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Jamaican's Finest Grooves - Clipping digital em áudio, vídeo, imagens e texto do melhor da música e cultura jamaicana no Brasil e no mundo. Histórias, novidades, curiosidades, bizarrices e afins!

31.7.06

Pedidos de Ziggy Marley para camarim surpreendem

O filho do lendário Bob Marley, Ziggy Marley, surpreendeu a quem achava que ele era todo natureba. O cantor, que se apresentará no Rio no dia 06 de outubro, na Fundição Progresso, pediu um estoque de vinho e vodka para o camarim do seu show.

Alguns biógrafos tratavam Ziggy Marley como tão natureba que só se alimentava de suquinhos de frutas.

O pedido de Marley só não foi mais estranho que o da diva pop Madonna, no braço londrino dos shows da "Confessions Tour". A cantora pediu um assento de privada novo para cada dia de show. Um comunicado ainda especificou que "o assento tem que ser inspecionado por minha equipe, depois instalado - com direito a um selo de qualidade - por bombeiros antes de cada noite do espetáculo".

25.7.06

Tuff Gong/Island and VP Records Team for Unprecedented Reggae Sales Campaign

Tuff Gong/Island and VP Records Team for Unprecedented Reggae Sales Campaign, "Blazing Reggae: Genesis To Revelation," Featuring Artists on Both Labels and Major Marketing Partners

SANTA MONICA, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- July 24, 2006 -- For the first time in music history, two powerhouse reggae labels are joining forces for a consumer and retail marketing campaign designed to tell the story of Jamaican music from past to present. For the unprecedented effort, dubbed "Blazing Reggae: Genesis To Revelation," Tuff Gong/Island and VP Records are also teaming with strategic partners for major promotions -- from consumers winning a chance to record a dub single at Tuff Gong Studios and having it distributed by VP to tie-ins with Adidas and Bob Marley's clothing line Zion Rootswear, CD kiosks at travel agencies, and flyaways to the Marley Resort & Spa opening in the Bahamas later this year.

"By promoting the catalogs of both labels, we hope to expand reggae's mainstream awareness," said Ramon Galbert, Marketing Director for UMe, which manages the Tuff Gong/Island repertoire. "Like many genres, reggae has numerous sub-genres and the combined marketing efforts from these two historic labels will expose consumers to many of those core sub-genres."

The campaign, which launches at the height of reggae summer (July) and runs through the back-to-school season (September), focuses on sales of original albums and compilations from Bob Marley & The Wailers, Toots & the Maytals, Burning Spear, Gregory Isaacs, Black Uhuru, Buju Banton, Jimmy Cliff, Dennis Brown, Bunny Wailer, Junior Murvin, Third World, Stephen Marley, Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley, Ziggy Marley, Shabba Ranks, Sean Paul, Yellowman, Garnet Silk, Dillinger, Capleton, Luciano, Beenie Man, Eek a Mouse, Barrington Levy, Lady Saw, Wayne Wonder, Jah Cure, and Bounty Killer plus a handful of movie soundtracks, including the classic "The Harder They Come."

Added Aaron Talbert, Director of Sales and Marketing for VP Records: "VP is known for having today's hottest reggae artists and today's top-selling reggae albums. We've kept up with the sounds of the street. By bringing together the reggae history of Tuff Gong/Island and the contemporary Caribbean culture of VP, we hope to appeal to a wider audience for reggae and for both labels."

Unique promotions with the Jamaican Tourist Board and www.bahamas.com include selling product online and via CD counter kiosks in travel agencies (a limited edition compilation is also expected) as well as several all-expenses paid consumer flyaway vacations to the Marley Resort made available to national/regional chains that set-up cohesive consumer POS/online promotions. Another promotion will offer fans the opportunity to fly to Jamaica to record their dub record at Tuff Gong Studios, have it pressed and then distributed at VP Records' network of stores.

For Adidas, limited edition t-shirts have been created to commemorate the historic reggae campaign and will tie-in with the new Adidas "Kingston" clothing line to be introduced in the fall. Zion Rootswear, from PacSun Clothing, will launch a back-to-school promotion.

Sound Clash events -- Tuff Gong vs. VP -- will take place at clubs and select indie and key chain retail venues, accompanied by major outdoor advertising and street promotion. Print advertising has already begun for "Blazing Reggae: Genesis To Revelation," including in the Reggae Festival Guide, The Fader and Jamaican weeklies in New York, Miami and Los Angeles. Each participating national account may choose from a selection of national print partners (Rolling Stone, Vibe, Spin, The Fader, Paste, Relix, VICE, Global Rhythm, Mass Appeal) and local/regional options.

A half-hour Tuff Gong video show centered on the campaign and hosted by Rohan Marley will feature videos, interviews and live performances. The special is expected to premiere online before running on national cable. There will also be online advertising for "Blazing Reggae: Genesis To Revelation."

Other retail marketing tools to be made available are campaign branded t-shirts for clerk/retail added value promotions, restaurant placemats serviced to select Jamaican restaurants and grocery stores in key markets, posters, header cards, dump bins, commemorative sales folders for one-stops, urban core and VP distributed accounts, and a CD sampler hosted by legendary Jamaican radio personality Barry G.

23.7.06

Father U-Roy inna Studio session 70´s

Como diz U-Roy, "This Station Move The Nation With Version" , portanto, mais um...

Soul Syndicate Band + Tonny Tuff - 1979 Live Inna Yard -"Jah Jah Music"

Não resisti em publicar mais este videozinho! Soul Syndicate, das melhores...

Culture - Studio Recording 70`s - Natty Dread Taking Over

Como já diz o título, videozinho da década de 70 do Culture, que mostra a real dentro dos estúdios jamaicanos na época (e se bobear até hoje), todo mundo junto na mesma salinha, sem essa de separar os instrumentos e microfones e creio eu, gravando apenas em 2 canais.

Movie Script on Bob Marley & the Wailers Black Beatles

Fort Lauderdale, FL - A Fort Lauderdale man copyrights movie script entitled The Black Beatles the unauthorized story of legendary reggae group, Bob Marley and the Wailers. The story is about the famed Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer rise to stardom from their humble beginnings in Kingston, Jamaica until their ultimate breakup as a group.

Author John Dixon says that, "A Hollywood motion picture about this historical and celebrated group is well overdue and now is the time to bring it to the big screen." The drama is based around both fictional and factual events in order to make it a successful Hollywood motion picture at the box office. Author John Dixon, who is spiritually inspired by the Wailers says that, "I can not wait until this great story hit the big screen. The idea is to let the whole world know how truly extraordinary this group became and present an honorary dedication to the group."

The novice screenwriter says that the story will focus on each individual group member of the band and not just Bob Marley. The script will also help to gain further exposure and appreciation for each of the group members musical contributions, wisdom and struggles for equality."

Two of the group members Bob Marley and Peter Tosh are now deceased and survived by living legend and rastaman, Bunny Wailer (Jah B). The author's current plans are to submit the script to the upcoming Bill Cosby screenwriting contest and American Black Film Festival in Miami, Florida.

"I would prefer the Black Beatles script be made into a big screen blockbuster instead of a television mini series," says Dixon. "Can you imagine Terrence Howard as Bob Marley, Samuel L. Jackson as Peter Tosh, Don Cheadale as Bunny Wailer and Nick Nolte as Chris Blackwell?"

The Black Beatles motion picture screenplay will be in theaters near you soon, for additional information please visit www.blackbeatles.com .

REGGAE SINGS OF AFRICA



"We are the descendants of a suffering people; we are the descendants of a people determined to suffer no longer. If Europe is for the Europeans, then Africa shall be for the Black people of the world. We say it, we mean it ..."

­ Marcus Garvey

AFRICA IS the mother of countless nations, whose children are spread across the globe. Reggae music has long had a history of social consciousness that evokes the sentiments of African-minded men, such as, Marcus Garvey. Jamaican performers, such as, Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Sugar Minott, Buju Banton, Garnet Silk, and many more, have propagated the image of Africa in a variety of ways through their music.

Rastafarian philosopher, Mutabaruka says, "Most themes in reggae music is based around Africa, especially in the '70s. Men, such as, Peter Tosh and Mighty Diamonds had songs centred around Africa. I don't know any artiste in the '70s who didn't address tenets of the Rastafari philosophy of Africa as a homeland. Who wasn't affected by the apartheid?"

ANCESTRAL CONNECTION

Jamaicans were affected owing to our ancestral connection with the motherland. According to Kwaku Asante-Darko, lecturer at the National University of Lesotho on www.arts.uwa.edu.au/motsplurials/mp/600ked.html, "On the pan-Africanist dimension of reggae music and its specific intellectual and emotional appeal are largely explicable in the light of the African origins of its Jamaican pioneers".

"Their historical experiences and social struggles are reflected in the works of several of their musicians, who see their musical profession partly as the acceptance of a challenge to fulfil a duty, which Bob Marley describes as 'we free our people with music'."

Some performers showed concern for Africa, such as, Bob Marley in Zimbabwe, while others anticipated going to Africa as Dennis Brown did when he sang "Africa we want to go" in Africa. Reggae stars such as Sugar Minott, Bunny Wailer, and Bob Marley, sing of a pan-African return to the fatherland in their songs, River Jordan, Fig Tree and Zion Train, respectively

THE IDEAL

In Till I'm Laid to Rest by Buju Banton, Africa is presented as the ideal, as he chants, "Ethiopia awaits all prince and princess". For others, Africa is mother, as Peter Tosh postulates in Mama Africa with "Long time me no see you Mama/They took me away from you Mama /Long before I was born." When several reggae musicians, including Jimmy Cliff, toured Africa in the late 1970s, the African liberation wars were in full gear, or had already ended in countries like Guinea Bissau, Angola, Mozambique, Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe). Songs, such as, War and Apartheid by Marley and Tosh, respectively, are examples of reggae music that lauded the liberation effort in Africa.

Yet, Africa is also seen as home, expressed by Garnet Silk in the '90s with Hello Mama Africa, when he sings, "Say Mama Africa a yours and mine/Own a continent no island never deh pon mi mind/This was well-orchestrated plan from long time/Soon I shall be home and everything will be fine.

