*M.I.A.'s Kala*

*Representing the World Town*

By Sukant Chandan

Not since the days of Punk have we seen commercially successful music
feature accents reflecting the actual country and cities in England where
artists are from, rather than copying US accents, a trend that has been
rejected by cultural genres that have been sprung up spontaneously from the
grassroots here such as Jungle/Drum & Bass, Garage and Grime. Artists like
Dizzee Rascal, Kano, Skinnyman, and Lady Sovereign have succeeded in
representing British, mainly London urban working class youth. But Mathangi
"Maya" Arulpragasam* *aka M.I.A's (Missing in Action/Acton) new album *Kala,
*named after her mother (the first album *Arular* named after her father)
has brought the closest thing in modern urban music that has so ingeniously
fused many international influences into modern urban dance music, with a
definite tilt towards South Asian sounds. Asian Dub Foundation, and
FunDaMental, especially on the amazing *There Shall Be Love* album have
tried to do this and continue to, but M.I.A. has taken this all to a whole
new, sophisticated and yet still beat-banging level.

For so many different reasons, London might as well be a different country
to the rest of England, not least because of the seemingingly endless amount
of different ethnic communities who live side by side with each other.
London youth grow up listening to sounds from countries from which their
friends, parents and possibly themselves have lived, as well as Western
sounds in the form of Rap, R'n'B, Ragga and Dancehall and 'our own' London
sounds such as Garage, Grime, Drum and Bass and Dub Step. The last genres
have come about after having fused together other musical and cultural
influences with our own London spin on things. But not many could have
foreseen that a former refugee in London from the brutal war between the
Tamil people and the Sri Lankan state would have produced one of the most
exciting and pioneering Urban music sounds that has come onto the scene to
date, and an artist who is as lucid in her political beliefs as she is
confident in her talents in music and art having done the artwork for her
two albums and who has had a massive artistic input into her music videos.

The sound on *Kala* doesn't betray its identification with the London sounds
or with the traditions of the London rave and dance culture as elaborated on
*Kala's *more upbeat track *XR2* which opens with her asking 'where were you
in '92?', rapping in a sulky-drone tone about the rave scene back in 1992. *
Kala* also shows influences of B-More and Brazilian Baile Funk sound,
largely has a result of producer and Diplo who produced tracks on *Kula* as
well as the first album. *Kula *is layered with a multitude of different
cultural influences and as the title says on one of the album tracks, she is
truly representing the *World Town*.

M.I.A is not a product of any privileged art scene like so many other
commercial successes in the entertainment industry. Once you get into her
music you can hear how her life story and experiences have profoundly
influenced her creativity. She fled Tamil Eelam in Sri Lanka via a refugee
camp in India to London at the age of around 12, ending up with her single
parent mother in a working class housing estate in Hounslow, West London.
She witnessed the bombing of her community and the horrific repression of
the Tamil people. Like the other refugees in the camp in India where she
stayed in for a year, she lived in poverty of which she has said "*we were
drinking loads of contaminated water, we had no medicine, I had no hair and
scabs all over my head." *

**

Her experience of the struggle of the Tamil people, her father's involvement
as a Marxist activist in it and subsequent punishment for it by the Sri
Lankan authorities, has made her passionately vocal in her music about the
way peoples struggles are demonised. In an interview with Fact Magazine she
explained " I haven't heard one proper thing that talks about what the
problem is. All I want is a shot of one kid in Palestine who actually says
what the fuck is going on. I want one Al-Qaeda dude for every one they've
shot and killed and arrested and put in Camp X-Ray to be filmed for five
minutes and asked, "What the fuck is your problem, really, for you to give
your life up for it? Why don't you just tell the world exactly how you
feel?" You have to have a sense of what the other side feels and how they
think ... The media is too busy portraying the cartoon-character, the
dehumanized animal. I'm willing to say things if [they] provoke discussion
and thinking,"

M.I.A.'s first album *Arular* succeeded in catapulting her into the industry
limelight, which is maybe surprising if one considers the
politically-charged nature of her lyrics that forthrightly and
controversially addressed issues such as war, resistance and oppression. *
Kala* in comparison may seem hardly political at all, but closer listening
shows that although it is less extrovertly politically, the lyrical content
still expresses lyrics about immigration, war and life on the hustle as a
first generation third-world kid in London. M.I.A claims her new album, "is
also about being a woman in the world and finding your own place within it".

