: “Don’t ever call me ‘your drummer’ again, you’re  my fucking singer.”
The crisis lasted two years and it was Shirley, above all, who helped him get through it.
Universally recognized as one of the greatest rock drummers of all time, Watts and guitarist Keith Richards have been the core of the Rolling Stones’ instrumental sound: Richards spent upwards of half the group’s concerts turned around, facing Watts, bobbing his head to the drummer’s rhythm. A 2012 review of a Rolling Stones concert reads in part: “For all of Mick and Keith’s supremacy, there’s no question that the heart of this band is and will always be Watts: At 71, his whipcrack snare and preternatural sense of swing drive the songs with peerless authority, and define the contradictory uptight-laid-back-ness that’s at the heart of the Stones’ rhythm. Watts was never a flashy drummer, but driving the beat for “The World’s Greatest Rock and Roll Band” for a two-hour set, in a stadium, no less  is an act of great physical endurance that Watts performed until he was 78.
Charlie Watts contrasted pretty much every image the Rolling Stones evokes. Rather than wearing jeans, he preferred suits, from  the young man who had worn his brown hair down to his shoulders in the late 1960s he evolved into a craggy, white-haired, impeccably dressed senior statesman of rock.What people also seem to forget Watts had a solid career outside the Stones, loving jazz, boogie-woogie, big band and other demanding styles. He published a book on Charlie Parker, and leant his graphic arts talents to design covers for albums such as Between the Buttons as well as logos, posters and tour stages. With his financial future secure because of the Stones’ status as one of the world’s most popular live bands, Watts was able to indulge his passion for jazz by putting together some of the most talented musicians in Britain for a series of recordings and performances. They typically played during the long breaks between Stones tours.
Read more here: https://www.heraldsun.com/latest-news/article253706943.html#storylink=cpy
And he was  modest too, having said he felt embarrassed when receiving minutes-long standing ovations. "I hate leaving home," he once said. "I love what I do, but I'd love to go home every night."
A jazz drummer in his early years, Watts never lost his affinity for the music he first loved, and as well as being a musician, Watts was also a keen artist and in 1964 published Ode To A High Flying Bird, a comic book tribute to the jazz musician, Charlie Parker and with his financial future secure because of the Stones’ status as one of the world’s most popular live bands, Watts was able to indulge his passion for jazz by putting together some of the most talented musicians in Britain for a series of recordings and performances. They typically played during the long breaks between Stones tours.
His first jazz record, the 1986 “Live at Fulham Town Hall,” was recorded by the Charlie Watts Orchestra. Others by the Charlie Watts Quintet followed, such as  From One Charlie and Warm & Tender. In 2004 he also released Watts At Scotts, a recording of him playing at London jazz club Ronnie Scott’s alongside a group of other musicians.and he expanded that group into the Charlie Watts and the Tentet. He also released an album with Jim Keltner, and with The Charlie Watts Tentet released Watts at Scotts. and from 2009 onwards he played concerts with another group he put together, the ABC&D of Boogie Woogie.
 
Read more here: https://www.heraldsun.com/latest-news/article253706943.html#storylink=cpy
Together with the Stones, Watts was inducted into the Rock'n'Roll Hall of Fame in 1989. Rolling Stone magazine also put the time-keeper in twelfth place on its list of the best drummers of all time.
Through near six decades with the Rolling Stones, Watts  remained skeptical of fame. In the end, he only wanted one thing, to make music. 
"It's been years and years and years I've been playing the drums, and they're still a challenge, I still enjoy using drumsticks and a snare drum," he once said. 
Death will  always create deep heartbreak and an inexplicable deep sense of loss whoever you are. My thoughts  currently are with  others too  who have lost their beloved ones  but  for now, Rest in peace, Charlie Watts.  You helped make rock and roll what it became, your drum beats will live forever one of the greatest drummers of our time.

