An open letter to Bob Geldof has been issued by the campaign, Race Equality in the Music Industry, whilst his efforts are appreciated, the press release responds to the failure to include any more than 1 single black artist, Emeli Sande, amongst the 30 who make up Band Aid 30, being recorded this weekend ignoring the numerous other talented and successful black artists in the UK. One of the co-signatories of the letter is artist and co-chair of BARAC UK, Zita Holbourne.
PRESS RELEASE RE:IMI OPEN LETTER RE: BAND AID 30
November 15 2014
RE:IMI (Race Equality: In Music
Industry) notes that Bob Geldof is recording a new 'Do They Know It's
Christmas?' single by Band Aid 30 this weekend, with profits going
towards the ebola response in west Africa. Whilst we appreciate this
initiative and the many less high profile efforts by African community
organisations in Britain, it is a shame that 30 years on, Geldof, a man
who seems to have a passion for Africa, has not widened his address book
to include African artists.
To the best of our knowledge the only
African included in the Band Aid 30 lineup is Emeli Sande. Is it that
Geldof is not aware of the numerous African British artists with
commercial success such as Tinie Tempah, Leona Lewis, Dizzee Rascal,
Beverley Knight, Corrine Bailey Rae, Omar, Sade Adu, Alexandra Burke, to
name a few who could have been included?
Whilst this is not a personal attack
on Geldof, the reality is that for all the good intentions of the Band
Aid 30 project to help Africans, what many within the African British
and black music communities see from the published lineup is another
form of Eurocentrism - the European off to help the African, without
engagement with African musicians in Britain, let alone on the African
continent.
If the music industry is serious
about engaging with diversity, particularly race equality, which is the
reason RE:IMI has been formed, then that message needs to feed through
more, and be reflected in a British collective of artists such as Band
Aid 30. As it is, whilst Emeli Sande's place in the Band Aid 30 lineup
is well-deserved, as she is one of Britain's top selling recoding
artists, her inclusion as the only African could be perceived as a
tokenistic effort.
We hope that this open letter comes
to the attention of the organisers of the recording session in order to
redress the situation for future efforts. It would be helpful if today's
multi-cultural Britain was better represented in the Band Aid 30
lineup. 29 years on, perhaps lessons can still be learnt from Michael
Jackson, Lionel Richie, and Quincy Jones, whose ‘We Are The World’
effort was performed by a truly multi-cultural collection of artists
known as USA For Africa.
Outside of Band Aid 30 and the big
charities and NGOs, there are initiatives led by Africans both here in
Britain and on the African continent. In London, the newly formed
collective Elbow Out Ebola has a conference at Zanzibar in south London
on December 5
to find out where ebola-hit countries are at, and how Diasporan
Africans can help, and community groups BTWSC and African Histories
Revisited are organising a dinner fundraiser on December 6 at Best Western Cumberland Hotel in Harrow in aid of Médecins Sans Frontières UK's ebola response.
Interestingly, a number of African
artists on the continent have recorded songs to raise awareness about
the ebola virus, but as the organisers or artists do not have the same
profile or media access as Geldof, you've probably not of heard of them.
One of the songs is 'Africa Stop Ebola', which features singers
well-known on the so-called world music scene, such as Tiken Jah Fakoly,
Amadou & Mariam, Salif Keita, Oumou Sangare, Kandia Kora, Mory
Kante, and rapper Didier Awadi.
The song is a message about what
people can do to help stop the spread of ebola in Africa, and is
performed in French and local languages widely spoken across west Africa
to ensure that the message is understood.
RE:IMI encourages Geldof, if he would
like to help Africans, to engage with them and work with them rather
than merely doing things for their benefit. We thank all the Band Aid 30
artists, but we are now wise to the rise in sales and profile which
charity records, and concerts, provide.
Kwaku, RE:IMI co-ordinator
editor@BritishBlackMusic.com
P O Box 14092, London NW10 1WL
editor@BritishBlackMusic.com
P O Box 14092, London NW10 1WL
Diane Dunkley, artist manager, RM2 Music
Dr Robbie Shilliam, lecturer, Queen Mary, University of London
Hugh Francis, chair UK Black Music Industry
Rikki Stein, artist manager, Fela Anikulapo Kuti Estate
Zita Holbourne, spoken word & visual artist, co-chair BARAC
Dr Robbie Shilliam, lecturer, Queen Mary, University of London
Hugh Francis, chair UK Black Music Industry
Rikki Stein, artist manager, Fela Anikulapo Kuti Estate
Zita Holbourne, spoken word & visual artist, co-chair BARAC
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