Africa Bambaataa
Feel the rhythm of the Africa Bambaataa
Are you ready for the new age?
They are setting the stage
For the renegades
To control your mind
They planned it yesterday, free
Zulu Nation here to stay
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Pump it, rockin' it, stickin' it, funkin' it Africa
Pump it, rockin' it, stickin' it, funkin' it Zulu Nation
Z.U.L.U that's the way we say Zulu
Z.U.L.U that's the way we say Zulu
Zulu Nation, cities of angels
Zulu Nation, cities of angels
Africa Bambaataa Zulu Nation
Electro funk, electro funk
Electro funk future shock
We want your funk Africa
We want your funk
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
The world is on fire, can I take you higher?
The world is on fire
Zulu Nation
Ha ha ha future, ha ha ha future
Electro get going and the funk don't stop
Time to clear the floor and let the Zulu's rock
?
The year 2000 is on the way some say
The year 2000 has been here since yesterday
Electric beats, electric beats
We're Zulus
?
The future's gonna rock
?
The future's gonna rock say what
Z.U.L.U that's the way you say Zulu
Z.U.L.U that's the way you say Zulu
‘Afrika Shox’ from the album “Rhythm and Stealth” by
Leftfield was released in 1999 on the 6th of September. It is an
integrated genre of music, which consists of progressive
dance/electronic/house, but also influenced by reggae. Music and dance were of great importance to
the people enslaved from the 1620’s to the 1860’s. All over America, slaves made
music and danced for many different reasons, to remember their ancestors, to
mourn, to worship, they also did it to strengthen the bonds within the
community, as well as for leisure and to
find love. The poem ‘Limbo’ by Edward
Kamau Braithwaite can be inter-textually referenced to this video, this is
evident throughout the video. Feel the rhythm of the Africa Bambaataa
Are you ready for the new age?
They are setting the stage
For the renegades
To control your mind
They planned it yesterday, free
Zulu Nation here to stay
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Pump it, rockin' it, stickin' it, funkin' it Africa
Pump it, rockin' it, stickin' it, funkin' it Zulu Nation
Z.U.L.U that's the way we say Zulu
Z.U.L.U that's the way we say Zulu
Zulu Nation, cities of angels
Zulu Nation, cities of angels
Africa Bambaataa Zulu Nation
Electro funk, electro funk
Electro funk future shock
We want your funk Africa
We want your funk
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
Let's get electrified, let's get electrified
The world is on fire, can I take you higher?
The world is on fire
Zulu Nation
Ha ha ha future, ha ha ha future
Electro get going and the funk don't stop
Time to clear the floor and let the Zulu's rock
?
The year 2000 is on the way some say
The year 2000 has been here since yesterday
Electric beats, electric beats
We're Zulus
?
The future's gonna rock
?
The future's gonna rock say what
Z.U.L.U that's the way you say Zulu
Z.U.L.U that's the way you say Zulu
Limbo:
And limbo stick is the silence in front of me
limbo
limbo
limbo like me
limbo
limbo like me
long dark night is the silence in front of me
limbo
limbo like me
stick hit sound
and the ship like it ready
stick hit sound
and the dark still steady
limbo
limbo like me
long dark deck and the water surrounding me
long dark deck and the silence is over me
limbo
limbo like me
stick is the whip
and the dark deck is slavery
stick is the whip
and the dark deck is slavery
limbo
limbo like me
drum stick knock
and the darkness is over me
knees spread wide
and the water is hiding
limbo
limbo like me
knees spread wide
and the dark ground is under me
down
down
down
and the drummer is calling me
limbo
limbo like me
sun coming up
and the drummers are praising me
out of the dark
and the dumb god are raising me
up
up
up
and the music is saving me
hot
slow
step
on
the burning ground.
This
video represents many issues such as slavery, racism, a society which is not
accepting, and excluding. The video also uses subliminal
messages to show political incorrectness. The mise-en-scene within this music
video indicates that it is aimed at a more mature audience. It is also aimed at
audiences who enjoy the techno/dance scene. All the images
and shots within the music video are very straight/ strong and very geometric, representing the harsh nature of
the modern world. The opening, low angle shot is of The Twin Towers; this shot
connotes white supremacy; and is also used as a cultural signifier to New York.
The shot then pans down to the ground level; this could be signifying the main
character’s status in society, and implies that he is insignificant within
society and the nation. In terms of slavery, which is what the main character
represents, he is representing the status of his ancestor’s centuries before
this was filmed.
The
second shot in the music video, has used the rule of thirds to show a hectic
New York street, and a police car with its sirens on. The flashing lights of
the car represent the lights which are used in clubs and are associated to the
dance and electronic/house genre. The police car represents how society fear
the constraints and laws that are oppressed on society, and also signifies how
the buyers and owners of the slaves in the time of slavery were the equivalent
to the police in this photo.
The dark mise-en-scene, city views
and urban setting represent the urban genre of music within the video.
Saturation is low, connoting the bleak world that the main character faces. The
camera cuts to a shot of a car park underground; this is a cultural signifier
of underground music, it is dark, includes flashing images, and is also unknown
to the mainstream music scene. The fact this clip is also in black and white
also suggests that it is a non-mainstream video also.
