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Les Siestes Electroniques au Congo

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    10 days of concerts, meetings, workshops dedicated to electronic music in Congo
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    Les Siestes Electroniques, what does that means? We don't understand ... to rest after having an "electronic" meal ?!
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    Les Siestes Electroniques is actually a French festival that has started 10 years ago.
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    When IDM was all over the place, we've had to rethink the way we're organizing concerts.
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    Watching a guy using his laptop, alone on stage... well it's kind of boring!
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    So we've tried to present this kind of musicians in different conditions.
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    What if those music would be played in an open air venue, at the sunset ?
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    Wouldn't be easier and way more fun to listen to it ?
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    We've then explore more aesthetics, using the same "recipe",
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    presenting new music to new audience at parking lots, subway stations, churches ...
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    And at the French cultural center, you'll understand that electronic music can be plural
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    It can be as hot as Coupé-Décalé played in the most sexy club late at night,
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    but it can also be very soft, gentle, calm!
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    Thanks you guys, we wish you good luck!
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    We're speaking with Guillaume Kidula, Douster and Jay Weed.
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    Meet them tomorrow at the French cultural center!
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    The musician, alone, in front of his laptop screen, moving his mouse...
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    it's kind of oldshool! we're now trying to find more intuitive way to do electronic music.
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    The gesture is now something that really counts for instance.
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    We think that with new tools comes new possibilities.
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    Our goal is thus to provide new tools and see what you'll do with them.
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    We're not here to say : "hey, electronic is cool, you should try"
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    We're here like :"we're making that music with those tools, what would you do with them"
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    I'm a computer engineer from Toulouse.
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    I'm in Congo to organize music softwares trainings.
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    The aim is to present several music softwares and see how they could match the local needs,
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    and then develop new creative approaches.
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    I'm Hugo "Douster", I came from Lyon and I'm a dj and producer of electronic music for about 10 years.
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    I'm Jeremie, I came from Lyon and I'm a music producer under the moniker of "Jay Weed".
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    I was first making rap music,
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    and thanks to travelling - especially in South America, I've started to integrate different kind of music into my own mix.
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    I really enjoy all kind of music, coming from all over the world...
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    I'm then always interested by discovering new aestetics.
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    I think that electronic music had become more and more democratic,
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    because you can now do almost everything by yourself!
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    Even a very low skilled musician can program some drum kit, a bass line and different kind of sounds.
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    The first edition of Les Siestes Electroniques in Congo, in 2010,
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    has made us realise that there is space for electronic music in Congo.
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    The Congolese are willing to discover new musics!
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    I'm especially interested by all the local underground subgenres of electronic music.
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    Here, there, everywhere, people are making electronic music nowadays thanks to the advent of the personnal computer.
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    Even if there is no pure electronic music in Congo such as house or techno,
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    there is Coupé-Décalé or Ndombolo which are typical African music styles made with computers.
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    It seems like we have a good team of local musicians around us!
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    Pretty much motivated and open-minded...
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    I think we won't face absolutely no problem working with these guys!
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    But maybe I'm wrong, who knows ...
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    Douster and JayWeed performs live at the Institut Francais du Congo.
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    When it started, you first ask yourself "wtf is this ?"
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    What we have here: only up-tempo music!
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    Tempo is beautiful, alright. Tempo is made to dance.
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    But it's speechless!
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    It doesn't make any sense! How can you understand music then ?
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    What is the meaning of this music ?
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    What does it says?
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    You must speak, you must explain!
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    You must have a topic!
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    Then people will understand! Then people will give a shout out!
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    Here it's just "TUKU TUKU TUK TUKU TUKU TUK"!
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    According to me it's a MESS! ...
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    Jean-Michel Jarre was playing melodies on his synthetizers,
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    but here it's way more percusive music...
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    and that's how it becomes universal!
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    We thus don't need to be introduced. Look at the crowd here, check tomorrow in the clubs...
