|
“I can’t drive,” M.I.A. says flatly. “So I love cars.”
She’s matter-of-fact, answering an obvious question about the possible
threads running through the high-octane fumes and sour diesel smoke of her
new album KALA, which opens with the roadway rush of “Bamboo Banga”. But
because this woman is an uncanny combination of street style and political
substance, making music about wanting what you can’t have and trying to work
with what you haven’t got –This isn’t a break-up album,” she says. “It’s a
wake up album.”
M.I.A. is often held up as someone different,
someone with ‘that’ special
something and an unerring ability to always keep ahead of the pack,
continually turning in music that sounds both exciting and fresh. KALA will
not change this viewpoint, it will only fuel it further.
The majority of the record was made
when she was supposed to be taking time out and traveling.
When she ended up in Chennai, India, she spent weeks
live recording drum patterns with local percussionists,
writing new songs like
“BirdFlu” and “20 Dollar”, holed up in a studio used normally for Bollywood
soundtracks. She ultimately filmed a fully-cast video for “BirdFlu” and
freeing herself from the constraints of waiting for the time it takes to
release records nowadays, aired it on the internet for free sans a
commercial release to accompany it. It sent the anticipation for this album
to nuclear levels. Subsequent trips found her writing and recording in
Trinidad, Jamaica, Australia, Japan and briefly in the US, where she spent a
New Year’s Eve in Baltimore with producer Blaqstarr before finding a studio
to make “The Turn” with him.
So while her buzzed-about 2004 debut
album, Arular, found her in the leftfield of both dance
beats and Third World politics, rapping about her early
life split between war-torn Sri Lanka and London’s council estates,
KALA has got M.I.A. out in the global street or “World Town”, as she
envisions it in one song. It’s from there that she continues to voice for
the people pushed to the side in the shell game of international
geopolitics, “the Third World deserves freedom of speech just like everyone
else,” she says. “We want to fight the battle to say what we want, whether
to be serious or just make fun of ourselves. That’s what ‘World Town’ is
about; that’s what ‘Paper Planes’ is about — it’s what people in the Third
World live through,” she continues.
Arular was a bedroom dancehall rocker
that fire-wired an international fan base and appealed
to plugged-in critics, KALA is a different beast, it’s the
beat of the street itself — the sound of roadside sound systems, taxicab
transistors, DVD-wired dollar vans, motorbike couriers and parking lot
pull-ups. It’s also the sound of M.I.A. digging in as both an artist and a
producer.
|