NEGRO HUMOR

RÁDIO DIÁSPORA

NEGRO HUMOR

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Ver carrito

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RÁDIO DIÁSPORA

NEGRO HUMOR


Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
SKU: FD030  |  , , , EAN o ISBN: 8435008859930

Running counter to the monopoly of white representation in music, Radio Diaspora translates the African diaspora through free jazz experimentalism and free improvisation. The musicians in the duo, Romulo Alexis and Wagner Ramos, reverberate the signs of blackness through zones of sonorous intensity, giving new meanings to the Afro-descendant musical experience.

 In ‘Negro Humor’, their tenth album, the duo investigates the dichotomy of humor to again reverberate their struggle through music against the physical and symbolic violence suffered by the black population. Humor as a facet of sadness. Laughter as symbolic oppression underscoring the contradiction of a society that, by accepting racist jokes, recognizes and lightly reasserts the brutality of the dominant discourse.

Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

Radio Diaspora works on the concept of cultural identity, which is flexible and dynamic. This provocation is generated by referring to all African ancestry moved by the diaspora and its sonorous, vocal, polyrhythmic, and polyphonic codes – all the ancestral heritage that has spread throughout the world following expropriations, genocide, and slavery – sampling and amplifying references that become triggers of energetic approaches.

A heavy core of representations and senses aims to exorcize through noise and strangeness all secular violence against people of the African diaspora.

In the title song of this album, ‘Negro Humor’, the respected Brazilian actor Grande Otelo highlights the contradiction of the clown, which awakens joy in everyone but is a sorrowful, lonely figure, ridiculing himself and putting himself in the most embarrassing situations. Relieved, loud laughter echoes in the audience because it is not the target of ridicule.

In ‘Despacho’, Radio Diaspora explores the dichotomy of society by introducing a speech by Brazilian lawyer Hédio Silva Júnior specialised in Afro-Brazilian religion. He questions a rule under discussion in Brazil’s Congress that would prohibit the use of chickens in Candomblé and Umbanda rituals. Silva Júnior points out that everyone takes a stand to protect the rights of animals, but the same cannot be said of the defense of young black people and outlying societies.

The track ‘Meia-Noite’ evokes a celebrated point of Umbanda, an Afro-Brazilian religious syncretic cult, permeated by free jazz and electronic atmospheres developed by the duo.

The other songs on the album are divided into two parts. They feature the voices of North American icons of the black struggle for civil rights: The tracks ‘A.H.M. Al-Shabazz 1 and 2’, amid sonic dissonances, use extracts from speeches by the American leader Malcolm X, and in ‘Muhammad Ali 1 and 2’ we hear quotes from famous interviews given by the boxer and activist. Ali ironizes the questions he asked his mother as a child, why all good and positive things are associated with white. “Mother, how come is everything white? Why is Jesus white with blonde hair and blue eyes? Angels are white, the Pope, Mary, and even the angels. When we die, will we go to heaven? She said naturally we go to heaven. So, I said, what happened to all the black angels they took from the pictures.” His Inquiry, however, is seen as a joke by the white audience present at the TV show, which laughs off Ali’s scathing criticism.

 Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

"The (album) sound means to exorcise racism out of our minds and make us ready to act”.
- Rômulo Alexis

Productos relacionados

-9%

Ver carrito

20,00


Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora

Running counter to the monopoly of white representation in music, Radio Diaspora translates the African diaspora through free jazz experimentalism and free improvisation. The musicians in the duo, Romulo Alexis and Wagner Ramos, reverberate the signs of blackness through zones of sonorous intensity, giving new meanings to the Afro-descendant musical experience.

 In ‘Negro Humor’, their tenth album, the duo investigates the dichotomy of humor to again reverberate their struggle through music against the physical and symbolic violence suffered by the black population. Humor as a facet of sadness. Laughter as symbolic oppression underscoring the contradiction of a society that, by accepting racist jokes, recognizes and lightly reasserts the brutality of the dominant discourse.

Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

Radio Diaspora works on the concept of cultural identity, which is flexible and dynamic. This provocation is generated by referring to all African ancestry moved by the diaspora and its sonorous, vocal, polyrhythmic, and polyphonic codes – all the ancestral heritage that has spread throughout the world following expropriations, genocide, and slavery – sampling and amplifying references that become triggers of energetic approaches.

