Mail & Guardian

Review: The eternal splendour of Lovers Rock

- Kwanele Sosibo

Just like weed songs and mothers’ care songs are institutio­ns to the point of being subgenres in reggae, so too are the dance nostalgia songs. In these songs, the dances, particular­ly those of an older era, are romanticis­ed as being close to utopic.

There was less brandishin­g of guns, the tunes go, and there was less of the skulking guy-on-the-corner thing. Patrons would pair up. The sexual tension would ramp up. The singles, too, would hold their own vibe, almost oblivious. If a man started trouble, the high tempers would be quelled just in time so as not to disrupt the flow of the party.

Although the dance might have been a slice of heaven — the land of herb stalks and slow grinding — the bubble was fragile, not completely sealed off from the elements. But for black folk who held these jams in the midst of their captivity, it may as well have been solid as a rock.

Steve Mcqueen’s Lovers Rock, the second in an anthology of five films based on black life in Britain, is a pitch-perfect representa­tion of this. Mcqueen and his team take us inside the bubble. From the first moment, we are more than just voyeurs, with the intimate prepping scenes cajoling us to participat­e. We are there through the party’s various

moods and we linger on its accoutreme­nts: the juvenile male posturing, the bashfulnes­s and indignatio­n of the women’s responses and, importantl­y, the sleek fashions. There is a self-awareness and abandon expressed through body movements and there is a meticulous appraisal of the soundsyste­m culture underpinni­ng it all.

As one of Mcqueen’s writers, Courttia Newland, says, the film confronts this question: “How do we manifest our true selves in a place where we are not the hosts?” In as much as racial tension stalks the lives of Mcqueen’s protagonis­ts, when it shows up at the party it often

wears a disguise, masking itself as different types of violence. The decisive moves to contain it, are less acts of heroism than they are acts of collective care. (Anthony B’s plea of “Bwoi leave the magazine” in the song Waan Back definitely comes to mind.)

For Mcqueen, the five-film Small Axe anthology seeks to bring to light histories of black British life that have not properly been acknowledg­ed. In a talk with New York Film Festival director of programmin­g Dennis Lim, Mcqueen calls Lovers Rock, preceded by the politicall­y charged film Mangrove, “the heart” of the anthology. Even without hav

ing seen what comes after in the series, one can easily approximat­e what Mcqueen means.

Not merely an ode to a style of reggae emerging out of London in the mid-1970s, Lovers Rock is a cinematic feat, where for long stretches Mcqueen washes us in the beauty of black being, with softly-lit skin, little dialogue and evocative sonic accompanim­ent.

A case can be made for Lovers Rock finding communion with works such as Babylon, If Beale Street Could Talk and even Idris Elba’s Yardie. But if all these were part of an album, Mcqueen’s film would be that ethereal interlude late in the proceed

ings, “half short, twice strong”, to borrow from GZA. A period piece like the rest of the collection, Lovers Rock achieves a timelessne­ss through its specificit­y, Newland says.

The anchoring roles of Amarah-jae St Aubyn and Michael Ward cannot be downplayed as the couple slowly finding their groove, but Lovers Rock’s ultimate sleight of hand lies in the distending of that anchor, huddling us together for an ephemeral, yet seemingly eternal, moment of splendour.

Small Axe is broadcast on BBC Brit, Dstv channel 120 on Mondays. Lovers Rock shows on November 23

 ?? Photo (right): Parisa Taghizedeh ?? Half short, twice strong: (from left) Franklyn (Michael Ward), Martha (Amarah-jae St Aubyn) and Patty (Shaniqua Okwok) are the main characters in Steve Mcqueen’s Lovers Rock, which takes us inside the blues party bubble.
Photo (right): Parisa Taghizedeh Half short, twice strong: (from left) Franklyn (Michael Ward), Martha (Amarah-jae St Aubyn) and Patty (Shaniqua Okwok) are the main characters in Steve Mcqueen’s Lovers Rock, which takes us inside the blues party bubble.
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