Wednesday 16 April 2008

AN OPEN LETTER TO NOEL GALLAGHER

This is my third blog in my music focused world and it is an open letter to Noel Gallagher. There is little chance that he will read it so I guess its open to all that choose to read. Hopefully it will make the people who agree with Noels recent statement rethink their stance and if not you can take a horse to water but you can’t make it drink and you certainly can’t make it think.

For those that are unaware of the comment Noel made regarding hip hop and the Glastonbury music festival and the fact that Jay-Z will be headlining this year’s event I shall explain.

In short Noel, of Oasis has gone on record stating it was wrong to have hip hop headlining and that the organizers had changed things too much. The guitarist and sometimes singer claimed that Jay-Z was not in keeping with the nature of Glastonbury Gallagher said:

“If it aint broke don’t fix it. If you start to break it the people aren’t going to go. I’m sorry, but Jay-Z? No chance. Glastonbury has a tradition of guitar music.” He ended his statement with “I’m not having hip hop at Glastonbury. It’s wrong”

So now that we have covered the background my letter starts like all good letters should………..

Dear Noel,
I hope you are well. I recently read the reports on your statement and was moved to write to you. Firstly can I say that I, like many people, have showed some admiration for your song “Wonderwall” and for quite a few of your other northern guitar classics. You, for a short minute, gave a revolutionary zeal to lads in pubs everywhere as they stood beer glasses in hand singing along to your many anthem like guitar pop/rock songs while effortlessly mimicking your brother Liam’s characteristic swagger. You gave a feeling of belonging to many of these guys who otherwise may have been lured into Ecstasy filled night clubs to dance the water out of their bodies. Although I have come from another musical perspective I can appreciate you and your music. The reason I can do this will become clear as you read on. So I thank you for this and I thank you on behalf of every swagger loving blagger from our home town of Manchester.

But noel I must admit that the wonder fell off my wall when I heard what you had said about Jay-Z. I have heard you make many a statement regarding your music and it has never bothered me in the least. Statements like Oasis being the greatest band in the world, you being the next Beatles, or inferring it at least, it never really bothered me I mean you have a right to your opinion even when you embraced New Labour and tried to resurrect Rule Britannia under the guise of cool Britannia that never bothered me much either because I knew it would come back to bite you and make you look back, not with anger, but with regret.


However when an artist of your eminence decides that a whole genre of music should be excluded from the united kingdoms largest music festival then I think we should all ask what does Mr. Gallagher mean by terms like “traditional” and hip hop being “wrong”? I am not defending Jay-Z’s form of hip hop and anyone who has listened to my music will know that I have a different take on hip hop and music in general, but I will defend his right to play at a musical festival as long music festivals exists.

What could inspire you to endorse nothing less than Musical Apartheid? Were you really saying no hip hop should be entertained? Or was it Jay-Z you have a problem with? Does the term traditional mean only bands from the UK? Does it mean only bands with the basic set up of drums, guitars and bass? With hip hop being a music primarily created by black people do you mean only bands with a white heritage? Oh Noel, what do you mean? I think its time to educate you in the hope that you can clarify your thinking and in so doing help us to understand you.

You have made it very very clear that one of your main influences is the Beatles. You have taken every opportunity to align yourself with their legacy and to those with musical ears you have taken chord progression and many phrases from their back catalogue. For example “don’t look back in anger” in which you used the chord progression from Lennon’s “imagine” in the intro of the song. So I think it should be clear to assume that in your mind the Beatles would be considered traditional.

In the case of the Beatles, they came to prominence as part of a wider musical legacy which became known as “the Mersey Beat”, which I am sure you are aware of.

What you may not be aware of or have overlooked is the fact that the Mersey beat was inspired by the influx of black music into the city in the post war years. In addition to the fact that black GIs were coming into Liverpool bringing along with them Afro-American music the cause of black music was also championed by many a white seaman. It was this music that was not openly sold in music shops but instead trafficked under counters that the likes of Paul McCartney and john Lennon would learn to play as youngsters in the same way that you learned to play their music. This hidden but powerful source of music became known as “Race Music” for obvious reasons.

