The Guardian (USA)

'Make techno black again': a social experiment subverts whitewashi­ng in clubs

- André Wheeler

How did house music become so whitewashe­d? How did a black musical art form pioneered by black DJs during the 80s and 90s in black neighborho­ods become so detached from its origins?

In recent years, these questions and conversati­ons around the gentrifica­tion of techno, house and rave music have increased.

“House music’s co-option has followed a similar pattern to that of other black musics,” said Micah Salkind, author of Do You Remember House?, a collection of over 60 oral interviews. “Black DJs – and in particular black gay DJs – were some of the primary instigator­s and innovators; white DJs followed and attempted to replicate their successes.”

In 2014, Chicago DJ Derrick Carter wrote on his Facebook page: “Something that started as gay black/Latino club music is now sold, shuffled and packaged as having very little to do with either.”

Frankie Decaiza Hutchinson, cofounder of Discwoman, a New Yorkbased collective and DJ booking agency focusing on DJs of marginaliz­ed background­s, criticized the lack of diversity at Dekmantel and Awakenings last year, two major rave festivals held in the Netherland­s. “It’s so weak how people would rather blame those who are excluded than actually interrogat­e how it’s fucked to have a techno festival of over 100 acts with only 5-10 black acts,” she tweeted.

Last year, the documentar­y Black to Techno examined the birth of techno in inner-city Detroit and how white DJs from Canada and Europe whitewashe­d the genre. Elsewhere, black media theorist DeForrest Brown Jr launched apparel adorned with the callto-action, Make Techno Black Again last year.

Of course, the gentrifica­tion of these genres and spaces fits into the larger relationsh­ip straight, white culture holds with the work of marginaliz­ed communitie­s. White musical acts have adopted black sounds forever: from the Rolling Stones adopting the

sounds of blues and jazz music to Australian rapper Iggy Azalea facing criticism for adopting a “blaccent”. The history is long and complex.

Welcome then Rave Reparation­s, a self-described “social experiment”, demonstrat­ing the power of smallscale reparation­s. Formed by New York transplant­s Mandy Harris Williams and Alima Lee, the creative duo is working to combat this gentrifica­tion, striving to make it easier, and safer, for black people to attend Los Angeles dance parties, held at secret undergroun­d locations across the city.

The problem is LA’s pre-coronaviru­s shutdown nightlife scene – once home to a host of standout black queer venues, including Jewel’s Catch One – has grown increasing­ly homogeneou­s, overtaken by “white DJ bros”.

Rave Reparation­s places a distinct focus on tasking white people to help their cause. They work closely with party promoters to offer discounted tickets to black, brown and queer people (typically 50% off full price), and organize crowdfunde­d donations for free tickets.

“We’ll go down a list and ask, ‘Who is the most marginaliz­ed body in LA?’ So we start with giving free tickets to black queer trans femmes,” Williams tells me.

Lee and Williams also reach out to trusted white party promoters and ask them to vouch for and support up-and-coming black promoters (who often struggle, disproport­ionately more than their white counterpar­ts, to rent out club spaces).

“Navigating the undergroun­d economy [of throwing parties in LA] is difficult because there is no Better Business Bureau,” Williams tells the Guardian. “There are no rights or protection­s that black people have to not face discrimina­tion for rentals. Sometimes owners will just say to black promoters, “We’re not sure about the crowd you’ll bring in.’”

At its core, Rave Reparation­s is about highlighti­ng how tangible labor and sacrifice is needed from white people to combat racism and exclusion. “This is based on a history,” Williams argues. “The struggle for national reparation­s is slavery. The struggle for Rave Reparation­s is based on something that occurred literally within Alima and I’s lifetime. My cousins share stories about attending Frankie Knucklesse­ts when they were younger, years ago.”

Williams and Lee say they were inspired to start Rave Reparation­s after feeling isolated and overlooked at many of LA’s parties.

“That’s why we set up these pricing schemes for parties that prioritize people who come from the diasporas of the music being played at each event,” Lee explains of Rave Reparation’s passionate attempts at restorativ­e justice.

“You don’t feel comfortabl­e at these events,” she adds. “You’re trying to dance and people are staring at you and wondering what you’re even doing there.”

Lee explains the unique and subtle microaggre­ssions black people can face on the dance floor: “They’re literally standing there and blocking you from moving and won’t make space for you and your marginaliz­ed body.” She pauses, emotional and frustrated. “Rave Reparation­s grew from us wanting and needing more space for our bodies.”

The work of Rave Reparation­s fits into a larger trend. In a short time span, reparation­s has gone from a farfetched pipe dream to a concept discussed during the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al debates. Reparation­s – defined by Merriam-Webster as, “the act of making amends” – is an increasing form of advocacy for black people today. The conversati­on has touched on everything from monetary payment to direct descendant­s of African slaves to more naps.

Even if large-scale reparation­s fail to materializ­e in the near future, the conversati­ons hold power. TaNehisi Coates, author of Between the World and Me, is largely credited with re-popularizi­ng reparation­s through his 2014 essay, The Case for Reparation­s. After that essay was published, congresswo­man Sheila Jackson Lee presented HR 40, held a hearing on reparation­s and invited Coates to read his essay.

However, reparation­s still confuses many.

Lee and Williams are often asked, “What is the ultimate goal of Rave Reparation­s? Does money really fix racism?”

The true power of reparation­s is not about solving structural racism through money, they say. It’s having black people’s struggles seen and understood. Lee explains: “To be seen, felt, and heard – that has the biggest impact on queer, black and brown people.”

 ??  ?? Mandy Harris Williams, left, and Alima Lee, right, founded Rave Reparation­s to help make dance clubs more black again. Frankie Knuckles, center, is an American DJ credited with popularizi­ng house music. Illustrati­on: Guardian Design
Mandy Harris Williams, left, and Alima Lee, right, founded Rave Reparation­s to help make dance clubs more black again. Frankie Knuckles, center, is an American DJ credited with popularizi­ng house music. Illustrati­on: Guardian Design
 ??  ?? Chicago DJ Derrick Carter. Photograph: Steve Black/Rex Features
Chicago DJ Derrick Carter. Photograph: Steve Black/Rex Features

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