Formed in 2016, Scene + Heard is a London-based creative collective that focuses on exploring the mainstream and sub-cultures across the black diaspora carefully curated nights that bring together film and music.
Founders Darryl Daley and Daniel Spinola are childhood friends born and raised in South London whose mutual love for both mediums served as a motivation to express themselves as creative individuals. Soon they would come together organically to create a project which would evolve into S+H.
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Daley explains the early motivations for linking film and music: “(I) was interested in the idea how you create a night which bridged the gap between the two mediums. “Looking at the close relationship between the two mediums, we created soundscapes through music genres and DJ line-ups which reflected the visuals the film and engaged with the audience.”
Previous editions Scene + Heard have seen the collective pair cult films including South London reggae drama Babylon, drag ball doc Paris Is Burning and banlieue based classic La Haine with specially-curated DJ sets featuring the likes Touching Bass, queer black DJ and art collective BBZ and Gal-dem.
Following a brief hiatus, S+H return on March 25 at the Africa Centre with a special screening acclaimed music documentaries Woza Taxi and Idunu Taxi which focus on the music and fashion subcultures Durban and Lagos respectively. Created by the Rome--London visual collective Crudo Volta and led by founder Mike Achode, both features reflect on the Gqom movement in South Africa and the Afrobeats scene in Nigeria.
Using the taxi as a device to document the development the contemporary music scenes the African diaspora, the format fers an insight using the vehicle as a facilitator in transit between the West and Africa in sharing and preserving fresh creative narratives. The respective documentaries feature a new wave artists and producers from both countries including Julz Da Deejay, TLC FAM, Teni, Young John and Slimcase to name a few. Both embody the link between the traditional and the new sonic hybrids that emerge from the intersect Zulu and Yoruba culture collides with technology.
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As a welcome positive representation Africa, the world’s youngest continent, Taxi Waves chronicles what it means to be young, black and African which is far from a monolith and more nuanced than lazy ‘world music’ comparisons.
The DIY spirit Scene + Heard connects the diaspora and its importance as a safe space in a metropolis like London where seminal landmarks black culture have been erased. Daley says: “As a person the black diaspora, it was the greatest importance that nights reflected myself, my people and our shared cultures. We were able to connect first, second and third generations through cult films and new music in one space”.
“The night has always been an ode to the beauty, inspiration and innovation blackness.”
S+H event presents Taxi Waves: Woza and Idunu at the Africa Centre, Great Suffolk Street on Wednesday March 25 with a screening, discussion with Director Mike Achode and a special DJ set from Anja Ngozi