Saada Branker Writes on ‘Anticipating a Movement in the Art of Spoken Word’

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South North Griots Summit Team: Dwayne Morgan, Motion, Nth Dgri, Eddy DaOriginalone.

Saada STYLO reflects on a personal journey into the art and heart of  Spoken Word in this exclusive blog post for the Canada Council of the Arts. 

More than 20 years ago, youthful and thrilled by just about every experience, I lost in love. The pain of the heartbreak had me reflective, so I sought comfort in the writings of black poets, authors and folk singers. It wasn’t long before my pensive moods gave way to indignation and I put pen to paper to write my first poem, “Bittersweet Departure.” I was green, as was my technique. My words seemed tightly tangled and the sentiment flat. The poem remained inconspicuous within the pages of my closed notebook.

Then I watched Maya Angelou’s apostles describe how the span of their hips and the curl of their lips made them phenomenal and I, with a growing audience, was captivated by the poetic prowess of the spoken word artist.

To understand spoken word is to appreciate how it is poetry constructed for flight. There is movement in its meaning and a lifting of its phrasing; so much so, members in the audience catch the cadence, sway to the melody, rise to the call, raise fists in solidarity and bow their heads in mourning. In a manner so quintessential to the concept of an artist’s call and response, we lend our ears and much more to spoken word artists. Theirs is a full-bodied, poetic expression that frees us from technique and formula and rigidity and rules and instead captures us in flowetry.

A gathering of Griots

Most artists and art lovers have access to a galaxy of cyber spaces formed to share what we think and how we feel. One useful tool for connecting is subjective thought, and how we express it can present an opportunity to expand and then elevate the discussion. I’m expecting that consciousness raising at the South-North Griots Summit on May 28-31 at Toronto’s Harbourfront Centre.

The 4-day gathering of wordsmiths from North America, the Caribbean and Africa at this city’s cultural hub is noteworthy. The artists who will perform and participate in panels have sparked a trail of personal and professional achievements. Their arrival at the Harbourfront raises Toronto’s profile as being a welcoming host to a movement of heroic writers performing poetry as they feel it.

Canada has a history of spoken word artistry; one that encapsulates slam contests and freestyling. But first there was dub poetry. There, as I imagine in the spirit of Trinidad & Tobago parang, words are gripped differently and restructured like instruments of sound connecting with audiences through utterances, beats, riddim, a snap, a stomp and a verbal massaging of Caribbean dialect passed on from Ancestral tellings. The delivery of dub’s mellifluous soundings intertwine with stories about hardship, integration, exclusion, actualization, celebration, growth, self-love and, yes, heartbreak experienced by everyday Caribbean women and men. Authors Karen Flynn and Evelyn Marrast describe dub poetry in a 2008 journal article, citing Jamaica as the birthplace for this movement of the working class and non-elites:

“With its emphasis on what Edward Kamau Brathwaite (1982) calls ‘Nation Language,’ dub poetry by its very existence challenges the hegemony standard English and the literary establishment; articulating the anger and despair of ordinary Jamaicans, it is necessarily protest poetry …”1

That protest caught and grew then migrated. Today, the tales are passed on and shared by a Canadian generation that honours its trail forgers George Elliott Clarke, Lillian Allen and the incomparable Louise Bennett; a cross-section of spoken word artists that birthed the new voices. They in turn use varying art styles to sound off about marginalization and the way it morphs into something else, posing challenges in the application of their craft.

A meeting of minds

Why a summit? I’m learning that the seeds for this type of artist discourse were planted by the Northern Griots Network (NGN), a collective of African-Canadian spoken words artists in collaboration with the Nia Centre for the Arts and the Harbourfront Centre. Back in 2003, the NGN organized a series of poetry performances throughout Canadian cities. The initiative ran for six months with support from the Canada Council for the Arts. At that time, the network had just formed. Years later, this South-North Griot summit can be considered another part of a long-running dialogue. Included can be conversations about the role of spoken word in our time where protests for social justice overlap. With its ability to capture attention in ways that encourage reaction and response, spoken word is and has always been an empowering method for many performing poets—storytellers whose illuminating editorials offer proof that all lives matter. That affirmation will hopefully extend to the artists’ messages and to the business of their craft. And hopefully arts councils will develop artist-oriented programs of support in response.

