On 25-Jul-12 2:59 PM, Udhay Shankar N wrote:

> http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/30/us-afghanistan-rock-idUSBRE85T0LO20120630
> 
> 
> Young Afghans seek solace from war in heavy metal rock

Something on similar lines I just ran across:

http://www.deathmetalangola.com/film/

The Film

SYNOPSIS

Following nearly 40 years of unrelenting war – with every attendant
horror – peace and reconstruction are slowly arriving to Angola. Damaged
first by the war for independence from Portugal, Angola was then ripped
apart by a devastating civil war that orphaned thousands of children.
Huambo, Angola’s second largest city, finds 55 of these children in the
Okutiuka orphanage under the care of Sonia Ferreira. Sonia’s boyfriend,
Wilker Flores, is a death metal guitarist who uses the brutal sounds and
rhythms of this hardcore music as a path to healing, or, as Sonia says,
“to clear out the debris from all these years of war.”

DEATH METAL ANGOLA tracks Wilker and Sonia’s dream – to stage Angola’s
first-ever national rock concert, bringing together members from
different strands of the Angolan hardcore scene from different provinces
– as it unfolds in fits and starts against the bombed out and mined
backdrop of the formerly stately Huambo. Rubble and deconstructed spaces
provide scenic reminders of why
hardcore music has gained a foothold.

What initially looks like a Quixotic undertaking gains momentum, aided
by social media and propelled by members of the various branches of the
death metal hardcore underground, who join together to stage the event.
Raucous and righteous, DMA’s look at a rock show off the grid is
fulfilling, haunting, and real.

DIRECTOR’S NOTE

A few years ago, I was traveling through Angola researching a film about
a railway when I stopped at the only cafe that served a decent cup of
coffee in the bombed-out former capital, Huambo. A young man in a blue
button down oxford shirt and tiny dread locks waved me over. I sat with
him for a while and chatted. We talked about what I was doing there and
I asked him about himself. He said he was a musician. Oh really? I
asked, what do you play? He looked me right in the eye and said, “Death
Metal.”  Stunned, I asked him if he would play for me. He got very
excited, said he’d find an amplifier somewhere and that I should meet him
later that night at “the Orphanage,” and slipped me the address. I
assumed it was some sort of club. However when I arrived in the middle
of the night at what seemed like an abandoned milk factory in the middle
of nowhere, it was clear that this was no club. There he was, Wilker
Flores, the young man in a blue oxford, with tiny dreads and an electric
guitar, surrounded by 55 orphaned boys who called this place home.
Syphoning electricity from the neighbor, Wilker proceeded to play one of
the hardest and harshest impromptu concerts imaginable, lit by nothing
more than the head lights of van. It was absolutely magical and
terrifying and it marked the beginning of my long and profound
relationship with Wilker, as well as the woman who runs the Orphanage,
Sonia Ferreira, who is one of the most remarkable people I have met in
my life. I have never seen anything like this place and never met anyone
like these people. This has truly been one of the deepest, life altering
experiences I’ve ever had.  The tremendous power, bravery and grace that
these people embody lies at the very heart of this film,  DEATH METAL ANGOLA.



Director : Jeremy Xido / Cinematography: Johan Legraie and Jeremy Xido/
Editor: Todd Holmes / Produced by: Joseph Castelo, Jeremy Xido, and
David Gallagher / Composer: Christian Frederickson / Sound Recordist :
Oswald Juliana / Sound Design : Timothy Bright


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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