MusicRace

black italians feel underrepresented & intend to take matters in their own hands

November 28, 2017
1.9K Picks
By Johanne Affricot / GRIOT*, AFROPUNK contributor

The power and strength of African-American cultural heritage is one of inestimable value, one which many around the world draw from on a daily basis. The Civil Right Movement, the Black Power, the music – hip hop, R’n’B, jazz, blues, soul – are just few of the many elements of the Black and American culture that fascinate, attract, educate, inspire. In Italy, you’ll never meet an Italian person who has never heard of James Brown, Malcom X, or Martin Luther King. They know who Rihanna and Beyoncé are, too. It might be easier to remember and love “the cool ones”, and their struggles. Likewise, you’ll meet fellow Italians who are completely unaware of the cultural and social struggle that we, Italians, Afro-Italians, Italian Africans, African Italians or black Italians, have to deal with. Many will be blinded by your aesthetic diversity and they will struggle to identify you as an Italian. In the same way, society will make sure the settings of the entire cultural system are made so not to represent you, include your presence, your diversity, your skills within the vast Italian cultural heritage – with a few exceptions that make us hopeful, such as X-Factor Italia and Sanremo, the oldest and most renowned Italian television music contest, for instance.

GRIOT is a magazine, a collective and a creative platform that celebrates aesthetic, creative and cultural diversity. This year, we have been invited by Jazz Re:Found Festival (November 29 – December 3) to conceive and organise an event to shed a light on stories, people, realities and creative excellence that are the essence of contemporary Italy, too, but are invisible to the majority of Italians: African Italians.

 

Stay Black – Jazz:Re:Found 2016

On December 1, and 2, we are presenting in collaboration with Jazz:Re:Found two events, Sangue Misto (Mixed Blood) – Appuntamento ai Marinai, and Sangue Misto (Mixed Blood) – Sound, Identity, Representation. These appointments are followed by Stay Black!, a panel organised by the festival in 2016 (and mainly focused on African American music culture) which we attended as panelists (represented by Johanne Affricot)  alongside AFROPUNK’s editor-in-chief, Lou Constant-Desportes, and other renowned guests such as journalist and panel moderator Damir Ivic (Soundwall) and Federico Sardo (Noisey).

Finally, our turn has arrived and this year the focus will be on Italy, on African Italian cultural producers and up and coming artists of the contemporary Italian music scene.

We are extremely glad to have been chosen by Jazz:Re:Found to help out with this cultural challenge, everyone’s challenge, a challenge that needs more support in order to spread culture and face the rising regurgitation of hatred and fear of “the other” we are experiencing in Italy, and achieve concrete results. In order to do so, we have involved Michele, founder and creative director of Crudo Volta music collective, and Cedric Kibongui, DJ and event organizer, who will moderate the panel Sangue Misto: Sound, Identity, Representation, alongside GRIOT.

Michele (Crudo Volta founder) Johanne Affricot (GRIOT Founder and Creative Director) Cedric Kibongui, dj and events organizer

Sangue Misto (Mixed Blood) – Appuntamento ai Marinai

Appuntamento ai Marinai (Italy, 2017) is a documentary about the second generation of Italians with Eritrean origins in Milan. Written and directed by Italian Eritrean anthropologist and sociologist Ariam Tekle, this project is Tekle’s first directing experience and it tackles issues such as inclusion, citizenship, identity and migration, and stories that emphasize the role of music, a key element of sharing and union. After the documentary preview, Johanne Affricot will introduce Ariam Tekle who will take part in a Q/A session via Skype from New York, where she is currently promoting her documentary.

Sangue Misto – Sound, Identity, Representation

In the second part we will meet up and coming artists who are active in the Italian music scene: David Blank, Tommy Kuti, MudimbiTechnoir and Vhelade. The aim of the panel is to explore, among other various topics, their artistic path, the influence of their identity in the creative process, the reasons why there are no afro-inspired Italian music subgenres (e.g. Grime in England, Afrotrap or Coupé-Decalé in France, or Kuduro and Batida in Portugal,) and to answer questions such as “Do we need platforms and festivals, like AFROPUNK Festival for example, that can represent us all?” The panel will be introduced by Johanne Affricot, GRIOT founder and creative director, and hosted by Michele and Cedric Kibongui.

Find out more on Sangue Misto website.

Where and When

Sangue Misto – December 1 – 2 (6pm and 3:30 pm)
c/o Bellissimo Blue Loft – Via Regaldi 7 – int 12/a
Turin

This post is in partnership with GRIOT.

Related