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The Hay festival is going to Colombia in January, and guess who is performing?
Thursday 25 January.
[9] 20:30H, PLAZA DE LA ADUANA, Cartagena
Bob Geldof in concert
The Hay Festival is pleased to present, for the first time in Colombia, Bob Geldof, organiser of the legendary concerts Live Aid and Live 8 and founder of the band Boomtown Rats. Geldof’s music fuses an Irish sound with classic rock and he is one of the great international music stars.
Friday 26th January
(12) 12:00- 13:00h, Teatro Heredia (Heredia Theatre)
Bob Geldof in conversation with Peter Florence
As well as being an exceptional musician, Bob Geldof was one of the main organisers of the Live Aid (1985) and Live 8 (2005) concerts which attracted world attention towards the growing problem of poverty in Africa. In July 2005 the Live 8 concerts drew crowds of 3 billion people spread across ten different cities. Largely due to international pressure exerted by the attendance success at the concerts, members of the G8 agreed to significantly increase economic aid to several African countries. The charismatic rock star will talk to Peter Florence, Director of the Hay Festival, about music, Ireland and with regards to Africa, about the G8 leaders, aid programmes and trade tariffs. Simultaneous translation into Spanish will be provided.
This article by their literary agents seems to confirm it.
Hitchens and Geldof to appear at Hay Festival Colombia
Christopher Hitchens, Bob Geldof, DBC Pierre, David Mitchell, David Starkey, Wole Soyinka and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie are just some of the English-speaking performers who will be travelling to Colombia to appear at the 2nd annual Hay Festival Cartagena. The festival will take place from the 25th – 28th January 2007 in the beautiful colonial town of Cartagena de Indias, declared a UNESCO world heritage site in 1984. Spanish-speaking performers include Jorge Valdano, Real Madrid’s General Sports Director; Pablo Jiménez Burillo, General Director of the MAPFRE Foundation Institute of Culture; Soledad Puértolas, winner of the 1979 Sésamo Prize; Enrique Santos, editor-in-chief of Colombian newspaper El Tiempo; Chilean novelist, essayist and diplomat Jorge Edwards and Colombian author Juan Manuel Roca. The full programme is available on the Hay website.
Students: 20% of the capacity of each event will be free for students (indispensable to register through our web site and later on pick up the tickets with ID and student ID). For more information please contact Gema Tours, Cartagena: +57 (5) 660 1627
This was the same for every event in Cartagna, not just Bob's.
Scottie wrote: Good pics Reka. Thanks. When you compare them to the one a couple of posts earlier, you can see he was not using the hair straighteners last night! .
A rough translation from one of my friends on myspace. Sounds like a great night. I like the description of Vince as an "immaculate" vioinist.
Ok - to be honest - after writing to you, I decided to see how bad my Spanish is... and I managed to translate it... kind of... some parts just didn't make sense, and the last paragraph... well... it seems like something is missing, don't it? What song were they talking about? Something about Paula? Anyway - here's what I came up with. I'd get a second opinion, though...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For the first time in history, Bob Geldof performed in Cartagena, as part of the Hay Festival of Literature, 2007.
The concert went well, and there were people from all corners of Columbia, and the world.
Geldof wore a purple suit, a black shirt, white pants and Texas boots, playing his acoustic guitar before a multitude of shouts and applause.
His band, which had, among others, an immaculate violinist, played a classic North American Style, which came before the flashy trends of today.
The Irish music the band made caused people near the stage to dance.
Several Irish tourists shook flags of their country, excited by the emotion of their musical idol, whose fame, partly, comes from his starring in the movie, The Wall, based on a Pink Floyd record.
“My Spanish is ****” said Geldof, who, after finishing the first song, tried to talk to the crowd.
He discussed the similarities between Ireland and South America, because, according to him, there were armed conflicts, class and economic issues and he spoke of the origin of the Celtic town, and the history of Ireland and that the problems caused the death of numerous generations.
“I Don’t Like Mondays”, one of his most famous songs, got the greatest reaction from the crowd, who reacted energetically.
When Geldof left, people of all ages crowded themselves before the fence to request that she touched the last song to him, and he simply replied, “Yes, my time exceeds me…”
My Spanish is virtually non-existent, but in the second review I can see that they are referring to Indifference in the final paragraph. They are likening the song to Michael Flatley and an Irish step dance. It also mentions that he has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
I think he sang for 2 hours.
