Bristol underground scene

The Bristol underground scene is the culture associated with drum and bass, and graffiti art that has existed in Bristol from the early 1990s to the present.[1]

The city of Bristol in the UK has spawned various musicians and artists, and is typified by its urban culture. While the city is most associated with a group of artists who emerged during the 1990s, especially the "Bristol Sound", the city maintains an active and diverse underground urban scene.

The city has been particularly associated with 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".[2]

The Bristol scene is characterised by a strong relationship between music and art, especially graffiti art. A founding member of the band Massive Attack, Robert Del Naja, was originally a graffiti artist, and local graffiti artist Banksy has also gone on to produce album covers and artworks. Banksy collaborator Inkie was also part of the scene.[3][4]

The "Bristol Sound"

The Bristol sound was the name given to a number of bands from Bristol, England, in the 1990s. These bands spawned the musical genre trip-hop, though many of the bands shunned this name when other British and international bands imitated the style and preferred not to distinguish it from hip hop.

The style was perhaps typified by the song "Unfinished Sympathy" by Massive Attack, which has frequently been described as one of the best songs of all time, according to polls produced by MTV2, NME,[5] and various other magazines and reviewers. A reviewer for the BBC has said that: "More than a decade after its release it remains one of the most moving pieces of dance music ever, able to soften hearts and excite minds just as keenly as a ballad by Bacharach or a melody by McCartney."[6]

The Bristol sound has been described as "possessing a darkness that is uplifting, a joyful melancholy".[7] 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 can include the aforementioned original Bristolians Massive Attack, 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.

Urban graffiti

A work by Bristol artist Banksy

Many graffiti artists work in Bristol. One of the most notable is Banksy, who has also designed album covers for bands such as Blur and Monk & Canatella. Banksy is a world-renowned artist who uses his original street art form to promote alternative aspects of politics from those promoted 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 simple vandalism.

Banksy has produced work all over the world, including in Barcelona, New York, Australia, London, San Francisco and the West Bank.

There has long been an interplay between the different music and art scenes. Robert Del Naja of the internationally successful 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".[8]

History of the Bristol underground scene

Bristol has long been a multicultural city. In the 1950s and 1960s there were waves of immigration that made Bristol one of the most racially diverse cities in the UK. This mix included greater access to new strands of music such as reggae. "In 1980, following a police raid on the popular Black and White Café, the St Pauls riots erupted, the first of the decade's civil disturbances."

Other Parts of the city were equally mixed with areas like Ashley Down and Bishopston attracting huge waves of Italian, Irish and South American immigrants who were to work in the industrial section of the north of the city after the war. These set of immigrants also put their stamp on the city through their late night drinking clubs, where like St Paul's police would tend to turn a blind eye.

"Around this time, the Bristol underground scene was steeped in punk and reggae influences, and soon embraced hip-hop – and with it the colourful New York-style lettering at the most creative end of the graffiti art spectrum."[9]

The 1990s was when the scene began to create work of international significance. 1991 saw the release of Massive Attack's Blue Lines, an album which has met international critical acclaim. Blue Lines was named the 21st greatest album of all time in a "Music of the Millennium" poll conducted by HMV, Channel 4, The Guardian and Classic FM. Stuart Bailie of BBC Northern Ireland stated that "It was soul music. But it had bold, symphonic arrangements. It featured samples of the Mahavishnu Orchestra … It had funky breaks and an emotional power that was hard to figure. It sounded anxious and lost. But there was a grandeur in the music also. People who came across the record became obsessed, spinning it endlessly."

Darkness

The Bristol underground scene was characterised by a sparseness and darkness. Bands like Portishead and Massive Attack are known for using sparse instrumentation – a prominent bass line, vocals with what are usually melancholic lyrics and sometimes other effects commonly associated with hip-hop, such as samples and scratching. Banksy also tends to use very few colours, concentrating on black and white with sharp outlines, covering controversial topics such as war.

Separately to this, some writers have talked of an undercurrent of darkness within the city due to its history.[9]

Racial tensions within the city

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."[9] However common knowledge that both Whiteladies Road and the Blackboy Hill had connections with the slave trade is untrue: both names are derived from pubs.[10][11][12]

"It's a past that we feel equivocal about", says Steve Wright. "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."[9]

There has often been a slight undercurrent of tension both in the politics and creatively with artists and musicians in the merger of black and white culture. During the 1950s the Bristol Evening Post carried what many today would consider openly racist articles, warning of the dangers of black bus drivers.