To this day Liverpool as a city has an uneasy relationship with its past and for some reason seems to refuse to accept the major role black music played in the development of the cities musical culture. Even though evidence of that history is lost in the mainstream it always resides just below the surface but ever present in the psyche of us all and in the minds of musicologists like Portia Maultsby who concluded that the success of white rock and rollers was very much boosted by black influence. There was also the proliferation of the “cover Syndrome”. Which was a way for record companies to counteract the immense crossover influence of R’n’B in the early fifties. Record companies deliberately copied/covered versions with white artists to repackage and make the music more palatable to a white audience or a ‘traditional’ audience. These are the kinds of issues that we are trying to leave behind.

Maybe Noel you can speak to your father or maybe an uncle about the fact that many white males of this time would gain access to clubs to listen to black music the same clubs that had color bars preventing black people from attending


Noel are you saying you would wish for this influence to have not happened in the early development of what you call traditional music?

What about Hendrix, who revolutionized rock music? As you know he was essentially a blues musician, again blues is a musical form with a black tradition.

But hey, I’m sure you know about the influences in the music you love. I mean Paul Weller is one of your idols in fact you have taken great pleasure in his work and in working with him. Why don’t you ask Paul about his early influences of SKA, two tone and mod music I’m sure he would tell you where that ‘skank dat’ he loves so much came from and how Skin heads and Mods took there music from the SKA ‘riddims’ of Jamaica. If your musical greats have taken such strong influences from black music then how have you got a problem with the man they call Jay-Z? In fact have you not seen festival or music events like the Diana memorial concert where white and black folk were shaking their collective ass to the music of Kanye West? I heard that even Prince William can be heard in the palace blasting Pharrell and Snoop.

For arguments sake lets say you were able to get a ban on hip hop at Glastonbury. What then? Would you screen the hundreds of thousands of visitors to make sure there were no hip hop lovers sneaking in amongst the traditional music lovers? NO, I’m sure even you would see how preposterous that would be.


Noel, I would like to say that both the Beetles and Paul Weller, in his time with The Jam and The Style Council, did not put a musical ban on Sam Cooke, The Shirelles, Al Hibbler, Roy Hamilton, Ray Charles, Little Richard, Colin Areety, James brown, Jimi Hendrix, Miles Davies, duke Ellington, B.B king, Marvin Gaye, chuck berry. If they had done this the music you have come to love would today be a very different thing. Although you may say none of the artist I have listed can be called hip hop. The point is as a hip hop artist I know in my soul that hip hop would not be here without these greats who went before me to lay the foundations of hip hop. As the phrase goes there is nothing new under the sun.

So please don’t reject hip hop because you fear it or you hate it or it makes you feel a little put out. You must embrace it in the understanding that all music is related just as you have close relatives and distant ones, nevertheless you are all from the same line. Music is the same we are all connected through it. So use your position to unite not to grab headlines that make you seem ignorant and backward in your grip on reality and lost in an outdated mentality.


There is nothing greater than when music from two different branches comes together to prove clearly that they are rooted in the same tree.

Can you imagine if you had asked to Jay-Z to hook up and drop a track together for Glastonbury? It is obvious that Jay-Z has a mind open to such collaboration because of his work with Linkin Park. But I guess I am dreaming because although I would have rather read a headline saying that said ‘Noel Gallagher and Jay-Z join forces for one track to open Glastonbury’. The truth is I know your ego is too great to share the stage with an artist you feel is inferior to yourself and that is the saddest thing about your statement; it reveals something inside you that is ignorant and maybe a little bitter that your band didn’t break America in the same way that Jay-Z has broken everywhere…….

