The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE recommends an impressive impersonation of Bob Dylan
‘In Afghanistan no women or girls have access to education. By playing music I am playing for the people who can't’
CHRIS SEARLE speaks to violinist Faradena Afifi
AS SHE was about to to enter an east London studio in November 2022 to create the album which eventually became bee Reiki, violinist and vocalist Faradena Afifi had an unusual meeting.
“A white-tailed bumblebee was the first being I encountered before going into the studio to record with Steve Beresford and Paul Kimasia Morgan. I was warming up outside, doing some T’ai Chi and I noticed the poor bee lying in a puddle. I ended up doing a reiki treatment and witnessing her flying off to the blue sky. It put me in a very good mood and my joy influenced everybody there. The bee became a folk song and I turned into its mood — definitely not something I would come up with on my own.”
More from this author
A landmark work of gay ethnography, an avant-garde fusion of folk and modernity, and a chance comment in a great interview
ANGUS REID applauds the inventive stagecraft with which the Lyceum serve up Stevenson’s classic, but misses the deeper themes
ANGUS REID time-travels back to times when Gay Liberation was radical and allied seamlessly to an anti-racist, anti-establishment movement
ANGUS REID speaks to historian Siphokazi Magadla about the women who fought apartheid and their impact on South African society
Similar stories
Chris Searle speaks with drummer DEVIN GRAY of the Melt All The Guns Trio
CHRIS SEARLE interviews veteran pianist VERYAN WESTON
CHRIS SEARLE speaks to Chinese vocalist Annie Chen on the release of her new album Guardians
CHRIS SEARLE interviews pianist Sophie Agnel about her album Agisseq