Creative tensions within bands

Some of this tension spilled over into some of the artists' creative work. Massive Attack for example were wrought with creative tensions over their 1998 album Mezzanine, which resulted in one of the three core members leaving. Robert Del Naja has described the dark atmosphere within the group: "There was always this tension between control and collaboration. Always… We were just trying to get the job finished… Everything became thinner and smaller. All that warmth being spun into a tiny little thread, then that thread just being cut."[13]

Artistic use of darkness

Graffiti on the Thekla arts and music centre.

The music and art of the Bristol underground scene has often used dark imagery and lyrics. Massive Attack's song, "Unfinished Sympathy" talks of a lover's unhappiness, and the mood is soulful, downbeat and emotional.[14]

Banksy within his pictures has used images of civilian casualties of war, and his work often talks of frustration and anger.

Portishead's song "Glory Box" includes the lyrics "Give me a reason to love you" and speaks of a lover's unhappiness with her current situation. Another song, "All Mine", speaks of forcing a lover to be unable to escape making them "tethered and tied" until "the day they die". Suggestions of the songs meaning have included the idea that it is either "scary or incredibly romantic. It can be about the initial obsession you get in fresh relationships."

Massive Attack's 2006 single Live With Me features a vocal performance by a deep soul singer and again includes soulful lyrics such as "Nothing's right, if you ain't here". The video includes images of a young woman drinking herself into a stupor, on her own, in a dark city. The video finishes with a shot of her tumbling over and over down a staircase until she is out of shot. One review of the video described it as follows: "It's uncomfortable viewing, but I found it really haunting. It features a young (mid twenties) professional-looking woman drinking herself into oblivion on her own in her flat. I can't really put my finger on what it is about it that I find so arresting, but I thought it was an incredibly powerful four minute film."

Politics

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, one of the most influential artists and musicians of this scene has openly declared his opposition to the Iraq War for example.[8] Del Naja and Banksy have both submitted art works to the War Paint exhibition which showcases anti-war art work.

Bristol independent media

Bristol also has a well-established 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, pulling no punches with its satirical exposés of council and corporate corruption. The Bristolian, "Smiter of the High and Mighty", even spawned a radical independent political party that polled an impressive 15% in Easton ward in 2003. In October 2005 it came runner up for the national Paul Foot Award for investigative journalism.[15]

The anarchist-oriented Bristle, "fighting talk for Bristol and the South-West", was started in 1997 and celebrated 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.

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 present-day punk fanzine Everlong, all of which have been published in Bristol.

Bristol based magazines, Trap, and Crack are popular and have emerged from the Bass Music culture 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,[16] have proved to be more short-lived. Dialect Radio, however, as 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, and is run entirely by volunteers on a not-for-profit basis, and covers local arts, music, political issues, and local people of interest.

References

  1. Baker, Lindsay. "Banksy: off the wall – Telegraph". The Daily Telegraph. UK: Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  2. Miles, Milo (12 November 1995). "Trip-Hop". Salon. Salon Media Group. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  3. "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.
  4. 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.
  5. Staff writer (12 November 2002). "NME's 100 Greatest Singles of All Time Unveiled". NME. UK: IPC MEDIA. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  6. "Unfinished Sympathy". BBC Radio 2 – Sold On Song. BBC. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  7. "Peter Webb". Exploring The Networked Worlds Of Popular Music. Routledge. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  8. 1 2 Blake, Veronica (20 March 2008). "War Paint Exhibition – Preview and Robert Del Naja interview". IndieLondon. IndieLondon.co.uk. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Baker, Lindsay (28 March 2008). "Banksy: off the wall – Telegraph". The Daily Telegraph. UK: Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  10. Winstone, Reece (1966). Bristol As It Was 1874–1866. p. Photos 82, 83.
  11. Hammersley, G. H. Survey of the Manor of Clifton. in Clifton and Durdham Down: A Landscape History, p. 6, Plan 2.
  12. Smith, V. (2002). Street Names of Bristol. Broadcast Books. ISBN 1-874092-90-7.
  13. "The brand plays on". Sydney Morning Herald. 15 February 2003. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  14. Hands, Steve (March 2006). "Massive Attack". musicOMH. OMH.com. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  15. Hooper, Dickon (14 October 2005). "Scurrilious magazine scoops top award". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  16. "Electro Magnetic Installation Bristol". The Pirate Archive. Retrieved 24 June 2009.

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