Music

A reflection on Power Hip Hop.

A total of 3031 people attended a performance of Power Hip Hop

Power Hip Hop gathered together a diverse group of musicians to perform at the Theatre Royal earlier this year. Young rappers worked with the wonderful Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra to produce original works, here’s a quick look at how it went down.

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I am a teacher and brought with me 20 refugee students to see the show. This is the first time these students have been in a theatre; have seen an orchestra, and seen refugees celebrated and encouraged to perform to an audience like this. My students were beaming for hours afterward...” (Richard Angus, ESL Support Teacher)

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“Totally transfixing right from the start, these exciting new voices cut across genre, race, class, tradition and stereotype to perform up stage-front of the tuxedoed and be-pearled TSO, all in their best Rapper baggy jeans and T-shirts.” (Gai Anderson, Power Hip Hop review)

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“Bravo! On Tuesday I was privileged, incredible privileged, to be part of the audience to see Power Hip Hop. Created through the passion of the artistic director of Kickstart Arts, Jami Bladel and the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, this was the most extraordinary piece of theatre.” (Coral Tulloch, Pontville, Excerpt from a featured letter to the mercury)

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Kickstart and Headway Rebuilding Lives present: Portraits of Invisible People

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A multi art form installation about different ways of being.


Kickstart Arts’ Portraits of Invisible People takes us on a physical, emotional and intellectual journey through the personal stories of people whose lives have been changed forever due to a brain injury.


The show asks its audience to consider the nature of fate, memory, grief, truth, and relationship through extraordinary storytelling, metaphors of space, experience and time, video, stunning photography and sound. Kickstart Arts, Headway rebuilding lives, community participants and artists collaborated to develop a deep, heartfelt personal story telling that offers powerful insights into what’s most important in life.


From late February 2010 four professional artists have worked closely with people living with acquired brain injuries, their family members and support workers to explore what life is like if you have a brain injury. Project curator/writer Richard Bladel, photographer Sean Fennessy, filmmaker Troy Melville and designer/builder Uwe Feiste have collaborated with these community members to draw out their unique and profound perspectives on life.


THE EXHIBITION DETAILS


Portraits of Invisible People: a multi art form installation about different ways of being.


Exhibition Opening 6 PM Friday August 6th


Exhibition runs from Saturday August 7th – Sunday August 15th


Long Gallery, First floor, Salamanca Arts Centre, 77 Salamanca Place, Hobart


FOR MORE INFORMATION
Kickstart Arts Inc
03 62242362
0408 358 671
community@kickstart.org.au
For more information about Kickstart Arts: www.kickstart.org.au

(Photo by Sean Fennessy)

Community Radio, A new voice in the Midlands

Photo courtesy of LenR

Photo courtesy of LenR


Starting last week Kickstart have started working on a new project up in Oatlands, we’re working with the local school and some keen youths to invigorate the local radio station. Although the dates are yet to be decided soon you could be hearing some new voices and new music charging through the air to a huge number of radios throughout the Tasmanian Midlands.


If per chance you represent a new band looking to get it’s original music played, get in contact and you to could be being heard through Tasmania.


-Stay tuned,


George.

Success! Power Hip Hop gets THREE standing ovations.

A couple of nice comments from punters:



“Power Hip Hop was absolutely awesome on Saturday, congratulations!! That is the first time I have ever been not slightly awkward about giving a standing ovation, those kids were so talented and confident: they really pulled it off. And yay for the orchestra, sound and lighting. WOOP.”
- Kelly Eijdenberg



You rock the boat and the boat rocks back.
The immediate and spontaneous standing ovation of the packed house last night said it all. Kickstart Arts and the TSO kicked arts at the Peacock Theatre with Power Hip Hop. This remarkable performance was the culmination of a year’s intense collaboration between Kickstart and the TSO. Both arts organisations taking an artistic risk on an innovative community cultural development project that paid off. The intense and delightful interplay between the DJ and French Horn was one thing, but hearing an oboe rap was incredible. Were we in New York? No we were at the Salamanca Arts Centre. This was a collaboration of creative friction, audience response, rhythm and poetry (rap). The young poets channelled Bob Dylan, telling us the times are changing again, and explored issues of world peace and community engagement. My favourite lyrics were ‘you rock the boat and the boat rocks back’. Perhaps we need a little more artistic boat rocking if it delivers performances of the calibre of last nights show. The spotlight was shone on bright futures last night. Bravo Power Hip Hop.”

- Madeleine Ogilvie, ALP Candidate for Denison

(Photos by Richard Bladel)

Ted talks: Emmanuel Jal

Contact Us

03 6224 2362

community@kickstart.org.au

77 Salamanca Place

Battery Point 7004

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