Thursday 23 April 2009

With a song in her heart and some sense in her head!

This evening I had the pleasure of speaking to one of the UK's most talented and underrated vocalists in a no-holds-barred interview on the state of jazz music today.

Gill Manly is a jazz artist who's just released her second album "With A Song In My Heart" to much critical acclaim. Having been in the industry for a couple of decades, Gill spoke honestly and refreshingly about her experiences in music and her thoughts on the industry, warts and all. After a sabbatical of a few years, Gill returned to the stage and the recording studio to find not much has changed since she exited the business and found spiritual enlightenment.

Look out for Gill and other talented women in jazz in a feature on the rise and rise of women in jazz in the next issue of Lucid Magazine, online on Monday, 4th May.

Wednesday 22 April 2009

Photographer Patrick Farrell wins Pulitzer for Haiti images

BY ANDRES VIGLUCCI

Veteran Miami Herald photographer Patrick Farrell has been awarded journalism's biggest award, the Pulitzer Prize, for his harrowing images of the victims of the storms that ravaged Haiti in 2008.

Farrell, 49, visited Haiti four times during last year's hurricane season, capturing scenes of the dead and the survivors of a series of storms that generated devastating flooding across the impoverished nation.

He was in Haiti the night Hurricane Ike -- the fourth storm to hit there in a month -- washed across the already overwhelmed countryside, drowning even more homes and people.
Farrell's published photographs, along with stories by Miami Herald Caribbean correspondent Jacqueline Charles and Herald reporter Trenton Daniel, are credited with helping raise international awareness of the storms' toll on Haiti and its people's struggle to survive in the aftermath.

''Patrick's photography is the most provocative and at times disturbing storytelling work that I have seen or edited,'' said Luis Rios, The Herald's director of photography. ``It is exceptional documentary photography with a purpose -- to chronicle the misery and heartache of the Haitian people.''

The Pulitzer Prize jurors recognized a package of 19 black-and-white photographs, entitled ''A People in Despair: Haiti's Year Without Mercy.'' The images range from the flooded streets of Gonaives, to the aftermath of a storm-related school collapse in Port au Prince, and the deadly toll on children in the rural town of Cabaret who were washed away from their parents' grasp by rushing floodwaters.

In all, more than 800 Haitians died and more than 1 million were left homeless by the unrelenting series of storms.

Farrell's Haiti photographs have also won the Society of Professional Journalists' 2008 Sigma Delta Chi Award for excellence in journalism in Photography Spot News, as well as awards in the Pictures of the Year International competition and the 75th National Headliner Awards.

Farrell, a Miami native, has been a Herald staff photographer since 1987. He's a member of the class of 1977 at Christopher Columbus High, a Miami Catholic school, where he ran cross country and shot photos for the school yearbook. He graduated in 1981 with a bachelor of arts degree in television and film production from the University of Miami.

Farrell grew up in the High Pines neighborhood of unincorporated Miami-Dade County near South Miami, the seventh of 12 children born to Dr. James and Peggie Farrell.

Farrell says he owes his discovery of photography to an eye injury he suffered when he was shot in the right eye by a BB gun pellet while he was trick-or-treating on Halloween 1971. He spent a week with both eyes bandaged shut at Larkin General Hospital in South Miami.
His view of the world changed after his bandages were removed, and he began to pay more attention to the details and light around him, Farrell says. As a result of the eye injury, Farrell is a ''left-eye shooter'' and holds the camera up to his left eye. (Most people naturally shoot with their right eye.)

After he discovered photography, he destroyed a bathroom in his parents' home by turning it into a darkroom.

Farrell started his career working for several small community papers in Florida.
His Herald assignments have taken him to Turkey, Haiti, Cuba and throughout Central and South America, as well as the Caribbean. He was part of the Herald staff that won the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for the coverage of Hurricane Andrew's devastation in South Florida.

Sunday 19 April 2009

Indian literary talent takes centre stage

Yesterday, I had the pleasure of being in the company of three distinguished Indian writers (and one Brit!) who had come to London as ambassadors for Indian literature as part of The London Book Fair.
In a discussion titled "Cities in Literature", part of the British Council sponsored India 09: Through Fresh Eye programme, writers including Sukhetu Metha (pictured above), author of the acclaimed Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found discussed what is it about cities that inspire so much writing. Each author spoke about their own experiences of city life and how it influenced their writing (novellist Shankar, who's penned 80 books in Bengali, has set all his books in Calcutta) and then read a passage from their chosen work. Austin Williams, the aforementioned lone Brit on the panel, spoke about London while Namdeo Dhasal's publisher, who attended in place of his awol client, read about the dark side of 70s Mumbai from Dhasal's radical collection of powerful poetry.
But it was Sukhetu Metha's shimmering account of contemporary Bombay life, a city of 21million people, that really caught my attention. Part reportage, part memoir, Metha's gift for capturing the spirit of the city was compelling to listen to and, I was told, even more fascinating to read. "The Londoners of the future are being born in Bombay today", he said, speaking of the relationship between global cities in the 21st century.
After hearing the panellists speak so eloquently and passionately about their cities and their work, I immediately went out and bought Metha's Maximum City (five years after everyone else it seems!) and read up on Namdeo Dhasal and Shankar. When I'm done with Maximum City, which is living up to the hype as an absolute page turner, I'll definitely go in search of other Indian writers and their words. There are worse ways to spend a Saturday afternoon.

Sunday 12 April 2009

Lucid's Top 5 for April 09: #2

In at number two...

Much has been made of the USA’s first black president and Iceland’s first openly gay prime minister but we ask whether the UK is ready for either.

The question is: “Will the UK elect a gay PM before a black PM?”

Athena Kugblenu and Francis Kaikumba go head-to-head to debate a hot topic in the run up to our politically-charged May issue. Read our tête-à-tête then join the debate by leaving a message in the comment box: http://www.lucidmagazine.co.uk/#/headtohead/4532736292

Sunday 5 April 2009

Lucid's Top 5 for April 09: #1

In at number one...

April 6th marks the 15th anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda and, in an exclusive interview, Paul Knipe talks to Mr Hotel Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina, the man whose story inspired the 2004 Oscar-nominated film starring Don Cheadle, Sophie Okonedo and Nick Nolte. Mr Rusesabagina now runs the Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation and campaigns against injustice, particularly in the Great Lakes region of Africa, which includes Rwanda and the Congo. He says:
"Unfortunately it takes a movie for the world to wake up. It took 10 years for Hotel Rwanda to be made, for the international community to realise that there was genocide in Rwanda. It is taking just as long to realise that in the Congo – since 1996 I believe – more than 5 million people have been butchered, and yet we do not raise a single finger to say no to cruelty and crimes."
Read his inspirational story here.
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