MOTION’S 40 DAYZ – AFROTORONTO

Few artists on either the local spoken  word or hip hop scene can boast to have the skills to seamlessly navigate between both worlds. Toronto-born and bred artist Motion, is just such a rare talent.

Over the years, she has opened for such renowned artists as Mos Def, Wycelf Jean, Talib Kweli, Jill Scott and more. Her vocal chops have also been showcased on the soundtrack for the film, When Moses Woke (Itoti Productions) which premiered on Bravo! Television.

And to all that, add published author as well.

Motion recently launched her latest book of poetry entitled 40 dayz. A follow-up to her book Motion in Poetry, published by Women’s Press in 2002, 40 dayz is an intensely personal and reflective exploration of her journey as woman, mother, lover and world citizen.

Still ever rooted in her Torontonian universe, Motion takes us back to her Antiguan and Bajan heritage to show how her family, friends & other individuals have shaped who she is.

Motion has a gift for bringing back days gone by through infusing her reminiscing tales with lyrical smells and scents of familiar experiences. As you are transported back with her in a funkadelic time machine, we encounter Malcolm, Maya and Alice along the way.

Her piece “dem say” is a prime example of how, in just a few lines, Motion takes us back to an idyllic and more care-free past.

But eventually, sure as the sun rises from the east every morning, innocence is broken, hope battles with regret and dreams are too often deferred.

Despite all of that, and perhaps because of those growing pains, one’s sense of community remains a major pillar amid it all.

This T-dot community that Motion illustrates encompasses it all. From the busloads of people going along with their mundane existence, to the mournful mothers and guilty lovers, all play a part.

The bustling city landscape she describes is also sometimes a metropolis under menacing clouds. In “hedlines” we find a city under curfew where “somewhere a poet is detained” and a “high court decides the fate of men”.

Motion depicts a post-911 world where “ownland security” justifies the oppressing rule of a police state. She longs to spend her Friday night watching “pre-war N.Y. on Sex and the City.”

In a cold mega-city where “skyscrapers grow where green trees used to greet” and “good mornings are swallowed up down fearful throats and stuck-up tongues”, we often find ourselves feeling suffocated.

But far from wallowing in despair, the bliss of passion, lust and love remains a permanent fixture in Motion’s poetic cityscapes. From jonesing under the Bronx bridges by the Hudson River to fantasies of making love while riding the rocket in the T-dot, she leaves with this burning question: … where is the love?

MERES J. WECHE is an original founder and the Executive Editor of AfroToronto.com. He can be reached at mweche@afrotoronto.com.

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FREEDOM WRITERS Drop a New Classic Vid feat. Faces from the TDot!

Loved being there, and also pairing with Jemeni (bigUP Mark Strong too) for our cameo duo in the Freedom Writer’s new video “For the Change.” Directed by producer BigSproxx, it features an entertaining mix of vintage footage and sharp editing that perfectly punctuate this conceptual vid. A blast from the past, present and future, “For the Change” keeps your eyes moving.

As written on FreedomWritersMusic“For the Change” is a hard hitting production layered with horns and an infectious bassline, featur[ing] Emcees Tona, Adam Bomb, Progress, Frankie Payne and Theo3 weaving in and out with rapid fire flows that rise in intensity with every line.”

Look out for cameos from Motion, Crown A Thornz, Ty Harper, Jemini, Stolen From Africa, DJ NaNa, Smash Brovaz, Ian Kamau, DeeJay Grouch, Mel Boogie and many more of TDot’s finest!

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she said he said

she said

I think I’m gonna run away and join the circus

he said no way I’m gonna become a wrestler

don’t you wanna live an exciting life she said

will you be able to buy me wrestlers?

how bout a safari? like we go save the animals and stuff?

he said no way so an animal can bite me?

they won’t bite. we’ll help them and stuff? like the elephants

how about the lions?

yeah mon. we’ll talk to them like this  aka um bakama

that’s not a language

yes it is it’s lion language she roars

that’s just foolishness

how do you know

cause I’m a lion.

