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ON THE ROAD TO BURMA
Globetrotting with Ozomatli, unlikely U.S. diplomats
BY RANDALL ROBERTS
Ozomatli: ( Jiro Yamaguchi, Wil-Dog Abers, Justin Porée, Raúl Pacheco, Mario Calire, Asdru Sierra, Ulises Bella
Eduardo Mackinlay
The Ozomatli posse: Logging frequent-flier miles, courtesy of the U.S. government
Four days into a five-day tour of Rangoon, Burma, we thought we’d had our fill of weirdness. But after Ozomatli are led through Kawechan School for the Blind’s darkened hallways and up a flight of stairs, the sound of a flailing guitar solo and the thump of a bass drum punch through the corridor. Around a corner, standing on a stage, four conservatively dressed men wearing sunglasses and matching pink-and-blue polo-type shirts are banging out a rock song. They look like a ’60s surf band, the Ventures or something — square and stiff.
Ozomatli, a band born in Los Angeles in 1996, are scheduled to perform a few songs for students, orphans and disabled kids as part of an outreach program arranged by the U.S. Department of State. They didn’t count on any competition, and they watch from the side as a band called Blind Reality, facing 100 people of varying degrees of disability, creates a chaotic, freakazoid sound that only four sightless rock dudes living in the pocket of one of the world’s most beaten-down countries could possibly make.
See the full story at: http://www.laweekly.com/2009-06-25/music/music-without-borders/
2 comments:
Hi, thanks for drawing attention to my story, but please it's not necessary to post the whole thing. The accepted way to highlight a long feature is to provide one or two telling paragraphs and *link* to the story. LA Weekly funded my trip, and my story. Please link, and remove. Thanks!
Randall
Randall:
I originally planned to use a link and a teaser but some of my blog readers like to see it in the blog. I understand that you would like LA Weekly to get the hits since they paid for your trip & story so I will remove the full text and just leave a link and teaser. I particularly enjoyed the story since I visited Burma while serving as the Press & Cultural Counselor of the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok. The story has also been circulated to about 2800 people through an e-mail list serve that I subscribe to so the story has certainly received a lot of attention inside the DC Beltway. There are a lot of ex-USIA people out there who are supportive of cultural diplomacy. Regards, Bill
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