In a special conversation event, we chart hip hop’s first five decades, from its birth in the block parties of the Bronx and origins in Jamaica, to commercial gangsta-rap and right up to today’s artists. We discuss how this American revolution in music, dance, and art spread across the global cultural landscape. Hear four speakers passionately bring to life the culture and music – but also political theory, American history, and sociology. With our own sub-genres here in the UK, we’ll look at the key moments that led to this country’s enthusiastic embrace and interpretation of hip-hop, particularly by Afro-Caribbean communities.
Part of Futures – a free festival of discovery that celebrates innovative and world-class research taking place at universities across the South West. It’s funded by the UKRI.
SPEAKERS
MYKAELL RILEY
Senior Lecturer
College of Design, Creative & Digital Industries
University of Westminster.
Mykaell is Director of The Black Music Research Unit (BMRU), and senior researcher and curator at the University of Westminster.
Central to Mykaell’s research is his work on mapping Black British music. Bass Culture is a response to the disengagement and lack of education surrounding the heritage of Jamaican and Jamaican-influenced music in Britain over the last six decades. Mykaell’s career started as a founder member of the British roots Reggae band Steel Pulse who would go onto receive a Grammy. Over the years he has performed, produced, managed and consulted on many successful artists and their projects. As a professional writer/producer, Mykaell’s work has encompassed TV, Film and Theatre, resulting in over eleven UK top twenty positions, and three UK number ones.
LIZZIE BOWES
Research Associate
Black Music Research Unit
Universities of Westminster and Bristol
Lizzie Bowes is Research Associate at the Black Music Research Unit. She supports Dr. Mykaell Riley, Director of the BMRU, as the Unit continues to operate as the foremost research centre for the study of Black-British music and culture.
Outside of her work for the BMRU, Lizzie is an AHRC funded PhD student at the University of Bristol, working on an interdisciplinary project on Black-British rap and autofiction.
ROB TURNER
Senior Lecturer in 20th and 21st-Century Literature
English
University of Exeter
Rob Turner’s research is focused on American literature, with a particular interest in experiments in sound. He writes regularly about experimental music for the Wire magazine. Current projects include a book on sonic ecology and poetry, and an edited collection on hip-hop, literature, and American culture. Recent publications include two book chapters on the politics of epic (considering works by Ezra Pound and Will Alexander), and an analysis of Samuel Delany’s Afrofuturist metafictions.
SIMON TOPPING
Associate Professor
School of Law, Humanities and Social Sciences
University of Plymouth
Simon Topping is Associate Professor of United States History at Plymouth University. He is the author of Lincoln’s Lost Legacy: The Republican Party and the African American Vote, 1928-1952 (University Press of Florida, 2008) which was short-listed for the 2009 Neustadt prize. He has published a number of articles on the importation of American racism into Northern Ireland during the Second World War.
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In a special conversation event, we chart hip hop’s first five decades, from its birth in the block parties of the Bronx and origins in Jamaica, to commercial gangsta-rap and right up to today’s artists. We discuss how this American revolution in music, dance, and art spread across the global cultural landscape. Hear four speakers passionately bring to life the culture and music – but also political theory, American history, and sociology. With our own sub-genres here in the UK, we’ll look at the key moments that led to this country’s enthusiastic embrace and interpretation of hip-hop, particularly by Afro-Caribbean communities.
Part of Futures – a free festival of discovery that celebrates innovative and world-class research taking place at universities across the South West. It’s funded by the UKRI.
SPEAKERS
MYKAELL RILEY
Senior Lecturer
College of Design, Creative & Digital Industries
University of Westminster.
Mykaell is Director of The Black Music Research Unit (BMRU), and senior researcher and curator at the University of Westminster.
Central to Mykaell’s research is his work on mapping Black British music. Bass Culture is a response to the disengagement and lack of education surrounding the heritage of Jamaican and Jamaican-influenced music in Britain over the last six decades. Mykaell’s career started as a founder member of the British roots Reggae band Steel Pulse who would go onto receive a Grammy. Over the years he has performed, produced, managed and consulted on many successful artists and their projects. As a professional writer/producer, Mykaell’s work has encompassed TV, Film and Theatre, resulting in over eleven UK top twenty positions, and three UK number ones.
LIZZIE BOWES
Research Associate
Black Music Research Unit
Universities of Westminster and Bristol
Lizzie Bowes is Research Associate at the Black Music Research Unit. She supports Dr. Mykaell Riley, Director of the BMRU, as the Unit continues to operate as the foremost research centre for the study of Black-British music and culture.
Outside of her work for the BMRU, Lizzie is an AHRC funded PhD student at the University of Bristol, working on an interdisciplinary project on Black-British rap and autofiction.
