Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Bristol underground scene

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bristol underground scene
A work by Bristol graffiti artist Banksy
DateEarly 1980s–present
LocationBristol, England
Outcome
  • Creation of trip hop music
  • Rise of graffiti
  • Publicity of social issues
  • Rise of independent media

The Bristol underground scene is a cultural movement in Bristol, England, beginning in the early 1980s. The scene was born out of a lack of mainstream clubs catering for the emergence of hip hop music, with street and underground parties a mainstay. Many DJ crews formed in the early '80s playing hip hop, house and soul in disused venues with sound systems were borrowed from the reggae scene: City Rockers, 2 Bad, 2 Tuff, KC Rock, UD4, FBI, Dirty Den, Juice Crew, Rene & Bacus, Soul Twins, Fresh 4 and Bristol ultimate DJ Masters The Wild Bunch. These names were the precursors to the more well known ones that came from this scene.[1] It is characterized by musicians and graffiti artists. The scene was influenced by the city's multiculturalism, political activism, and the art movements of reggae, punk, hip hop, hippies and new age.[2]

Bristol has been particularly associated with the trip hop music genre.[3]

The Bristol scene has a strong relationship between music and visual art, particularly graffiti art. A founding member of the band Massive Attack, Robert Del Naja, originally a graffiti artist, and local graffiti artist Banksy have gone on to produce album covers and artworks. Inkie, collaborator alongside Banksy, also took part in Bristol's counter-culture scene.[4][5]

History

[edit]

The music scene in Bristol in the 1970s and '80s was influenced by Caribbean immigrants,[1] as well as the growing UK punk movement of the time.[2]

The city of Bristol was beginning to form a sound system culture in the late 1970s, with regular impoundings of music equipment by police.[6] Due to rising social tensions in the city, the 1980 St. Pauls riot occurred, after a police raid of the Black and White Café. After the riots, the police no longer confiscated music equipment. Music fans began looking towards reggae bands like the Black Roots because of their messages of pacifism in a time of social conflict.[7]

In the early 1980s, hip hop culture made its way to Bristol and graffiti artists like Robert Del Naja and Banksy began making graffiti art.[2] In music, the Wild Bunch sound system began playing hip hop, reggae, funk and rhythm and blues tracks but with added ambient effects, leading to the development of trip hop music.[8]

Characteristics

[edit]

Activism

[edit]

By definition the underground scene tends to be slightly apart from the mainstream, and this is reflected in the politics of some of the artists and musicians associated with it. Robert Del Naja and others openly declared their opposition to the Iraq War, for example.[9] Del Naja and Banksy have both submitted art works to the War Paint exhibition which showcases anti-war art work.

"Bristol sound" and trip hop

[edit]

The Bristol sound was the name given to a number of bands and producers from Bristol, in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[10] The city has been particularly associated with the music genre trip hop. Salon magazine has said that trip hop was spawned in "the bohemian, multi-ethnic city of Bristol, where restlessly inventive DJs had spent years assembling samples of various sounds that were floating around: groove-heavy acid jazz, dub, neo-psychedelia, techno disco music, and the brainy art rap".[3]

The Bristol sound has been described as "possessing a darkness that is uplifting, a joyful melancholy".[11] As a whole, the Bristol sound was characterised by a slow, spaced-out hip hop sound that a number of artists in the early and mid-1990s made synonymous with the city. These artists include Massive Attack,[12] Portishead and Tricky and others such as Way Out West, Smith & Mighty, Up, Bustle and Out, Monk & Canatella, Kosheen, Roni Size, and the Wild Bunch.[13]

Graffiti

[edit]

Many graffiti artists came out of Bristol, including Banksy, an anonymous, English graffiti artist who designed album covers for bands like Blur and Monk & Canatella. Banksy has produced art work in Barcelona, New York City, Australia, London, San Francisco and the West Bank. He uses his original street art form to promote alternative aspects of politics from those displayed by the mainstream media. Some believe that his graffiti helps to provide a voice for those living in urban environments that could not otherwise express themselves, and that his work is also something which improves the aesthetic quality of urban surroundings. Others disagree, asserting that his work is simply vandalism.

There has long been an interplay between the different music and art scenes in Bristol. Del Naja of the band Massive Attack was initially a graffiti artist, "indeed, his first ever live gig was as a DJ accompanying artwork he had produced in a gallery in Bristol".[9]

Independent media

[edit]

Bristol also has a tradition of print media, now best exemplified by The Bristolian and Bristle magazine.

