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  • Posts Tagged ‘Andrew Dubber’:

    Bass Festival highlights: Fight The Power and The Great Excursion critical debate

    Written by Nicky Getgood on Thursday, June 10th, 2010 ( 2 responses )
    Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    A hard day at the office

    A hard day at the office

    Last Wednesday saw the launch of the Bass Festival with the opening of Punch Records’ exhibition Fight The Power, of global protest and propaganda art.

    Zellig sculpture

    Fight The Power is on until the end of June at the newly opened Zellig, the Custard Factory, so you can get a good look at the building’s new sculpture too.  Elsewhere online is a slideshow of photos from the Fight Power exhibition launch and a film of the launch’s opening speeches and Ammo Talwar’s tour of the exhibition by Andrew Dubber.

    Fight The Power

    Simon, Sandra and Raycho fighting the power. And each other.

    Fight The Power got Simon Walker, Sandra Hall (Friction Arts) and Bulgarian Artist Raycho Stanev in an outspoken mood, which worked well for the following night’s critical debate at The Edge based around the issues stemming from Raycho’s installation The Great Excursion.

    critical debate

    Paradox, Raycho, Sandra and Lee at the Critical Debate

    I was a little late in joining it, but the critical debate was a lively and much-needed discussion which explored issues around ethnic, cultutal and class identity and how these can affect our own personal identities.  Paradox really hit the nail on the head when she quoted Bruce Lee: “I’m a citizen of this planet.”

    The Great Excursion 1

    Birmingham’s City of Culture bid also entered the discussion, with people musing on how it can be truly multicultural rather than what Paul Murphy calls, “The 3 S’s: steel bands, saris and samosas.”

    The Great Excursion 2

    It was an incredibly special evening (which Friction Arts have written a more in-depth post about), which makes it all the more sickening that it ended with The Edge getting broken into after everyone had gone home.  As Lee has wisely said, ‘Peace and love to the burglar, hope the karmic burden was worth it!’

    The Great Excursion 3

    Raycho Stanev and his beautiful technical assistant Annie have returned to Bulgaria, but his installation The Great Excursion, about his childhood memories of the expulsion of over 360,000 Bulgarian Turks from his country in 1989 under the socialist regime, is staying at The Edge, Cheapside until 19th June.  Raycho’s very personal and touching work is well worth a visit to learn about a particularly sinister yet little-known episode in Bulgarian history that will make you reflect upon attitudes towards race, ethnicity and cultural differences in the UK today.

    The Great Excursion 4

    Punch Records’ Bass Festival is on into early July, with events and gigs all over Birmingham.  The next Digbeth highlight is ‘spiritual messenger’ Jah Shaka’s gig at The Rainbow on Sat 25th June.

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    Supersonic 5alist

    Written by Nicky Getgood on Tuesday, July 15th, 2008 ( Start discussion )
    Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    Andrew Dubber and Stef Lewandowski’s latest site 5alist motivated me to ‘make a 5′ of my favourite bits from Capsule’s Supersonic festival in The Custard Factory over the weekend, which I’ve only just about recovered from. Here we are:

    1. Brian Duffy – a brilliant talk from a truly astounding intellect, which made Pete create Brian Duffy Has A Big Brain. We also got a sneak preview of Modified Toy Orchestra’s latest pop video starring Hula Barbie. Brian and Mike in Mono’s ZX Spectrum Orchestra later that day was very impressive, if only to learn the prison-stretch lengths of time these guys spend programming to produce the simplest sounds. Geek Pride!

    2. Heavy Metal in Baghdad – a heartbreaking film as much about the Iraqi’s impossible living situation as it is about metal band Acrassicauda.

    3. Nintendo Gameboy – instrument of choice for DJ Scotch Egg, Marousa (think Animal playing a mac) and the fantastic Fuck Buttons.

    4. Efterklang – a lovely, lifting 10-piece group.

    5. 7 Inch Cinema’s screening of Nosferatu with a live soundtrack. Scary stuff.

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