Others in the 70s were as affected by the apartheid movement as those directly involvement. Aparatheid and its end evoked a number of songs such as Mutabaruka's Mandela Beware.

"My 'free up the land' poem and my song Mandela Beware expressed how we felt about what was taking place in South Africa. Mandela must beware and see the warning of the lack of militancy that characterised the time after he was released from prison. Because of the apartheid time in the 70s, music came out of the black movement, Jamaican people were searching for identity. A lot of songs were conceived out of that, even my earlier poems were from that time," Mutabaruka said.

"A number of songs were concerned with going to Africa, repatriation, which is the Rastafarian theme," he said.

THEME OF REPATRIATION

Asante-Darko writes: "Bob Marley's song Exodus presents the theme of repatriation in a particularly captivating manner. This is seen mainly by his specific reference to Africa as the 'Fatherland' of the Black man. He equally emphasises the need to leave 'Babylon', the place of captivity where Black people face segregation rather than integration. Reggae music, like jazz and blues, is a bridge of sound that ensures safe passage across the many bodies of water that dis/connect African peoples dispersed across the globe."

This message of connecting the races and going across the waters back to Africa was expressed before Bob Marley's time. Mutabaruka concurs that "even before the 70's Alton Ellis had a song Going Back to Africa, singing "I'm gonna get there". The sentiment of the early ska, the titles of the instrumental mention Africa. That was before Rasta become so popular. Rastafari didn't have churches or any outlet to further our propaganda, so the music became the outlet. A lot of people in the world listen to it. Music is a weapon of intention for the Rastafari movement and it was well used".

Reggae music conveyed a social consciousness that moved persons of all races and creeds, bringing together the Diaspora. Mutabaruka relates that "Winnie Mandela herself told me of how the Rasta man and reggae music helped to strengthen them. Reggae music helped them so much in their time of struggle. Even in Zimbabwe, soldiers expressed that when they were in the jungle the music was their only whim of hope, that half-way across the world there were people that cared about them. Reggae music is one of the most unifying instruments, more than even politicians. Reggae music is why Jamaica is recognised as a cultural mecca".

GOOD ORATORY

And Asante-Darko agrees that "reggae artists reveals striking qualities of good oratory. One equally witnesses the deployment of both classical, traditional and innovative rhetorical skills to the cause of the political independence, economic advancement and the restoration of the racial pride of Black peoples the world over. Such artistic representation of the Negro's experience unites the darker people of Africa to those of America and to all everywhere in whom burns the unfulfilled wish for freedom, equality and dignity".

These expressions that freedom and equality could be achieved through Africa were first advocated by Marcus Garvey and musicians used their music as a means propagating the cause that Africa was for black people. "The African sentiment was related to the legacy of Marcus Garvey," Mutabaruka said.

Asante-Darko examines the issue, stating "in Jamaica reggae begun as a reaction to British colonial rule. Its inclination towards the pan-Africanist perspective of the Jamaican nationalist and pan-Africanist, Marcus Garvey is its marked feature. The theme of Africa's past suffering and promising future is closely linked to the 'Back to Africa' advocacy. Marcus Garvey, for his part, saw the solution to this problem (of the discrimination due to a colour line) as the return of Africans to the continent from which they originated. The advocacy of a literal return to Africa came to be championed in reggae music. The songs Exodus, Marcus Garvey and Black Starliner Must Come by Bob Marley and the Wailers, Burning Spear and Culture respectively are indications of this. They all speak of the need to fulfil the aspirations of all peoples of African descent by moving (metaphorically or literally) to Africa, which is to all intents and purposes the bona fide possession of the Black man".

SLANGS AND SAYINGS

The presence of Africa in reggae music helped to spawn many slangs and sayings that are still used today. They are sayings that evoke the Caribbean people's need for freedom from sufferation and discrimination, as well as evoke the intellectual foundation of Rasta. Asante-Darko explains that "phrases and expressions such as 'a Blackman Redemption', 'black man time again', 'Black Star Liner', ' 'fight for our right', 'the Babylon system is a vampire', or 'Jah will mow down the concrete jungle', 'Downpressor man', 'them belly full but we hungry', 'burning and looting', 'Brothers have to fight against apartheid' are expressions intended to attract and hold the social, political and economic attention of a pan-African audience".

Kwasku Asante-Darko concludes that "the pan-Africanist dimensions of reggae music may be summed up by indicating that whatever its mood - the recriminatory anger of Peter Tosh, the mystical outburst of Culture and Burning Spear, the encomium of ancestral and pre-colonial figures of Alpha Blondy and the hopeful lamentation of Lucky Dube - one notices a common factor of commitment to the African cause. These songs took the struggle of African revivalism from the arena of political discourse to the masses of people. In this sense reggae music can be said to be a significant instrument in the pan-Africanist concern".

Whatever the cause, whatever the means, Africa has been an undeniable part of reggae music. In turn reggae music has beyond doubt influenced the world. But is the theme of Africa still alive today? There is wealth of conscious music present today, but not as large and influential as its predecessors. However Mutabaruka claims that Africa and Rasta still live on. "Through Sizzla, Capleton, I-Wayne Rasta is still alive and so is the theme of Africa. The theme is still Africa and Rasta," Mutabaruka said.

21.7.06

Black Uhuru

Black Uhuru não preciso nem dizer o quanto são bons, ainda mais com essa dupla revolucionária, "The Riddim Twins" Sly & Robbie, a frente da banda. Videozinho de 1981.

Bunny Wailer Crosses Cultures On New Album

July 20, 2006, 11:00 AM ET
Wes Orshoski, N.Y.
Reggae icon Bunny Wailer says his next studio record will find him dabbling in more mainstreams sounds and styles, and embracing the popular music of America and England.

"I'm taking time out in this album to play other musical cultures, like hip-hop, R&B, rap, you name it," the 59-year-old Wailer tells Billboard.com, noting that his self-described "crossover" album will be titled "Cross Culture."

"I've been acquainted with America's music and British music over the years, and I've been absorbing, listening, learning and accepting those things people playing [that] music would accept from being acquainted to reggae," he continues. "Because as you know, there's a lot of other artists who take time out to play reggae music."

Among the songs to be included on the disc is a cover of the Sly & the Family Stone classic "Family Affair," an interesting choice, as Wailer opened for the group in the early '70s while still a member of the Wailers. "Cross Culture" will be released on his own Solomonic label and licensed for international release and distribution.

With the passing of Bob Marley of cancer in 1981 and the slaying of Peter Tosh in 1987, Wailer is the only living original member of the Wailers, Jamaica's greatest reggae group. Since leaving the band in 1974, he has continually recorded but only made sporadic live appearances.

Despite leaving Marley and company as the Wailers were on the cusp of an international breakthrough, Wailer, born Bunny Livingston, remained friends with his bandmates, with whom he shares relatives.

Earlier this summer, he made the unexpected announcement that he would join Marley's sons Ziggy and Stephen for a brief tour of the U.S., which kicks off Aug. 6 at the annual Reggae on the River festival in Piercy, Calif.

Of the decision, Wailer says, "It was something that was destined to be. I had to accept life for what it's worth. And I think at this time, it's worth the trip of going together with sons and family, and the nephews. That's something that was destined to be by the will of the most high. We don't make plans, we fall into plans."

CD REVIEW : Impressive compilation of roots rocking reggae




CD: King at the Controls: King Jammy Essential Hits From Reggae's Digital Revolution (1985-1989)

ARTISTE: Various, all produced by Lloyd 'King Jammy' James

LABEL: VP Records

IT IS a long title for a CD and this two-disc collection (the second is DVD) earns every syllable.

Contrary to what might be expected from a label and sound system renowned for the raunchiness of Shabba and Bailey (both appear with Peenie Peenie and One Scotch, done in tandem with Chaka Demus, respectively), Essential Hits contains a good chunk of roots reggae, done digital style.

It actually starts out with Half Pint's Money Man Skank and there is the genuine Black Uhuru's I Love King Selassie (which has nowhere near the punch that the live, Sly and Robbie backed version on the Island collection packs), as well as Admiral Tibet's Serious Time (the original, not the remake with Shabba and Ninja).

LOVER'S SIDE

On the lover's side, Dennis Brown's The Exit makes the cut and John Holt's If I Were a Carpenter is a surprise (did not know it was a digital era, much less a Jammy's, production), while Frankie Paul's I Know The Score brings Essential Hits to gentle closure.

There are some serious cuts among the other popular songs. Pinchers' gleeful grinding anticipatory Agony, Admiral Bailey's rollicking crotch classic Puy, Nitty Gritty's Run Down The World (a rahtid bassline made for children to be made to, or at least for rehearsals to be conducted) and of course the song and rhythm that jump-started digital reggae, Wayne Smith's Under Me Sleng Teng among them.

So are some lesser known tracks, far lesser known tracks, like Nicodemus' Father Jungle Rock, delivered in the distinctive mixture of baritone and monotone, which harks back to the oversimplified lyrics of an earlier time ("c-a-t dat a cat/r-a-t dat a rat/f-a-t dat a fat) before making a definitive statement on the female form ("a tell yu any gal wid dem bottom no fat/dem cyaan get no medal fi dat"). Flattay! Scoobay!

Leroy Gibbon's She's My Baby highlights the extra crisp delivery of a phenomenal voice that went silent.

The notes in the sleeve are extensive, with pictures of people like Jammy's sound system selector Tupps as well as Waterhouse Gully.

TRACK LISTING

1. Money Man Skank (Half Pint)

2. If I Were a Carpenter (John Holt)

3. Agony (Pinchers)

4. Punaany (Admiral Bailey)

5. Peenie Peenie (Shabba Ranks)

6. I Love King Selassie (Black Uhuru)

7. Father Jungle Rock (Nicodemus)

8. Water Pumping (Johnny Osbourne)

9. Boom-Shack-A-Lack (Junior Reid)

10. Deh Wid You (Super Black)

11. Children of the Ghetto (Cocoa Tea)

12. The Exit (Dennis Brown)

13. Run Down The World (Nitty Gritty)

14. Under Mi Sleng Teng (Wayne Smith)

15. She's My Baby (Leroy Gibbon)

16. Rock Them One By One (Eccleton Jarrett)

17. Let off Supum (Leroy Smart)

18. One Scotch (Admiral Bailey and Chaka Demus)

19. Serious Time (Admiral Tibet)

20. I Know The Score (Frankie Paul)

Radiohead go reggae!



