PREVIEW: Slingshot Hip Hop, a documentary film about Palestinian hip-hop

 

Announcement

 

What: Slingshot Hip Hop, a documenary film about Palestinian hip-hop music
When: Thu Feb 11, 2010, 7 – 8:30pm
Where: Rackham Amphitheater (915 E Washington Street)
Cost: Free and open to the public (Part of UM’s Black History Month celebrations)

The screening will be followed by a discussion led by Amer Ahmed, Associate Director of University of Michigan’s Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs (MESA).

Join the event on Facebook.

Click here to read the preview and review of this film from an earlier screening at UM.

 

Slingshot Hip Hop

 

Slingshot Hip Hop, a documentary film about Palestinian hip-hop music, is directed by Jackie Reem Salloum (who received her BFA from Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti). The film was nominated for Grand Jury Prize in the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. (Click here for a detailed review of the film by Maureen Clare Murphy.)

 

 

Salloum spent five years making Slingshot Hip Hop, at times raising money by working at her parents’ ice cream shop in Farmington Hills, Michigan. Her production company, Fresh Booza Productions, refers to this – booza being the Arabic word for “ice cream”.

 

Filmmaker Jackie Reem Salloum

 

After the film screening, film-maker Jackie Salloum will also lead a discussion about the film.

Featured in the documentary is the Palestinian rap group DAM (Da Arabian MCs).

 

DAM, a Palestinian hip-hop group

 

You can check out an interview with Salloum in which she is discussing the film, by clicking here. You can also check out a trailer for the film.

 

 

A discussion which took place some time ago at Red Emma’s Bookstore Coffeehouse in Baltimore about this film, has this to say:

Slingshot Hip Hop braids together the stories of young Palestinians living in the West Bank, Gaza and inside Israel as they discover hip hop and employ it as a tool to surmount divisions imposed by occupation and poverty. From internal checkpoints and separation walls to gender norms and generational differences, this is the story of young people crossing the borders that separate them.

 

 

As readers of the erstwhile Arts Lounge are well aware, Ann Arbor has a thriving hip-hop culture. This will be a very interesting film to see, and will be eagerly anticipated. As Eric Snider wrote in January in a Sundance Review on the Cinematical blog:

When you hear that Slingshot Hip Hop is a documentary about Palestinian rap groups, you probably have the same thought I had: “What, that old subject again? Why can’t filmmakers come up with something original?”

Just kidding. One of the joys of a film festival is seeing documentaries on unusual topics that you had never considered before, and I’m sure I’m not the only one who didn’t know Palestine had even one rap group, let alone a major hip hop movement. First-time feature filmmaker Jackie Reem Salloum (an American with Palestinian and Syrian roots) knows that our curiosity will be piqued simply by hearing the subject matter […]

Incidentally, this film is sort of a parallel project to UM graduate student Vanessa Diaz’s film Cuban Hip-hop, about which I blogged in the erstwhile Arts Lounge some time ago. (Just as Jackie Salloum went to Palestine and made this documentary on Palestinian hip-hop, Vanessa Diaz had gone to Cuba and shot a documentary on Cuban hip-hop.)

Preview: Sô Percussion

Sô Percussion
Sô Percussion

The top of the Sô Percussion website reads, “If you think about it, drums are the new violins.”  Uh, what?  It’s a quote from a recent New York Times article about the rise of percussionists.  I read the article. Uh, what the poop?

That’s not fair.  The article is pretty great- developing the journalist’s relationship to percussion along with the rise of percussion in the classical music world. But, still, I continue to have a difficult time understanding a drum as a violin.

We will see tonight as Sô Percussion, a quartet of young (for the classical music world at least) Yale School of Music grads, plays two sets at the UofM Museum of Art.  The first set (7:30pm) will be performed in the museum’s apse while the second (10pm) will start in the apse and travel around to different parts of the museum.

Then, Sô Percussion after party at eve in Kerrytown with DJ Forest Juziuk of Dark Matter on the ones and twos.  Showgoers and non-showgoers are very invited.

Tickets are steep and almost sold out but any open tickets will be available at the door.  (The $40 ticket price and limited availability raises the question of whether UMS should even be presenting Sô Percussion.  Very antithetical to a goal of inclusiveness.  How far should UMS stray from this mission to present top talent? Oh, Saturday afternoon philosophy).

Farewell me maties, Bennett

PREVIEW: The Bad Plus

The Bad Plus + One
The Bad Plus + One

Said by Rolling Stones to be “about as badass as highbrow gets,” The Bad Plus presents a distinctive sound fusing together post-60’s jazz with indie rock to create an entirely new art form, now known as Nu Jazz. They’re no ordinary jazz trio and their unique take on classics create something that is truly inspiring.  (Just for you to get an idea)

The trio formed in 2000 and released their first album on Fresh Sound after playing only three gigs together and have just released their seventh e.p, For All I Care, joined by indie singer/songwriter, Wendy Lewis.  Their catalog is extensive and their performances seem to break the gap between the high culture/low culture distinctions.  As their name suggests, The Bad Plus has recorded jazzed versions of many rock artists.  Nirvana, Pixies, Neil Young, Yes, and Interpol just to name a few. (Check out this rendition of Aphex Twin’s Film)

If you have never gotten into jazz or if you are into jazz come check out these new happenings and I promise you will not be disappointed.

Save the Date!

