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Diamonds with Dignity
Soap Opera Jazz - the 2005 CTIJF
The
carnival of dreams
The
Gilberto Gil series
Time
Space Change
The
revolution will be commodified
The
return of the patron
The
emergence of the Lion
Reggae riddim and rain
A story ten foot tall
Damn
I love Easter
Praise song for the people
Life without waiting for Brenda
Music mines its own business
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“The only reality is a dream. Nothing else is real. So all our lives, everything we do is fulfillment of dream…"
Abdullah Ibrahim
Part I. Theatre for the liberated.
Carnivals are of full of dreamers. People in the throes of ascencion,
attempting to raise an entire city. It’s something revolutionary,
people taking to the streets to claim cities as their own.
In Africa there are few carnivals, that is to say few spectacular and
spontaneous uprisings of cultural celebration, in the street.
It’s something revolutionary. People taking to the streets,
claiming the cities as their own. With the pomp of costumes and dance,
and the pulse of music and march.
Certainly there is no carnival in Africa as spectacular as the Coon
Carnival. The backdrop is the most beautiful city in the world, one of
the energy centres of the world and a bridge to all possible worlds.
Cape Town connects with all of Latin America, it talks to India,
Malaysia and the middle east. It pulls Europe into its orbit, and the
Japanese come just for the golf courses – there are none as
picturesque in all the world. Cape Town is all the rage in Germany. Ah
Kapstad! They exclaim. Even if they haven’t been there it’s
all they want to do. Everybody wants a piece of the table mountain and
the joy it promises.
And so under the table, the stage is set for a dramatic and fantastical
tale. A tale of the Cape Town dreamers who have always appeared at the
right time in our history and created magic to inspire a city.
We’re talking about people like Abudllah Ibrahim, Basil Coetzee,
Kamali, Mr Mac McKenzie and 50 years later his son Gerald Mac, Melvyn
Matthews, Kaatjie Davids and Boeta Dickie. Their carnival is a theatre
of liberation.
Part II. A carnival in revolution
It began with a drum, called the goma, and a dancer, called the gaai.
The woman was the drummer and the man the dancer. Theirs was a song to
the gods, a celebration of life, space and eternity. When one loses
those three essentials, the song is no longer sweet and the dance no
longer elegant. And so when the first colonisers arrived in Cape Town
and took control of the land, the resources and therefore the people,
the goma and the gaai slowly became pejarotised and faded into
insignificance.
Slavery was introduced and with it one day a year of freedom for the
slaves. On this day the slaves ran amok in the city, wildly, with the
intoxication of space and time and movement, reclaiming the land. Just
for one day.
And so the annual Cape Town Carnival was born. It was later in times
after emancipation, dubbed the Coon Carnival because the participants
in Cape Town painted their faces black like the New Orleans freed
slaves who painted theirs in mimicry of the white minstels who painted
their faces black to parody blacks. Or so the story goes. For this
tale, its not important.
What is important is that there was freedom and celebration. Later when
the slaves were emancipated in 1834, the tradition continued as a
memorial to freedom.
But freedom is tentative and elusive. And a century later freedom was
in reversal. The 1950s was the grandest period yet for the carnival,
and yet it was the period that lead directly into next round of
slavery, apartheid.
And so the carnival died again. People who are not liberated cannot
have a carnival. And so from the late 1950s through till the late
1990s, a period of 50 years, the carnival wasn’t able to
function. It didn’t actually die, it simply went underground. And
with that move came gangsters and drugs and aclohol and the
self-combustion that kept it going but killed its soul.
It’s only startign to re-emerge now. The carnival is starting to
realise it has to draw in the whole city. And the city is slowly, very
slowly - its ojnly the waking phases now – realising its right to
have a carnival.
Part III Mr Mac.
Perhaps it was to be expected that Mr Mac would be stabbed. The 1950s
was changing fast and the days of gentlemanly gangsterism were on their
way out. He was after all the King of the Coon Carnival, with many
rivals in the fiercely and proudly contested epicentre of Cape Town
culture. And his relentlessly triumphant Cornwall Troupe of Gympie
Street in Woodstock was the pride of the city - and the envy of rival
coaches. A few years earlier this envy might have been dealt with
respectfully, with sleeves rolled up, a few good punches thrown, and
mama standing by to ensure that no knives were pulled out or dirty
tricks played.