No they haven't chilled out, its a tribute album

Radiohead's classic album 'OK Computer' has been entirely re-recorded, nine years after its original release.

However fans should not worry, the band themselves haven't tampered with their masterpiece. Rather the record the latest subject of the Easy Star reggae label's cheeky tribute recordings.

Three and-a-half years ago, the Easy Star Allstars released 'Dub Side Of The Moon', a reggae adaptation of Pink Floyd's 'Dark Side Of The Moon'. And for its follow-up, 'Radiodread', the collective have tackled 'OK Computer'.

Easy Star's explained: "We wanted to do something that no-one would anticipate, something that would take us to a new place altogether."

And bandmate Lem Oppenheimer said of the logic behind the project: "Reggae music, born in opposition to colonial oppression, conveys hope in the bleakest moments. Likewise, there is humour and hope in the voices of 'OK Computer''s lyrics, and that's where we found the deepest connections with the reggae spirit."

Released on August 21, 'Radiodread' features an array of guest vocalists, including Horace Andy on 'Airbag', Citizen Cope on 'Karma Police' and Frankie Paul on'Lucky' .

Alive, More Than Ever, Lee Scratch Perry

O xamã do reggae, Lee "Scratch" Perry, edita um novo álbum ao vivo, intitulado "Alive, More Than Ever". Longe dos seus The Upsetters, mas em parceria com uma banda europeia.

The Mighty Upsetter. The Man. O homem. O reggae. O dub. O louco. O feiticeiro de Oz da baixa de Kingston. Lee "Scratch" Perry. O último dos moicanos depois do desaparecimento de Sir Coxsone Dodd e Desmond Dekker. Sem esquecer Jimmy Cliff, Max Romeo, Burning Spear, Toots & The Maytals, entre outros. Mas Lee "Scratch" Perry é o actual sumo pontífice do reggae. Ponto.

Juntamente com a sua nova banda, The White Belly Rats, coletivo suíço liderado por DJ Startrek, Lee Perry voltou à estrada para a apresentação de "Panic in Babylon", editado em 2004.

Ao cabo de sete décadas de vida, este artista ainda tem a distinta lata de editar um álbum ao vivo diretamente captado da mesa de mistura. Sem overdubs, remendos, ou acrescentar o que quer que seja. É um pré-happening. O dub enrolado na hora. A história feita ao segundo.

Mais vivo do que nunca, em tradução livre. Como se quer a arte. Lee "Scratch" Perry mantêm-se pronto e ativo.

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Nota: Algumas palavras soam "estranhas", mas é que o texto foi escrito por repórter de Portugal, como vocês podem verificar clicando no título.

20.7.06

Reggae superstar returns to B.R.

Victor Essiet & The Mandators to play at Club Culture

Carrying the message of “one love, one world,” Nigerian reggae sensation Victor Essiet returns to Baton Rouge for two shows Wednesday and Thursday at Club Culture.

Essiet will perform with his band, The Mandators, featuring his entourage of four musicians and two back-up singers.


ictor Essiet & The Mandators will perform at 11 p.m. tonight and Thursday at Club Culture.

After seeking political asylum from Nigeria in 1998, the reggae musician moved to Los Angeles, where he released "Power of the People," a compilation album of his hits throughout Africa. Through Mystic Records, Essiet then recorded a second album, “Crucial,” which earned him the Best New Entertainer Award in 1999 from the International Reggae and World Music Awards in Atlanta.

Essiet also joined with Jamaican “riddim twins” Sly & Robbie, a drum-and-bass duo who has worked with Peter Tosh, Mick Jagger, Joe Cocker, Bob Dylan and Cindy Lauper.

The Nigerian’s dynamic recording sessions with Sly & Robbie resulted in his latest album, “One Love, One World,” released through Mystic in stores on Independence Day. The 13-track album includes two Bob Marley covers, “Dem Belly Full” and “Mi Friend,” and Dolly Parton's "I Love You."

Essiet moves beyond the limits of redundant reggae beats and treats listeners to a fresh, airy sound that includes some hip-hop.

“It’s going to be one of the greatest shows ever seen. It’s going to be great,” said Essiet, as he promised a first-class performance. “Everybody who likes good shows should come out to Club Culture and see this show and support reggae music, because it carries the message of one love, one world as a people.”

Victor Essiet & The Mandators play Wednesday and Thursday, starting at 11 p.m. at Club Culture, 450 Oklahoma St., off Nicholson between downtown and LSU. Tickets are $25, and venue owner Olu Akin-Fawehinmi will cook his well-known curry chicken.

On the Internet:
http://www.victoressiet.com
http://www.myspace.com/victoressiet

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Nota: Posto esta mensagem por não conhecer o artista mencionado e portanto buscar maiores infos.

Reggae Concert with Anti-Gay Musicians Cancelled

A reggae concert featuring artists who sing anti-gay lyrics has been cancelled—resulting in Black LGBT activists declaring victory.

LIFEbeat, an AIDS organization that is connected with the music industry, has cancelled its Reggae Beat Jumpoff, which was scheduled for July 18 at New York’s Webster Hall. According to a statement from the group, “ [ w ] hile the organization’s staff and board believe very strongly in the positive purpose and intention of this event, the possibility of violence at the concert from the firestorm incited by a select group of activists makes canceling the event the only responsible action.”

LIFEbeat was criticized by Black gay activists and bloggers after it was announced that Jamaican dancehall artists Beenie Man and the group T.O.K. were scheduled to perform, according to the Washington Post. A Beenie Man song calls for a lesbian hanging, and T.O.K suggests in a song that gay men be burned. In statements released in mid-July, T.O.K. said it had “matured over the years,” and Beenie Man said, “AIDS is an epidemic that doesn’t discriminate. It’s not a gay or a straight thing, it is a fight for life.”

The concert organizer had rejected the anti-gay lyrics, but said including the artists would help reach a larger audience thanks to the popularity of their music.

Jasmyne Cannick, one of the bloggers, indicated in a statement that although the activists are thrilled with the cancellation, “no threats of violence were ever made against LIFEbeat’s staff and board of directors, nor the concert.” Activists are now urging LIFEbeat to stage with a new concert with gay-friendly artists and to donate the proceeds to J-FLAG, The Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays.

Indeed, in a statement issue later by LIFEbeat, John Cannelli, the group’s executive director supported Cannick’s assertion: “We also want to clarify the concerns of violence we felt. Those concerns didn't stem from any threats from activists or members of the Caribbean American community. They stemmed from threatening phone calls our office received from random individuals that led to concerns for the safety of our staff and others.”

In the same statement, Cannelli added, “In our desire to do something positive within the Caribbean-American community, we didn't realize the depth of the hurt in the GLBT community around the lyrics of these artists.”

Among the activists/bloggers who participated in the protest were Cannick, Keith Boykin, FemmeNoir, Troy Notorious, Woubi-Yossi Collective and The 7 Magazine.

18.7.06

Herchcovitch une Bob Marley a judeus ortodoxos

Recado do estilista é liberdade total para o verão 2007

Sabina Deweik

SÃO PAULO - Rastafaris judaicos. Será que é possível unir Bob Marley a referências da vestimenta dos judeus ortodoxos e a isso adicionar uma pitada de África em estampas supermodernas? Pelas mãos de Alexandre Herchcovitch fica comprovado que sua coleção masculina para o Verão 2007 dá conta do recado. O casting é formado de meninos que usam dreadlocks, e, já no primeiro look, a estranheza das batas enormes, com colares do símbolo da estrela de David.




Os macacões são referência importante para o estilista, que resolve decompô-lo de diversas maneiras: seja recuperando ternos de alfaiataria seja acoplando-os a saias pregueadas seja em jeans. O fio condutor é unir peças, que normalmente são desconectadas como camisas e saias, camisas e calças, calças e partes de cima de macacões - tudo isso na mesma peça. Para complicar a história, Herchcovitch coloca cordões de algodão pendurado nos looks, referência esta explícita aos chamados "tsitsits", franjas normalmente usadas pelos judeus ortodoxos.

As estampas também se misturam sem preconceito: são xadrezes, listrados típicos da camisaria, prints de imagens de Bob Marley e até estampas de savanas africanas com direito a zebras e girafas em moletons.

As calças da coleção vem com cós bem baixo, mais curtas e com punhos no tornozelo, as bermudas são peças chave assim como os camisões tipo bata e as t-shirts presas a sainhas. Na cartela de cores tons suaves como rosa e amarelo e muitos motivos distintos. Nos pés a primeira Melissa desenvolvida para homens pelo estilista.

E a mistura de raças e credos está feita. Liberdade total para o Verão 2007. Este é o recado do estilista.

Verão de Herchcovitch celebra união entre religiões

SÃO PAULO (Reuters) - O estilista Alexandre Herchcovitch usou as religiões judaica e rastafári, muito popular na Jamaica, como fontes de inspiração para criar uma coleção masculina leve e solta, bem de acordo com o verão brasileiro.


Apresentado na tarde deste sábado, no Museu de Arte Moderna (MAM), no quarto dia do São Paulo Fashion Week, o desfile trouxe modelos com dread-locks que exibiram criações confortáveis, como macacões.

"Trabalhei com peças de tecidos diferentes", explicou Herchcovitch a jornalistas, após o desfile, referindo-se à mistura de calças de alfaiataria com moletons.

Segundo o estilista, a origem da cultura rastafári está relacionada ao judaísmo. "A religião rastafári foi fundada na Etiópia, e os rastafári eram uma das doze tribos de Israel", explicou.

Os looks mais acinturados ficaram por conta dos paletós, que vieram combinados a camisas listradas ou a camisetas estampadas.

Ao contrário da coleção feminina, a paleta de cores priorizou os tons claros, com predomínio de azul, bege e verde.

A estamparia bebia diretamente da Jamaica, com coqueiros em camisetas e savanas em calças e em alguns paletós. As referências ao judaísmo apareceram nas estrelas-de-davi usadas como medalhões pelos modelos e na cor azul, que remetia à bandeira branca e azul de Israel.