I did end up performing “Bittersweet Departure” on a stage as part of a Montréal-based, spoken word collective. Our ambition brought me back to living and my exit, stage left, brought me back to feeling. Best part: I was welcomed into a fold that accepted me and my personal mission to heal. It was a thrilling experience to share with artists and audience a passion for the power of spoken words, together looking deeply into what formed from the impact.

1. “Spoken Word from the North: Contesting Nation, Politics, and Identity” from Flynn, Karen; Marrast, Evelyn. Wadabagei : A Journal of the Caribbean and Its Diaspora 11.2 (Spring 2008): 3-24.
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About the Author: Saada Branker
Saada Branker is a writer living in Toronto. She works with emerging writers through Saada STYLO, her copyediting business, and is currently the Fresh Milk Arts Platform Artist-in-Residence in Barbados.

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HEADSPACE 5TH ANNIVERSARY : RETURN OF THE GEMINI!

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UforChange Presents…

HEADSPACE 5th Year Anniversary
RETURN OF THE GEMINI!

Hosted by Wan Luv & MOTION

Featuring Deejays
L’Oqenz – https://soundcloud.com/loqenz                                                                         Charlie. – https://soundcloud.com/northandnext
Sean Roman – https://soundcloud.com/seanroman

Hip Hop, House, Nu Disco, Funk, Reggae & Old School

Date: June 12, 2015                                                                                                                  Location: 237 Sackville St. – The Church Hall
Doors: 9:30pm

$10 B4 11:30PM | $15 After 11:30PM
19+ with valid photo ID

**Funds collected at Vivacity & Headspace will be invested in free community programming for Youth Artists entering cycle 11 at UforChange, in September.

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RAISING LAZARUS BY CELEBRATED UK POET & PLAYWRIGHT KAT FRANCOIS PLAYS TORONTO

RAISING LAZARUS e-flyer

MotionLIVE presents award-winning U.K. Poet & Playwright KAT FRANCOIS starring in her riveting one-woman play RAISING LAZARUS.

From the streets of urban London, to the Caribbean island of Grenada, RAISING LAZARUS uncovers the secrets of a hidden lineage that leads to the frontlines of a brutal war, where young West Indian men are thrown into a futile fight for a country that doesn’t love them. A rivetting story of heartbreak, adversity and the ultimate sacrifice.

Hot on the heels of her crowd-raising performance at the South North Griots Summit of Spoken Word in Toronto, U.K.-born KAT FRANCOIS is an award-winning performance poet and playwright. From World Poetry Slam Champion to published author of RYHME AND REASON, Kat Francois has toured her celebrated plays internationally, including Australia, Ireland, Norway and the renowned Edinburgh Fringe Festival.

Kat Francois is the producer of WORD4WORD, the long-running poetry presentation in residence at Theatre Royal Stratford East.

The Toronto presentation of RAISING LAZARUS is sponsored by OBSIDIAN THEATRE COMPANY

_________

MotionLIVE presents
from London U.K

RAISING LAZARUS

Written & Performed by Award-winning Poet & Playwright
KAT FRANCOIS

Friday June 5th, 2015 8PM
DANCEMAKERS Theatre
The DISTILLERY DISTRICT
15 CASE GOODS LANE, STUDIO 301

TIX: $10  RSVP GUESTLIST: info@motionlive.com

Sponsored by OBSIDIAN THEATRE COMPANY

Presented by
MotionLIVE in association w/ ift theatre, Zupakat Prod., RwD, SunStar Worldwide

motionlive.com
katfrancois.com

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THE OFFICIAL SOUTH NORTH GRIOTS MIX by L’OQENZ!

01. SUN RA – CALLING PLANET EARTH
02. GUINESS – SPOKEN WORD
03. KENDRICK LAMAR – ALRIGHT
04. ESPERANZA SPALDING – REALLY VERY SMALL
05. KAT FRANCOIS – DOES MY ANGER SCARE YOU
06. MAD ZACK – NIGHT ANIMALS
07. MOTION – GRAF
08. HIATUS KAIYOTE – LAPUTA
09. TAQRALIK PATRIDGE
10. YUNA – LIVE YOUR LIFE (MELO-X MOTHERLAND GOD MIX)
11. GIGZ FT. AFRAKAREN – LOVE INSIDE
12. DUKE ELLINGTON & JOHN COLTRANE – IN A SENTIMENTAL MOOD
13. DENONTE OSAYANDE – MASKS
14. FREEDOM WRITERS FT. IAN KAMAU – I’LL BE WAITING WHEN FREEDOM COMES
15. FLYING LOTUS – EYES ABOVE
16. ROCHELLE CHRISTIE – DISCRIMINATION
17. PUBLIC ENEMY – PUBLIC ENEMY NO. 1
18. YOUNG FATHERS – MMMH MMMH
19. MYA ANGELO – EVIL
20. HALEEK MAUL – FRAULEIN (PROD. KING BRITT)
21. NON – UNTITLED
22. JESSICA CARR MOORE – I’M A HIP HOP CHEERLEADER
23. TUGGS.T.A.R – SEASON OF LOST LOVE
24. MUSTAFA THE POET – SPECTRUM OF HOPE ***
25. WOODCARVER
26. LOST POETS – WHEN THE REVOLUTION COMES
27. SONAR SENGHOR – SICCO

