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24 September 2014
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Basement Jaxx singer joins local choirs and musicians to make Grace Amazing


Listeners to 大象传媒 Radio Solent were treated to a bit of history with a modern twist with the first official play of a new recording of the hymn Amazing Grace.

From rappers to church choirs, the new recording brings together a vast array of different styles and voices from across the region to mark the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade.

All performers, including Basement Jaxx's Vula Malinga, producer Al Siesta and Southampton-based rapper Jukie gave their time and expertise for free to create a piece of music that is as uplifting as it is moving.

Created in only a matter of weeks with the majority of singers and choirs recording their lines at different times, it is hoped the new recording will capture people's imagination and be a fitting commemoration of this historic event.

Other organisations involved include the Southampton University African Caribbean Society singers and the St Margaret's Church Choir, Oxford.

The final work can be heard on bbc.co.uk/southtoday and there are plans to develop a download track.

But making Amazing Grace amazing is not the only 大象传媒 South project to mark the abolition.

Together with the Royal Naval Museum, 大象传媒 South staged an interactive day of broadcasting, workshops, performances and live radio broadcasts in the shadow of HMS Victory at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard yesterday (Sunday 25 March).

And the South's Politics Show with Peter Henley broadcast a live discussion from the Family Day on current political issues surrounding slavery.

Based at the Museum's Chasing Freedom Exhibition, 大象传媒 South showcased television, radio and online coverage of the 200th anniversary of the Act of Abolition of the Slave Trade from across the region, featuring surprising stories explaining how this region was connected to the Slave Trade and the part played in abolishing it.

There were live performances from Reading's RASPO Steel Band and Oxford's Gospel Choir and the winners of the Emancipation slam poetry event while Cameroonian story-teller Noah Messomo brought to life some of the human stories behind the Slave Trade.

And there was an opportunity to visit Chasing Freedom for free. This special exhibition presents for the first time the Royal Navy's role in combating the trade and its continuing work in defending human rights across the world today.

Notes to Editors

Amazing Grace was written around 1773 by John Newton, a captain of a British slave ship turned evangelical preacher. After many decades as a preacher Newton finally repented on his past as a slave captain and was claimed by William Wilberforce to be an inspiration. The hymn is now instantly recognisable but is actually one of the hidden legacies of slavery.

Full list of contributors: Vula Malinga; Nikki Pearson; Michael Watson; Denise Reese; Christine Clayton; Nicole Fleary Griffiths; Esther Fleary Griffiths & singing group; Momma Cherri's Inspirational Choir; Everyone Sings; Rachael Oke; Aaron Soul; Brenton McLean (Jukie); Sharon Chenge; Lilli Erricson; Portsmouth African Women's Forum and friends; Ebba Gifty & The Southampton University African Caribbean Group; St Margaret's Church Choir, Oxford; Gifty Amakye; Maryam Elkhalifa; Nonny Ojukwu; and Tarry Mavimba.

HB

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Category: Radio Solent; South Regional TV
Date: 26.03.2007
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