O toque irreverente ficou por conta dos porta-isqueiros que viraram colares. "O porta-isqueiro remete à Jamaica", disse o estilista, lembrando o consumo de maconha pelos adeptos da religião rastafári.

Johnny Luxo, Constanza Pascolato, Supla e Erika Palomino acompanharam o desfile da primeira fila.

(Por Fernanda Schimidt)

Dread, beat and blood

Novo livro sobre Marley, in english!

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Late 1976, and rival political factions are warring on the streets of Kingston, Jamaica, with only Bob Marley calling for peace. In an exclusive extract from her major new book, Vivien Goldman remembers life with Marley at his home on Hope Road and reveals exactly what happened when gunmen came to kill him

Sunday July 16, 2006
Observer Music Monthly

'Money is like water in the sea,' Bob Marley insisted earnestly on that late 1976 afternoon as our conversation by the Sheraton pool in Kingston turned to business and politics. 'People work for money, den dem don't want to split it. It's that kind of attitude,' he continued scornfully. 'So much guys have so much - too much - while so many have nothing at all. We don't feel like that is right, because it don't take a guy a hundred million dollars to keep him satisfied. Everybody have to live. Michael Manley say 'im wan' help poor people... They feel something good is gonna happen,' he said reflectively, then continued: 'We need a change from what it was. It couldn't get worse than that.' Sounding more sure, he concluded fiercely, almost defiantly, 'You have to share. I don't care if it sounds political or whatever it is, but people have to share.

Grateful dread... Bob Marley on Hellshire beach, 1973. Photograph: Esther Anderson/Corbis


Bob's last comment might sound odd: why should the outspoken revolutionary poet be so concerned about anyone's political misinterpretation? But we were speaking just days before the free Smile Jamaica concert he was due to play for the people, and large crowds are always volatile. Bob was conscious of the heightened tension that always surrounded the build-up to a Jamaican election. His generous humanist statement could be labeled as socialism. People might say he was definitively backing Michael Manley's People's National Party (PNP), with its affiliation to Castro and Russia, and rejecting the Jamaican Labour Party (JLP), headed by Edward Seaga, dubbed in widespread graffiti as 'CIA-ga' because of the American secret service's overt support of his team. That could mean trouble.

Times had changed since Bob and his wife Rita had backed Manley in the 1972 election. The island seemed to be full of guns. People were more desperate and violent, and Bob was a far more public figure. Now he had to screen every word and be extra-careful not to be misunderstood.

For an effectively fatherless mixed-race child of the rural areas and stifling ghettoes to be receiving more acclaim than any Jamaican ever was a wake-up call that a new society had actually arrived. Bob's international success made him a symbol of a troubled island's hopes. He now found himself in the unenviable position of being the prize of a tug-of-war between the island's two political parties. As the material for his album Exodus began to brew in 1976, the island was convulsed with lethal political agitation, and Bob's star status did not confer immunity - rather, it was the reverse. 'People see him as a big man now, gone international,' as his boyhood friend Mikey Smith explains. 'Everyone want Bob Marley deh 'pon their team.'

Less than two decades after Jamaican independence, the system left behind by the British had frayed, and the infrastructure was crumbling. I remember arriving in Jamaica from Los Angeles once, having been shopping earlier that day, and how obscene it was to compare LA supermarkets' towering stacks of produce with the island supermarkets, with shelves so empty they seemed to sell air. There was music, style and creativity in abundance, but shortages of everything else from rice to rolling papers. Driving anywhere was an adventure, as the ancient taxis seemed to be held together with rubber bands and hope, and the roads all over the island had potholes like craters. Power cuts were as regular as police roadblocks.

Deadly tribal wars, the seeds of which had been planted centuries before, were being fought between the opposing JLP and PNP areas. Families turned against one another from block to block. People risked death to cross Kingston's disputed areas, such as the one between Fifth and Seventh Streets, or the several desolate areas where soldiers camped out and extracted rough justice from any passer-by.

Bob had his own way of dealing with it. During another conversation, when he paused from taking energetic puffs on a communal 'chalice' and passed it on, I asked if he was bothered much by the police. 'I hardly ever on the streets to get stopped. I is a man who don't really travel up and down too much,' he replied laconically. Effectively, the stress on the streets was keeping Bob at home, just like his bred'ren in the ghetto.

When his plan for a free concert became known, he was approached separately by the JLP and the PNP, both eager for his support, but he chose to do a non-aligned event, albeit inevitably with government approval. 'Michael [Manley] jumped on it with full endorsement,' says Wailers' art director Neville Garrick. 'He said, "All you guys have to do is rehearse."' At first Manley proposed that the show be held on the lawns at Jamaica House, the Prime Minister's official residence. 'No, mek it somewhere central that don't have no political affiliation,' Bob insisted.

Finally, the show was billed as a collaboration between the Wailers and the government's cultural office. So Bob was righteously angered when it was sprung on him that the election date had been brought forward to coincide with the Smile Jamaica show. Despite his best intentions, the Wailers's noble offering to the people had effectively been co-opted by Manley's PNP. The populist project now appeared to be little more than a promotional gig in the very territorial spirit Bob was trying to discourage. It was a cynical move on the PNP's part, which took a lot of the joy out of the idea. The lightly sardonic voice of Bob's lawyer, Diane Jobson, drops uncannily into Bob's rasping snarl as she recalls how he said, 'Diane, dem want to use me to draw crowd fe dem politricks.'

Bob had encouraged his Hope Road home in Kingston to become a 'safe house,' a neutral zone, in which youths caught up in the turmoil of the warring political factions could hang out and reason away from the old violent mindset. At a certain point, Bob's utopian vision of the yard as sanctuary was bound to collide with street conflicts. He was in a delicate position, and to add to the irony, the enemies Bob was trying to reconcile were often relations, old neighbours and schoolmates.

I had been invited to stay at Hope Road, and around 5.30 one morning I woke, restless, and looked out of my bedroom window. Bob was standing in the otherwise quiet yard under the big mango tree, talking angrily to two men whom I couldn't see clearly. There was something ominous in their exchange. Even at a distance, Bob's body language was different from anything I'd seen before; tense and taut, he was brusquely intent on making his point. It was unsettling - and clearly a very private moment. I turned away and went back to bed. But sleep wasn't easy. For me, this brief and somehow troubling glimpse suggested a new side to this complex man, the rough one that gave him the name Tuff Gong.

Among those who've reasoned about Bob's Exodus, it's usually held that the album is wholly a product of the traumatic event that was about to take place. But in reality, Bob already sensed that he was living in a time where imminent horror coloured everyday beauty. Proof positive: relaxing in the rehearsal room late one night, I heard music floating up from below, so I drifted down the stairs that ran outside the building. The moonlit yard under the mango tree was crowded with around 15 people sitting on the ground, the downtown kids who found refuge there and the Dreads who made it home. Tucked under the veranda of the little house was a bedroom with nothing but some hooks on the wall, a chair, and Bob, in dusty sandals and shorts, sitting on the edge of a narrow iron bed. It was just the kind of scenario that comes to mind when Bob lilts through the lines, 'We'll share the shelter/Of my single bed' on 'Is This Love'. Bob was playing his guitar, trying on chords for size.

A young girl sat at the other end of the bed, her eyes fixed on Bob. He sang to her and to all of us as he strummed wrath and reality on his 12-string acoustic. His picking provided rhythm and hints of harmony as he sang, 'Guiltiness, rest on their conscience, oh yeah...'

Everyone there was absorbed by the unaffected anger that stalked his crisp delivery. The words hit home to anyone who'd ever been aware of injustice in their lives - which meant everyone present, and many who would eventually hear the song in its majestic cut on the Exodus album.

For many around town, 3 December 1976 was proving a difficult day, anyway. Bob's label boss Chris Blackwell was on his way to Hope Road when he stopped off at Lee Perry's Black Ark to check out some new tracks. Sitting in the small, womb-like control room, covered with red, green, and black fake fur and stills from kung-fu flicks and westerns of the spaghetti and Hollywood varieties, Blackwell was entranced by the neon towers and canyons of Perry's spacey new track, 'Dreadlocks in Moonlight', topped with the producer's own warbling vocals. 'Me waan the Gong to voice dis ya one,' explained Scratch. Blackwell said: 'No. You can't improve on your own version. This is great. Make me a tape to carry.'

So he sat down to watch Scratch work. No one mixed like Scratch. The skinny little man in a peak cap, undershirt and shorts danced with the four-track Teac machine from which he coaxed such shattering sounds. Darting in toward the knobs and faders, he'd flick them as if flame flashed from his fingertips, then twirl and pirouette, dipping back just in time to catch the beat. Blackwell was unsurprised when technical hitches made the promised few minutes stretch into over an hour. He resigned himself to being late for the Wailers' rehearsal.

For Neville Garrick, the day was also not going as planned. Heading for rehearsal, he was stopped by a policeman and arrested for weed. Neville was already somewhat edgy, still shaken by the reaction he'd got when handing out his newly designed stickers for the Smile Jamaica concert to some Dread friends. One man retorted: 'Me no put no political label deh pon my vehicle, Rasta.' Garrick was confused, thinking everyone should know that Bob was performing an apolitical event. But then he looked at his own design again, and realised that the rising sun he'd drawn to symbolise the dawning of a new, more loving island bore a close resemblance to the PNP logo.

Over at the villa of Dermot Hussey, the island's most noted reggae broadcaster, the Wailers' keyboard player, Tyrone Downey, was lying on the floor trying to relax from the stress that had been going down at Hope Road. Sensitive and imaginative, Downey had been the baby of the Wailers, a protege of Family Man, who had first used him on sessions when Downey was 12. He'd been nicknamed 'Jumpy' when he first went on the road because of his wariness. Now Downey was legitimately nervous. Ever since the change of the election date that had so alarmed Bob, men had been bearing down on Hope Road, dropping heavy warnings to the singer. 'Me hope you know what you a do, Dread,' they would say, looking grim.