ROB TURNER
Senior Lecturer in 20th and 21st-Century Literature
English
University of Exeter
Rob Turner’s research is focused on American literature, with a particular interest in experiments in sound. He writes regularly about experimental music for the Wire magazine. Current projects include a book on sonic ecology and poetry, and an edited collection on hip-hop, literature, and American culture. Recent publications include two book chapters on the politics of epic (considering works by Ezra Pound and Will Alexander), and an analysis of Samuel Delany’s Afrofuturist metafictions.
SIMON TOPPING
Associate Professor
School of Law, Humanities and Social Sciences
University of Plymouth
Simon Topping is Associate Professor of United States History at Plymouth University. He is the author of Lincoln’s Lost Legacy: The Republican Party and the African American Vote, 1928-1952 (University Press of Florida, 2008) which was short-listed for the 2009 Neustadt prize. He has published a number of articles on the importation of American racism into Northern Ireland during the Second World War.
For centuries, the idea of life beyond Earth has fascinated scientists, storytellers, and curious minds alike. We know that, within our solar system, all life needs water and a stable planetary atmosphere – but what about exoplanets in galaxies far, far away?
As the search for evidence of extra-terrestrial life has entered a new era and is moving rapidly, Professor Nathan Mayne from the University of Exeter is inviting you to join a discussion that will explore distant planets. We look at human efforts to uncover those planets presenting with the conditions of sustaining other life forms. Do they meet our preconceptions and expectations? And ultimately, can they help us answer the mind-boggling question: Is it only us out here?
This event is part of an event series on exoplanets and outer space. The second event will be Could There Be a Planet B? in November.
NATHAN MAYNE
Physics and Astronomy Department
University of Exeter
Nathan Mayne works in the Physics and Astronomy Department at the University of Exeter. There, he is a Professor of Astrophysics and Planetary Climates in the Astrophysics Group, researching the climate of Earth, our solar system, and exoplanets. Nathan is a UKRI Future Leaders Fellow, the Academic Director of Research Computing Infrastructure for the University of Exeter, and one of our trustees!
Agile Rabbit
In a special conversation event, we chart hip hop’s first five decades, from its birth in the block parties of the Bronx and origins in Jamaica, to commercial gangsta-rap and right up to today’s artists. We discuss how this American revolution in music, dance, and art spread across the global cultural landscape. Hear four speakers passionately bring to life the culture and music – but also political theory, American history, and sociology. With our own sub-genres here in the UK, we’ll look at the key moments that led to this country’s enthusiastic embrace and interpretation of hip-hop, particularly by Afro-Caribbean communities.
Part of Futures – a free festival of discovery that celebrates innovative and world-class research taking place at universities across the South West. It’s funded by the UKRI.
SPEAKERS
MYKAELL RILEY
Senior Lecturer
College of Design, Creative & Digital Industries
University of Westminster.
Mykaell is Director of The Black Music Research Unit (BMRU), and senior researcher and curator at the University of Westminster.
Central to Mykaell’s research is his work on mapping Black British music. Bass Culture is a response to the disengagement and lack of education surrounding the heritage of Jamaican and Jamaican-influenced music in Britain over the last six decades. Mykaell’s career started as a founder member of the British roots Reggae band Steel Pulse who would go onto receive a Grammy. Over the years he has performed, produced, managed and consulted on many successful artists and their projects. As a professional writer/producer, Mykaell’s work has encompassed TV, Film and Theatre, resulting in over eleven UK top twenty positions, and three UK number ones.
LIZZIE BOWES
Research Associate
Black Music Research Unit
Universities of Westminster and Bristol
Lizzie Bowes is Research Associate at the Black Music Research Unit. She supports Dr. Mykaell Riley, Director of the BMRU, as the Unit continues to operate as the foremost research centre for the study of Black-British music and culture.
Outside of her work for the BMRU, Lizzie is an AHRC funded PhD student at the University of Bristol, working on an interdisciplinary project on Black-British rap and autofiction.
ROB TURNER
Senior Lecturer in 20th and 21st-Century Literature
English
University of Exeter
Rob Turner’s research is focused on American literature, with a particular interest in experiments in sound. He writes regularly about experimental music for the Wire magazine. Current projects include a book on sonic ecology and poetry, and an edited collection on hip-hop, literature, and American culture. Recent publications include two book chapters on the politics of epic (considering works by Ezra Pound and Will Alexander), and an analysis of Samuel Delany’s Afrofuturist metafictions.
SIMON TOPPING
Associate Professor
School of Law, Humanities and Social Sciences
University of Plymouth
Simon Topping is Associate Professor of United States History at Plymouth University. He is the author of Lincoln’s Lost Legacy: The Republican Party and the African American Vote, 1928-1952 (University Press of Florida, 2008) which was short-listed for the 2009 Neustadt prize. He has published a number of articles on the importation of American racism into Northern Ireland during the Second World War.