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Sunday, December 16, 2007
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Video Recordings from Radio Centraal 106.7FM.
Current mood: artistic
Category: Music
Check out some video recordings from Radio Centraal 106.7FM in the video section on our MySpace profile. All of them were recorded in our studio during a show!
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Currently
listening
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Welcome to Sky Valley
By
Kyuss
Release date: 22 June, 2006
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2:30 PM
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Thursday, October 04, 2007
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RADIO CENTRAALS FIRST COMPLICATIE ceedee is uit & TE KOOP!
Current mood: artistic
Category: Music
Hoe kunt u de cd kopen ?
2 manieren :
1/2 - Ofwel komt u naar op woensdagavond tussen 21 en 21.30 uur naar Radio Centraal, Ernest Van Dijckkaai 21 in 2000 Antwerpen. Kostprijs per stuk : 10 euro.
2/2 - Ofwel stapt u een van deze drie Antwerpse platenzaken binnen. Zij hebben de cd vanaf 8 oktober in voorraad ; andere zaken volgen mogelijk nog. In alfabetische volgorde : - TUNE-UP, Korte Nieuwstraat 9, 2000 Antwerpen, tel. 03 226 84 11 (open : woens > zater 11 > 18 uur) - USA IMPORT, Sint-Jacobsmarkt 75, 2000 Antwerpen, tel. 03 232 04 29 (open : maan > woens 12 > 18 uur + donder > zater 11 > 18u30 of later) http://www.usaimportmusic.be/ - VINYL, Aalmoezenierstraat 4, 2000 Antwerpen, tel. 03 213 00 59 (open dins > vrij 11 > 18u30 + zater 12 > 19 uur) http://www.vinylrecords.be/. (Belt u vanuit het buitenland, vervang "03" dan door "+32 3".) Ligging : zie http://www.antwerpen.be/stadsplan ... Winkelprijs per stuk : 12 euro.
3/3 - Ofwel stort u geld en sturen we u de cd op. Daarvoor schrijft u 12 euro (verpakkings- en verzendingskosten inbegrepen) over naar zichtrekeningnummer 844-0179207-75 (Iban BE05844017920775) op naam van : Radio Centraal Ceedee Ernest Van Dijckkaai 21 2000 Antwerpen België.
4:31 PM
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Tuesday, September 04, 2007
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MURDER MUSIC: TWO-FACED REGGAE STARS SIGN, THEN RENEG ON, PLEDGE TO STOP HATE SONGS
Current mood: calm
Category: News and Politics
Two Jamaican reggae stars want to have it both ways: they've signed a pledge to put an end to their songs calling for the murder of gays and lesbians -- and thus halt a successful boycott of their hate music -- but back home in Jamaica (one of the world's most culturally homophobic countries) they're trying to pretend they didn't sign the pledge.
Some weeks ago, gruff-voiced reggae mega-star Buju Banton , notorious for his song lyrics calling for the murder of homosexuals, signed a pledge to cease his homophobic music-making after a successful three-year global boycott initiated by the U.K.-based Stop Murder Music campaign.
The Stop Murder Music campaign, a joint project of the militant British gay rights group OutRage!, the Jamaican Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays (J-FLAG), and the British Black Gay Men's Advisory Group (BGMAG), caused the cancellation of hundreds of concerts and sponsorship deals, costing homophobic reggae artists more than $5 million.
Banton — the stage name of 35-year-old Jamaican dancehall music star Mark Anthony Myrie — signed the Reggae Compassionate Act (RCA), by which he agreed to not make homophobic statements in public, release new homophobic songs, or authorize the re-release of previously-recorded hate-gays numbers, the British daily The Guardian reported on Monday, July 23.
Among Banton's particularly poisonous anti-gay songs, his "Boom Bye Bye" features sounds of gunfire "in a batty-boy's head" — "batty-boy" being Jamaican patois for "faggot" — and says of any "batty-boy," "burn him up bad like an old tire wheel."
The Reggae Compassionate Act states, "There's no space in the music community for hatred and prejudice, including no place for racism, violence, sexism, or homophobia."