Charlie Watts Orchestra -Flying Home


Charlie Watts - Boogie Woogie
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Charlie Watts - If it Aint Got that Swing




Monday 23 August 2021

International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition

 

Every year on 23 August, the world observes the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition. The day is marked to “inscribe the tragedy of the slave trade in the memory of all peoples,” according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO).
The legacy of the transatlantic slave trade still lives on. It began in the 15th century and only ended in the 19th. Even today, the descendants of slaves deal with horrific racism. This led to the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement in the US. Nothing in human history compares with the slave trade’s magnitude, cruelty or sustained brutality.
Slavery was not a new institution in the 15th century. It was invented even before the Middle Ages. In ancient times, the losing side in war was often enslaved and made to pay for its misfortune with servitude. Slavery was common in the Roman world. In the 10th century, the Vikings captured men and women in their raids and then sold them off in the slave markets along the Volga River and the Caspian Sea.  
The colonial empires of Western Europe were the main benefiters from the transatlantic slave trade. The trade transported people, mainly from Africa, in inhuman conditions to work as slaves in the colonial settlements in Haiti, Caribbean, and other parts of the world.
As the slave trade developed, Europeans created a racist ideology which could be used to justify the trade. Africans were thought to be sub-human, uncivilised, and inferior to Europeans in every way. And as they were ˜not one of us, they could be bought and sold. The development of racism is linked to the slave trade. The slave trade could not have continued without this ideology to justify it. Racism cannot be ignored in any study of the slave trade.
The English had equated blackness with death and evil centuries before they met any black people. Thus the first reaction to people with black skin was to assume that they were some form of devil or monster. From this, and from travellers tales, arose the stereotype of the African, as barbarous, prone to excessive sexual desire, lazy, untrustworthy and even cannibalistic. There were few who challenged this prejudiced view. Richard Ligon, in his book A true & exact history of the Island of Barbados, published in 1657, wrote against the popular view. He believed ‘that there are as honest, faithfull, and conscionable people amongst them, as amongst those of Europe
From about 1600, with the development of science in Europe, racism could be˜proved  scientifically. Scientists and philosophers like David Hume could state that Africans were˜naturally inferior to the whites It was widely believed that Africans and Europeans had developed separately. Many, like Sir Thomas Herbert, writing in 1634, believed that Africans must be descended from apes and were part of a separate and inferior race. This was long before Charles Darwin theory of evolution, which showed that all humans are part of the same species.
In the era of joint-stock companies, the transatlantic slave trade exploded. The United Kingdom’s National Archives tell us that “Britain transported 3.1 million Africans (of whom 2.7 million arrived) to the British colonies in the Caribbean, North and South America and to other countries” between 1640 and 1807. An estimated 7 million slaves were transported from Africa to America in the 18th century. This figure for the period between the 16th to the 19th century is estimated at 10 to 12 million. 
Human beings were forcibly removed from their African families and communities and loaded onto ships owned and fitted out by Liverpool, Bristol and West Country merchants, to endure the horrific Middle Passage from Africa to the New World. Only 466,000 reached their destination, and 99,000 died on route, and their bodies most likely flung overboard to be eaten by sharks.
For those who managed to survive, they were then sold at auction into the sugar, cotton and tobacco plantations of the Caribbean and the southern states of America.
The majority, some 414,000, ended up as field slaves on Jamaica, the Leeward and Windward islands. Here their daily task was working the cane fields, harvesting the stalks and processing them in the crushing and boiling houses and
 Mortality rates were extremely high and the slaves were accommodated in primitive conditions with only the most basic food. For much of the period they could be tortured, murdered and raped with impunity. Those that did survive could only expect to live another 2 to 4 years, so bad were the working conditions in the plantations. Many slaves tried to escape or rebel, and even suicides were a daily occurrence.
Meanwhile the  merchants become exceptionally rich on this human misery.The fabulous wealth generated by slavery and the trading system which thrived around it provided the capital for the development of industry and commerce, which laid the foundations for the birth of modern capitalism. The fact was that the wealth of the Western countries was built on the backs of Black slave labor is a point many historians seem to conveniently forget or ignore.
In the 18th and 19th century, many white people were horrified by the brutality  of  the slave trade and wanted for freedom for the slaves. But this led the people who supported it to develop theories to justify what they were doing. They claimed that some slaves had caught a rapidly spreading disease, the symptoms of which made the slaves run away! Blacks were naturally lazy, people were told, which is why they hated working on the plantation. Defenders of the slave trade also said that blacks were less intelligent than whites; they were “sub-human” and had tails. These ideas were backed by church leaders, writers and academics and soon a large number of myths about black people were spread about Europe. The African slave in America was happier than in his own civilisation— slavery supporter quoted in CLR James “The Black Jacobins”