But Mr Mac was an orphan, and everything was changing. The technicolour
era of style and racy romance was losing its sparkle as the apartheid
regime clamped down and the political climate raced towards the typhoon
of Sharpeville 1960. The ire of the people was rising. The government
had introduced the Supression of Communism act and was randomly
arresting black political figures. The ANC had rolled out its Defiance
Campaign. And then in '56 the great leaders were arrested. Lithuli,
Tambo, Mandela, Sisulu, all of them taken in one swoop and tortured
through a five year Rivonia trial.
People were getting edgy. The stakes were getting higher. The more that
was taken away from people by the government, the more the playground
of dreams that was the Coon Carnival became important. Playing the game
was no longer enough. Winning, recognition, claiming ownership of title
and space, that was what mattered.
So it was no surprise that the extravagant Mr Mac was stabbed in the
liver by a rival and sent packing never to return to the Carnival.
Mr Mac's was a period of terrific enlightenment. He raised the carnival
to ecstatic heights. While he was the King of Cape Town, the Carnival
bristled with pride and passion. Troupes marched through the streets of
Cape Town with military precision, ballroom elegance and the ecstacy of
goema. The singers sang for the blessing of the stars, the rows of
dancers were as inspired as Fred and Ginger, and the people were
themselves. It was lighthearted and celebratory, a period that –
like the Brazilian and Cuban carnivals - fulfilled a collective dream
of owning the city, a dream of joy and relief from daily life. It was
the highest order of street theatre. Nothing was static. Everything
moved. Dreamers in a dreamworld of wondrous colour and rhythm.
And then Mr Mac was stabbed and decades of silence ensued.
Part IV. Kamalie, Abdullah and Basil
Where Mr Mac was extravagance, Kamalie was tradition and history. He
was the king of drum and fife. His was the world of ratiep, where
people enter a trance cut themselves with swords and bayonets without
pain or blood. A spirit world far above the normal world where
everything was possible. His troupe was the Wild Apaches. Abdullah
Ibrahim and Basil Coetzee were the jazz cats, their introduction to the
world of the carnival was through Kamali. They stepped into his world
and could never leave. Abdullah told me this story some years back:
"One year we played at Athlone stadium with the Apaches, drum and fife.
I mean that drum and fife thing man, unbelievable, that was trance
stuff. So we come out of the stadium and its now about 5 o clock, the
day is finished. There's lots of troupes and people are queuing, now we
go into the first house, it belongs to a troupe member and you play a
few songs there and they entertain you, give cakes and teas and stuff,
then you go to the next one two miles away, and there are people all
along the street and they join us. So we come out of Athlone stadium
and we go down Klipfontein road and there were a lot of people. And we
just naturally formed a circle. And Kamali was in the middle with the
bassdrum. Everybody was playing. And then we realised what was going
on, everybody was just in a trance. We we were transported in time, we
looked at each other and we all had different clothes on. And we
checked like old traditional Khoi clothes on, everybody. It lasted
about 5 seconds, 5 or 10 seconds. Time space change. And then the spell
was broken and we were back again. That was the first experience when I
said to Basil we're going to play this music."
Playing the tradition is the hardest thing, Abdullah told me. Anybody
can play jazz, but playing tradition, that’s hard work. Tradition
is about healing. Because in tradition is where dreams are kept alive.
And holding onto dreams, turning dream into reality, that’s the
hardest thing.
Part V. A liberated city.
The carnival has reached a new phase, which by this tale’s
counting is stage 5. Stage one was the Khoisan with the goma and gaai.
Stage two was the one day of freedom a year the slaves had. Stage three
was emancipation, stage four the 1950s. And now we are in stage 5. The
new millenium, a new energy. Apartheid is over. Cape Town governance is
changing. The city is finally aspiring to be itself. People like Melvyn
Matthews, who created magic with the Penny Pincher All Stars in the
late 90s and 2001, have succesfully lobbyed government to recognise
Cape Town’s cultural heritage. He received several millions from
government to take a variety of troupes to international carnivals to
participate and learn more so that we can enhance our carnival. Boeta
Kaatjie Davids is doing similar work with the District Six Museum to
advance the carnival tradition. The City of Cape Town structures have
taken on the carnival as one of its Cape of Great Events, and Geraas,
the Kyknet Afrikaans music show on MNET, recently awarded the music
award of the year to the Coon Carnival. If that isn’t a sign of
changing times…
Cape Town is in a new phase of liberation. The traditional goema music
of the carnival is experiencing a terrrific re-emergence with the
breadth of the city’s musicians stepping into Kamali’s
circle and innovating on carnival tradition. Dreams are once more
becmoming reality. And the carnival must now surely be in the next
major phase of evolution – ascenscion.
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