Ezra Collective – Streets Is Calling (feat. M.anifest & Moonchild Sanelly – Single Edit)

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Ezra Collective

Joined: Dec 2024
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Ezra Collective – Streets Is Calling (feat. M.anifest & Moonchild Sanelly – Single Edit)


“Streets Is Calling feat. M.anifest & Moonchild Sanelly” by Ezra Collective: https://ezracollective.lnk.to/streetsiscalling

Pre-order/presave the new album ‘Dance, No One’s Watching’ out 27th September 2024: https://ezracollective.lnk.to/dnow

#ezracollective #manifest #moonchildsanelly #streetsiscalling

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30 Comments

  1. Sometimes, listening to Ezra collective,I hear the sound of the past, sometimes I hear what I imagine is the near future of music. This time is different, I think I am hearing the future of culture.
    I am an old man, I was taught standard English by my parents. Standard English has changed a lot in 60 years. Just watch some vintage TV to see just how much. What is standard English is mutually.decided by the people who speak it. It needs to be so in order that people who are new to the language can have any chance of understanding necessary official systems.
    This number reminds me of meeting two young women in the mid 70s when I started college. One of them newly arrived from Jamaica, the other from Gambia, both away from family for the first time, wide eyed excited but also wary. They bonded immediately and who knows, maybe they are still friends. I remember being in conversation with them, hearing about their cultures, similarities and differences. At a time when, in my city, immigrant communities were small and under pressure. Only those people who experienced the prejudice really knew what racism was and it didn't have a name. We were all naive, ignorant, how racism begins.
    I remember hearing Angela and Fumike talk and loving their different accents speaking standard english they'd both learned in school but also finding common words fom their own community languages and piecing together a playful, personal informal common language. Just amazing for a boy from a narrow, working class monoculture.
    After college, I got a job in the merchant marine and visited most of the major cities in West Africa from Dakar as far south as Matadi. For a boy of 20/21 a mind blowing experience. So ever after, I was hooked on cross cultural experiences and now I see and hear in my own culture this wonderful mingling of the waters of life. I still love tradition and I worry sometimes that treasures of all kinds get lost when these galaxies merge, there has to be a conscious effort to remember the old language as the new one takes over but the adventure is too intoxicating and to discourage it is asking for suppression, which we know from our tragic history, is disastrous.
    So. Bring it on!