Also the belief in the superiority of the British and European races fed the expansion of the empire. The British empire grew from the idea ˜that the British were the best race to rule the world  a view expressed by Cecil Rhodes, the colonial administrator who founded the British colony of Rhodesia, in
Central Africa (now Zimbabwe).
 During the lengthy reign of King George III, from 1760 to 1820, Atlantic slave uprisings and a multiracial coalition of abolitionists transformed the British public’s view of the slave trade at the same time the Crown supported its continuation. 
The night of 22-23 August 1791 saw the beginning of an uprising in Santo Domingo, in modern-day Haiti and Dominican Republic. The uprising in the French colony inspired the Haitian Revolution. It also played a major role in the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.The uprising conveyed a universal demand for freedom that transcends all limits of time and space. It speaks to humanity as a whole, without distinction of origin or religion, and continues to resonate now with undiminished force.
Therefore, the United Nations (UN) decided to commemorate this day as the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition.
 Although the Slave Trade Act of 1807 had made it illegal for British subjects to buy or sell African captives, demand for slaves remained high in the Caribbean, Brazil, the Spanish colonies, and the United States. After 1808, as the illegal slave trade flourished, European enslavers transported millions of enslaved Africans to the Americas, many in ships built, financed, or outfitted in Britain.
 In the decades after the abolition of the British slave trade, enslaved and free people of African descent petitioned the Crown repeatedly, seeking royal intervention on their behalf in their quest for liberty and civil rights. These petitions largely fell on deaf ears. Even after Parliament passed the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, which ended slavery in the British Caribbean, Mauritius, and the Cape Colony (South Africa), enslaved people did not immediately receive their freedom. The negotiated settlement required enslaved men and women to continue to labor for their former masters as unpaid “apprentices” and also granted 20million pounds in compensation to Britons with financial interests in slavery. Formerly enslaved people and their descendants received nothing, other than recognition of their status as free subjects of the British sovereign.
However the pro-slavery views of the king and his sons bolstered the efforts of the London Society of West India Planters and Merchants to delay the abolition of the British slave trade for nearly two decades. George’s third son, Prince William (the future King William IV), served in the Royal Navy as a teenager and was the first member of the royal family to visit Britain’s North American and Caribbean colonies. While stationed in Jamaica, William witnessed colonial slavery firsthand and approved of what he saw. In 1799, William, now the Duke of Clarence, delivered his maiden speech in the House of Lords against the abolition of the slave trade. Printed by the pro-slavery lobby and widely circulated, his speech was viewed by many Britons as representative of the attitudes of the royal family.
It was only after 1838, with both slavery and the apprenticeship system at an end in Britain’s Atlantic empire, the British monarchy publicly supported the anti-slavery cause for the first time.
International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its AbolitionThe day is marked to remember and honour the victims of the slave trade and the systemic racism they endured. It also hopes to foster critical analyses of such practices that might transform into modern forms of exploitation and slavery.
 The UN hoped that the day would be an opportunity for collective reconsideration of the historical causes, consequences, and methods of the tragedy.
 UN Secretary-General António Guterres said that while the transatlantic slave trade was abolished more than two centuries ago, the world continues “to live in its shadows of racial injustice”. He called upon the need to combat racism, dismantle racist structures, and reform institutions.
 Officially acknowledging that the royal family both fostered and profited from the enslavement of millions, and affirming a commitment to reparatory justice as the Caribbean Community has urged the governments of Britain and Europe to do, is the very least the present-day British monarchy owes to the descendants of enslaved people.
The Crown’s act of willful forgetting demonstrates how easy it was to overlook,then and now,the pivotal role played by the royal family in accelerating England’s involvement in the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the development of an Atlantic empire built on the backs and blood of African and Indigenous people.
On 23 August this year, we honour the memory of the men and women who, in Saint- Domingue in 1791, revolted and paved the way for the end of slavery and dehumanization. We honour their memory and that of all the other victims of the slave trade and slavery, for whom they stand..
We pay tribute to all those who campaigned, black and white, to abolish the trafficking of enslaved labour, particularly the enslaved African men and women themselves.  Once and for all, it is time to abolish human exploitation and to recognize the equal and unconditional dignity of each and every individual on Earth. Today, let us remember the victims and freedom fighters of the past so that they may inspire future generations to build just societies while continuing to oppose all forms of modern slavery, and remembering that ending Slavery's legacy of racism is  a global imperative for justice.
As we pause to remember the horrors of the past, we are driven by the acts of defiance and the relentless efforts that abolished slavery. Yet, amidst our progress, we're confronted with the unsettling truth that millions of people globally are still exploited in modern slavery, including over 100,000 in the UK alone.