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    Everybody stand up and dance:
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    Pure bliss, everybody's in trance!
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    I'm clearly unhappy! Everything they're playing is prerecorded!
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    They're actually not playing!
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    It's like if robots were playing for me!
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    True music need true musicians!
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    Musicians playing their instruments and you can say: this one plays this, that one plays that...
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    People showed up to discover electronic music,
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    and if there now get up it's because there is a message in this music! Something's happening!
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    There is a vibe, and that vibe makes the rythm.
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    Music is not just only words,
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    music is what you're hearing!
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    What matters is the groove, the feeling, that will move you even if there are no words...
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    There was a communion of spirit. You've made a success.
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    We lack that kind of gigs here! I really enjoyed it tonight!
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    Even if you aren't in the mood for dancing, you have to. Music is taking you.
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    You see, even if we're only discovering electronic music, people get that feeling of trance...
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    People were jumping around... "Hot ambiance!" as they say in the Antilles!
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    You'll definitly see a lot of "ambiance" with that music. It keep the tempo upbeat and there's no time to sleep.
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    While we discover that music, we make it ours.
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    We make it ours, and it gives us ideas!
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    It gives us ideas... and that's the beauty of it!
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    Do you have broadcast advertisment? Of course we do!
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    Being a congolese Dj is kind of hard. We have to work with very few...
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    We try to deal with what we have and with that we manage the best part of it.
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    Do you handle the aircon as well?Yes!
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    When i'm here, i don't play music for myself, i do it for the customers.
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    I have to play all kind of stuff as i play for all kinds of people
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    A DJ must try to know about all kinds of music.
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    Every week end, i go around the clubs to see the Djs.
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    If there's a good track i haven't got already, i take it.
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    Anyway, you go at friend's place and you have the Facebook, the internet, the Google and so on.
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    My music is the romantic Zouk. I really like the Zouk.
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    When i'm working the Zouk, i don't like to be disturb.
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    The R'nB. R'nB is where i can express myself totally, peacefully.
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    I see the girl dance, i'm in the show too...
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    So it's my favorite music, the R'n'B.
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    When i'm not here, there's no "ambiance" and it's the same when i feel weak.
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    That's why the people respects the DJs!
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    If you call a girl, she may not come.
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    But if I call a girl, she respects me, she'll come!
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    We aren't respected. People assume that we're weed's smokers,
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    or an illiterate, somebody that has no level...
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    Trully, people thinks that we do that job for girls!
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    Somehow it's true, but not only!
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    Girls come by themselves, to hit on you, in front of people!
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    They're like "You know I'll love you, here's my phone number, call me!"
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    You get numbers of course, but our purpose is still the love of music.
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    It's our job, we were born to it, we live with it!
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    Girls come by themselves, it's automatic!
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    Even if you don't feel like it, they'll come anyway to bother you, so you got to deal with it!
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    I start to work at 14:00, from 14:00 to 21:00.
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    So as soon as people enter the room, I start mixing.
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    When there's nobody I put mixtapes and I wait around,
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    when people enter, i set the dancefloor on fire!
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    The "VIP" starts earlier.
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    Let's say they start at 15:00 and close around midnight.
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    Nightclubs are different as they start around 20:00,
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    and till 2:00 or 3:00 at night.
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    Some people have that shedule: they start working around 7:30, and they finish at 14:00,
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    and every congolese like to have a bier before going home!
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    That's why we're opening around 14:00, to get that specific audience.
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    I won't play any scarry thing!
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    Cause you do not scare your audience!
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    I'll scare them enough!
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    Do you believe in Acid House's comeback?
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    Yes, we'll import the "neo-colonialist Acid House" in Congo!
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    20 years later, is about the right time for acid house in Congo!
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    Knowing that congolese may have problem to go around, as going around remains expensive,
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    we organised some kind of "tour" based on buses.
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    So we could bring a part of the audience from club to club.