Did you see on the 1st review they spelt his name Geldorf!!
This is the second review. Bob Geldof is a chemically pure rocker. He demonstrated it during his concert Thursday in the Seat of the Customs in Cartagena, at the Hay Festival. Much has been said about Bob Geldof; for example, he starred in the film The Wall, that he met with Tony Blair and George W Bush, and was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. Sadly, he’s not known for his music. With the exception of “I Don't Like Mondays”, which was a number one in 42 countries, his music has somehow avoided the pop-charts, which is a shame. Geldof appeared last night in the Seat of the Customs at Cartagena, with a decade of rock weighing on his life. The program was filled by the songs from his time as leader of the Boomtown Rats and of his solo years. Songs like “This is the World Calling”, “The Beat of the Night”, and “Room 19 (Sha la la lee) among others. Two hours of rock, of the new wave of the late seventies of the eighties. There was rock with a punk base, rock with mixtures of reggae, rock with African percussions and, over everything, Celtic Rock, with plenty of violins and accordions. In the end, although most of the 10,000 spectators did not know much of the music of Geldof, Cartagena ended up dancing something like the “Irish Stepdancé”, at a festive rate, with plenty of accelerated steps that the dancer Michael Flatley made famous all over the world.
South america is a place in fast develop. Many of their countries are growing above de five percent. Chile, Brasil, Argentina, México, Peru, Uryguay, etc They are countries in a good line of economical develop, but is needed to know that about culture, poetry and music, the most of their citizens have the sense and The knowns, that first world have lost in some moment of his history. First world is the world of play station, spcial effects on films, or fast food. In this sense, i think taht latinamerica is the reserve of emotions, sensible a people who still feels poverty and figth for that. Bob Geldof is well received in those countries. They have made a list of priorutys on their lives, such as food, medicine and education. Golf fields are not a priority.
I wonder what Bob's view of South America is now. On a radio interview he once said he'd never been there and had no interest. He thought that it was just like Europe. I wonder if he has changed his mind.
I have read something about the "Hay" festival in Cartagena de Indias. The Hay is call to cuture people to meet. That is a good ocassion to mixture literature and music. In tah festival have been importante writers like Juan José Millás, very known in spain. The theme of the Guitararm o escopetaguitarra, is that it coul be misunderstood. The sense is that the only arm wich must exist is the guitar, or also, someday arms will be not necessary and they will be recycled to guitars. When Bob Geldof received the guitar, he asked "did it kill someone?"
Thanks Reka. I don't know whether it is my computer or the clip - but I can't hear what Bob says. He looks a little bemused at first! The confusion over the microphone is quite funny. It keeps buffering too, which doesn't help. Please tell me what he's saying! And what is said to him
I don't know what they say to him,because it is not in English, but Bob as tobares troncos mentioned it earlier asked did the gun gun kill anyone and the answer was hat it killed 100 people. Than Bob talked about these kind of guns and how they are used in Africa (example: child soldiers usualy use it). Than he came up with a biblical phrase I didn't understand it completly, but it was about turning something dangerous into something safe, peacful. In this case a gun into a guitar.
I love this quote from an article in today's Guardian on the festival
Hitchens' warm-up was followed by Bob Geldof performing 'I Don't Like Mondays' in the main square. Some of the crowd, new to the ways of literary festivals, thought they were coming to hear Pink Floyd, but joy was unconfined and the next day Geldof spoke off the cuff in Cartagena's old theatre, a jewel-box of Spanish colonial ostentation, and was duly presented with a guitar fashioned from a decommissioned guerrilla AK47.
Students: 20% of the capacity of each event will be free for students (indispensable to register through our web site and later on pick up the tickets with ID and student ID). For more information please contact Gema Tours, Cartagena: +57 (5) 660 1627
This was the same for every event in Cartagna, not just Bob's.
Yeah, and all the events had this sort of message as well, did they?
STUDENTS GO FREE TO BOB GELDOF'S CONCERT. Registration is open now. Enough places available
"And Lenin said 'There is no Heaven, so I don't believe in Room 19'" - Bob Geldof
and
"you can find adventure/in someone else's life/or you can criticize/when you need a lift" - Ric Ocasek