Friday, January 14, 2011

New Links and Short Update

I had my meeting today with my boss and the NGO, and we have begun the process of initial question/answer/paperwork it takes to make a big switch like this. Luckily, so far, the process has not been denied in any way, but it should take some time until I have a definite answer. The next step is for the NGO to decide if they can pay for my housing in exchange for the work I will be doing there. If that is approved, I should be good to go, but I don't want to jump the gun and get too excited about it until I know its for sure. Pachoko pachoko (little by little). I'll update this thing when I find out more. Should be some type of development in the next few weeks. Keep your fingers crossed for me!!
Peace

Here are a couple of links to check out:
This one is for a Picasa Web album of photos from the music camp. (they seem to upload easier here for me)
Malawi Music Project


And here is the address of the Music NGO, Music Crossroads, I'm trying to get the ok to work with here in Malawi.
If the link doesn't show up, here is the address: www.music-crossroads.net

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Time - Rachel Ruscombe-King



I just met Rachel through a mutual friend while she was on vacation. She is a former VSO volunteer who was in Malawi and has a lot of great songs. Check out her video so we can guilt her into making more. Also, I have added a banner at the top for an organization call Playing for Change. Pretty cool stuff!

Monday, January 10, 2011

Malawi Music Project pics2





These are pictures of when Peter Mawanga (famous Malawian musician) was recording the PC volunteers and other students' songs at the Music Camp. Enjoy!

Saturday, January 8, 2011

New Direction?

So, I tried to add a few photos, but am having trouble. The internet keeps timing out before I can get them uploaded. Will try again later, but wanted to share a new thing I'm working on here. As I said in my description of the Malawi Music Project, the experience was absolutely incredible for me, and I have decided to try to pursue such activities full time during my time here in Malawi. I have been in contact with a music NGO based in Lilongwe (capital city) called Music Crossroads International (link here:). I first contacted them and went to visit their office back in July of last year to introduce myself and see if they had any interest in being involved with our Music Project. Although we weren't able to swing anything for the project, I have stayed in contact with them and always inquire about what they are doing/direction they are heading. So, after my experience with our music camp, I have decided that I would like to work with Music Crossroads full time in Lilongwe. I contacted the director of Music Crossroads and he said that they would love to have me come be a part of what they are doing. How can I do that from Chitipa (the Northernmost district in the country)??? Can't. It would mean that I would relocate from Chitipa to Lilongwe for the remainder of my service. So I have presented my idea to my boss, who has promised to talk about it with our country director. We have also scheduled a meeting with the director of Music Crossroads, myself, and my boss next Friday to discuss how it might be worked out. Its not a yes yet, but I feel fairly confident that it is possible. It feels so great to finally find something that I am truly passsionate about and am hopeful that I might pursue it here where it is so needed. After telling my friend Jo about it, she said,"You should write a manifesto to state your case to Peace Corps." I thought it was a great idea, but of course, didn't know how to write. Jo, without being asked, decided to take it upon herself to put to paper what we had discussed. The following manifesto pretty much sums up why I feel this project is important and beneficial here in Malawi:


Jo's Music Manifesto

It’s hard to get lost and still feel safe, to not know where you are, but to feel comfortable in not knowing, to not know what comes next but to find that exciting and right. There is something about this kind of getting lost that if you can find, it guarantees a certain comfort, a comfort that rests in the fact that the world is unfair and filled with lost, but that one can feel, and feel safe in the face of lost, in the face of a world that presents so many ways to get lost. It’s easy to feel a certain non-existence in a world that often seems to want to crush the existence of so much. It’s easy to feel numb in a world that is degrading and filled with injustice. It’s easy to lose the need for responsibility when you feel nothing at all, when you have numbed yourself to the inequalities and unfairness that composes so much of the world. And maybe that’s why feeling in the face of so much numbness, feeling real in front of the continual push to not exist is incredible, though hard to achieve. But possible and easily attainable often in art and specifically through the art form of music. In the pursuit of social change people lose their grounding, they lose faith, they lose hope in their work to preserve what so many work to destroy and not only work to destroy but succeed in destroying.

Organizations, individuals, governments, and volunteers all work tirelessly on forming ideas, on implementing plans, and on attempting sustainability of a change they see the world needs. And so much fails often because people lose their hope, they lose the energy, and most importantly they lose the ability to sustain and ground themselves and with this loss comes the loss of development. This loss leads to numbness and people assume it’s a result of their failed efforts, the result of being part of a world that often offers little and takes a lot. Not only do people lose feeling they lose the need for feeling and without that, little change takes place, inspiration shrivels and a needed creativity dies.

Music allows people to feel and not only allows but demands it. An offered escape that finds feelings even if nothing on the outside offers up any, or any reason to feel. And that gives people motivation to change. To change because they feel something for no reason, and they don’t mind the lack of reason. Music commands feeling and commands a force and with this, people have unfounded hope to instigate change and unfounded hope is the most sustainable kind. A kind of hope that is unbreakable as it unfounded in the first place; there is no way to challenge it, in the same way that the feelings brought on by music are unchallengeable therefore making music a key instigator in social change, one that grounds, prompts, and activates a way of feeling that people can work from.

