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“The thing about dance music is, it is about inclusivity and bringing people together. All shades of the rainbow under one roof.”

Sister Bliss - Faithless.

Last week I met a woman I am a huge fan of, which in truth, is rare in Ibiza.

When I worked at BBC 6 Music as a music journalist in the early 2000´s Faithless were massive and I must have seen them play live at festivals and gigs at least 20 times over those 10 years.

When our music news team broke the story, that Maxi Jazz was leaving the band, a collective sigh of disbelief went around the office. Was this the end for one of our stations best loved bands?

I went to find out a bit more about ALL BLESSED, the album that landed in 2020 when I was invited into the Pikes hotel room of Sister Bliss for a chat about the bands latest record - their first complete body of work since Maxi departed 12 years ago.

But even more importantly, we spoke about our mutual Love of another lady in broadcasting, Emma Barnett, presenter of BBC Radio 4´s Woman´s Hour and why having a platform like that is still important for women in the music industry, “ There is a lot of challenges. You know, we're stuck in a patriarchal system. We're all trying to smash it in our various little ways. It has slightly blown my mind when Emma told me how much she loved Faithless and that she writes every show, every evening listening to Faithless. I was like, Wow, okay. I mean, she's properly bright, intellectually able, questioning, and is a really articulate woman. So that was very nice to have that kind of love and respect from from someone in the public eye. Not that that detracts from anyone who's just a completely ordinary person that loves our music, we wouldn't be here without the people actually listening and being a fan of our music wherever they come from. But I mean, for me, a lot of challenges are invisible. It's not something most people see with me. Things To do with equal pay or the fact I'm a single mum, you know, the juggling of childcare, all the stuff that goes on behind the scenes, that makes my life very different from your average male DJ or musician. How that works in the structure of my life and the kind of shows and work that I can accept and the things that block me from progressing, maybe being taken seriously because my band is also well. The core of it is myself, Maxie and Rollo for the last 30 odd years, and they're both men. And obviously sometimes men have a louder voice in the industry.”

She says, she has often wondered what would have happened if she had not been in the band, “Maybe if it was me or my own, I wouldn't be taken too seriously, you know? I mean, they're all very small gripes and my life is a very gilded one compared to most. But there is absolutely a gender pay gap and a lot of invisible prejudice that you don't see. The music business is very male and most echelons of it. There's a lot more visibility now. There's a lot more debate, which is really important about women in the music industry, whether they're behind the scenes and the managerial roles higher up, the record company tree, you know, booking the festivals and, you know, equality of line up and inclusivity.”

“It's really good that these things are being brought to the table because there is there is a scene that was basically black and gay, and it's been co-opted by the white world. And a lot of people have been shut out. And it's not right, it's not appropriate. I first heard house music properly in a gay club in London and when I was travelling in New York and like going to these seminal clubs that I'd read about and being pretty much the only women in there, you know, such a marginalised scene, people just don't realise and the way it exploded in Europe was very different to what happened in America, for example. But there were seeds of division in that. And the thing about dance music is it is about inclusivity and bringing people together. All shades of the rainbow under one roof, dancing under one roof in a place where people do come to leave the problems of everyday life behind. It sounds like a cliche, but it's real. It's tangible. We've written about it in our music. We this is my church. This is where I heal my hurts. People carry a lot of pain in their lives. And there's something about the electronic music scene, certainly in the early days that was a safe space for people.”

She says the kind of chat we engage in now, about equality and inclusivity, is extremely and ever more important,

“I'm glad that those conversations are being had now because if you don't have a conversation, you don't acknowledge things exist, you just can't change them, you know? I love that there are more and more female DJs around. Just that sense of there being a discourse around it that it isn't just what went before, that we can change things and that's better for everybody. The people that inspired me were the female DJs. It gave me an idea that I could do it. I was so nuts about house music and collected records. When I saw a female DJ putting two things together, I went, “Oh, that could be me.” Sometimes people need to see themselves to acknowledge that it's even possible.

Ayalah went on to tell me how maxi Jazz, had struggled before he joined the band, coming up against some horrible situations when he was in london,

“So we wrote a song many years ago called Muhammad Ali on our third album, and it came from a conversation that Maxi and I had about him growing up in South London in the 1950s, which was a very racist time, and he was actually very shy and kind of down on himself, and he wouldn't look people in the eye when he walked along the street because he'd get racist abuse. But, after he saw Muhammad Ali on the TV the first time he was on the television in the UK. He had this moment of recognition that this handsome, beautiful, bright, charismatic man was a black guy, absolutely owning it. And he had this deep moment of connection. And suddenly he said it was the first time I walked down the street after seeing Muhammad Ali on the telly. And I stuck my shoulders back and I puffed my chest up and I became proud of myself. And he just hadn't been, there had been no positive reinforcement, no role models, you know, or they were in a very limited sphere. So it was such a profound conversation. I said to him, you put that in a lyric. So I understand it's like that for all sorts of people in all walks of life, unless you see yourself represented. That's why being a woman? I'd like it not even to be a conversation, but it is still, because it's still slightly unusual to be a female producer and an artist and a DJ and be in a band and sort of headline Glastonbury or whatever else. You know, that's still a place that it'd be nice for more, more women to get to, without barriers. “

Hera the full episode HERE.

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“There are people I know who don´t fly private jets but they don´t talk about it….” Ben Turner, IMS Founder.