This is a significant shot in the music video. It
shows the black American actor stepping out of the shadows, and into the day
light. This can be linked with the ‘limbo’ poem when Braithwaite describes the
slaves descending from the ship “out of the dark and the dumb god are
raising me ,up ,up ,up ,and the music is saving me ,hot ,slow ,step ,on the
burning ground” The audience can imagine that the character is feeling like
this, because as he rises the audience can see his eyes, almost blind; blind to
the way in which modern society view things, but also how the society in the
time of the slave trade viewed things also. The noir mise-en-scene and
chiaroscuro lighting supports the dark theme of the video, and reinforces the
two different worlds. He is venturing into the unknown, and therefore can be
linked to migrants and immigrants from other cultures who are also venturing to
find happiness, but however are greeted with the harsh reality of the modern
society in 1st world countries.
This
shot shows the main character crouched in the dark, I related this to the
famous drawing ‘The Slave Ship’ by Marcus Rediker; which shows just how brutal
the conditions of the slave ships were. I think the positioning of the
character represents the positions they were in before they were allowed to
descend the ship.
This
shot then shows the character walking into the streets of New York. The
audience can see that he is walking like a Zombie or an alien. The characters costume and makeup also
indicate this. The white, cloudy eye contact lenses he is wearing make him
appear blind also. This could also connote that he sees the world from a
different perspective, or however represent that he does not view the world,
how it should be seen in modern society. The fact that his eyes are white (no
colour in his eyes) indicates that there is no colour in his life, his life is
bleak; just like the lives of slaves.
This
shot shows how the character is having a culture shock and is alienated from
the population; he is invisible to society; he is a blind person within a crowd
of uncaring people. He is used as a portrayal of the slaves once used in
America, who are now forgotten. The way he is separated from the crowd
signifies that he does not fit in with the modern society. The ambient
lighting, low saturation and the urban mise-en-scene that surrounds him
connotes that society is repressive and he is made an outcast.
This
shot shows the character crossing a busy New York street. We can tell by his
thin, brittle legs that look fragile and weak, that he is malnourished. He is
also walking unsteadily; this could be because his muscles have weakened, due
to lack of exercise and lack of use. This represents the fact that after slaves
had been on the ships for weeks, their limbs would not always work properly due
to lack of use and they would be so malnourished.
This
shot of a bystander shows him showing interest in the main character, he stares
negatively at the character, and his facial expression indicates he is
‘disgusted’ and ‘appalled’ by the man, and arises the thought that he may be a
disgrace to society. His potential disability and race has affected this man’s
judgement of the character, and this represents the views of several people in
society.
This
shot shows the bystander is indifferent towards the main character, and shows
that he is not the least interested in providing him with his help.
The
camera then cuts to a shot of the main character holding out his arm, to
suggest he needs support and help, however the audience are conscious that he
will not receive help, even if he is in desperate need or pain. The by-standers
ignore his cry for help and laugh. This can relate back to slaves, as they
would not have received help, even if they were in agonising pain, as they were
worthless to their owners.
This
shot Is significant within the music video. The main reached out his arm to
receive help, but however, it got broken off by someone passing by. This
picture represents the aim of the music video as a whole. The fact that the
main character is hollow on the inside, connotes the fact that people treated
slaves as if they were ‘nobody’s’ but also to signify that they thought slaves
to have no soul or feelings. It also
represents slaves as being fragile and that they felt hollow, and felt
meaningless. Personally, this is the most powerful shot in the video, and it
makes the audience think an awful lot, about the meanings behind the video.
After the pedestrian knocks the characters arm
off, he peers down at it, but however shows no sorrow or sympathy. This shot
represents many groups and attitudes in society in regards to facing our
consequences. This man does not seem fazed that he has hurt the character,
however looks quite pleased with himself after this shot; as he turns away and
disappears.
This shot shows the main character grasping a metal fence, this
is ironic because the lyrics that fit with the shot say:
We want your funk Africa
We want your funk
Lets get electrified, let's get electrified
Lets get electrified, let's get electrified
We want your funk
Lets get electrified, let's get electrified
Lets get electrified, let's get electrified
In
this shot, the main character watches break dancers in an underground car park
in New York; this is where break dancing originated, and also links in with the
source of the genre. The white break
dancers are essentially alienating blacks, white people are now dancing, they
have hijacked the dancing that originally came from slaves. The man glances at
them in distress; this may connote his confusion and sadness towards the fact
white people have grasped the dancing culture very casually without accrediting
the slaves that dancing originated from. This may signify that white people are
trying to control the blacks in society, like they once did. The dark
mise-en-scene is suggests potential threat, the non-ambient lights that run
along the ceiling resemble prison bars that could suggest he is in a confined
space and feels claustrophobic. The general theme of the music video is
alienation. This shot is also ambiguous and shows that the band is staying away
from the mainstream audience, and it also connects to the British-ness of the
band.
One
of the last shots is of another black man ‘witch doctor’ that is in a
modernized tribal print costume. He is
the sole person in the video who has approached the character and offered his
help. The camera then cuts to a low
angle shot of the witch doctor; from below he seems angel like, due to the
bright light behind his head. The man then offers to lend him a hand and says
‘would you like a hand?’ This is ironic
because the character has no hands.
