Who: The Bad Plus

When: Two shows to choose from tomorrow evening, Thursday February 4th, 7:oo p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

Where: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, right inside the League (you can also purchase tickets at the UMS office located in the same building)

See you there!

Review: MLK Makes the Day

The Martin Luther King Symposium was a beautiful display of spoken word and visual art. Taking place in the Pendleton room in the Michigan Union, this event really embodied the work of the great Dr. King and the freedoms that he fought for.

The slam was dazzling, with many talented student poets, such as AJ, TJ, Aisha, Brandon, and Chloe, who all spoke from the heart about freedom, peace, and inequality. The judges unanimously declared AJ the winner and he received a $100 visa gift card, while the crowd favorite was undoubtedly Ame (sorry, I don’t know the exact spelling and she told us to write “Amy” if we wanted to vote for her) who won the gift bag. Both were poets of amazing talent and emotion.

There were four artworks at the event also, paintings and drawings, to be admired and rewarded. These works were creative depictions of what civil rights meant to the artists, or at least shared some relation to MLK and his dreams.

The best part of the night, however, came with the feature poets Jessica Moore and Dee Matthews. They were Amazing! Dee was definitely my favorite with her second poem telling the untold story of Eve. She is such a passionate performer with such wonderful word strings and ideas. I could listen to her for hours, and so could most of the crowd, I believe. She also read a poem about the old folk that decided to ride the storm during hurricane Katrina and another about the revolution that never happened for the African American community. Both were intriguing and amazing, but the poem about Eve outstripped them emotionally and made us want to cry.

Airea Dee Matthews
Airea "Dee" Matthews

Jessica Moore was another great addition to the show. She read so many amazing poems that I can’t list all of them, but I can suggest that you look her up. Jessica Care Moore is the CEO of a poetry company, an Apollo legend, and a proud single mother from Detroit. What I really like about Jessica was that she was so real, I mean soooo real. She told us about what it is like to be world famous and still broke. How it feels to have people in countries all over the planet recognize your name and still have to receive welfare to feed your child. Moore is a beautiful person and I think to know her would make a person’s life better. I wish her and her son all the best, because she is fantastic.


Jessica Care Moore

The entire slam was amazing, it’s not just about the features, so I would suggest that everyone go to a slam sometime. They happen every two weeks on Thursday nights. Most of the time they start at 9:00 in the U-Club and are always hosted by the U-Club Poetry Team. Definitely make a cameo and maybe even slam or open mic. It’s a truly liberating experience.

As always,
This is Danny Fob: Artist and Art Reviewer

PREVIEW: Ladysmith Black Mambazo

Ladysmith Black Mambazo
Ladysmith Black Mambazo

You may have not heard of Ladysmith Black Mambazo but you most likely have heard their music. (Curious? click here!) Hailing from South Africa, Ladysmith is one of the most globally celebrated groups of the last few decades.  In addition to being the “cultural emissaries” of South Africa, their collaboration with Paul Simon almost 20 years ago launched “Graceland” as a pivotal album in world music.  Their roots are unique to South Africa, singing in a musical style called isicathamiya (Is-Cot-A-Me-Ya) which was traditionally sung by black, displaced rail workers for entertainment, but their voices also have the influence of gospel.

They have collaborated with many artists, including Natalie Merchant, Sarah McLachlan, Mellissa Etheridge, Emmylou Harris, Pete Seger, Eric Clapton, Phil Collins, and many others.  They have numerous grammy nominations and recived their second grammy in 2005 for Best Traditional World Music Recording.  Their music has been featured in many familiar films and advertisements including Lion King and The Land Before Time.  Aside from setting a world example of peace, harmony, and hope through music, Ladysmith continues to grace the world with their unique and beautiful music.

This is A UMS first so if you have an interest in world music, or learning more about another culture through music, tickets are still available through the UMS website.   The event will be tomorrow at 4 pm at the Hill Auditorium.  It will be a great experience and is part of UMS global focus.  If you can’t make it, be sure to check out other upcoming events in the next few months (may I suggest Béla Fleck or Baaba Maal with local heroes Nomo).

PREVIEW: Ann Arbor Folk Festival

Power Duo Ben Gibbard and Jay Farrar
Power Duo Ben Gibbard and Jay Farrar

Excitement is in the air my friends!  A longstanding tradition in Ann Arbor, the Ark brings you the 33rd annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival this Friday and Saturday.  If you have never been, I highly suggest you try to make it to this one as the lineup is extremely impressive (as always).  I am a folk festival newbie so I’m very excited to see how the night will play out.

Both shows start at 6:30 p.m. sharp at the great Hill Auditorium.  Friday’s lineup includes favorites Iron & Wine as well as Ben Gibbard and Jay Farrar performing their new collaborative release, One Fast Move or I’m Gone, inspired by Jack Kerouac.  If those two acts aren’t enough to get you excited there are a host of other performers including Band of Heathens, Hoots & Hellmouth, Po’ Girl, Jer Coons, and Nervous But Excited.

That’s not all folks! Saturday night focuses on the roots and traditions of folk and the lineup includes Rosanne Cash, Richie Havens, Doc Watson, Raul Malo, Hot Club of Cowtown, and Enter the Haggis.  Both nights are hosted by Patty Larkin.  Tickets may still be available through ticketmaster.  I hope you can all make it but if not here’s something for you sleepless fans, amazing concert!

Click here!