by SASHA FRERE-JONES
Issue of 2004-11-22, Posted 2004-11-15
"World music" is a category that does nobody any favors. Entirely disparate performers, like the dapper Brazilian singer-songwriter Caetano Veloso and the African blues guitarist Ali Farka Toure, get lumped together in American record stores simply because they don’t sing exclusively in English. Also, European and American pop have saturated the world to such an extent that Kylie Minogue and Tupac are now more world music than, say, the Malian singer Oumou Sangare. Finally, most of what you find in the world-music section tends toward the gentle, melodious, and uplifting, as if the world were that way.
The
music
of
Maya
Arulpragasam,
a
twenty-seven-year-old
Sri
Lankan
Tamil
who
moved
to
England
when
she
was
nine
and
performs
under
the
name
M.I.A.,
is
not
like
that.
Anyone
who
has
trolled
through
bins
on
Canal
Street
for
videos
of
kung-fu
movies
or
reggae
mix
tapes
will
recognize
M.I.A.’s
first
single,
"Galang"
(2003),
as
an
example
of
actual,
on-the-ground
world
culture:
synthetic,
cheap,
colorful,
staticky
with
power.
The
beat
is
shuffling
and
abrasive,
made
from
what
sounds
like
the
by-products
of
some
other,
more
polite
song.
It
most
resembles
Jamaican
dancehall
patterns,
but
with
a
twist.
Alongside
the
beat
runs
a
distressed
motif
that
may
have
been
a
melody
before
it
was
Xeroxed
fifteen
times.
The
lyrics
combine
the
exhortations
of
dancehall
("London
calling
and
speak
the
slang
now,
boys
say
wa,
go
on
girls
say
wa
wa"),
the
embattled
war
mentality
of
American
hip-hop
("Fed’s
gonna
get
you
pull
the
strings
on
your
hood
/
One
paranoid
youth
blazin’
through
the
hood"),
and
a
scenario
that
sounds
far
removed
from
Leicester
Square:
"They
say
river’s
gonna
run
through
/
work
is
going
to
save
you
/
praying
you
will
pull
through
/
suck
a
dick,
he’ll
help
you
/
don’t
let
them
get
to
you
/
if
he’s
got
one
you
get
two
/
Backstab
your
crew
sell
it
out
to
sell
you."
The
verses
are
simply
stitched
together,
without
dogma,
by
a
chorus
that
is
classic
dance-floor
doggerel:
"Blaze
to
blaze,
galang
a
lang
alanga
/
Purple
haze,
galang
a
lang
a
langlang."
And then the music stops. We are left with a queasy keyboard peal as a multitrack chorus of Mayas calls out, "Ya ya heeey, woy oy ee he hay yo." It isn’t a pop chorus, or any sound that you’d hear on American radio, even if the station were playing, you know, world music. It’s a voice from a place where kids throw rocks at tanks, where people pull down walls with their bare hands. It could be the sound of a carnival, or a riot.
This
year,
Arulpragasam
began
performing
live,
and,
as
she
was
preparing
for
her
first
appearance
in
England,
I
arranged
to
meet
her
in
the
lobby
of
a
stylish
central
London
hotel.
She
is
small
but
not
fragile.
Her
hair
is
long
and
wavy,
and
she
moves
deliberately,
confidently.
She
was
wearing
a
cotton
jacket
and
pants,
both
imprinted
with
a
pattern
that
you’d
see
on
pajamas,
and
carried
a
handbag
of
the
same
fabric
and
pattern,
with
the
colors
inverted.
Her
lacquered
yellow
pumps
looked,
to
a
New
Yorker,
like
a
repurposed
cab
door.
Except
for
the
shoes,
every
item
was
made
by
her
or
her
friends.
"That’s
just
the
way
of
living,
with
Sri
Lankans,"
she
said.
"You
just
make
everything.
If
you
want
clothes,
you
make
it.
If
you
want
a
table,
you
make
it."
