Tagged: Micropixie

September 30th, 2009

Micropixie’s Foot is Talking Crazy and I Like it

Micropixie is an artist out of San Fran who has lived all over the places. She’s also chic, sincere, and on Twitter and has won me over on that alone. Maybe there’s another thing worth saying too. If beige is more than a color and also where life and art meet for MPX the cosmic gypsy, who knows, maybe a single foot does make a new statement about ordinary life here at home on earth.

Have a listen now that you’ve been warned, this and the rest of her work is seriously spunky, awesome, and important:

Who thinks about feet and comes up with a daydream about race and identity? Really? Seriously.

Hopefully, the same kinda experience hits people in the gut and they come out of the intergalactic coma singing a pop opera like Zach from Beirut or finding a voice to match a jazzy tone like MPX did about feet. The whole connection here makes me smile, maybe you too:

In a post about the take-away show in Paris, a writer for La Blogoteque retells Beruit’s history:

Beirut has grown from a solo bedroom project to a band of up to ten people; it’s a band, but not a band. It’s a happy mistake, a mess. A group of noisy, undisciplined, joyful people who took over an entire terrace on Oberkampf, gathering around the tables, spreading their instruments and cases, everyone playing songs in their own world… Such a messy, smiling anarchy that we thought they’d never manage to play the song.

Soul, courage of spirit, and depth are part of everyone’s history, I think, but the story can be broken, taken, stolen, and borrowed and life’s a mess sometimes. Even if you keep it together or diva trick the world into believing you rule, bad things happen, people are ugly, and life isn’t fair. Heartache sucks and love stinks and growing up is tough.

All we know is what can and has happened and the option to start a story again is a nice twist that MPX offers up in her music. If life is change, imagination is as real as actual experiences, and creativity happens as a fact of life, then it’s a open question. Somewhere along the way, we have a chance to dive deep into relationships or stay in the shallow end and debate the right time to pick up the phone and the right person to call. Maybe instead you choose you.

I have a feeling MPX’s space travel gives the gypsy a worthwhile place to call home and a heart that wanders and does not belong in the world but her chest. Maybe later it’s a foot that brings a cosmic statement back down to earth so people get the message and take a stand, do a little dance, and make a little of love in the world.

Maybe everything changes, maybe nothing changes. Truth is, I’m kinda sick of the same old story. Either way, I’m down.

September 19th, 2009

Cultureal Sindicate: Taqwacore

I started thinking and writing about Taqwacore after someone at UW-Madison sent me an article from The Los Angeles Times titled “The Koran, punk rock and lots of questions.” At the time, I was blogging for a project called Inside Islam, a new media collaboration between Wisconsin Public Radio and UW-Madison and set out to find some answers. After a couple of months of research, I started talking with Imran Malik, drummer for The Kominas, on Twitter, and I wrote a follow-up post based on the conversation and other articles which also described Taqx as a concept called “punk Islam.”

From then on, I had my eyes peeled for people talking about Taqwacores and found a crew on Twitter. One of the crew is a guest blogger for Mideast Youth Daniela Kantorova. Here’s a set of photos she shared online with us from a Kominas show in Oakland this summer.

My friend and co-host Britny once said that, “Twitter is basically the most punk thing on the internet.” I agree, but I also think of it as the Red Light district for ideas, a place to be open and share thoughts, regardless of how polished and complete they are. For that reason, I think it’s the perfect place for working through a more coherent understanding of Taqwacore with a bunch of different people. It has become a starting point for tour dates, a place to share blog posts and now radio shows as well. Twitter shifts the #taqwacore flag from mere concept to fluid conversation among people across the US.

The #taqwacore hashtag is a way to mark tweets about bands and events in the scene, but it has also become a way to note where we’re breaking down a concept or abstract idea about culture or politics with references and thoughts related to Taqwacore. I could be talking about Nirvana and tag it with #taqwacore so that people know I’m making the connection.

It’s also connected me with others and given me an informal way to share my perspective. The conversations I’ve had about it in real life were mostly with my mother, Ellen Foley, a Pulitzer prize finalist and journalist for the past 30 years. Not that these credentials mean much, but it is the background I inherited and how I approached the whole movement at first. Actually, that’s kind of the point of using Twitter. Taqx have inverted the way I get information from top-down to bottom-up.

The bottom line is that telling the story of Taqx has never been a perfect process, and I’ve had to bring lots of other people into the conversation – interfaith leaders, journalists, other Kominas, my mom, and whoever else is willing to talk. In my mind, it’s a new story to be told whether or not it’s a woman, man, musician, journalist, or photographer articulating or tweeting what’s important. With any other subject the “who” would matter, but in Taqwacore we’ve taken our own roles.

For this show, we took the conversation offline and talked with Imran and lead singer of The Kominas, Basim Usmani, on air. We had a great time talking about Taqwacore music, social media, Mos Def, and life imitating art. To close this post, all I’ll say is I do hope we have more shows on Taqwacore and I’d like to point to The Los Angeles Times again since they had arguably the best article about Taqwacore I’ve read to date with “Nevermind the Islam: The Kominas are Punk” by Raja Abdulrahim. The title has two, count ‘em, two punk references! Rock.

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Click on the player above to listen to the show.

Show Playlist

1. Sharia Law in the USA by The Kominas
2. Teree Aisee Ke Tesee by The Dead Bhuttos
3. Miskeen by Al-Thawra
4. Chaku! by The Kominas
5. An audio piece by Micropixie
6. A Dog Called Ahkira by The Kominas
7. Evil Eye (Acoutastic) by Sarmust
8. Par Desi by The Kominas
9. Poppi Fields by Vote Hezbollah
10. Kane’s Injection – Guns & Dogs by Portugal. The Man