THE SOUTH NORTH GRIOTS SUMMIT – TORONTO’s LARGEST FESTIVAL OF SPOKEN WORD – TAKES PLACE May 28th -31st. #griotsSUMMIT2015 CONNECT www.NORTHERNGRIOTSNETWORK.com        www.LOQENZ.com

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THE POWER OF SPOKEN WORD! #griotsSUMMIT Twitter Fete!

FOLLOW US and CHIME IN https://twitter.com/NorthernGriots
GRIOTSTwitterParty

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Welcoming the Spoken World at #griotssummit2015

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South x North Griots Summit, May 28th – 31st, Toronto

I’m so excited about working with an amazing team of artists, curators and cultural presenters to bring to you the South x North Griots Summit, taking place in Toronto this spring! This manifestation of over a decade and a half of visionary work initiated by the Northern Griots Network promises to animate this Megacity with the power of Word and Sound.

Canada’s spoken word scene is recognized as world class, cutting edge and groundbreaking. In celebration of our vibrant and innovative legacy of poets and wordsmiths, the Northern Griots Network and Harbourfront Centre have collaborated to invite spoken word artists from around the world to share their powerful oral and performance traditions, and what’s new and next in the lineage of spoken word. The Griots reminds us that the world is old but the future springs from the past.

#GRIOTSSUMMIT2015 is produced in association with NIA Centre for the Arts, LulaWorld Festival and IGNITE #TO2015 during the artistic lead up to the PanAm Games.

Hope to see you there!

– Motion

Program Highlights

Thu. May 28 | 08:00 pm – 11:00 pm
In The Beginning… **
Lula Lounge | 1585 Dundas St W. / Dufferin                                                                             For TIX: www.dwaynemorgan.ca/events

Fri. May 29 | 06:00 pm – 07:00 pm
ACTION! Stage to Screen: Spoken Word in Film & Video
Harbourfront Centre | Studio Theatre | 235 Queens Quay W.                                                FREE

Fri. May 29 | 08:00 pm – 11:00 pm
The Griots Lounge**
Harbourfront Centre | Brigantine Room | 235 Queens Quay W.                                           For TIX: www.tickets.harbourfrontcentre.com/calendar

Sat. May 30 | 09:00 am – 10:00 am
Opening Keynote
Harbourfront Centre | Studio Theatre | 235 Queens Quay W.
Featuring: George Elliott Clarke                                                                                                FREE

Sat. May 30 | 08:00 pm – 11:00 pm                                                                                 Spoken World: Features                                                                                            Harbourfront Centre | Brigantine Room | 235 Queens Quay W.                                                For TIX: www.tickets.harbourfrontcentre.com/calendar

Sat. May 30 – Sun. May 31 | 10:00 am – 6 pm | FREE
Interactive Workshops, Panels & Sessions – including Learn Out Loud: Spoken Word & Education, The Word on Community Engagement , Career Development: Taking Care of Business, Word Life: Youth InterAction Co-creation Workshop, Speak the Change! Spoken Word & Political Activism, The Griot Impact on Contemporary Diaspora, and more…

For Full Schedule, connect: www.northerngriotsnetwork.com/schedule.html     For Info: GriotsSummit@gmail.com

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MOTION’S “A RIFF ON SAMO” INSPIRED by NON’s “DOWNTOWN 81”

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The debut of a new work of words by MOTIONBOOM for REAL : A riff on SAMO – accompanies a significant, just-dropped, musical release. Inspired by L’OQENZ aka NiteOwlNaps’ new sonic mix “DOWNTOWN 81 – premiered by OKAYPLAYER – and Motion’s own live eye experience with BASQUIAT’s visuals,  this rhythmic riff evokes the exhibited works (AGO in Toronto) and Unknown Notebooks ( New York’s Brooklyn Museum) of this evocative artist.