 

by motion::moshun2011

 

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NUIT BLANCH 2011 “OUR HOPE FOR CHILDREN” EXHIBIT feat. on STRIZZZY.COM

Our Hope for Children art installation was featured at this year’s Nuit Blanche in Toronto. The streets were packed to from dusk to the break-a-dawn as T.dot stayed awake all nite long, finding art in the most usual and unusual places. Shining in Yonge Street’s Additionelle store windows, 45 portraits represented the faces and voices of the city, blending words and images into “Poetik Portraits.” The exhibit featured the up close and personal imagery of photographer John Beebe. For two days, we set up a photo booth on the street – one in St. Lawrence Market, and the next in Nathan Phillip Square, and photographed and parlayed with both family and passersby, who came by and represented.

I remixed each person’s words and meditations on their hopes for children into a singular poetik piece; I wanted each phrase to be able to stand on its own, as well as a continuous lyrical poem, with verses and choruses. The words fused with the photos and here we have a collective artistic statement, coming straight from the people.

BiggUp Marie Lauren and the OACAS for the vision, and each person who shared their time, thoughts and words. One Love going out to J-Wyze, Mark Strong, DJ L’oqenz, Tamara Shelly, Brandon Haye, Quentin Vercetty, La BombaKoncept KingTamara Dawitt, Theo 3, Rootz Kizzy, Jo Altillia, Love Jones Sundays and all the people – from kids to elders – whose faces made a beUtifull impact on Yonge St. that nite, amongst the revelry and noise, a silent and powerful statement. You, my people, are hope:) Bless!

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Author & Activist SISTER SOULJAH Live in TOronto w/special guest MOTION

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ManifestoJA presents Art’Is TDOT EDITION

WORD/SOUND/IMAGE/POWER hosted by Donisha Pendergast, featuring Keisha Monique, Motion, Kabaka Pyramid, Michie Mee,Charlie Bobus, Five Steez, Ian Kamau, Aquilla Roots, Quentin Vercetty, Sabriyah Simon. Music by DJ L’Oqenz & Tasha Rozez

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WORD SOUND FLASH MOB!

Word, Sound Purpose! is an art-based public interactive performance (a flash mob) organized by Nia Centre for the Arts and reConnexion Artist Collective in partnership with Westview Collegiate.

We will be taking to the streets of Toronto on Sept 30th, 2011 disrupting public space and performing “BBM” by David Delisca and “Love Uncut” by Lola Bunz, reppin for our community’s young, dynamic poets, spoken wordist and emcees!

Rehearsal dates are September 25th (1-4pm) at the Centre for Social Innovation Annex. Meeting Room #1 (720 Bathurst Street. Toronto, ON)

LineUP & coaches includes::: Motion, David Delisca, Lola Bunz, J-wyze, Djena Laguerre and YOU!

Excerpt from LOVE Uncut by Lola Bunz

But see this the part of love that I don’t understand/
Where goes the love for that young boy tryna be a man?
Mama works 2 jobs gotta make them dollas/
Her Son’s had a few dads but never had a father/
Open your eyes love cuz that’s your first strike/
Oh wait I’ve heard this one before, they say luv bites…

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WOMBmanifesta @ ManifesTO

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nine/won/one (flashbak)*

Looking out my window at cool blocks

vibrations at bus stops, bus rock my rhythm

writing offa my skull top

A second to reckon my past, it couldn’t last

got caught in the flash

but shoulda stash my cash

Thought life was like forever

All tears, some laughs

Wished that I could grow up

but still be 20 and a half

Now my eyes watch scenarios that’s realer than blood-baths

over oceans, the scuds crash

right here trades mash

humans into metal and glass

wipe the smile off my mask

they taking terror to task

making a cage for dat ass

mad sad days while we still waving the flag

digging through trash – graves by the mass

I pass

I hadda wake up

but still like walking a dream and talking a dream

Hoping like King to put some hope in this thing

Feeling shaky like I’m walking a string

tight squeeze up in the middle of the dope and it’s fiend

Just a little bit longer

waiting til I’m  stronger

maybe til I’m richer or bigger til I deliver the full force

full course got served up

Before you know dessert’s up

too late to get worked up

Chains become digital

Control, subliminal

Independence is criminal

Kids are getting cynical

times are real

wanna cling to my umbilical

Write lines with swiftness

cause time is minimal

Watch the cool blocks

vibrations at bus stops

bus rock my rhythm

I write offa my skull top

Jus a second to ponder the past

It couldn’t last

got caught up in the flash

I shoulda stashed my cash.

-New York, Nov. 2001


* from Motion In Poetry

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Motion’s “Fall’N” out of the Kilzone

MOTION teams up with producer FRESH KILS on this smoothed out soulful, hip hop joint!

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