Anarchist Ian Bone's The Bristolian news sheet achieved a regular distribution of several thousand, with its satirical exposés of council and corporate corruption. The Bristolian, "Smiter of the High and Mighty", spawned a radical independent political party that polled 15% in Easton ward in 2003. In October 2005 it came runner up for the national Paul Foot Award for investigative journalism.[14]

The anarchist-oriented Bristle, "fighting talk for Bristol and the South-West", was started in 1997 and had its twentieth issue in 2005. Its pages especially feature subvertising and other urban street art to complement news, views and comments on the local activist scene as well as tackling issues such as drugs, mental health and housing.

The 1970s women's liberation paper Enough was succeeded in the 1990s by the environmental and pagan Greenleaf (edited by George Firsoff), West Country Activist, Kebelian Voice, Planet Easton, the anarcho-feminist Bellow and the present-day punk fanzine Everlong, all of which have been published in Bristol. Move was another Women's Liberation magazine; published by the Gay Women's Group, it continued for a number of years in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It had an international circulation, only selling about a quarter in Bristol throughout its existence.

Bristol based magazines, Trap, and Crack have emerged from the bass music scene, alternative fashion scenes and alternative art scenes, all of which feature a heavy student and post-graduate membership.

Urban radio projects such as the 1980s pirate, Savage Yet Tender, and Electro Magnetic Installation,[15] were more short-lived. Dialect Radio, Bristol's first community internet radio station, is still going and is broadcast over BCFM 93.2fm most weeks, and is available to download over the internet. It is put together by the Bristol Radio Co-op, is run by volunteers on a not-for-profit basis, and covers local arts, music, political issues, and local people of interest.

Racial history

[edit]

An article in 2008 in The Telegraph stated that: "Racial matters have always carried a historical resonance in Bristol, a city made affluent on the profits of tobacco and slave-trading. Street names such as Blackboy Hill and Whiteladies Road remain as reminders."[2] However, common knowledge that both Whiteladies Road and Blackboy Hill had connections with the slave trade is untrue; both names are derived from pubs.[16][17][18]

"It's a past that we feel equivocal about", says Steve Wright.[who?] "It's a double-edged thing. There are the beautiful Georgian terraces that we love, but they were built on the profits of slavery. It's our shady past, and Bristolians are a bit self-effacing, a bit ashamed of it and are quite keen to layer new associations on top of it. There's always been a defiant, subversive streak in Bristol, and Banksy's work is very much in that tradition."[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone". Bl.uk. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Baker, Lindsay (28 March 2008). "Banksy: off the wall – Telegraph". The Daily Telegraph. UK. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  3. ^ a b Miles, Milo (12 November 1995). "Trip-Hop". Salon. Salon Media Group. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  4. ^ "Street art show comes to Bristol". BBC News. 9 February 2009. Retrieved 31 August 2011. Street art [...] erupted in the UK in the early 1980s [...] active on the Bristol scene at that time included Banksy, Nick Walker, Inkie and Robert del Naja, or '3D', of Massive Attack.
  5. ^ Reid, Julia (6 February 2008). "Banksy Hits Out at Street Art Auctions". Sky News. London. Retrieved 31 August 2011. Along with Banksy, Bristol's graffiti heritage includes 3D, who went on to form Massive Attack, Inkie, and one of the original stencil artists Nick Walker.
  6. ^ "Melissa Chemam - Massive Attack: Out Of The Comfort Zone - Paperback". Roughtrade.com. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  7. ^ "How '80s soundsystem culture gave birth to Bristol's thriving musical underground". Huckmag.com. 12 February 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  8. ^ "How '80s soundsystem culture gave birth to Bristol's thriving musical underground". Britishcouncil.org. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
  9. ^ a b Blake, Veronica (20 March 2008). "War Paint Exhibition – Preview and Robert Del Naja interview". IndieLondon. IndieLondon.co.uk. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  10. ^ "Smithy & Mighty". Bristolarchiverecords.com. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  11. ^ "Peter Webb". Exploring The Networked Worlds of Popular Music. Routledge. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  12. ^ "The Uniqueness Of Massive Attack - Melissa Chemam". Classicalalbumsudays.com. 15 January 2018. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  13. ^ "Feature / When Bristol music went 'Out of the Comfort Zone'". Epigram.org.uk. 20 April 2019. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  14. ^ Hooper, Dickon (14 October 2005). "Scurrilious magazine scoops top award". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  15. ^ "Electro Magnetic Installation Bristol". The Pirate Archive. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  16. ^ Winstone, Reece (1966). Bristol As It Was 1874–1866. p. Photos 82, 83.
  17. ^ Hammersley, G. H. Survey of the Manor of Clifton. in Clifton and Durdham Down: A Landscape History, p. 6, Plan 2.
  18. ^ Smith, V. (2002). Street Names of Bristol. Broadcast Books. ISBN 1-874092-90-7.

Bibliography

[edit]

Chemam, Melissa (2019), Massive Attack: Out of the Comfort Zone, Tangent Books, ISBN 1910089729, ISBN 978-1910089729

[edit]