In every type of work; in environmental work, in social action, in HIV/AIDS work, health, and education, there is a great lack of creativity, and a lack of sustainability. Organizing for social change does not exist in a sole pursuit of projects and proposals, but in an attempt to find grounding and meaning beyond what the world offers. And in order to do that there must be representations of beauty that exist beyond words and that provide sustainability through feeling anything but numb. One can pursue many projects, one can plant a million trees, start a thousand programs on HIV/AIDS prevention, but none of these will survive without the feeling that they survive in the face of all the injustices the world presents, and this feeling can only exist if the leaders of the projects, the programs, and the planters of the trees feel it too. To work for the environment and the world people have to learn also how to work for each other and inherent in this, is a need to work for oneself and to feel this without explanation, which often can only be done with the motivation of a song or a tune. The world presents a complexity of challenges and we fire back with a complexity of answers, but nothing will be sustained without a self-grounding that exists beyond complexity and instead in a realm of unexplained beauty and a feeling of being real.

Play to feel, feel to change, change to feel.

You rock, Jo!
I'll let everyone know how things turn out next weekend hopefully.
Peace

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Malawi Music Project Pics1

Holy crap, I think this worked!!! The following pictures should be:
-The arrival of the kids from various parts of Malawi
-Me talking with my band on what songs/music/band name they wanted to work on
-One of the stars of the camp, Clifford, showing the bridge and nut he made for his banjo at the camp
-An impromptu jam session with the kids
-The head planner/fundraiser PC volunteer, Scott (aka The Griz)helping with a banjo
will try to post more tomorrow!




Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Malawi Music Project

Just wanted to send everyone a quick Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!! I’ve been really busy these past couple months so its been hard to keep this thing updated, but I wanted to assure everyone that I’m happy, healthy, and had a great holiday season here in Malawi.
During the week of December 12-18, myself and five other volunteers put on the Second Annual Malawi Music Project. This was, without a doubt, one of the coolest things I have EVER done, and was definitely the highlight of my service here so far. Based on applications from kids all over Malawi between the ages of 13 to 23, we selected 19 students to attend the camp focusing on instrument building (using locally available materials), music theory, creativity, dancing, voice lessons, as well as how music can positively affect your life and the people around you. The group of kids had various talents/interests, but overall really enjoyed the camp and learned a lot. They even got to take home their very own homemade banjo they built during the camp. I will try to post photos with this update, but it might not work. The first day/evening we were very happy to welcome our special guest, Peter Mawanga, who is a very well known and respected professional Malawian musician to welcome the kids to camp. He was even kind enough to bring some recording equipment and lay down some tracks and make CD’s for the kids who were brave enough to sing their own songs on the first night. This was absolutely incredible for those kids because you have to remember that these kids all come from various villages and are very poor, then all of a sudden they are hangin’ out with one of the most famous Malawian musicians ever, getting pointers from him, and HE is recording THEIR SONGS FOR THEM. It would be like me going and hanging out with Eric Clapton for a day and playing my songs for him. (Amazing, but very intimidating) Regardless of the intimidation, the kids that played did great and each got to take home a CD with all the tracks on it. Anyway, during the first few days, we split the kids up into three bands who were each assigned a Peace Corps volunteer as their “band manager”. The goal was that each band would compose at least one original song with an important message and perform that song at the end of the camp in a sort of “Battle of the Bands”. I got to “manage” a great group of kids and was very impressed with their talent and attitude towards the project. It was so great to get to know them each individually and as a group and see them open up and become comfortable enough to share who they really are and bring their various contributions to the song. (Most kids here are very shy, so this was very quick progress) We also had plenty of classtime to teach them about music theory and were able to expose them to a great deal of diverse music they had never listened to before. Each PC volunteer also brought something unique to the camp and taught the groups different skills or gave them advice/ideas in order to help them achieve their desired goals with music. Our group of counselors (PC volunteers) worked wonderfully together despite our different musical interests/talents and we all stayed busy through the whole week. (And even found time to jam with each other and the kids after hours!) The camp was one of the most rewarding experiences not just of my time here, but of my entire life and I am very excited to be in charge of planning the camp next year. It was so great to get the message across that music can benefit you as a person even if you aren’t making money doing it. I tried to explain that for me, music is something that helps me through even the hardest times of life. NO MATTER WHAT I can always turn to music, and there is no better feeling than when you fully express what you feel inside through song.
So, all in all, it was a super successful week thanks to all the hard work of the kids and of course the PC volunteers as well. We set the bar pretty high for next year, and I will be looking for ways to fund the camp starting soon. Hopefully with a year to plan and fund raise we will have an even better camp at the end of this year!!
Gonna post this first, then try to upload some pics...