Tuesday, June 18, 2013

BENEFIT ALBUM BEATS FOR BANGLADESH RELEASES ON JUNE 18TH

Cover art for Beats for Bangladesh.

Check out and support this great project put together by my friend Tanzila Ahmed:

BENEFIT ALBUM BEATS FOR BANGLADESH RELEASES ON JUNE 18TH

OVER 30 MUSICIANS LEND THEIR VOICE TO RAISE MONEY FOR GARMENT WORKERS IN BANGLADESH

LOS ANGELES - Over 30 South Asian American musicians have come together to collaborate on Beats for Bangladesh: A Benefit Album in Solidarity with the Garment Workers of Rana Plaza. A unique partnership between the music blog Mishthi Music (www.mishthi.tumblr.com) and media production company Someplace in Brooklyn (www.someplaceinbrooklyn.com), the benefit album will donate 100% of the profits to the victims and family of the victims who died in the collapse of a garment factory in the suburbs of Bangladesh that claimed over 1,000 people, mostly women. 

On April 24th a nine-story garment factory in the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh collapsed. It is estimated that over 6,000 people worked in the building and as of today, the death toll is at 1,129. Approximately 2,500 injured people were rescued from the building. Brands and companies producing their clothing in the building included Benetton, Wal-Mart, Gap, JCPenney, and H&M, among others. It is considered to be the deadliest garment-factory accident in history, as well as the deadliest accidental structural failure in modern human history. 

The Beats for Bangladesh: A Benefit Album In Solidarity with the Garment Workers of Rana Plaza is a benefit album that brings together South Asian artists from across the country and beyond with the goal of raising awareness about the working conditions that Bangladeshi workers continue to endure and to raise funds to support workers. One hundred percent of the proceeds from the album, which will be released on June 18, 2013 for a donation of $15 or more as a digital download at www.BeatsForBangladesh.org, will go to the Bangladesh Centre for Workers Rights through the International Labor Rights Forum (www.ilrf.org), a non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C. All album purchases will be considered a tax-deductible donation. 

The album includes an eclectic mix of twenty-six songs ranging from hip hop to electronic to indie-rock and features artists such as 8-piece bhangra brass band Red Baraat, the renowned jazz ensemble Vijay Iyer Trio, hip-hop rapper Chee Malabar, and many more. Executive produced by seasoned Brooklyn Shanti, the album’s exclusive title track features vocals of Mandeep Sethi, M.C. K-Swift and Sierra Carrera. Other artists contributing to the album include: Ami Dang, Bill Ding, DJ Drrrty Poonjabi, Elephant w/ Guns, EVILARTFORM, Fair & Kind, Genius Mistake, Ko the Timeless, lal, Nita Chawla, Ras Ceylon, Saraswathi Jones, Second Sky, Senica Da Misfit, Shahid Buttar, Slant, Smithfield Bargain, Tabla Pusher, The Fourth Stream, The Kominas and Thuggee Cult.

“Western corporations are greedily chasing to make the maximum profit on the backs of Bangladeshi female garment workers. The collapse of Rana Plaza is corruption reaching a tipping point,” said Bangladeshi American activist and Mishthi Music writer Tanzila “Taz” Ahmed. “I wanted to create Beats for Bangladesh to keep labor rights issues in Bangladesh highlighted in the media and to create a funding bridge between the South Asian diaspora community to the women and children on the ground in Bangladesh who are in desperate need for help.” 

In a truly grassroots community effort, the benefit organizers hosted two fundraising events in Los Angeles and New York, with two more slated for Boston and San Francisco by July. Community organizations co-sponsoring the album include: 18 Million Rising, Adhikaar for Human Rights, Alliance of South Asians Taking Action, Asian Pacific American Legal Center, Desis Rising Up and Moving (DRUM), Food Chain Workers Alliance, Friends of South Asia, International Labor Relief Forum, South Asian Americans Leading Together, South Asian Bar Association - Southern California, South Asian Bar Association of Southern California Public Interest Foundation, and South Asians for Justice Los Angeles.

“We are not asking for people to boycott products made in Bangladesh,” says Executive Producer and co-curator, Brooklyn Shanti, of Someplace Called Brooklyn. “If this album can get people to check the labels on their clothing and think twice about how their decisions as consumers impact people around the world, then we have met one of our goals.” 

The album The Beats for Bangladesh: A Benefit Album In Solidarity with the Garment Workers of Rana Plaza is scheduled to be released on June 18, 2013 and will be a digital download available on Bandcamp. 

For more information on the album, please visit http://www.BeatsForBangladesh.org or www.facebook.com/BeatsForBangladesh.

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