Arulpragasam said that her mother brought her and her siblings to England in 1986, as hostilities between the ruling Sinhalese and the Tamil minority were ramping up. Her mother is a seamstress—"She sews medals for the Royal Family and world leaders for minimum wage." The family took a flat in Phipps Bridge Estate, a housing project twenty minutes south of London. "We were one of the two Asian families that lived there," Arulpragasam said. "I used to come home from school and see people burgling my house, just walk past with my telly. But it wasn’t as horrible as being in Sri Lanka." Eventually, the family found better housing, and at twenty-two Arulpragasam graduated from Central St. Martins College of Art and Design with a film degree.
In 2001, Justine Frischmann, who leads the rock band Elastica, commissioned Arulpragasam to make a film of the band on tour. Between shows, Arulpragasam began tinkering with an instrument called the Roland MC-505 Groovebox, an all-in-one drum-machine-and-keyboard unit that lets a musician create rough, electronic songs quickly. It suited her pragmatic nature.
M.I.A.’s début album, "Arular," will be released in February. Arulpragasam wrote most of its thirteen tracks at home on the 505 and then fleshed them out with the help of a series of professional producers, including Richard X, Anthony Whiting, and Switch. The over-all effect is like what a politically minded class of fourth graders might do for a term project if they had access to a lot of electronic toys: joyous, spring-heeled, impatient, unafraid to speak out. "Someone like me has never made it on the radio before, ever, or on anyone’s TV," Arulpragasam said. "And the boringest channels I can make it on the better. I want people to listen to me while they’re playing bingo in Swansea.
"Maybe. On the album, Arulpragasam talks about teen-age prostitution, "part-time jobbers in call centers," and "comfort bars." It’s hard to imagine Clear Channel approving "Sunshowers," which blends a small, delightful thump with a melody quote from a seventies song by Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band. After calling out, "From the Congo to Colombo!"—the Sri Lankan capital—Arulpragasam sings, "Can’t stereotype my thing yo / I salt and pepper my mango," and, later, "Like P.L.O., we don’t surrender." What makes this genuine world music, aside from the references, is the weaving of the political into the fabric of what are still, basically, dance tunes. Any division of life into personal and political halves is absent. Even in "Amazon," where Arulpragasam sings of being "blindfolded under homemade lanterns / somewhere in the Amazon, they’re holding me ransom," she also observes, "Palm trees in the wet smells amazing." In the song’s chorus, she sounds utterly casual, like an American teen-ager calling her mom after getting out of a movie at the multiplex: "Hello, this is M.I.A. / could you please come get me?" In the world, disasters can be everyday events.
M.I.A.’s live show took place on the evening of November 5th, Guy Fawkes Day, at a Camden rock club on Chalk Farm Road. Yellow bonfires burned on side streets all over the city. Inside, the crowd was young, scruffy, and nearly all white. Arulpragasam’s British manager duct-taped a banner reproducing M.I.A.’s spray-painted, circular orange-and-green logo to the turntables, which were suspended from the ceiling by chains. The d.j., an American from Philadelphia known as Diplo, played a set of fast, rhythmic Brazilian music called "baile funk"—itself a variation of a dance music from Miami called "bass"—and then began playing Jamaican dancehall songs. The crowd seemed happy but unsure what to do with, or to, the pulsing music. After half an hour of other people’s music, Arulpragasam took the stage with her backup singer, a woman named Cherry, who came to England from the Grenadines.
A stark rhythm started, followed by distorted handclaps, a low thrum, and a tiny cover of metallic bangs and screeches. Arulpragasam appeared in an elaborately embroidered satin jacket, something you might see on Chinese gang members in those pirated kung-fu DVDs. She began to knock her knees together in a bowlegged dance borrowed from Elvis Presley and the Jamaican singer Sean Paul. "Pull up the people, pull up the poor! Pull up the people, pull up the poor!" she sang, squeaking up an octave on the word "people." The beat was flecked with bits of shiny material, as if competing with the holiday fireworks outside. Diplo suddenly began tossing out CDs. People caught them or were hit by them, and began to realize that they should be dancing. When the show ended, Diplo kept d.j.ing, and Maya and her friends stood by the stage, unwilling to stop moving. They didn’t look much like anyone in the club. It didn’t seem to bother them.
The New Yorker magazine