Hussey offered to drop off Downey and his girlfriend at Hope Road for the rehearsal on his way to do Progressions, his 8pm radio show. 'I'll be back,' Hussey announced as he pulled away from Hope Road. He was in the habit of stopping by number 56 when Bob was readying for a tour, and as the rehearsals went on from nine at night until two in the morning, Hussey had no intention of missing out on that night's session, bad vibes or not.

He didn't know about the two plainclothes cops who had been stationed outside the house during rehearsals, due to the gravity of the political situation, and thus didn't notice their absence.

Diane Jobson had arrived at Hope Road in good spirits, bearing especially sweet grapefruit and some herb from Bob's favourite grower. But soon a profound nausea she'd never experienced before washed over her. 'Is you hold de nice spliff, Diane?' Bob called out. Chuckling, she handed over some luscious buds and went to relax and play with some of the yard children in Neville Garrick's little house in the compound.

In the newly built narrow galley kitchen by the rehearsal room, breezy and bright with a door at each end, Gilly the cook's blender was whirring as he sliced and diced fruit with quick precision. He could hear the Wailers' rehearsal perfectly. They had already polished 'Baby We've Got a Date', 'Trench Town Rock', 'Midnight Ravers', and 'Rastaman Chant'. Gilly remembers that Bob called a break, saying: 'Fams, you tek over rehearsin' the horns.' So Family Man Barrett led David Madden and the Zap Pow Horns into 'Rastaman Vibration'. Now that the Smile Jamaica show was almost upon them, everyone was looking forward to it, despite the tension in the town. Bob was light-hearted, joking around with Fams and Carly Barrett, who was sitting on a stool. Juggling the fat grapefruit Diane had brought, he asked Garrick to drive Judy Mowatt of his backing group, the I-Threes, to her Bull Bay home, a couple of hours away. She had had bad dreams the previous night and was still shaken. Garrick protested; not only did he want to see the rest of the rehearsal, but the best herbsman on the island was due to pass through with his wares. It was getting dangerously near Christmas, when good weed is hard to come by, and Garrick planned to lay in a store. 'Neville, you gwan like you love herb more than the rest of we,' teased Bob. 'Don't worry, we gwan hold some for you.'

Thus reassured, and seeing fatigue in Judy's kindly eyes, Garrick took the keys to Bob's new silver BMW and they set off. Now, this was a famous set of wheels, chosen because the initials suggested Bob Marley and the Wailers, and Bob didn't let many people drive it. Everyone started moving. Rita Marley headed to her Volkswagen. Bob's friend and neighbour Nancy Burke was asked by Seeco, the Wailers' percussionist, to move her car so the girls could leave.

Burke was feeling buoyant that night; she'd just got back from chaperoning Bob's sometime girlfriend Cindy Breakspeare as she won the Miss World contest in London. It was a great coup. In fact, even entering the contest had been daring of Breakspeare; though Jamaican Miss World entrants had traditionally supplied wives for many local politicians, including Edward Seaga, Michael Manley's socialist Jamaica had dropped its Miss World membership, along with Cuba. Because of the tension in town, guards had lately been posted at the entry to Hope Road's circular drive, but no one was there and the gate was closed. Still, even that inconvenience couldn't dent Burke's good mood.

She was dragged away from the kitchen by a little girl, one of Breakspeare's protegees, to join Diane Jobson and the other kids in Neville's cottage. Out on the road, Garrick, Mowatt, and the Hope Road doorman, a Trench Town youth named Sticko, were already way off in the distance. Before steering her car through the gateposts, Rita paused to let another vehicle drive in - then screamed and jammed on the brakes as pain seared her scalp.

The other car's unseen passenger had shot her through her window and scorched on into the yard.

'Give me a juice, nah!' A booming cry in the kitchen made Bob and Gilly look up as Bob's manager, a swaggering, sharp-witted hustler called Don Taylor, strode in. But Taylor was followed almost immediately by three intruders - gunmen, charging in through the doors at either end of the kitchen. One brandished two automatics like he was Jimmy Cliff in The Harder They Come. They fired round after round, the sound deafening as the kitchen became a battlefield. The Wailers and their militant Dread posse were caught off guard. Indeed, even though this was the moment Bob had been dreading, when the shock came, he froze. Everything went into slow motion. He felt something push him, and he fell down; only later did he realise it was streetwise Don Taylor, raised working the volatile bars and brothels of the Kingston waterfront. The bullet aimed at Bob's heart instead smashed into his upper arm. Later, Bob was advised that an operation to remove it carried the risk of loss of control of his fingers, so the lead would stay there till he was in his coffin.

The noise of four automatics belching bullets suddenly silenced.

'I recognise one guy,' mutters Gilly tersely. He won't name names. 'They came in with two guns blazing and I ran out thanks to the power of the Most High.' With an expertise learnt in his childhood flights from the Trench Town cops, Gilly raced through the yard and over the wall. In the rehearsal room, bullets smashed into Carly's drum stool, and he fell to the floor. The next shots hit the wall, right where his head had been. Fams was trying to run for it but got caught up in the leads trapped under Carly's stool. The brothers disentangled themselves and sprinted for the bathroom, where they hid in the bathtub behind the shower curtain, hearts pounding. The Wailers's newest American guitarist, Donald Kinsey, was so freaked he left the island and the band the next day, never to return.

Tucked away in Neville's little house, Diane Jobson and Nancy Burke had no idea what was happening. Silently, both women prayed as gunfire spasmed as if it would never stop. Terrified, the children cowered under the bed. When the shooting stopped, all their hearts convulsed. In the silence, unthinkable questions shouted inside their heads. Had anybody - everybody - been killed? And was Brother Bob still alive?

The eerie quiet was broken when Burke heard Seeco's wrenching shout outside their window. 'Blood claat! Is Seaga men! Dem come fe kill Bob!' That view was endorsed by word in the street, as passers-by said that before the ambulances and police arrived, they saw a car shoot out of the yard. But instead of driving uphill in the direction of University College Hospital, as might have been expected of any improvised transport for the wounded, the car headed downtown, straight toward the notorious Tivoli Gardens - the JLP headquarters, still a virtual no-go zone three decades on.

'Down in Trench Town, we heard it as a news flash over the radio, and as soon as we hear it, we know what the source was, even if we didn't know the person till after. We knew what it was about,' definitively states Bob's old Trench Town neighbour Michael Smith, of the group Knowledge. 'All of these things came from the politics, Bob deciding to do the concert for Manley when he had turned down doing a show for the JLP. At that time they had Bob Marley as an international star, and everyone wanted Bob on their side.'

So Bob's best intentions for a non-political concert had bitterly backfired.

Jobson rushed out into the yard, where Rita was reeling, bleeding from the head. She begged, 'Diane, take me to the hospital!' But seeing that Rita was still standing and coherent, Jobson ran past her and into the kitchen. Just minutes before, it had been packed and buzzing. Now she was horrified to find an empty room and see a half-peeled grapefruit lying on the floor in puddles of blood. She breathed again only when she heard Bob call out to her weakly, 'Is alright, Diane. Me here still.'

Comforting the hysterical children, Nancy Burke watched as Bob walked out in his blood-drenched shirt between two policemen to the waiting car, holding his arm in its reddening bandage. The anguished self-questioning, as so often happens in the unfolding stages of trauma and grief, would soon come. He didn't look shaken or fearful. The Tuff Gong was angry.

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Exodus: the Making and Meaning of Bob Marley and the Wailers' Album of the Century' by Vivien Goldman is published by Aurum Press, priced £9.99. To order a copy with free p&p call 0870 8360885 or go to observer.co.uk/bookshop

Jamaicano Beenie Man edita hoje novo álbum

O músico jamaicano Beenie Man lança hoje um novo trabalho. «Undisputed» constitui o título do trabalho gravado para a Virgin.


Beenie Man gravou o disco em sessões separadas entre a Jamaica e Miami, contando com a colaboração do produtor de hip-hop, Scott Storch, entre outros.

O artista jamaicano sempre esteve envolto em algumas polémicas, nomeadamente no que concerne à discriminação homossexual.

Sizzla, Elephant Man, Buju Banton, Beenie Man, entre outros nomes, constam de uma lista da Scotland Yard por se encontrarem sob suspeita de incitarem à violência contra os homossexuais.

Damian Marley mistura tudo em “Welcome to Jamrock”

O filho mais novo de Bob Marley luta contra preconceitos e lança novo disco

Jotabê Medeiros

Agência Estado

Raspa do tacho de Bob Marley, o caçula da família Marley mal lembra do pai. Um dos sete irmãos Marley que encararam a música como ganha-pão (os outros são Ziggy, Julian, Ky-Mani, Cedella, Stephen e Sharon), Damian Marley mostra, com seu mais recente disco, 'Welcome to Jamrock' (2005), que foi um pouco além dos desígnios do sangue.

O músico de 28 anos falou à reportagem de Nova York, onde estava em estúdio trabalhando de novo, o que mostra que também contraria o lugar-comum de que reggaeboy é preguiçoso. 'Welcome to Jamrock' é o terceiro trabalho de Junior Gong, como foi apelidado, e lhe valeu os Grammys de melhor álbum de reggae e de urban/alternative performance.

Você tocou recentemente no festival Coachella, que tinha como estrelas Madonna e Morrisey. Você acha que o reggae é hoje aceito naturalmente como uma expressão da música internacional ou continua sendo visto como música do Terceiro Mundo?

As duas coisas. Impôs-se na cena internacional como música negra, como o hip-hop. Mas, ao mesmo tempo, é sempre encarado como música do Terceiro Mundo. Ainda há preconceito. Não dão ao reggae todas as oportunidades que o gênero merece.

Há um pouco de hip-hop em seu disco. Que tipo de hip-hop o seduz, aquele mais pop de Kanye West e Black Eyed Peas ou aquele gangtsa de Snoop Dog e 50 Cent?

Gosto de Kanye, gosto de Snoop. Respeito muito o Public Enemy, por conseguir tratar de política na música. Mas gosto de música especialmente pela sensação. Ela não é boa apenas por ser política. É preciso primeiro ser música boa, fazer as pessoas se sentirem bem.

Mas há bastante referências à política e à pobreza em suas letras, além de uma advertência em relação às drogas e prostituição.