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    It gave consistency to the party as well, as the audience could see Jay Weed and Douster's mix evolving through the night.
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    Excursions are made by daylight! It's now nightime, wtf?!
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    It's as we were going to some warlock!
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    - The Ministry of Foreign Affairs!- It looks like a club ...
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    - Of course, we're in Vegas!
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    - Men, it's no Las Vegas, it's Brazza!
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    I'm not sure that mixing electronic stuffs in some rock or pop club in France would work...
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    One chance out of two that people throw you tomatoes!
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    The idea was to face the reality of what is a Brazzaville's club, and to see if it could work somehow.
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    We've been in three different nightclubs, all really different from each other.
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    We started with "Le Plaisir", a kind of neighborhood club, with a much younger audience.
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    The ambiance was much more rough, with a funny Dj booth!
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    I loved the Dj booth there!
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    Sick light installation!
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    When we arrived the resident dj was playing local music, audience was enjoying.
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    We plugged in and Douster started playing Dancehall.
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    You have to know that Dancehall is not really well known in Congo.
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    In the Congelese clubs audience is used to listen to r'n'b, hip hop and coupé décalé, but clearly no dancehall...
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    So even this beginning was surprising for the Congolese crowd.
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    Mirrors are everywhere in the clubs. That struck me.
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    And people are dancing in front of those mirrors!
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    Everybody was in line, in front of the mirrors!
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    The best Congolese dancer came to the party! He's the father of the congolese Michael Jackson doppleganger as well!
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    And he has some crazy dance moves, believe me.
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    This guy has imported the Smurf dance in Congo!
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    "When music comes, rhythms diverge"
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    When Jeremie was playing, the "head" of the local djs guild had hosted the mix,
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    speaking about trance music and declaring some weird punchlines to the audience!
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    "The ambiance doesn't choose... you just have to live it"
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    "Tonight we have a special guest: the pleasure (play on words about the name of the club - le plaisir)"
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    There is a lot of white people tonight!
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    And I have had the feeling the white people were playing their white music ...
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    I come, i here reggae, your music, but it's not my style!
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    Le plaisir is my club. I'm going regularly to Le Plaisir.
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    I've thought I could go to Le Plaisir after a hard week of work in order to relax...
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    But you're playing your music and I'm not interested... at all!
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    When we arrived at the second club, the atmosphere was different.
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    First af all the light show was all about strobe, which is apparently a very trendy way of lightning things here.
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    The mixing desk was about this height...
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    So you have to get on two beer crates...
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    which were quite unsteady...
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    Me, Jeremie and a third guy taking care of lights: 3 people on 2 crates, it was little bit tight :)
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    It looks like everything is always thrown together at the last minute ...
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    When I was mixing, the light installation, with all the switchs on the wall you know, seems to have had a problem.
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    So a fourth guy came up to fix it... We were five behind the desk then!
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    The guy was pulling the electrical wires, making electrical sparkles at 20 cm of us!
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    And the night became more and more electronic as one goes along.
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    It became then more cutting edge, less casual for the Congolese crowd.
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    We've played UK Funky, then hard Techno and stuff like that...
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    At some point Jeremie was playing hard UK Funky and some Congelese MCs came up on stage and starts toasting!
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    And it was pretty good, it fits!
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    Some people even thought it was part of the original played tracks!
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    At the end Mad Michel, the boss of the Boyoma-Boyoma club, made us a surprise.
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    He asked to clear the dancefloor. Everybody stopped to dance.
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    And then cames 4 kids, 14-16 yo
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    They showed us some massive coupé décalé moves for about 25 mn, while the Dj was mixing super fast!
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    An ecstatic show! The strobes were flashing, the dance moves were extreme!
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    The atmosphere was definitively different compared to the European one...
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    Way more hot. An extremely reactive audience.
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    People that came to the Dj booth really made my night!
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    As for the audience it was 50/50 I would say.