The pledge was drawn up by the Stop Murder Music campaign, and was also signed at the beginning of June by reggae stars Beenie Man (famous for singing, "I'm dreaming of a new Jamaica, come to execute all the gays"), Capleton (one of whose hit songs says "Blood out di chi chi, bun out di chi chi," Jamaican patois meaning "kill and burn gays"), and Sizzla, also noted for kill-gays lyrics [ADD: like "shoot queers, my big gun goes boom."]
Dennis Carney, vice-chair of the U.K. Black Gay Men's Advisory Group, who is of Jamaican descent, said: "These performers are sending a clear message that lesbians and gay men have a right to live free from fear and persecution, both here in the U.K. and in Jamaica.
And Gareth Williams, co-chair of the Jamaican gay rights group J-FLAG, added in a statement, "This statement against homophobia and violence is a move in the right direction. We hope it is not commercially motivated by the singers' desire to maintain their concert revenues."
But, back home in Jamaica, Radio Jamaica's website claims Banton's manager has denied that the singer signed the RCA pledge: "Speaking with RJR news, Buju's manager Donovan Germaine dismissed the report out of hand," the Web site said. While providing no direct quote, it continued, "He added that the [Banton] management team would not comment further on the issue as it was being used by the gay rights group to gain mileage for their cause." Pandering to the hometown homophobic fans, wouldn't you say?
Meanwhile, the newspaper Jamaica Observer reported on that Grammy-winner Beenie Man, in remarks also apparently designed only for home-turf consumption, has denied having signed the RCA agreement, which he blamed on profit-hungry European promoters, and said he would not pledge to honor it.
"'It's a ting from the promoters of Europe. They are getting so much fight from the Christian and 'g' organisation and everything,' said the self-proclaimed 'King of the Dancehall,' who apparently could not bring himself to say the word gay," the Jamaican Observer reported, adding that Beenie Man "said he did not personally sign any agreement and could not promise that he would be abiding by it. 'I do music,' he argued. 'Dancehall mi do, I can't promise nuh man dat. And mi neva sign it, yuh hear sah.'"
But contacted by this reporter, Peter Tatchell of OutRage!, which has coordinated the Stop Murder Music campaign, provided me with photocopies of the RCA statement signed by Banton and the other three reggae stars, all of whom used their real names. The photocopies of the signed statements are also now posted on Tatchell's Web site.
"The signatures were obtained on our behalf by the U.K. reggae promoter Eddie Brown of Pride Music," Tatchell told Gay City News, adding, "I have total confidence that he obtained their real signatures."
Tatchell explained to this reporter how the stop-gay-hate agreement was reached with the Jamaican singer-songwriters.
"Negotiations over the RCA began in March this year," he said, recounting how, "Eddie Brown of Pride Music U.K. — not a gay company despite the name, but a straight reggae promotion and PR firm — approached me expressing concern that the 'murder music' tag was harming the Jamaican music industry. He admitted the SMM boycott campaign had hit the artists hard financially and also damaged promoters like him. He offered to try to broker a deal to end the singer's incitements to murder LGBTs . Our aim is to stop murder music, so we agreed to cooperate. Eddie acted as the go-between."
hen, Tatchell told me, "Within the framework agreed with J-Flag, OutRage!, and BGMAG, Dennis Carney of BGMAG and I drafted the statement, and I sent it to Eddie Brown. Our draft consciously pitched it to reject all hatred and violence, and to appeal to reggae's tradition of one love, peace, and justice."
After that, Tatchell said, "Eddie forwarded our version to the singers and to his fellow reggae promoters. The artists rejected our first draft and we rejected the revised version they sent back to us. The title Reggae Compassionate Act was the idea of Eddie and his fellow promoters. Eventually, Eddie and his colleagues accepted our second draft, which was a slightly softer-worded version than the first. Nevertheless, it included all the essential points we wanted. He then put our new version to the singers on our behalf. One by one the four artists agreed to sign it."
According to Tatchell, "Eddie arranged the actual signatures with the artists while some of them were in Jamaica and while others were on tour. He negotiated face-to-face with some of their managements. The four signed agreements were delivered to him. He then sent us PDFs of these signed documents, which I have put on my Web site." (To see the signed documents, go to Tatchell's Web site and click on the rubric "Pop Music.")
Tatchell added, "Eddie is totally confident that all four artists have signed — and we have their signatures, including Banton's, to prove it. Eddie also believes that more dancehall stars will eventually sign up to the RCA."