Quando faço política na música, não é premeditado. É minha realidade. Música é a minha bênção. As mensagens são minha forma de ver o mundo. Somos o que somos. Nós nos comunicamos por meio da música. É assim que as pessoas me ouvem, no Brasil, por exemplo. É uma comunicação universal. Então, fazemos nos ouvir pela música, e tentamos ensinar algo pela música.

E quanto ao dub em seu álbum? Você foi influenciado por pioneiros do dub, como Lee Perry?

Não muito. Tenho mais influência do dancehall, de Shabba Ranks, Chaka Demus.

E do seu pai, não tem influência?

Sei da importância cultural do meu pai, é claro que é uma influência. Mas pertenço a outra geração. Eu só tinha 3 anos quando ele morreu, não tenho lembrança dele.

Você pensa em trazer essa turnê ao Brasil?

Estou esperando ser convidado. Gosto muito do Brasil.

12.7.06

Horace Andy Elementary and Josey Wales 1986 Mellowtone

Essencial !

Jah Shaka em ação! Ecoando...

Em ação nos idos de 1989!

R I D D I M

Mais um texto que escrevi há alguns anos atrás especialmente para meus amigos do site SURFOREGGAE.

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RIDDIM




Um ritmo. “Riddim” no vocabulário musical jamaicano é um padrão de ritmo. Basicamente é uma linha de baixo e bateria especiais. Algumas vezes uma pequena melodia acompanha o riddim, mas o ingrediente principal é a linha de baixo (em outro contexto musical o riddim poderia ser chamado de groove).

A maioria dos riddims originam-se de uma linha, um toque de baixo e bateria que alcançou êxito, sucesso entre o público, a aceitação, e normalmente neste caso o título do riddim acaba levando o nome da canção da qual surgiu como base.

Ainda hoje, os riddims mais executados já contam com mais de 20 anos de existência, e estudos apontam que a maioria delas foram criados pelo lendário STUDIO ONE, de Sir. Coxsone Dodd em Kingston. Muitos outros produtores da época também foram responsáveis por vários riddims clássicos, mas nenhum deles foi capaz de competir com a produção do Studio One no final dos anos 60 e princípio dos anos 70. Para exemplificar, versões de “Moving Away”, “Pretty Looks”, Nanny Goat”, “Drum Song”, “Jah Shakey”, “Full Up”, “Real Rock”, “Skylarking” e “Joe Frazier” são riddims que escutaremos provavelmente em qualquer sessão de discotecagem, de qualquer festa ou evento reggae que presenciar-mos.

Ainda hoje (2003) existe um contínuo debate sobre o uso destes velhos riddims. Produtores e artistas mais antigos criticam a criação musical atual por reexplorar antigos riddims, e também alegam que esta exploração acaba por perder e inibir a originalidade e a criatividade. Dizem que é fácil fazer uma versão de “Real Rock” com os recursos tecnológicos e samplers atuais, mas que é muito difícil criar algo novo. Em contrapartida, os artistas atuais alegam que utilizar antigos riddims trata-se de uma herança e tradição da qual os mais antigos deveriam orgulhar-se. Utilizar os riddims clássicos como inspiração é uma forma de fazer um tributo e render homenagens a todos aqueles que originaram os riddims.

Na verdade, os criadores dos riddims de origem gostariam é que as tais homenagens fossem convertidas em espécie (dinheiro dos direitos autorais), porque a maioria nunca sequer cobrou pelo lançamento do riddim original.

E também, na verdade, a maioria dos produtores jamaicanos confiam excessivamente nas versões e nas velhas fórmulas de sucesso dos riddims antigos. A industria musical jamaicana é e sempre foi um negócio com um monte de seguidores e pouquíssimos líderes. Mesmo assim, a música jamaicana já demonstrou e ainda demonstra ser uma das mais imaginativas e criativas do mundo. Estilos e modas são grandes negócios em determinada época e no semestre seguinte já não existe mais. Justamente por esta perspectiva, a originalidade converte-se na chave do negócio, no êxito em alcançar sucesso e público. Como exemplo, o rápido desenvolvimento do ragga nos últimos anos renderam uma série de bons riddims. Muitos deles foram ouvidos e passaram despercebidos dos ouvidos do público, mas outros seguramente já se converteram em clássicos, e serão reciclados pela próxima geração de produtores jamaicanos e mundiais.

O tempo passa e as fórmulas de sucesso mudam, mas os antigos riddims nunca morrem. Certamente aquela sua música favorita, clássica, cedo ou tarde voltará a ser o ritmo que mais agita a galera nas festas e bailes reggae espalhados pelo mundo.

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Luiz é amante do ritmo jamaicano desde seus 13 anos e procura sempre estar ligado no passado, presente e futuro da música da ilha. Tem um site/blog sobre o assunto, onde publica suas viagens pela net procurando por notícias, artigos, sons e links interessantes, que pode ser acessado no endereço www.reggaesoul.com

Som Pop

Vejam só vocês...eis um texto que escrevi para meus amigos do site Surforeggae publicarem depois de nossas conversas, em meados de 2000.

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Vocês se lembram do Som Pop? Aquele programa dominical de “videoclips” que a muito tempo atrás era apresentado na TV Cultura? Esse mesmo! Aquele que passava antes do Stádio, que era um programa sobre esportes. Ou era ao contrário?

Pois é! Me lembro que num dos programas, apresentado na época pelo “Eu sou Boy” Kid Vinil, a proposta foi apresentar videoclips que tivessem o mesmo título, com bandas e propostas totalmente diferentes. Então o grande Kid apresenta primeiramente a balada heavy metal romântica “Is this Love” dos cabeludos a lá big-ma-leão Whitsnake, sucesso total à época, inicio dos anos 80. Muito boa...

Terminado o primeiro videoclip, Kid anuncia um tal de Bob Marley, também com a sua “Is this Love”. Eu devia ter de 12 a 13 anos na época e não tinha a mínima idéia de quem fosse o tal Marley, mas como estava ali mesmo na frente da TV, porque não conferir. Começado o clipe, de cara já o achei mágico, pois o também cabeludo Marley era diferente, a começar pelo cabelo. O ritmo era contagiante, alegre e simples. As crianças dançando naquele ritmo lento, aquela alegria, realmente me contagiou. Guardei aquilo na memória e resolvi procurar.

Minha curiosidade em saber quem era esse tal Bob Marley me fez procurar o Centro Cultural São Paulo, pois não tinha a mínima idéia de onde buscar informações na época e lá tinha certeza que encontraria algo. Faz muito tempo que não apareço por lá, mas me lembro que eles tinham uma discoteca imensa, onde escolhia-mos os disco e sentava-mos numa boa poltrona com fones de ouvido. Era realmente mais do que relaxante. Foi lá que descobri a obra contagiante de Marley e também de muitos outros “cabeludos estranhos” que tocavam, cantavam e dançavam no mesmo ritmo. Demorou um pouco para eu conseguir juntar um dinheirinho e comprar no Museu do Disco, que ficava na frente da Pitter no centro de São Paulo, o primeiro discão do cabeludo Marley, Rastaman Vibration...

Caramba! Já se passaram 17 ou 18 anos, sei lá. Muitas histórias rolaram. Continuei e continuo contagiado. Muitas vezes fui radical ao ponto de não deixar sair outro ritmo do meu “3 em 1” que não fosse o reggae. Outras vezes deixei tudo de lado também, mas confesso que não tem jeito... Ainda não encontrei remédio para este contágio.

Caso alguém saiba, por favor, não me diga!

Pretendo escrever aqui no Surforeggae ao menos uma vez por mês, e desde já agradeço ao amigo Renato. Fiquem a vontade para me mandar mensagens via e-mail, ou mesmo através do meu blog www.reggaesoul.cjb.net (onde estou fazendo algumas adequações e mudanças). É lá no blog que costumo colocar meus arquivos e pesquisas sobre o Reggae.

É isso aí.

11.7.06

Ziggy Marley - Novo álbum e passagem pelo Brasil



Ziggy Marley acaba de lançar seu mais novo álbum, Love Is My Religion, e já tem agendado passagem pela América do Sul e Brasil, em outubro.

01/10/06 - Pepsi Music Stadium - Buenos Aires, Argentina

03/10/06 - Via Funchal - Sao Paulo, Brazil

04/10/06 - Pepsi on Stage - Porto Algre, Brazil

06/10/06 - Circo Voador - Rio de Janiero, Brazil

07/10/06 - Costa Verde - Salvador de Bahia, Brazil

09/10/06 - Chevrolet Hall - Belo Horizonte, Brazil

11/10/06 - Circulo Militar - Lima, Peru

As faixas do novo álbum são: Into the Groove, Love Is My Religion, Make Some Music, Friend, Blackcat, Beach in Hawaii, Lifetime, Be Free, Keep on Dreamin’, Still the Storms, Love Is My Religion (Acoustic), Be Free (Dub).

Fonte: www.ziggymarley.com

9.7.06

King Jammy - Jailhouse Rock

Afim de ver King Jammy trabalhando? Dá um play aí embaixo...

7.7.06

Heath Hunter Trenchtown feat Stephen & Damian Marley

Kingston é até bacaninha. E em Trenchtown, você foi? Não? Dá uma olha neste vídeo. Aparece inclusive no KG dos Marley...

The streets of Kingston

Você já foi a Jamaica? Não? Dá um rolé em Kingston através deste vídeozinho!

Bob Marley vira nome de rua em Nova York


O cantor e compositor jamaicano Bob Marley (foto) foi homenageado no último domingo, 2 de julho, quando uma rua no Brooklyn, bairro nova-iorquino, foi batizada com seu nome.

Políticos, fãs do músico e alguns familiares estiveram na cerimônia, que estava sendo aguardada desde meados de maio.

Nesta época, a prefeitura da cidade aprovou a nova nomeação do local, que agora também pertence à memória do reggae.

Bob Marley morreu de câncer no dia 11 de maio de 1981.