The International Music summit returned last week with Climate change at the top of it´s agenda.

Co-founder Ben Turner told me in this weeks episode, “ we are part of an industry that creates huge impact. DJs zigzag across the world on private jets. Live bands tend to tour in a much more cohesive, structured, strategic manner, whereas DJs don't. They go for the biggest money everywhere and they grab it so I think everybody has a big responsibility to play.¨

It was refreshing to hear Ben air the elephant in the room that many of us who love or live on Ibiza has thought about the last two years since tourism slowed down to a trickle of its normal influx. So what have we learned in the last two years away from business as usual?

“There were certainly organisations working hard to make changes here, but, Ibiza is an island. It's in a very challenging position. It needs tourism. It lives or dies by tourism. That was proven during the pandemic.¨

He contonued, “we all knew that, whether the government ever wanted to admit it, that Ibiza needed club tourism. Now I think it knows that it does, but certainly on a negative the private jets are at the forefront of the shift in our time. I didn't even know there was a private jet airport 15 years ago or 20 years ago. Now, you know, you can't even land on many occasions. So it's it's a huge shift as big money got into our industry. Big money has followed our music. Our music is now the most favourite or probably the most favoured music of the wealthy crowd. They all want to be around DJ culture for whatever reason. Ibiza is obviously the home of that. So, you know, unfortunately we're attracting it. It used to be the yachts coming in, now it's the jets, you know. So we you know, there's there's a huge challenge there. Huge challenge.”

We have all had a chance to dream of the idyllic image of what Ibiza might look like, if it had solved its tourism monoculture issues, but I asked Ben what he felt that might look like if he could imagine a perfect island scenario,

“ I think we would all maybe come by boat. That would be quite nice. If you think about the original people who came to this island and discovered Ibiza, you know, the hippies, who came on boats, that's the older Ibiza.

That's the spirit, the indigenous spirit of the island that you can still find in certain quarters and certain places.”

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NEW RESET REBEL RETREAT 9-12 SEPT 2022

In September we return to Retreat Life Once Again!!

Our first LIVE face to face event since 2019 took place in May this year and we loved it so much, we are back, by popular demand from you our listeners.

I can’t wait to be back together with you on the White Isle for three nights of Yoga, Hiking, Good food & Good Times!

If you feel like you need a little RESET in Life?

Come and join us as we take a little rest from the grind in Paradise in the North of the Island close to Portinax.

All rooms are shared & are twin rooms - 699 GBP . We are keeping this retreat intimate, there will be just 4 guests so we can keep vibes high, but also familiar and cosy.

Drop me and email to enquire: Jo@joyoule.co.uk

Our sample Schedule is as follows:

FRIDAY


4PM-5PM - CHECK IN AND WELCOME DRINK POOLSIDE

6-7pm WELCOME CIRCLE AND SLOW MUSIC INFUSED FLOW YOGA.

7.30 PM DINNER AT CASA

SATURDAY

7-8AM COFFEE AND TEA INFUSIONS.
8AM YOGA FLOW WITH JO
10-11.30 AM BRUNCH
1230 HIKE LOCALLY TO MOON BEACH.

5pm EARLY LIGHT BITES POOLSIDE DINNER
8PM SUCO SESSIONS - FULL MOON ELECTRONIC DANCE MUSIC MEDITATION ON THE ROOF OF NOBU HOTEL IN TALAMANCA

SUNDAY
8AM YOGA FLOW WITH JO
10-11.30 AM BRUNCH
1PM HIKE TO CALA DEN SERRA.
5PM STRETCH AND COOL DOWN AT SUNSET
7PM PM SUNSET DINNER & COCKTAILS / MOCKTAILS AT LOS ENAMORADOS

MONDAY

8-930AM JOGABEATS FINAL SESSION
1030 BRUNCH AND CHECK OUT
12-2PM REALAX POOLSIDE WITH A WELL EARNED GLASS OF CELEBRATORY CAVA / JUICE

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REBELS WITH A CAUSE

This year we return to helping others RESET!

Through our good friend Toby, founder of Walking Ibiza we will offer one FREE place on the Around the Island Walk Adventure in October 2022 with Toby Clarke who has been on this podcast MANY TIMES since he was our very first guest in April 2018.

Drop us an email to apply for the spot - worth 1,900 euros, if you have a reason you need a HUGE RESET in life, this trip could be perfect for you.

Jo@resetrebelproductions.com

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Music & Mood

It all begins with an idea.

Music and Mood are intrinsically linked.

Join us and collaborate with us on our playlists on Spotify, Recently Ibiza has been very cold and grey, so we created one called,

“Sun when there Ain’t None “

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THE RESET BUTTON

It all begins with an idea.

What ‘s your Reset Button?

What is your RESET BUTTON?

We once asked many different celebrities from Howard Marks who is sadly no longer with us to George Clinton what theirs was and they told us so Many different answers …..Click here to HEAR the RESET TOOLS

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Learn to Podcast in Ibiza

It all begins with an idea.

Every month I teach a group of 4 people how to start their own podcast series here in Ibiza The Hub Co-working.

If you feel like you have a story to tell or would like to find your voice through podcasting for your brand or business, drop me a line to Jo@Resetrebelproductions.com or Head to my Podcast productions Site Reset Rebel Productions.

Our next podcast course is 17-20th May and you can also stay locally to the venue, so that if you are not living here, you can still jump in and join us and get your series off the ground in Ibiza.

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