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    Some people were quite curious, open to new sounds and jump into it,
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    but some others were more reluctant and sometimes quite unhappy about this "novelty".
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    But I hope altogether it has pleased most of them ...
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    At least we were quite happy about it :)
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    Generally speaking, it worked!
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    Of course we haven't been able to pleased everyone...
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    Then we went to Le Groove club.
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    When we entered the club, it was packed!
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    And when Douster and Jay Weed started mixing, people were watching, listening, but not dancing.
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    I've had the feeling the French djs didn't take care of the reaction of the crowd,
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    It looks like they were here to only satisfy themselves...
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    It was a little bit like they didn't care about what was there before they came!
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    So people started to leave the dancefloor... :)
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    Some went out, for sure, because it was so much "European", too much for them...
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    It didn't bother me. I was there because I was willing to discover.
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    And when you're looking for something new, nothing can bother you!
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    At some point, a bartender came and asked: "More African music! My customers are about to leave! I loose money!" :)
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    The Congolese when they get to club, they wanna see their tables full of bottles! They spend a lot!
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    They buy a lot of drinks!
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    The Europeans, they only buy a bottle of beer from time to time ...
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    Trully when we arrived at the last club, a little bit late, it may have been intrusive for the audience that was already there.
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    I didn't know how the resident djs of all the "VIPs" would welcome us...
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    You're a resident dj, you do your job and then come from nowhere young fellows that wanna play their music...
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    Fact is we've been very warmly welcomed by all the resident djs!
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    One of the main problems here is they just can't download tracks. Internet is too slow here.
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    So it's hard to get new stuffs to play...
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    At the end in Le Groove club the local djs wanted to get all the sound we've played!
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    So we've filled up a hard drive, half drunk at 5 o'clock... Quite a funny moment.
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    Inch Allah, one day, they will entertain their audience with all these weird "European" sounds they got that night!
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    My vision about Africa? It's a mess and i like it!
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    I've found quite happy folks here.
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    It feels good! Their open-mindedness is a blessing!
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    I must confess that I didn't knew much about Africa before coming here ...
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    but what I would remember is the kindness... and the smooth African way of life which suits me well!
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    Congo isn't an easy country to understand...
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    We speak the same langage, so we think we understand each other...
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    but it's way more complex!
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    Our cultures are different. Our visions of the world are different.
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    So even if we use the same words, the definition, the comprehension of it can be different.
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    Some aspects of the Congolese culture are quite close from the French culture partly because of the colonization ...
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    but there is always a slight difference in meaning that can create trouble even in really simple things.
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    For example, when I set up a meeting at 9:00
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    most of the Congolese think they have until 9:59 to arrive ... which is true!
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    Here you also have to get used to a "last minute" way to do everything...
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    Which would create much stress somewhere else but is just normal here! That's how things work here!
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    We've booked buses for the club night, for instance
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    I've had the firm confirmation only 3 days before the gig ...
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    Unbelievable in France, absolutely normal here! :)
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    The money issue is also quite hard to deal with.
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    You're in a country where most of the people live with very few...
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    But also in a country which has oil resources,
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    and fortunes are made on that material of course...
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    Next to this you have people that live with really hard conditions,
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    with no water nor electricity,
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    which can create some "kafka-like" situation sometimes...
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    The fact that there's almost no internet connexion or let's say no fast connexion is also a difficulty.
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    We're organizing an event in Congo from France,
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    But even being here, getting the flyer's artwork from France was some sort of complicate thing...
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    The congolese way to deal with the rain may be extreme: it just stops everything!....
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    When it rains the taxi cabs and buses almost stop circulating, there are floods everywhere ...
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    Time stops when it rains!
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    So I was expecting 2 or 3 participants today,
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    15 trainees were there, behind their laptop, ready to work, already tweaking knobs!
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    That's a clear indicator of succes!
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    Congo is always like that, like in a rollercoaster, you can be really disappointed or really amazed within the same day...
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    Performance of all the Brazzaville's workshop participants.