Grupo de reggae, Digitaldubs lança primeiro CD

No álbum Digitaldubs Apresenta: Brasil Riddims - Volume Um, Reggae da Raiz até as Folhas, a voz dos guetos cariocas no riddim jamaicano

Lauro Lisboa Garcia

SÃO PAULO - Dá para contar nos dedos de um maneta os projetos consistentes envolvendo o reggae no Brasil. E quase todos já arquivados no passado. Acontece que ultimamente a trupe carioca Digitaldubs vem abrindo caminho e marcando terreno de um jeito novo e interessante. Formada pelos selectors (ou DJs) MPC, Nélson Meirelles, Cristiano Dubmaster e Kuque, a equipe de som é especializada no mais popular gênero jamaicano e seus derivados, como dub e dancehall. Em cinco anos de existência, suas festas já viraram clássicas e saíram do Rio para outros Estados. Agora o quarteto lançou seu primeiro CD, Digitaldubs Apresenta: Brasil Riddims - Volume Um, Reggae da Raiz até as Folhas (independente) fazendo um mix de reggae clássico com as citadas variantes. São 15 faixas divididas entre eles com diversos agregados, de estilos também variados: Rramos, B Negão, Mr. Catra, Ras Bernardo, Biguli, Gerson da Conceição, entre outros.

O esquema é o mesmo do riddim jamaicano: os caras criam uma base instrumental pulsante que pode ser aproveitada por outros de várias maneiras. A diferença é que, em processo natural, o Digitaldubs imprime cores brasileiras às bases importadas. Mais especificamente da música de preto feita nos morros e guetos do Rio: samba, hip-hop e funk-favela. São oito riddims que se transformam em 15 versões. O que mais rendeu foi o Cubimba Riddim, desmembrado em quatro. Coincidentemente estas são as melhores faixas do CD, com B Negão na frente. Sua adaptação de Sorriso Aberto, samba de Guará, do repertório de Jovelina Pérola Negra (1944-1998), é matadora. Biguli, com Lucro, também faz um raggamuffin-embolada dos bons. Sobre o 80 Riddim, Gerson da Conceição canta bonito viajandão em Procurando Abrigo.

Quando não diluído em outros ritmos, reggae brasileiro é muito chato (os detratores dizem que o jamaicano também é). E aí está o gaúcho Armandinho, o regueiro da vez entre os mauricinhos, para confirmar. E tome batida monótona e macaqueada, versos repetitivos e encharcados de clichês, etc. Embora ainda careça de mais elaboração nas letras - que incluem mulheres, denúncia social, violência e camaradagem como temas -, o projeto do Digitaldubs é alentador.

Clube inglês cancela show de cantor de reggae homofóbico


O clube Concorde 2, em Brighton, na Inglaterra, cancelou o show que o cantor de reggae jamaicano Buju Banton faria no local na próxima quarta-feira. O estabelecimento atendeu aos protestos da comunidade gay local, segundo a qual as letras de suas canções são homofóbicas. As informações são da Reuters.

"Em vista de pressões inusitadas da Câmara Municipal, membros da comunidade LGBT e a polícia, o Concorde 2 não teve outra opção senão cancelar o evento com Buju Banton", informou o clube em seu site. Banton tem uma música intitulada "Boom Bye Bye", que fala de um gay levando um tiro na cabeça.

Essa não é a primeira vez que um artista jamaicano é proibido de cantar na Inglaterra. Em novembro de 2004, um clube próximo de Londres cancelou um show do jamaicano Sizzla Kalonji depois de ser pressionado pelo grupo Outrage!, segundo o qual o artista defendia que se matassem lésbicas e gays.

6.7.06

Jamaican Sound System

In Jamaica, a Sound System is a popular type of nomadic outdoor concert/party. The sound system scene is generally regarded as an important part of Jamaican cultural history and as being responsible for the rise of modern Jamaican musical styles such as ska and dub.

History

The sound system concept first became popular in the 1950's, in the ghettos of Kingston. DJs would load up a truck with a generator, turntables, and huge speakers and set up street parties. In the beginning, the DJs played American R&B music, but as time progressed and more local music was created, the sound migrated to a local flavor.

The sound systems were big business, and represented one of the few sure ways to make money in the unstable economy of the area. The promoter (the DJ) would make his profit by charging a minimal admission, and selling food and alcohol. Competition between these sound systems was fierce, and eventually two DJs emerged as the stars of the scene: Clement 'Coxsone' Dodd, and Duke Reid. It was not uncommon for thousands of people to be in attendance.

The popularity of a sound system was mainly contingent on one thing: having new music. In order to circumvent the release cycle of the American record labels, the two sound system superstars turned to record production. Initially, they produced only singles for their own sound systems, known as "Exclusives" or Dubplates - a limited run of one copy per song.

What began as an attempt to copy the American R&B sound using local musicians became Jamaica's first unique music: Ska. As this new musical form became more popular, both Dodd and Reid began to move more seriously into music production. Coxsone Dodd's production studio became the famous Studio One, while Duke Reid founded the famous Treasure Isle.

Jamaican sound systems

* Duke Reid - The Trojan
* Coxsone Dodd - Coxsone Downbeat
* King Edwards The Giant
* Sinclair The Lion
* Count Boysie
* Prince Buster
* King Tubby's Hi-Fi
* Bells The President
* Lloyd Daley - Lloyd The Matador
* Percival Tibby - Sir Percy
* Percel Chin - Admiral Chin
* Joe Chin - Unitone
* Ken Hamilton - Duke Hamilton
* Roy Muncey - Count Muncey
* Mr Chung - Cavaliers
* King Prof
* Bass Odyssey
* Killamanjaro
* Stone Love
* Harry Mudie - Mudies Hi-Fi
* Socialist Roots Sound System

UK (Jamaican-style) Sound Systems

* Sir Coxsone Outernational
* Saxon
* Unity
* Qualitex
* Immortal
* Infinity
* Iration Steppas
* High Pressure
* Symbiosis
* Jah Shaka
* Channel One
* King Earthquake
* Jah Youths
* Aba-Shanti-I
* Jah Voice
* Operation Sound System
* Jah Tubbys
* RDK Hifi
* Toxic Sound System

Dub music

Dub is a form of Jamaican music, which evolved out of ska and reggae in 1970s Jamaica. The dub sound includes adding extensive echo and reverb effects to an existing music piece, sometimes accompanied by snatches of the lyrics from the original version.

Dub is characterized as a "version" of an existing song, typically emphasizing the drums and bass for a sound popular in local Sound Systems. The instrumental tracks are typically drenched in sound processing effects such as echo, reverb, part vocal and extra percussion, with most of the lead instruments and vocals dropping in and out of the mix. Another hallmark of the dub sound is the massive low bass. The music sometimes features processed sound effects and other noises, such as birds singing, thunder and lightning, water flowing, and producers shouting instructions at the musicians. It can be further augmented by live DJs.

These versions are mostly instrumental, sometimes including snippets of the original vocal version. Often these tracks are used for "Toasters" rapping heavily-rhymed and alliterative lyrics. These are called "DeeJay Versions". As opposed to hip hop terminology, in reggae music the person with the microphone is called the "DJ" (elsewhere called the "MC", for 'Microphone Controller' or less commonly 'master of ceremonies'), while the person choosing the music and operating the turntables is the "Selector" (elsewhere called the DJ).

A major reason for producing multiple versions was economic: A record producer could use a recording he owned to produce numerous versions from a single studio session. Version was also an opportunity for a producer or remix engineer to experiment and vent their more creative side. The version was typically the B-side of a single, with the A-side dedicated to making a popular hit, and B-side for experimenting and providing something for DJs to talk over. In the 1970s whole albums of dub tracks were produced, often simply the dub version of an existing vocal LP, but sometimes a selection of dubbed up instrumental tracks for which no vocals existed.

Dub music evolved from early instrumental reggae music and "versions" that incorporated fairly primitive reverb and echo sound effects. Errol Thompson engineered the first strictly instrumental reggae album entitled "The Undertaker" by Derrick Harriott and the Crystalites released in 1970. This innovative album credits "Sound Effects" to Derrick Harriott.

Whilst some have tried to attribute the "invention" of dub music to just one person, the facts show that by 1973, instrumental reggae "versions" from various studios had evolved into "dub" as a sub genre of reggae. Through the simultaneous efforts of several independent Jamaican innovators, these competitive engineers and producers worked hard to leapfrog each other with each subsequent dub release with no single person being able to claim all the credit for the origination of "dub" as a genre.

In 1973, at least two producers, Lee Perry and the Aquarius studio engineer/producer team of Herman Chin and Errol Thompson simultaneously recognized that there was an active market for this new "dub" sound and consequently they started to release the first strictly 100% dub albums.

It was not until 1975 that King Tubby was internationally recognized as the premier dub artist/innovator/producer with the release of his two debut albums "King Tubby Meets The Upsetter At The Grass Roots Of Dub" and "Surrounded By the Dreads at the National Arena". He was then immediately hailed as the leading dub music innovator of the day.

Dub has continued to progress from that point to this, its popularity waxing and waning with changes in musical fashion. Almost all reggae singles still carry an instrumental version on the B-side and these are still used by the sound systems as a blank canvas for live singers and djs.

In the 1980s, Britain became a new center for dub production with Mad Professor and Jah Shaka being the most famous, while Scientist became the heavyweight champion of Jamaican dub. It was also the time when dub made its influence known in the work of harder edged, experimental producers such as Adrian Sherwood and the roster of artists on his On-U Sound label. Bands such as The Police and UB40 helped popularise Dub in the UK with UB40's 'Present Arms in Dub' album being the first ever DUB album to hit the UK top 40. The Welsh band Llwybr Llaethog are an important UK group to have frequently produced Dub tracks in addition to their usual hip-hop/electronic output.

In the 1990s and beyond dub has been influenced by and in turn influenced techno, jungle, drum and bass, house music, trip hop, ambient music, and hip hop, with many electronic dub tracks produced by nontraditional musicians from these other genres. Musicians such as Bill Laswell, Leftfield, Ott, Massive Attack, Bauhaus, The Clash, PiL, The Orb, Rhythm & Sound, Pole, Underworld, DeFacto, Thievery Corporation and others demonstrate clear dub influences in their respective genres, and their innovations have in turn influenced the mainstream of the dub genre. In the UK, Europe, Japan and America independent record producers are making dub . DJs appeared towards the end of the 1990s who specialised in playing music by these musicians, such as the UK's Unity Dub. Traditional dub has, however, survived (see Iration Steppas and Aba Shanti-I, for example) and some of the originators like Lee Perry and Mad Professor continue to produce new material. One modern dub band who has a fairly large underground following is Skunk Record's Slightly Stoopid.