In a note to editors accompanying its press release on Banton's signing of the RCA, the Stop Murder Music campaign asked, "To test the singers' sincerity, we urge you to assign your journalists to interview them to make sure they personally confirm their commitment to renounce and oppose homophobia." In view of the reported denials in Jamaica, it looks like that was a wise precaution.
Brett_lock A key figure in the SMM campaign, Brett Lock of OutRage!, said: ""We have never accepted any agreement whereby an artist agrees to not perform homophobic lyrics at concerts in Europe and the US, but continues performing them in the Caribbean. The idea that these singers can incite the murder of gay people in Jamaica and then come to Europe and be accepted as legitimate artists is morally sick and indefensible. The only agreement we will accept is an agreement that they will not incite homophobic hatred and violence - in lyrics or in public statements - anywhere in the world, including Jamaica. This is what the Reggae Compassionate Act says, and this is the pledge made by the four singers who have signed it,"
Banton has a record of homophobia that is a lot more than musical. In 2004, Banton was charged with being part of an armed group of homophobes who invaded the home of several gay men in Jamaica and badly beat them, sending two to the hospital.
"Mr. Banton was allegedly one of a group of about a dozen armed men who forced their way into a house in Kingston on the morning of June 24 and beat up the occupants while shouting homophobic insults, according to the victims," the Guardian reported on July 17 of that year.
Banton was later acquitted by a jury, at a time when a public opinion poll showed that 92 percent of Jamaicans believe homosexuality should remain criminalized. Gay sexual behavior currently carries a penalty of 10-15 years in prison.
Several gay and lesbian leaders in Jamaica have been murdered in recent years, and gay men walking in the streets are frequently targeted by lynch mobs (for details, see this reporter's articles, "Jamaica, Island of Hate," October 5-11, 2006, and "Jamaican Mob Threatens to Murder Gay Men," February 22-28, 2007.)
British reggae DJ Mark Richards from the reggae label Xtremix records, asked by the Guardian about this week's signing by Banton of the RCA agreement, said, "I can see why he's done it. He doesn't want to jeopardize his whole career over just a few songs. But it doesn't mean he's going to change any of his opinions."
The Stop Murder Music Campaign is continuing to target other reggae artists whose lyrics incite murder of lesbians and gays — among them Elephant Man, Bounty Killer, Vybz, and TOK.
6:08 PM
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Sunday, June 17, 2007
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Jamaican Homophobia: The Kosjer Meat Defence.
Current mood: annoyed
Category: News and Politics
If you're a Jew with a fear of cooking, blame it on the Germans. Thanks to the Holocaust you likely have a near violent dread of baked goods, pizza and roast chicken. Tasteless notion? Somewhat outrageous? Truly silly? Think again, In the wake of yet another wave of mob gay bashings on the island paradise, a Kingston, Jamaica minister writes in today's Jamaican Observer that his nation's violent homophobia is a result of 400 years of "painful sodomization during slavery."
According to Reverend John Hardy of the New Testament Church of God Jamaicans should not only be given a free pass for gay bashing, but the world needs to understand that it will take at least another 500 years before Jamaican men recover from British buggery.
"The vilification of Jamaican homophobia," explains the good reverend, "is just an attempt to distract from the real culprit: it's a failure to recognize 400 years of Jamaican history, starting with the sodomy of male slaves by their white owners as a means of humiliation...By enslaving them and taking them to...Caribbean plantations and sodomizing them every night, [black men were] left them with feelings of rejection and humiliation that laid the foundations of their homophobic architecture."
Hardy joins a number of other voices in concluding that homophobia must be blamed on the British, on slavery and on the British habit of sodomizing black men as a daily avocation.
The British Empire seems to have had a real passion for the male back door and Jamaica seems to have been to forced gay sex what Cuba has always been to cigars.
British slave masters loved sodomy at home, in public day or night, explains Reverend Hardy. Those limey bastards just couldn't get enough of it.
During colonial times, Hardy says, "British men would sodomize their black slaves both privately and publicly."
Slaves would be forced to sodomize each other in front of slave masters and other members of the plantation a s a form of entertainment.