The track *Jimmy*, the closest to a conventional song on the album, heavily
samples a song from Bollywood movie *Disco Dancer* in 1982, but still
manages to remark on genocide in Rwanda , Congo and Darfur on what appears
to be a bubble-gum love song. Confounding sexual and racial stereotypes
doesn't end there on *Kula.* On the track *Boyz, *M.I.A. got a hundred male
dancers from Jamaica dancing on it. She didn't want the usual sexist
booty-shaking video. At a well-known club in Jamaica, Ragga super-star
Beenie Man took the track off M.I.A., and played it in the dance re-winding
it for 45 minutes while everyone was going crazy over it. Like so many other
tracks on the album *Boyz* has cut-up samples of South Asian singers, and
Asian and African percussion, which gives the album a cohesion and
continuity throughout.

Given the opportunity by her record label to spend quite a bit of money in *
Kala*, on which she has produced or co-produced 7 of the 12 tracks, she
decided that instead of spending her budget on expensive producers she'd
rather spend the money on going to villages in India, Liberia, Trinidad,
Australia and Jamaica to find the vocals and percussion for the album. She
has argued that we need to hear and be influenced by the sounds from youth
around the world on which the Western music industry is pushing dubious
cultural commodities such as the rapper 50-Cent.

On the subject of crass lyrics, the last track *Come Around* is produced by
Timbaland, one of the pre-eminent Rap and R'n'B producers around. Although
the track is excellent, unfortunately like so many Timbaland's recent
tracks, he has taken the tragic route of supposedly 'rapping' on it, at
least he hadn't tried on this track to attempt to sing like he has on his
other recent tracks with tragic consequences. His rapping wouldn't even have
been so bad if the lyrics weren't the sleaze-ball lyrics that they are: " I
don't wanna be in love with you I'ma just break you off and say goodbye",
you get the picture. To M.I.A.'s credit she doesn't entertain Timbaland's
rubbish, who just comes across a juvenile idiot. She has said that she has
no interest in becoming the next Nelly Furtado, whose 'promiscuity' is
promoted by Timbaland's production. One cam imagine that the pressure on her
to become a no-brained bimbo performer must be considerable; just being in
the decadent and superficial cultural context of the entertainment industry
in which she works must present enough pressure to sell-out.

The Timbaland episode on the album is an exception. The other vocal artists
she has featured on the album are far away from the music industry
manufactured bling culture. One such example on the album is South-East
London based Nigerian rapper Afrikan Boy featured on the track *Hussel*,
about working the struggle of working class immigrant life in London,

[Afrikan Boy:]

I'm illegal I don't pay tax tax,
EMA yes I'm claiming that that,
police I try to avoid them,
they catch me hustling they say deport them,

Then the amazing track *Mango Pickle Down River* produced by M.I.A. and
Australian based producer Morganics features crew of ten year old Black
Australian/Aboriginal youths called 'Wilcannia Mob' rapping alongside M.I.A.
who are a part of Morganics outreach project. The kids sound great, and the
minimalist track has a didgeridoo bassline. Timbaland was so impressed with
the beat that he later took it and featured it on Snoop's new album. M.I.A.
explained about Wilcannia Mob and the racism against Black Australians; "even
to get them into the after party, me and my brother practically had to get
into a fight with people to get them in ...just the amount of segregation
between black and white Australia is really crazy"

From promoting cultural "Third World democracy", as she states in The
Clash-sampling track and one of the most catchy tracks *Paper Planes*, she
comes straight back down to London on the bass heavy Grime and Dub-Step
style *20 Dollar*, the follow up from *10 Dollar* from the first album. The
only sign of the Third World sounds on this track are her vodacoded singing
which starts the track in South Asianesque semi-tone harmonies. For the rest
M.I.A raps in her characteristic blistering sarcastic bad-attitude sulky
drones, i.e., not dissimilar to a London rude girl!

*Kula* takes the listener on a unique journey through the latest break-beat
sounds of modern western urban music via number of Third World cities and
villages. That in itself would make *Kala* an incredible album, but such an
exercise could easily result in something more like a 'World Music' fusion
project gone horribly wrong. But M.I.A has pulled off something which rests
comfortably between her combined identities of Western underground dance
music along with a close loyalty and identification with the international
sounds of people across Asia, Africa and Australasia. *Kula* shows that
there doesn't necessarily have to be cultural divisions in the music
industry, and that these cultures when ground against each other can, if
done by those involved in them on a grassroots level, become the future
sounds of which *Kula* is definitely a pioneering contribution. In an
industry which encourages cultural and political separation from the masses,
M.I.A is unlikely to succumb to this pressure; her loyalties are firmly and
graphically expressed through her music.

*Sukant Chandan* is London-based writer on current affairs and cultural
issues. He was for ten years a Garage and Jungle/Drum&Bass MC with the
DubNeg crew playing at clubs and on London pirate radios. He runs two blogs
http://ouraim.blogspot.com/ and http://sonsofmalcolm.blogspot.com/ and can
be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://sonsofmalcolm.blogspot.com/2007/09/review-of-mias-new-album-kala.html

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