Yasmin was a great guest speaker, her career focus resonates heavily with me as she comes from the same background as me and that background is SOUNDSYSTEM CULTURE.
That culture is in my blood my mother an avid reggae and jazz collector and DJ and my Dad a producer in the Broken Beat and Trip hop scenes in London which are two scenes that got almost everything from soundsystem culture. Yasmin said that soundsystem culture is about making the spirituality of music real, and she couldn’t be more right. I was 9 years old when I have my first memory of Notting Hill carnival, in fact its one of my earliest memory’s, hearing the bass press inside my young chest, sitting on my uncles lap eating jerk chicken and Mac n Cheese whilst my Mother is entranced by the sounds, the smell of what I would later know as Thai weed coming out in smoke from the mouths of my elders. The spirit of reggae music is inside me, it’s about liberation of the mind free from the shackles of the western world who’s goals since the beginning have been to deify the ego, to play God, to push the narrative ‘THE WHITE MAN KNOWS BEST’, no he doesn’t it’s for any human to say he knows more than the next. That’s why as oppressed people we are so musical, yes it’s in out genes but also it’s a quest for liberation, a quest to return to the days our ancestors ruled kingdoms unthinkable in todays world. Yasmin spoke about the spirit of the ancestors in movement, music and dance and that’s why I think at the root of Sound as art, it is the African people and the diaspora that have truly taken it to it’s spiritual depths. As the quest for liberation bares a heavy burden on the soul and that burden must be released, often art is just that release.
Marcus Garvey -“Liberate the minds of men and ultimately you will liberate the bodies of men.”
