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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my barcelona, my sonar festival

to see the full Sonar Gallery please click here

Sonar is a gi-normous beast of an electronic music festival that takes place predominantly in an insanely large aircraft hangar on the outskirts of Barcelona. It has grown and grown since I was first there in 2006 and it was pretty massive then. It has built on its great rep and now attracts tons of thousands of dance music aficionados & partygoers from all over the world. As its name and success have grown it has inevitably attracted a more mainstream audience, especially a lot of Brit blokes and birds that might once have gone to Megaluf and Ibiza now also come here too for a bit of sunshine raving.

It has over time become a very well-oiled machine and together with its vastness and corporate tie-ins has resulted in the loss of some of its coolness. Everything is now contained within the area 51 style location and all the satellite parties around it (anti-sonar etc) have been shut down. Its still a magnificent weekend with a fantastic line-up showcasing the best dance music around and Barcelona as a festival destination is second to none. Disco nights  and beach/pool side days are a glorious combination.

I will undoubtedly be there again, even if its just to see our friend Mary who will seemingly only be met on this weekend at this festival which she has been attending to for a whopping 13 years in a row….as darth would say, impressive, most impressive.

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my barcelona, my sonar festival

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my barcelona, my sonar festival

If you’re going to chat someone up at a festival why not do it with an empty box of gluten free beer on your head…

 

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my barcelona, my sonar festival

Nice to meet some die-hard fans on my travels…

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Me and my camera in someone else’s town, my barcelona, my sonar festival

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

I was out of the country from Thursday to Monday and in the time I was away the shock & horror had turned to sadness and to frustration and when visiting the site that evening it was clear these emotions had manifested to resentment and anger.

It was incredibly hard to go down to Grenfell Tower but it was even harder to stay away. This area has been engulfed by the tragedy and there is no avoiding it no matter where you are. As you walk around the streets here no-one is talking about anything else  and even though things carry on as normal, it is very far from normal. People are still shopping on Portobello Rd as usual but every shop, cafe and bar has posters with photographs of ‘missing’ residents from the Tower plastered all over their glass fronts by their families and loved ones desperate to cling onto a glimmer of hope . There is also a very eerie atmosphere wherever you go and it is unusually quiet.

When we went to the base of the tower by Latimer Rd many people were congregating. Some silent, lost in their own terrible thoughts as they stared upwards, some sobbing, grief-stricken whilst others had formed groups and were discussing how something needed to be done and that they needed to organise themselves. This is a community that has already been squeezed and squeezed and also utterly ignored for such a long time and they spoke as if this was the inevitable tragic conclusion of a long history of neglect and lack of concern on behalf of the council and the companies who operate on their behalf. They were very angry.

The tension around the site is still very high as you can imagine. A girl took a picture of the tower and a guy started shouting at her. ‘This ain’t the Eiffel Tower! What you taking pictures for?” I was incredibly discreet (even before this incident) when taking the photographs I have shown to you this week as was so acutely aware of being intrusive or insensitive but I have been photographing this area and its residents for years and to not document this in some way seemed wrong to me.

What was most heartbreaking being down there was the outpouring of love towards the victims. So many heartfelt statements had been scrawled on the walls around the area, so much feeling and compassion and sorrow and regret.

On Wednesday we went to a local volunteers meeting to see if there was anything we could do to help and met a huge number of people who had turned up in the stifling heat for the same reason. Despite everyone’s best intentions the meeting sadly sharply descended into chaos. The volunteers who had organised the event quickly lost control as they were bombarded with questions they couldn’t answer. Seeing their was no genuine leadership others started trying to assert their own ideas as to the best way forward and suddenly everyone was shouting over everyone else. Everyone there wanted to do what was best and to be useful and to contribute but everyone had a different idea of how to go about it. People are still too angry and their emotions too raw to be thinking clearly and their frustration at not being able to help the way they desperately want to was depressingly turned on each other.

The community in this area is very tight knit and unlike a lot of areas in London in that it really is a local community and people define themselves as West Londoners even over their own origins and this tragedy has rocked this neighbourhood to the core and it will be a long time before anything feels normal, if ever again.

 

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

 

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

All the gig pictures this week were taken at M.I.A’s Meltdown festival at the Royal Festival Hall at the weekend.

The above photograph is taken from the Young Fathers gig and it truly was a phenomenal experience. Please look at the full gallery here. It includes shots of the most magnificent stage invasion ever.

Their performance was nothing short of incendiary and it is as if pure energy pours out of them, connecting each other and every member of the audience. To connect with people through music is the greatest experience on Earth as for me it shows how positive and unified and capable the human species can be. It is us at our best and as the world tumbles from conflict to conflict it is great to be reminded that it is not all horror and hate.

The Young Fathers dedicated their track ‘Shame’ to Theresa May and that basically summed it up. These gigs came just after the election and felt they really symbolised the wind of change currently galvanising this country. We all know we can be better than we have been and that means understanding that we are all in this together and can only get through it together. We will never make it otherwise.

 

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

This is Victoria Smith, one of the three drummers in Soulwax. She is an incredible drummer and as you can see has the best drummer faces in the business.

If you wish to see the full gallery of Soulwax from their gig at Meltdown, please click here

 

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I can see the Grenfell tower as I turn the corner of my street. I see it everyday. Up until yesterday I have never given it much thought. It is very unlikely I will ever look at it again and not think of the tragedy that has happened there. I don’t really know what to say. It is just beyond horrific. My thoughts and condolences are with the victims who have lost their lives and homes.

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

Shall I tell that nasty woman to go fuck herself? Shall I?

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

Crunch time for Britain…

This election is our last chance to protect the things that should be most valued in society: services, healthcare, community support, affordable housing, a living wage, equal opportunities, culture. The Tories do not value these things because they do not value us or our needs. They seem to stand for nothing other than themselves.

They cannot be trusted with our future because they are only planning for their own.  They plunged our country into disarray, creating division and instability for their own political gain. They have continually shown no concern for the effects of their actions as long as they stay in power.  If they get back in they will continue to initiate policies for their own benefit whilst selling off the countries assets (including the NHS) in the process. This is what the Tories do. This is all they ever do. They will take away our human rights. They will continue to slash services.  A vote for them is really just a vote for them, not for you, not for the country, not for anyone else.

Or you could vote #anythingbuttory. Just make sure you vote. Everything else can wait till tomorrow.

If you want to know how to make a tactical vote here is how to do it: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/ng-interactive/2017/jun/02/tactical-voting-guide-how-to-make-your-vote-count-in-the-2017-election

 

 

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london

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Me and my camera in my home town, my capital city, my london