Adão Negro comemora 10 anos com lançamento de DVD

A banda Adão Negro comemora dez anos de carreira com uma festa no Rock’n Rio Café, no Aeroclube Plaza Show, neste sábado, 8, a partir das 21 horas. Na festa, será apresentado aos fãs do ritmo jamaicano o primeiro DVD do grupo “Adão Negro – Ao vivo na República do Reggae”, em homenagem a Peter Tosh e que foi gravado em setembro de 2005.

O DVD tem a participação especial de artistas nacionais e internacionais, a exemplo de Bunny Wailer, Gregory Isaccs e Andrew Tosh. Além de canções que fazem parte do tributo a Peter, músicas de reggae produzidas na Bahia e no exterior vão estar no repertório do show, que conta ainda com as bandas Mosiah e Moa Anbesa.

Formada por Sérgio Cassiano [vocal, guitarra e violão], Dino Cerqueira [percussão], Marcelo Nem [teclados], Valterson Cabeça [baixo], Aurelino Fábio [bateria] e Marcos Guimarães [guitarra], a banda começou a tocar na periferia da capital baiana e já gravou quatro discos.

O último deles, “Vence Tudo Ao Vivo”, gravado no Rock’n Rio Café, em março de 2005, foi divulgado no mês de junho nas rádios e TVs da Jamaica pelo cantor Sergio Cassiano. O grupo já pensa em gravar o próximo álbum e já começou a acertar os detalhes do trabalho com jamaicano Errol Brown, engenheiro de som que já trabalho com discos de Bob Marley, Alpha Blondy, Jimmy Cliff e Gilberto Gil.

Lançamento do DVD do Adão Negro
Onde: Rock’n Rio Café Salvador (Aeroclube)
Quando: 08 de julho, a partir das 21h
Quanto: R$15 (pista) e R$25 (camarote), na bilheteria da casa

5.7.06

SENSIMANIA SOUND SYSTEM

Mais um videozinho bacana! Sound inna Kitchen... ;-)

Britânica sofre infarto e acorda com sotaque jamaicano

A britânica Lynda Walker, 60 anos, acordou depois de um infarto falando com um sotaque jamaicano. Lynda sofre de uma doença chamada de síndrome do sotaque estrangeiro, de acordo com o jornal britânico Times Online.
Lynda diz que ficou muito chateada logo que descobriu. "Eu não me sinto a mesma pessoa. Não havia notado o sotaque, mas dei-me conta de como soava quando meu terapeuta me mostrou uma fita das nossas conversas. Fiquei devastada", disse ao jornal.

Pesquisadores da Universidade de Newcastle estão estudando o caso de Lynda. Existem no mundo apenas 50 casos documentado da doença nos últimos 65 anos. A síndrome foi identificada em 1941 quando uma mulher norueguesa sofreu uma lesão cerebral e começou a falar com um sotaque germânico.

Estudiosos sugerem que uma pequena parte do cérebro que afeta a fala foi danificado. Esta lesão pode resultar em mudanças de tom, lentidão na fala ou erros de pronúncia, mudando o sotaque da pessoa. "É como perder uma grande parte de sua identidade", disse Lynda.

"Todos me perguntam de onde sou, quando respondo Newcastle, eles riem. Acham que estou mentindo. A pior coisa é não ter controle sobre o próprio sotaque. Eu quero minha voz de volta, mas não sei se vai acontecer."

Um remédio chamado música

Pesquisas científicas comprovam que a música exerce influência sobre os aparelhos respiratório, digestivo, circulatório e até sobre o sistema nervoso

03/07/2006
Carina Teixeira


No dicionário, a explicação é de que música significa a arte e ciência de combinar harmoniosamente os sons. Considerada uma prática cultural e humana, tem um importante papel nas sociedades. É provável que essa manifestação tenha sido fruto da observação dos sons da natureza, que conseqüentemente despertou no homem, através do sentido auditivo, uma necessidade de reproduzir o que ouvia.

Apesar de ser intuitivamente conhecida por qualquer pessoa, definir o que é, não é tarefa fácil, pois é difícil encontrar um conceito que abarque todos os significados dessa prática. Mais do que qualquer outra manifestação humana, a música manipula o tempo e o som. Considerada uma linguagem universal, provoca reações das mais adversas nos seres.

“A música tem, com toda a probabilidade esse poder terapêutico, de reorganizar a estrutura molecular do ser humano e a psicológica mais do que qualquer outra”, opina o compositor, pianista, musicólogo e membro da Academia Brasileira de Música, Amaral Vieira.

Além de todo esse mistério que permeia a música e o ato de produzi-la, recentemente um estudo feito nos Estados Unidos e publicado pelo periódico britânico Journal of Advanced Nursing, afirma que ouvir música pode reduzir dores crônicas em até 21% e depressão em até 25%.

A pesquisa foi feita com 60 pessoas de ambos os sexos, que tinham entre 21 e 65 anos. Os pacientes sofriam de dores crônicas não-malignas, como dores nas costas, osteoartrite e artrite reumatóide, em média há seis anos. Esses sintomas são caracterizados pela presença de dores resistentes a intervenções tradicionais.

O estudo dividiu seus voluntários em três grupos de 20 integrantes cada um, sendo que dois deles foram submetidos a sessões de audição musical, enquanto o outro não ouvia músicas no período das pesquisas.

As responsáveis pela pesquisa, Sandra Siedliecki, da Fundação Clínica de Cleveland, e Marion Good, da Universidade Case Western, observaram que os grupos que ouviram música uma hora por dia durante uma semana, apresentaram melhoria nos sintomas físicos e psicológicos em relação ao grupo que não ouvia.

“O primeiro grupo foi convidado a escolher o estilo musical preferido, que variou de rock a baladas melodiosas e de pop a sons da natureza comumente usados para promover sono ou relaxamento”, explica Sandra em comunicado da Blackwell Publishing, editora do Journal of Advanced Nursing.

O segundo grupo escolheu músicas relaxantes que compreendiam cinco gêneros, com peças de jazz, piano, orquestra, harpa e sintetizador, que foram selecionadas pelas pesquisadoras.

Os dois grupos que ouviram música afirmaram queda nas dores entre 12% e 21%. Esses resultados foram medidos por um questionário chamado McGill, que consiste em uma descrição minuciosa de 78 palavras, organizadas em quatro grupos e 20 subgrupos em uma escala de 0 a 100, no qual 0 significa ausência de dor.

Outros fatores positivos foram os resultados de 19% a 25% a menos de relatos de depressão, em relação ao grupo que não ouvia música. Os pacientes submetidos à audição de peças musicais também relataram sentir maior capacidade de controle as dores.

“Houve pequenas diferenças nos valores identificados nos dois grupos que ouviram música, mas ambos mostraram melhorias consistentes em cada uma das categorias analisadas”, afirmou Sandra. “Dores crônicas não-malignas constituem um grande problema de saúde pública e qualquer novidade que possa oferecer algum alívio é bem-vinda.”

Musicoterapia - É a utilização da música e de seus elementos (som, ritmo, melodia e harmonia) em um processo destinado a promover comunicação, relacionamento, aprendizado, mobilização, expressão e organização para fins terapêuticos psicoprofiláticos ou de reabilitação, define a Federação Mundial de Musicoterapia.

Já segundo a Canadian Association for Music Therapy, a Musicoterapia é a utilização da música para auxiliar a integração física, psicológica e emocional do indivíduo e para o tratamento de doenças ou deficiências. Ela pode ser aplicada a todos os grupos etários em uma grande variedade de ocasiões.

Como ciência, o tratamento de certas doenças nervosas por meio de música, é recente. Embora os primeiros registros a esse respeito possam ser encontrados na obra de filósofos gregos pré-socráticos, seu uso só começou a ser desenvolvido no final da Segunda Guerra. O primeiro curso universitário de Musicoterapia foi criado em 1944 na Michigan State University, nos Estados Unidos.

Atualmente, a Musicoterapia é estudada e praticada em dezenas de países. Embora existam variações na legislação de cada país, na maior parte dos países é uma carreira universitária autônoma. Em alguns é ligada à carreira médica ou à psicologia.

"Há séculos os curandeiros usam músicas e tambores. Estamos apenas redescobrindo o que sempre souberam: a música, por meio de sua profunda repercussão sobre a mente e o corpo, pode ser uma arma poderosa para curar as pessoas", declara Ronald Borczon, musicoterapeuta e fundador do departamento de Musicoterapia na Universidade Northridge da Califórnia.

Trabalhando com uma gama variada de pacientes, os musicoterapeutas, geralmente tratam de pessoas com dificuldades motoras, autistas, pacientes com deficiência mental, paralisia cerebral, dificuldades emocionais, pacientes psiquiátricos, gestantes, idosos, além de distúrbios de aprendizagem e de comportamento, e também sendo usada na área social com crianças e adolescentes em situação de desamparo.

Além da Musicoterapia, pesquisas atuais, vêm descobrindo que a música pode ajudar a curar de várias outras maneiras. Em muitos casos estudados, descobriu-se que vítimas de queimaduras, estimuladas a cantar quando lhe trocam as ataduras sentem menos dor. Pacientes de câncer que ouvem música e aprendem a tocar instrumentos, por exemplo, vêem os níveis de hormônios do estresse cair e o sistema imunológico se fortalecer.

“Demonstrou-se clinicamente que a música contribui para a nossa saúde e para o nosso bem-estar. A música, então pode representar uma parte importante do nosso programa básico de prevenção – prevenção da doença no nível pré-físico de desequilíbrio energético”, afirma o psiquiatra americano John Diamond em seu livro Your body doesn't lie (O seu corpo não mente).

Além disso, acredita-se que esse poder da música, resulta da capacidade de reduzir a ansiedade, que pode comprometer as defesas imunológicas, bem como intensificar a sensação de dor. A música, em especial o canto, desvia a atenção da pessoa ao sofrimento e alivia a tensão.