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Aphelion (ft. Mr Gee)

from Aphelion: a tribute to Lorraine Hansberry

October 17th, 2021
12 tracks
33:37
Aphelion: a tribute to Lorraine Hansberry
Aphelion: a tribute to Lorraine Hansberry
Aphelion (ft. Mr Gee)
0:00
2:05
Aphelion (ft. Mr Gee)
Fold
[Mr Gee] So Where’s our hope meant to come from? Because We’re lost if we place our hope in you. We’re lost if we sit around and wait for you to change. Your system, your world, your mind, your rage; hoping that one day we’ll be seen as.... human. And where’s our justice meant to arrive from? If this world is soaked in White supremacy; saturating its ancient laws, submerging all, like an infernal stream of thought forever flowing through time. Drowning us at birth, seeping into our graves, placing tender droplets upon our foreheads, baptising our shame. Because Our freedom… Our freedom was once a crime, our freedom was once denied, our freedom was once despised… And you can’t seem to abolish that thought From within your mind, no matter how hard you try. You Fear the equality of truth, will burst your riverbanks by changing its tides. Are we so difficult to love? So easy to hate, is it commonplace to devalue our lives? Under the pretence that we devalue your Space? All Ghettos are man-made; orchestrated with a smile. All Racism is mapped, we just navigate its sick design. So Spare me your liberal cries, or carefully painted protest signs, because I know that today’s ally so woke can float with tomorrow’s white flight. It’s just a matter of time, as we all sink into this difficult history. 400+ years underwater and I’m still struggling to breathe. So what happens to a dream deferred? Does it now explode into nothingness, without a question, without a word, without a thought or the idea that it will ever be heard? A Well meaning gesture drenched by the pressure of your system, your mind, your rage, your world; Hoping and praying that one day..... we’ll be seen as.... human. [Lorraine Hansberry] My position is that we have a great deal to be angry about, furious about, you know they’re still lynching negroes in America. And I feel as our African friends do that we need all ideologies which point toward the total liberation of the African peoples all over the world.
2:55

Our world is ruled by a system that values the accumulation of wealth over life itself and conceals this fact by pretending the opposite. Lorraine Hansberry understood this profoundly, in contrast to most of her contemporaries, as encapsulated in this brief excerpt from her play Les Blancs:

“In one century men choose to hide their conquests under religion, in another under race. So you and I may recognize the fraudulence of the device in both cases, but the fact remains that a man who has a sword run through him because he will not become a Muslim or a Christian—or who is lynched in Mississippi or Zatembe because he is black—is suffering the utter reality of that device of conquest. And it is pointless to pretend that it doesn’t exist—merely because it is a lie.”

— Lorraine Hansberry

Lorraine Hansberry was a Black, homosexual woman at a time when all three characteristics guaranteed even more disadvantage and prejudice than today. Understandably, she considered herself a radical in the true sense of the word. She lived her life with immense courage and tenacity, always remaining true to herself and never yielding in the face of adversity. The authorities treated her as subversive; the FBI maintained a file on her.

Although her two close friends James Baldwin and Nina Simone have in recent years had their legacies restored to some extent, Lorraine’s story has been all but written out of history by a capitalist, patriarchal and homophobic system. It is in defiance of this system that we release our tribute to her. We hope that it may help reclaim her legacy so that her extraordinary contributions and vision can be better recognised. On behalf of all musicians struggling with mental & physical health issues we also want people to know that this album was born out of an extremely challenging period for us. It is a celebration of overcoming those challenges but also a call to overturn a system that values profit above life.

Lastly, we’d like to give a huge shout out & thanks to all of our collaborators on this project who helped out despite pandemic adversity. Leeds’ jazz guru Emma Johnson for the magnificent horn sections, beloved Irish folk musician Kieran O’Malley for the exquisite strings, and of course the exceptional eloquence of UK poet Mr Gee.

Credits

Words and speech by Lorraine Hansberry along with Coretta Scott King (2), EF Schumacher (2), James Baldwin (9) and Mr Gee (6, 11). Additional lyrics and vocals by Seth Mowshowitz
Music written, arranged, mixed & mastered by Seth Mowshowitz
Performed by Fold along with the following:
Horn Arrangements – Emma Johnson
Saxophones – Emma Johnson
Gareth Smith – Trumpet (2, 5)
Simon Dennis – Trumpet (3, 7)
Rosie Nicholl – Trombone
Violins – Kieran O’Malley

Artwork by Seth Mowshowitz
View of Earth from Apollo 4 cover photo by NASA Spacecraft 017/Saturn 501 orbiting Earth at an altitude of 9,544 miles on November 9, 1967.