Your holy war, your northern star /
Your sermon on the mount from the boot of your car.
…September, streets capsizing / Spilling over down the drains
Shard of glass, splinters like rain / But you could only feel your own pain.
Please / Get up off your knees.
Please / Leave me out of this, please.
Those evocative words are from “Please” by U2, one of the most powerful anti-politician songs ever rendered. The song itself is dramatic: simultaneously a paean to peace and an angry diatribe against the politicians who ruined Northern Ireland with their sectarian conflicts.
Those conflicts, known as “The Troubles”, lasted three decades and caused thousands of deaths. Irishman took on Irishman, using bombs and guns, simply because one was Catholic and the other Protestant. Northern Ireland became a wasteland, a playground for terrorists, a landscape of vandalised houses, a shattered economy. There seemed to be no end in sight.
By 1997, a protracted peace process was underway, but had stalled several times. In that year, Bono’s legendary Irish rock band recorded “Please”. The band released a special EP with four faces pointedly on the cover: those of the main Irish political protagonists, Ian Paisley, Gerry Adams, John Hume and David Trimble.
On Good Friday 1998, a peace deal was finally signed. It was the turning point. Since then, Northern Ireland has been subject to a power-sharing deal (sound familiar?). Of course the troubles did not end overnight, and there have been further outbreaks of terrorism and political bickering. But from that time, Northern Ireland has been on a gentle recovery path.
Did a rock band cause peace to break out? Of course not, that would be a facile conclusion. But there can be no doubt that U2, with their heartfelt lyrics and gut-wrenching singing, made their contribution. They had a big effect on their natural audience, the young, and caused a sway in public opinion about the conflict. And by targeting political apparatchiks in their album covers, concerts and posters, they caused a great deal of much-needed embarrassment.
You know where I’m going with this. Kenyan musicians, where are you when your country needs you? It is the job of the artist to record the pain of the land, and to cause social uplift. This country is at a crossroads: over the next few months, either we make the hard decisions that we need to as a nation, or we stare failed-state status in the face.
Of all the artistic platforms, popular music can have the most dramatic and most immediate impact. It plays directly on the emotions and can send spirits soaring. It can build oneness and unity of purpose. It can affect millions of people simultaneously.
It is not that we don’t know this. We have had some famous songs that have driven social and political movements. The ‘Yote Yawezekana’ and ‘Unbwogable’ songs played a big role in bundling out a rotten regime right here in 2003. Eric Wainaina has done a great deal to heighten awareness of our social ills. But those songs are rare, and those singers plough a lonely furrow.
So where are you, Kenyan musicians? Are you going to stand up and be counted? This country needs pressure from all possible quarters if we are going to complete our rebirth. Most importantly, we need pressure from our own sons and daughters, particularly those with the talent to write the lyrics and produce the tunes that will resonate with the multitudes.
We need songs that expose corruption; songs that mock our awful politicians and their awful politics; songs that lament our lost values; songs that plead for the poor and record their suffering; songs that educate the ignorant and teach them how to be discerning when choosing their leaders. We need songs that will drive those who systematically loot this country into the sea.
So, my dear singing ‘celebs’, you need to take some time out from your songs about sex and hedonism. There is a bigger game to play. You need to do more than attend vacuous awards ceremonies with your booty hanging out. You need to stop gyrating your hips and instead search for your consciences. You have a higher purpose to achieve. Your music must have meaning in the context of the situation of your people.
By all means, keep writing and singing trite love songs. Everyone does that, including U2 and Michael Jackson. Popular hits will give you the success and space to do something bigger and better. But every once in a while, you must produce a song that creates a social revolution.
Your audience is the most populous in the land. You have the power in your fingers and in your voices. Use it! Look beyond stretch limos and vapid lyrics: you could actually go down in history. The artist must rise above ethnic divides and political walls. Art is the great unifier of the world; use your art to transform this divided land from which you sprang.
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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
To answer the appeal
Check out Sauti Sol, Dela and other penya artists such as just a band, i.e. usinbore and its video (www.just-a-band.com). As much as the songs of most of these artists are songs about love they have many politically charged songs and are definitely the new generation of Kenyan musicians with mad following here in Kenya. Also find more info on http://www.penyafrica.com or go to any of the artists’ facebook groups. All artists also available on itunes and other online stores (to get an idea of the catalogue). Make sure you check out muthoni ndonga’s new album “the human condition”. Her song silence is all about politics. A 26 year old social art-preneur who has already gotten rave reviews. Played on BBC extra and compared to MIA and the likes.
