SOUNDTRACK: SAUTI SOL-“Love or Leave” (Field Recordings, May 30, 2012).
Here is another Field Recording [A Morning Walk With Sauti Sol] filmed at SXSW. But this one is on a bridge. The four members of Sauti Sol are up at dawn (one even sings “good morning.” As a guy runs past them, they realize “We didn’t have our morning job, today” so two of them run around the other two, to much laughter.
Their happy mood is clearly reflected in their wonderfully colorful jackets (and amazing harmonies.
“Love or Leave” is terrific, with a great riff. There’s only the one acoustic guitar and their voices fill in everything else.
I don’t know anything about Sauti Sol. So the blurb says:
In spite of the early hour and chilly air, Sauti Sol arrived at the Pfluger Pedestrian Bridge in Austin, Texas, in good spirits — not to mention colorful jackets that provided a welcome contrast to the cloudy sky. There, the Afro-fusion quartet from Nairobi greeted the morning birds and joggers with a version of its recent single, “Love or Leave.” The song amply demonstrates the group’s signature acoustic sound, which is anchored by the guitar of Polycarp Otieno and vocal harmonies of Bien-Aime Baraza, Willis Chimano and Delvin Mudigi.
There’s some pop elements including a kind of choreographed dance but the way the minor key hits in the chorus is outstanding.
It’s great that bands from Nairobi come to SXSW, and it’s even cooler that we get to hear them.
[READ: January 31, 2018] “On Not Growing Up”
I don’t really understand what this is supposed to be. It is listed as fiction according to Harper’s. It is written as an interview but neither party is introduced.
The first question is “How long have you been a child?” The answer is “seventy-one years.”
The second question puzzles me even more and I think I’m thrown off from there. “Who did you work with?”
Meyerowits for the first phase: colic, teething, walking, talking. He taught me how to produce false prodigy markers and developmental reversals, to test the power in the room without speaking. I was encouraged to look beyond the tantrum and drastic mood migrations that depended on the environment, and if you know my work you have an idea what resulted. The rest is a hodgepodge
The interviewee says that the term adult is problematic. It’s too easy to say that his childwork is directly divisive to Matures.
So it’s kind of funny, I guess, but not really. It might be saying something about people growing up too fast, bit I don’t think so.
He says that fixed moral boundaries are harmful even if they provide momentary comforts and save lives. He has some things to say about Dr Spock:
His art was to survey the past and ensure a predictable persona outcome. He devised solutions for the escape of childhood, very good ones, I might add. I think that some of his approaches are worth modifying, if only in service of a kind of dark science.
Spock’s entire approach presents infancy as a problem to be managed, to be grown out of, and I’m not alone in finding this condescending. Physical growth is (mostly) a necessity (although we’ll soon see about that), but emotional growth is something Matures crave strictly for others. Rarely is it satisfying to the person who accomplishes it.
He says he wants to die as his is, as a child.
Very weird.

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