The Brits also loved toys. Hardy, hardly squeamish for a member of the clergy describes wooden objects known as ramrods that would be used to sodomize the black male slaves, "until at times blood and excreta would spurt out of their bodies as water gushes out of a broken fountain."
But Hardy's justification for Jamaican homophobia doesn't stop there. On no. Call in the Jews.
Quoting Genesis, Hardy justifies his logic by pointing out that as Jamaicans fear sodomy, Jews fear certain cuts of meat.
"It is this painful and humiliating experience of 400 years of slavery that gave rise to Jamaicans' homophobic attitude. The Jews exhibit a similar disposition to a painful experience of their ancestor, Jacob.
Genesis 32: 25: When the man saw that he could not overpower him, he touched the socket of Jacob's hip so that his hip was wrenched as he wrestled with the man. Genesis 32:32: Therefore to this day the Israelites do not eat the tendon attached to the socket of the hip, because the socket of Jacob's hip was touched near the tendon.After 4,000 years the Jews still remember the painful experience of their ancestor, therefore they will not eat the tendon of the hip of any animal."
Frankly, I had no idea! I'm cutting tendons from my diet immediately. However, sodomy is here to stay (in case you were wondering.)
Hardy implores the world to be patient, however. Very very patient. Apparently things in Jamaica move slowly under the influence of the hot Caribbean sun, rum and Ganja. Hardy concludes by saying that "It is just about 170-odd years since the blacks in Jamaica have been freed from slavery, and the painful memory of the colonial masters' sodomization still lingers. It may take another 400 to 500 years before Jamaicans become more tolerant to homosexual activities."
"Those who find it strange that Jamaicans are so homophobic," says Hardy, "must interpret that attitude as a people saying "do not remind us of our painful and humiliating past", a people saying "don't push from the back because it is a painful act".
Jamaica me crazy, mon.
10:47 AM
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Saturday, February 23, 2008
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Reaction from a fan of Radio Centraal 106.7FM.
Current mood: cheerful
Category: Music
Saturday, April 07, 2007
Radio Centraal is a very small alternative radiostation in Antwerp. I discovered the station soon after they started broadcasting, so I've been listening ... for 26 years to their wonderful programmes. Here's the reason why:
When I was in my teens, it was my favourite sport to persuade my dad (he's 80 today and still an amateur Einstein) to find one way or another to extend the antenna of my old Tandy radio so I'd be able to listen to as many radiostations as possible. The result was a weird looking construction of plastic ribbons tied to the wall of my room on the second floor of my parent's house. As a result I was able to listen to Radio Centraal, something not many people could do living in the 'distant' district of Wilrijk.
Here are a few reasons why I wanted to capture this particular radiostation: good reggae music, programmes in Spanish and various exotic languages.
A few years later I discovered an ex-classmate of mine, while he was presenting a programme on biology. Well, this was the explanation why he knew everything about stick insects ...strangely as it seems, this was fascinating for me, because at that time we kept stick insects at home, though sometimes, the little creatures escaped and hid in our curtains, when dad (the absent minded professor) had forgotten to close the terrarium properly ...
2007: my car suddenly decides it wants early retirement and I'm forced to buy a new one. Much to my surprise and lots of 'fingerspitzengefuel' (sort of using your fingers to finetune) I'm able to capture Radio Centraal manually . My boyfriend claims to be able to listen to Radio Centraal in his car as far as Loenhout (which isn't that far from the Dutch border, though I suspect him of wishful thinking) In all honesty I have to add that he, during his student days, has been quite active in the radio amateur business. At that time he was living in Tilburg, the Netherlands, and anything concerning radio was a hobby to him. He did have very decent receivers and enhancers ... So one day, he discovered Radio Centraal while living in Holland ...while looking for a decent Reggae programme. Currently we are living in a southern district of Antwerp and we still enjoy Radio Centraal. Though I remain convinced that without enhancing and tampering with the right equipment, it is virtually impossible to listen to Centraal outside the old city bourders. To make a long story short, whenever I listen to the radio while driving, it's a challenge for me to keep capturing the signal as long as possible!
To all the volunteers and radiomakers at Centraal, 106,7 FM, loads of succes! Keep up the good work!
Irie!

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Currently
listening
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23
By
Blonde Redhead
Release date: 10 April, 2007
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8:16 PM
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