A Year of Revelations and Elations Around the World
Looking for the album, song or even trend that sums up the past year from a global music perspective? The 'Slumdog Millionaire' soundtrack is not a bad place to start -- a film set in Indian slums, directed by Britain's Danny Boyle, with music involving Bollywood's current standard setter A.R. Rahman and Sri Lankan-born and London-based post-rap star M.I.A. And while it has no direct connection to the recent attacks in Mumbai, the timing makes it even more poignant. Or maybe a collection of songs by Kenyan artists recorded in praise of the U.S. president-to-be, whose father was from Kenya but whose mother was of English, Irish, German and Cherokee heritage, and he himself was raised in Indonesia and Hawaii. But the problem with trying to identify any global zeitgeist is it's just so, well, global. And no matter what music can do, no matter what insights it can give us into war (Georgia) or redemption from incomprehensible barbarity (former Sudanese "lost boy" turned rapper Emmanuel Jal), the experience of music, at the core, is personal. Whether it's epiphany, cultural insight, artistic innovation or "mere" enjoyment provided, even the most shared experiences are ultimately individual.
Continue reading A Year of Revelations and Elations Around the World
Posted by Steve Hochman on Dec 30th 2008 3:00PM
Filed under: Around the World



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MTV Africa just held its inaugural awards show this past weekend -- the MTV Africa Music Awards (MAMA), held in Nigeria's capital, Abuja -- with at least some intent of helping spur global interest in artists that are stars on the continent but pretty much unknown elsewhere. Benjamin Lebrave has a similar, if far more modest, goal with a new venture as well. He's launched
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"I used to go to this old viola player," a friend tells of his youthful years in the post-revolution 1980s of Iran, when Islamic rule made music difficult to find. "He was about 80 and had a photocopy shop in one of the old parts of Tehran. He had this huge archive of LPs, and I'd order some Persian or classical music and he'd record it on cassette. That was the only way. Then we'd copy it and distribute it. On many occasions, I went to someone's house, someone I didn't know before, someone I just met. He'd invite me to dinner or something, and I would see my own cassette there that had circulated! So he got Bach from a friend of a friend of a friend who got it from me. That was my experience with music in my teenage years and my 20s."
Meet the 'Novas Bossas,' same as the bossa nova? 