Peace,
Nynke
That was an inspiring article. I am not a celeb but we have an answer to your question. We saw the need at the beginning of the year and we are finalizing an album with some of the lyrics that you highlighted in your article. Artventures is a band consisting of young people who are desirous to spread the message of love, peace and forgiveness to all Kenyans. We have composed and recorded songs to help us pass the message under the mentorship and sponsorship of Mr. & Mrs. Keter who perform with the band. The band has been trained by Yuri Samson Odhiambo a professional music instructor and producer. The album will be ready for launch from 20th December 09.
The compositions in the album include never, never again, a song that documents the plight of IDPs in Kenya and pleads that this should never happen again; that Neighbors, brothers and world should not stand still and see evil come and go and neither should we take the sacrifices we have made – lives and property lost – in vain.
Shame is a song that highlights the shame of what happened before and after the crisis. It shames the causes of violence; it shames leaders, preachers and all those who fanned the violence and asked Kenyans to rise up and embrace a true nationhood and the love that we once had.
Eldoret explores the once greatness of the Eldoret town, its multi ethnic, multi cultural coexistence and tolerance, its sporting fame and the greatness of men it has produced like Kipchoge Keino and other great athletes. Then it asks the town…
Tell me, tell me, tell me what got into you?
How could you ever turn your streets into killing fields?
Brother against brother and neighbor against neighbor?
Will you ever rise again as our prize and our pride?
Will you ever bring back your children?
And restore their dignity?
These questions are not only relevant to Eldoret town but to all the towns and centers in Kenya. What madness got into us that we could do what we did? Shedding innocent blood and overseeing such wanton destruction of life and property?
The campaign is dedicated to peace and to IDPs situation in the country. The campaign hopes to mobilize Kenyans to raise money to resettle IDPs by supporting the much needed basic amenities such as schools, water and sanitation facilities.
Although some IDPs have land and some have returned to their original homes, the real resettlement has not yet started because the IDPs still lack the above basic amenities. We hope to turn this campaign to a Kenyans for Kenyans initiative for peace, reconciliation and reconstruction.
We also hope to mobilize artists in every region we visit to rise up to the occasion and create art for peace. We hope to have a team of not less than 50 artists doing something for peace in 2010. We will focus and support different forms of creative arts; visual arts (painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, decorative arts, plastic arts, photography), performing arts (music, dance, theater, cinema) or literature (poetry, prose).
Our performances started on 3rd December in Juja Town. We will perform in Thika on 13th December 09. Others schedules for the first leg of the tour include;
• Flag off of national tour on 16th December from Nairobi;
• Dec 17th, 18th and 19th 09 – performance and peace functions, Naivasha
• Dec 22nd, 23rd and 24th 09 – Performance and peace function, Nakuru
• Dec 24th, 26th and 27th 09 – Performance and peace functions, Eldoret
• Dec 28th, 29th and 30th 09 – Performance and peace functions, Kakamega
The second leg of the tour will cover Central and Eastern Provinces in January and February 2010. The third leg will cover North Eastern and Coast in March 09.
We would appreciate your partnership and support in this venture in whatever form.
Let’s all work together to build a united, prosperous and peaceful Kenya.
Na amani iwe kwetu, tuwe na upendo, tuwe na umoja.
In service to our motherland
Hi Sunny,
Your cry to Kenyan Artistes to come to our rescue resonated very well with me. It left me with a nostalgic feeling that maybe we aren’t living our lives to the fullest here in Kenya. I identify with the power of art to cause revolutions. I am an avid listener of our local music with a bias to artists who sing in their mother tongues. Their music is powerful and is pointing the way and giving many Kenyans comfort and hope of a better future. They are the ones who reach the millions out there in the rural parts of our country where the majority of our brothers and sisters live and they are the ones who will chronicle the change that is to come through their music.
Keep up the good work see ya next sunday.
Hi All:
I am delighted to see the response to this article. Succour to all the musicians who are responding to the call for the music that will cause a social revolution. Remember: a good message alone is not enough: your songs must have popular melodies, a beat that resonates, the power to compel Kenyans to listen and sing. Then we will have something.