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    Arrival in Pointe Noire.
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    It's hard to fall totally in love with Pointe Noire..
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    The gap between the poor and the rich is too big.
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    We've been in the neighborhood, and where all the expats foreigners are living...
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    It gives you a weird feeling...
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    Here you have 1l of pure oil. You add this with coke and you can drive for 600 km :)
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    There are more foreigners... more money too... and loads of oil!
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    The Congolese oil is here!
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    So the relation with the local inhabitants is different, from what we saw in the clubs, at the hotel...
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    People are not as relax as in Brazza, they're seeing us, the white faces, as wealthy colonizers...
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    When you're going to club here, only the prostitutes speak to you for instance ...
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    Sunset DJ set at "L'escale d'Emex"
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    During at least an hour and a half, we thought: ok, it's dead, no one will come!
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    We could see people standing by their car, far away from the dance floor, waiting for something to happen...
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    We were far from our "sunset at the sea" fantasy!
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    Night and a huge shower rain felt at the same time...
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    Oddly enough people came at that very moment and started to dance their ass of!
  • 31:15 - 31:17
    And from there... It was massive!
  • 31:52 - 32:05
    We had great feedback from the people! But nobody gave us 5000F notes as in Brazzaville: our audience didn't look so rich actually!
  • 32:05 - 32:15
    But their unusual moves and choreography on the dancefloor were unmistakably a way to show their love!
  • 32:15 - 32:20
    The audience was some sort of weird "mash-up" as gathered at that moment the people that hanged around the beach,
  • 32:20 - 32:30
    the audience of inside the bar as it stayed open the whole time, broadcasting heavy coupé décalé,
  • 32:30 - 32:35
    pointe noire's expats and brazzaville's friends came as well... and finally kids!
  • 32:35 - 32:43
    Twenty of them came from a nearby youth club but above all we were join by all the street kids wanderer!
  • 32:43 - 32:48
    We ended up with a feeling that was much likely our french version of Les siestes:
  • 32:48 - 32:56
    a laid-back and easy going gathering, like a nice family meeting... It was a great moment!
  • 33:04 - 33:15
    In france we are all blasé, having that feeling that everything have been wrote, said, seen or done.
  • 33:15 - 33:28
    There's a refreshing feeling here in Congo, even if it's sometimes hard to introduce new things due to the weight of traditions.
  • 33:28 - 33:35
    Things are still possible here and new things are emerging.
  • 33:35 - 33:45
    I just hope that those congolese Siestes were not just about bringing something "cool" to the people... That we've been further.
  • 33:45 - 33:57
    As people and musicians we have collect a whole lot of positive thing: sounds, discussions, way to see life, music...
  • 33:57 - 34:05
    The sharing of all those ideas and sounds is a succes in itself for me, and it clearly moved me.
  • 34:05 - 34:18
    More than ever i think that the people from Brazzaville are welcoming and have this appetite for new things.
  • 34:18 - 34:29
    There are not so many roads here, it's hard to fly away, hard to use internet...
  • 34:29 - 34:33
    So sharing is crucial, talking is crucial!
  • 34:33 - 34:39
    The way people welcomed us, especially the club's DJ, that was awesome...
  • 34:39 - 34:41
    It clearly moved me!
Title:
Les Siestes Electroniques au Congo
Description:

Après Berlin, Riga, La Haye, le Caire, Kyoto, Montréal ou Abu Dhabi, Les Siestes sont allées balader leur tropicalisme de chambre à Brazzaville et Pointe Noire pour une deuxième édition des Siestes congolaises haute en couleur. Documentaire de Pierre Teulières.

http://www.les-siestes-electroniques.com

2nd Congolese edition for Les Siestes Electroniques! From November 21 till December 3 we’ve spent time digging into local sounds, playing at weird venues, exchanging with musicians and djs from the neighbourhood.

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Video Language:
French

English subtitles

Revisions