A heavy core of representations and senses aims to exorcize through noise and strangeness all secular violence against people of the African diaspora.

In the title song of this album, ‘Negro Humor’, the respected Brazilian actor Grande Otelo highlights the contradiction of the clown, which awakens joy in everyone but is a sorrowful, lonely figure, ridiculing himself and putting himself in the most embarrassing situations. Relieved, loud laughter echoes in the audience because it is not the target of ridicule.

In ‘Despacho’, Radio Diaspora explores the dichotomy of society by introducing a speech by Brazilian lawyer Hédio Silva Júnior specialised in Afro-Brazilian religion. He questions a rule under discussion in Brazil’s Congress that would prohibit the use of chickens in Candomblé and Umbanda rituals. Silva Júnior points out that everyone takes a stand to protect the rights of animals, but the same cannot be said of the defense of young black people and outlying societies.

The track ‘Meia-Noite’ evokes a celebrated point of Umbanda, an Afro-Brazilian religious syncretic cult, permeated by free jazz and electronic atmospheres developed by the duo.

The other songs on the album are divided into two parts. They feature the voices of North American icons of the black struggle for civil rights: The tracks ‘A.H.M. Al-Shabazz 1 and 2’, amid sonic dissonances, use extracts from speeches by the American leader Malcolm X, and in ‘Muhammad Ali 1 and 2’ we hear quotes from famous interviews given by the boxer and activist. Ali ironizes the questions he asked his mother as a child, why all good and positive things are associated with white. “Mother, how come is everything white? Why is Jesus white with blonde hair and blue eyes? Angels are white, the Pope, Mary, and even the angels. When we die, will we go to heaven? She said naturally we go to heaven. So, I said, what happened to all the black angels they took from the pictures.” His Inquiry, however, is seen as a joke by the white audience present at the TV show, which laughs off Ali’s scathing criticism.

 Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

"The (album) sound means to exorcise racism out of our minds and make us ready to act”.
- Rômulo Alexis

Productos relacionados

-9%

Ver carrito

20,00


NEGRO HUMOR

Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
SKU: FD030  |  , , , EAN o ISBN: 8435008859930

Running counter to the monopoly of white representation in music, Radio Diaspora translates the African diaspora through free jazz experimentalism and free improvisation. The musicians in the duo, Romulo Alexis and Wagner Ramos, reverberate the signs of blackness through zones of sonorous intensity, giving new meanings to the Afro-descendant musical experience.

 In ‘Negro Humor’, their tenth album, the duo investigates the dichotomy of humor to again reverberate their struggle through music against the physical and symbolic violence suffered by the black population. Humor as a facet of sadness. Laughter as symbolic oppression underscoring the contradiction of a society that, by accepting racist jokes, recognizes and lightly reasserts the brutality of the dominant discourse.

Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

Radio Diaspora works on the concept of cultural identity, which is flexible and dynamic. This provocation is generated by referring to all African ancestry moved by the diaspora and its sonorous, vocal, polyrhythmic, and polyphonic codes – all the ancestral heritage that has spread throughout the world following expropriations, genocide, and slavery – sampling and amplifying references that become triggers of energetic approaches.

A heavy core of representations and senses aims to exorcize through noise and strangeness all secular violence against people of the African diaspora.

In the title song of this album, ‘Negro Humor’, the respected Brazilian actor Grande Otelo highlights the contradiction of the clown, which awakens joy in everyone but is a sorrowful, lonely figure, ridiculing himself and putting himself in the most embarrassing situations. Relieved, loud laughter echoes in the audience because it is not the target of ridicule.

In ‘Despacho’, Radio Diaspora explores the dichotomy of society by introducing a speech by Brazilian lawyer Hédio Silva Júnior specialised in Afro-Brazilian religion. He questions a rule under discussion in Brazil’s Congress that would prohibit the use of chickens in Candomblé and Umbanda rituals. Silva Júnior points out that everyone takes a stand to protect the rights of animals, but the same cannot be said of the defense of young black people and outlying societies.

The track ‘Meia-Noite’ evokes a celebrated point of Umbanda, an Afro-Brazilian religious syncretic cult, permeated by free jazz and electronic atmospheres developed by the duo.