Listen | Read | Experience!


  BOOM For Real : a riff on SAMO   by MOTIONlive | MMXV

    New york

JB scrawls across a wall

as Martin speaks

in black tags against the

white starkness

It is Poetry

Now is the Time

85

Bebop Bird lives in acrylic and wood

the inanimate tremble

of shivering disc

Black

and white

Letters spell

Prkr

like his notes

JB’s materials are found

Wax

Vinyl

Wood

Vanderzee

Harlem photog

captures the living

in gelatin

Silver

print

Basquiat lives there

too

paint-stained

dreaded

designer suit

Brooklyn born

Haitian

Rican

Graf and glitterati

breed

Ire and dread

Visuals pound

bricks to canvas

Street is studio

here is born the Noise

SAMO

spray cans

pseudonym

paint

transcribes planes and trains

vets and pains

and legless men

gouged by the pursuit of democracy

Still

Crowns hover the tracks

and traffic rumbles down

the surface of thin paper

VARIOS

the many

the crowd

the built up

the discarded

The cosign

the acclaim

the crash

the time travel

The regression to 7

Years

The succession of

Kings

The multi-chaos

the collage of colors

trapped in a human skull

traced by stitches

held together by scars

The Black man

boxer-ready

is a victor in the blood-filled ring

The cosmos hail the champion

the warrior returns

Locked in a frame of wood

a house of glass

renowned

rendered silent

by lips barred

in shards of crayon

and ink

The ghosts live here

the echoes of heroes

crying on stone mountain tops

tho dead

still Victorious

Burden stiffens his wings

fingers claw the dark expanse

and Jesse runs

over nazi hate

While the negro popo – blue-clad

stands static in a pale space

Samson is sheared of his locks

imprisoned by his own fascination

The poisoned portrait

Defeated v.s. the destroyed

Black slashes scream in the silence

and resonate noise

Blast of the beatbox

and spray can trumpets

wakes the worshippers

the idols

the enforcers

the pawns

The cowboy collectors

the copyright creators©

Gun-wielders who ransom

lifeblood for coins

The mind machine spins

powered by history

here hangs the anonymous

the unnamed

the self reflected in oil and stick

the tortured anatomies

the lonely black shadow

with white eyes slit

The artist in black shroud

hangmen with pink fists

teeth bared

defacement

   it could have been me

The young who lived old

but never got to be

under the peering eyes of the peeping toms

darkness torn by boars with horns

and venus boxes madonna

as the fighter tussles with wolves

colored men and halos

float over the city

the games of life

the circus sideshow

Dual visions

of fire spitters

and a falling metropolis

hieroglyphics

rise from the rubble

as the serpent waits

And Exu on his altar

stands at the gate

Waits for the Soul to come

88

Here lies the re:Mix

galaxy of collage

echoes of immortality

crux of death and rebirth

re: myth

reality

the beat bop

the back spin

the freestyle polyphony

Downtown to uptown

cross bridges

and oceans of memory

Boom

   for real

for niteOwlnaps

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OKAYPLAYER PREMIERS the BASQUIAT MIX by L’OQENZ aka NiteOWLNaps

27 years after his passing, JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT‘s aura continues to rise. Infamous artist, actor, DJ  who came of age with the earliest of the New York Hip Hop and punk scenes, Basquiat has left an indelible cultural mark. From the millennial release of the lost film Downtown 81, to recent exhibits at the Brooklyn Museum and Toronto’s AGO, the life andart ofthe Graf artist once known as SAMO who went on to take the exclusive art world by storm, is now the intrigue of a new generation. Through words, sounds and visuals, his influence lives on.

What more fitting than a re:Mix of the voice, sounds and energy of this immersive artist by the multi-talented L’OQENZ. Also known by her production moniker NiteOwlNaps (NON), the producer & DJ has fused her passion for the art of Basquiat with her sonic musings, creating DOWNTOWN 81: A tribute to Jean-Michel Basquiat. Premiered by OKAYPLAYER and presented by PIRATES BLEND, this debut is a MUST Listen, a journey through space, sound and time!