Elavi AKA the Educator

CLOCKWORK by ELAVI
WWW.ELAVI.COM


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Wednesday 2 April 2008

THE PRICE OF YOUR DREAMS

This blog is about a couple of topics that I feel relate or at least in my experience they are irrevocably linked. The first is control or the power to control. The second topic is our dreams and aspirations.

In my first blog I mentioned the fact that I had taken to the streets to sell my own music and that many of the people who have becomes friends both online and in the real world first made contact on the streets of my home town Manchester. Although I have remained in regular contact very few of these people know that on the 19th December 2007 I was prosecuted by Manchester city council for selling my music on Market Street in the town center. It seems that no matter what argument I put to the council they were hell bent on prosecution, and believe me I did try to reason with them. I tried the argument that all I am is a poor guy trying to use his entrepreneurial spirit to better himself. I tired the argument about the music industry being in turmoil and with that turmoil no one is being signed so I decided to wait no longer to get my music out.

What I learned was you can’t reason with a dog that’s got a bone between its teeth especially when that dog’s got a taste for meat. I realized I was the meat. In the eyes of the council I was no different to pickpockets or people selling fake DVD’s and other bootleg material.

So off to court I was headed still thinking of my best defense. However the more I looked into the law coupled with the fact that they had me on CCTV tracked trough the city like I was Jack Bauer in an episode of 24. The footage clearly showed me selling and taking cash from members of the public. So not only did they have me by the short-and-curly’s , they also had hold of Big Willy and the two twins as well (painful). So to jump to the outcome the verdict was guilty and the fine was £250.

From my point pf view the money I had to pay was worth it. Not because I believe that £250 is nothing but because the experience taught me about one thing. It taught me about control. The control that society has over us all, it taught me that if you have a dream sometimes there is a price to pay for that dream.

I will be totally honest I have never been a lover of authority figures, men in suites, men in black or whatever you want to call them and anyone who has listened to my single ‘FREE UR MIND’ will know where am coming from. That’s right the council guys were just a couple of agents without the dark shades and cheaper outfits. But the control they enforced was no different. If I had stolen, then come after me. If I had killed, come after to me. If I had raped then by all means come after me. But the so called crime of selling my music just didn’t add up. To me, the council and the police officers who confiscated my music needed to free their own minds and quickly.

Ok, now I come to the most important part of this blog and my experience.

After I was prosecuted I did not go out to sell for a while until I realized I had stopped hitting the streets not through choice but though fear. Subtle fear had crept in and along with it the feeling that I was being watched. I felt like I was doing something wrong.

Me scared? Yes Elavi, you, scared like a little baby scared of the monsters in the dark. This realization came to me when I was watching a film called HUSTLE AND FLOW. In which the main protagonist DJay relates to another character that it’s not about making it. It’s about making it with as little resources as you have. He said that it’s not about how big the man is in the fight but how big the fight is in the man. It made me think that it was from the street selling that I had been able to record my album, get it stocked in many HMV stores and build my website. The streets had been good to me. Why should I desert it now? So I decided to break trough the fear buy a new bag, fill it and head for the town center to sell, sell, sell like my name was cash generator.

The first couple of times I was uneasy this was not helped by the council guys finding me straight away like agents chasing NEO. But the more they came the less I feared them. I mean what more could they do to me apart from prosecute me again (which they are in the process of doing again by the way). No, in a way they have helped me to realize that they can not control me unless I let them control me, unless I crumble to fear. So far I have paid £250 for my dream but more than money I have also paid the price of my fear and to be free of fear is a priceless thing, because with the absence of fear comes freedom. I am free of what people think of me. I am free of the control and I am closer to my music and my dream.

So, to all the dreamers like me who are driven to create, those who have a dream and a goal. Face your fear. Find out the price of your dreams and gladly pay it no matter how high the price because the reward will be priceless.

Elavi AKA The Fearless

CLOCKWORK by ELAVI
WWW.ELAVI.COM


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