The other songs on the album are divided into two parts. They feature the voices of North American icons of the black struggle for civil rights: The tracks ‘A.H.M. Al-Shabazz 1 and 2’, amid sonic dissonances, use extracts from speeches by the American leader Malcolm X, and in ‘Muhammad Ali 1 and 2’ we hear quotes from famous interviews given by the boxer and activist. Ali ironizes the questions he asked his mother as a child, why all good and positive things are associated with white. “Mother, how come is everything white? Why is Jesus white with blonde hair and blue eyes? Angels are white, the Pope, Mary, and even the angels. When we die, will we go to heaven? She said naturally we go to heaven. So, I said, what happened to all the black angels they took from the pictures.” His Inquiry, however, is seen as a joke by the white audience present at the TV show, which laughs off Ali’s scathing criticism.

 Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

"The (album) sound means to exorcise racism out of our minds and make us ready to act”.
- Rômulo Alexis

-9%

Ver carrito

20,00


RÁDIO DIÁSPORA

NEGRO HUMOR

Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Despacho_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 1_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Muhammad Ali . 2_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
Negro Humor_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 1_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
A.H.M. Al-Shabaz . 2_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
Meia-Noite_Radio Diaspora
SKU: FD030  |  , , , EAN o ISBN: 8435008859930

Running counter to the monopoly of white representation in music, Radio Diaspora translates the African diaspora through free jazz experimentalism and free improvisation. The musicians in the duo, Romulo Alexis and Wagner Ramos, reverberate the signs of blackness through zones of sonorous intensity, giving new meanings to the Afro-descendant musical experience.

 In ‘Negro Humor’, their tenth album, the duo investigates the dichotomy of humor to again reverberate their struggle through music against the physical and symbolic violence suffered by the black population. Humor as a facet of sadness. Laughter as symbolic oppression underscoring the contradiction of a society that, by accepting racist jokes, recognizes and lightly reasserts the brutality of the dominant discourse.

Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

Radio Diaspora works on the concept of cultural identity, which is flexible and dynamic. This provocation is generated by referring to all African ancestry moved by the diaspora and its sonorous, vocal, polyrhythmic, and polyphonic codes – all the ancestral heritage that has spread throughout the world following expropriations, genocide, and slavery – sampling and amplifying references that become triggers of energetic approaches.

A heavy core of representations and senses aims to exorcize through noise and strangeness all secular violence against people of the African diaspora.

In the title song of this album, ‘Negro Humor’, the respected Brazilian actor Grande Otelo highlights the contradiction of the clown, which awakens joy in everyone but is a sorrowful, lonely figure, ridiculing himself and putting himself in the most embarrassing situations. Relieved, loud laughter echoes in the audience because it is not the target of ridicule.

In ‘Despacho’, Radio Diaspora explores the dichotomy of society by introducing a speech by Brazilian lawyer Hédio Silva Júnior specialised in Afro-Brazilian religion. He questions a rule under discussion in Brazil’s Congress that would prohibit the use of chickens in Candomblé and Umbanda rituals. Silva Júnior points out that everyone takes a stand to protect the rights of animals, but the same cannot be said of the defense of young black people and outlying societies.

The track ‘Meia-Noite’ evokes a celebrated point of Umbanda, an Afro-Brazilian religious syncretic cult, permeated by free jazz and electronic atmospheres developed by the duo.

The other songs on the album are divided into two parts. They feature the voices of North American icons of the black struggle for civil rights: The tracks ‘A.H.M. Al-Shabazz 1 and 2’, amid sonic dissonances, use extracts from speeches by the American leader Malcolm X, and in ‘Muhammad Ali 1 and 2’ we hear quotes from famous interviews given by the boxer and activist. Ali ironizes the questions he asked his mother as a child, why all good and positive things are associated with white. “Mother, how come is everything white? Why is Jesus white with blonde hair and blue eyes? Angels are white, the Pope, Mary, and even the angels. When we die, will we go to heaven? She said naturally we go to heaven. So, I said, what happened to all the black angels they took from the pictures.” His Inquiry, however, is seen as a joke by the white audience present at the TV show, which laughs off Ali’s scathing criticism.

 Radio Diaspora uses art as an instinctive force to reject submission to traditions and culture as taming. Music is the weapon.

"The (album) sound means to exorcise racism out of our minds and make us ready to act”.
- Rômulo Alexis

Productos relacionados