Tracks Produced/Remixed By: NON
Mix & Master By: Zoé Johnson of AFIMEarts
Artwork By: Felipe Velasquez | Graphics By: Blu

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WELCOMING THE SPOKEN WORLD AT HARBOURFRONT, TORONTO

Griots Motion banner

Canada’s flourishing spoken word scene is recognized as world class. In celebration of our vibrant legacy of poets, we’ve invited spoken word artists from around the world to share their stories, songs and unique oral and performance traditions. The griot reminds us that the world is old but the future springs from the past.

Bought to you by the Northern Griots Network, in association with Harbourfront Centre and NIA Centre for the Arts, South-North Griots Summit is an international event bringing together top spoken word artists and presenters of African-Canadian and Caribbean heritage from across the Americas. The SNGS aims to advance the development of Canadian spoken word by drawing on the best and the brightest to engage in discussion and display their skills for audiences to enjoy spoken word performance in its full artistic dimension: music, movement, rhythm, and voice.

Music, theatre and other performance forms are central to the role of griots in engaging audiences. Traditionally, they are storytellers / singers / musicians / poets / historians, and through their spoken words are the living memories of humankind. How has this African tradition traveled cross-seas and south to north throughout the Americas? From the epics and praise songs sung by formal Griots, through to blues narratives, dub missives, calypso subversives, and hip-hop provocative’s, the poetic voice entertains and connects as a force of artistic communication, information, empowerment and transformation in our communities.

Understanding what is constant and what has changed in this transition may be a way to better understand both where we have been and where we are going; for, as the Griot reminds us, the world is old, but the future springs from the past.

Canada’s current spoken word poetry scene is flourishing and recognized as world class. It was built through the hard work, excellence and innovation of artists like Lillian Allen, Louise Bennett, Ayanna Black, and George Elliot Clarke, giants upon whose shoulders successive generations of spoken word artists and slam poets often unknowingly stand.

The SNGS is a song in celebration of those accomplishments, and an exploration of how the seed planted in yesterday’s CELAFI and International Dub Poetry Festival is grown today to link Caribbean innovators whose dub poetry and Rapso shape dancehall and soca with their techniques and tempos, with award-winning Canadian spoken word playwrights and ground-breaking impresarios putting poetry in motion when sisters/brothers speak, with US lyricists rocking Nuyorican, Def Poetry Jams and Apollo stages to bring a Jessica Care Moore to global acclaim. Through these linkages, gathering brilliant new world spoken word organizers and artists to learn from one another, showcase talents, listen to and speak with youth, and chart a way forward, we look to reach higher heights, to rediscover a greatness that will live so forcefully in the minds of generations to come that it will never be lost.

— SNGS Coordinating Committee: Anthony Bansfield a.k.a Nth digri, Eddy “Da Original One” David, MOTION and Dwayne Morgan

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THE ONLY MUSIC PLAYLIST YOU’LL NEED TO CELEBRATE TRIBECA’S RECORD-BREAKING YEAR FOR WOMEN

TRIBECAFILM.COM – BY MATT BARONE

Women directors will be represented in full force at this year’s festival, and this exclusive Soundcloud playlist is the best way to party with them, no matter where you are.

Slowly but surely, cinema’s longstanding gender gap has been shrinking over the last few years. It’s a long and patience-testing process, but the results are growing more optimistic and inspirational by the day, and the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival is leading the charge. Women filmmakers are getting their projects made with an increased frequency and some, namely critically adored Selma director, and Tribeca Talks participant, Ava DuVernay, have crossed over onto Hollywood’s A-list.

And, who knows, perhaps some of the women behind TFF 2015’s most exciting movies are next in line. This year’s film lineup represents a significant milestone in Tribeca’s 14-year history: 40 of the 119 feature-lengths films were directed by women. That’s 33% of the fest’s behind-the-camera talent, a record-breaking percentage for TFF—and, giving the stats even more cache, 11 of those 40 women are from New York City.

To capture this trailblazing spirit, screenwriter/playwright/poet Motion and DJ L’Oqenz have given us something really special to celebrate this momentous occasion. Sadly, unless you’ll be in NYC at some point in the next 12 days, you won’t be able to see any of these ladies’ films, but that shouldn’t stop you from enjoying the good vibes. Courtesy of Motion and L’Oqenz, here’s an exclusive and personally curated Soundcloud mix, made up of 15 songs from women like Mary J. Blige (who’ll be at TFF with her new documentary, The London Sessions, and a one-night-only concert), Jean Grae, Lena Horne, Alicia Keys, and Emily King.

Throw on this 15-track playlist and toast to the fairer sex.

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