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3:10 PM 10th October 2025
arts

Literary Greats Help Launch Five-Month Black Arts And Culture Programme In Leeds

(L-R) Malika Booker, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Conceição Evaristo, Roger Robinson
Photo: @photosbydavidlindsay
(L-R) Malika Booker, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Conceição Evaristo, Roger Robinson Photo: @photosbydavidlindsay
A star-studded line up of internationally acclaimed poetry greats helped launch Out of Many People’s tantalising programme of Black arts and culture last night (Wednesday October 8), aptly called Rooted.

The sell-out event Sound System: Music & Poetry of the Black Atlantic, saw iconic Black dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson, giant of Brazilian poetry Conceição Evaristo and internationally acclaimed T S Eliot Award-winner Roger Robinson reading their work, as well as selecting the music that inspires them; it was chaired by two-times Forward Prize-winner Malika Booker.

Sound System: Music & Poetry of the Black Atlantic was the brainchild of new community interest company Out of Many People, with its Rooted programme launched in Black History Month and running until Spring 2026.

The packed event was the result of local, national and international collaboration between Out of Many People, National Poetry Centre and Brazil Festival of Urban Peripheries (FluP), and with the support of the British Council.

It also saw the National Poetry Centre announcing the exciting Creative Exchange Programme between the National Poetry Centre and FluP, with emerging poets Kadish Morris, Jamila Pereira and Omari Swanston-Jeffers from Northern England selected by Khadijah Ibrahiim, founder of Leeds Young Authors, to travel to Rio de Janeiro to perform at the FLUP Festival.

“Out of Many People has been set up by myself and my good friend Dawn Cameron to showcase authentic Black storytelling,” said its co-founder Susan Pitter, who is also a trustee of the National Poetry Centre, the vision of Poet Laureate Simon Armitage who was also at the event.

“The National Poetry Centre will be a home for poetry in the UK, Out of Many People a home for Black storytelling in the North, and I’m honoured to represent both.

“Sound System culture has emerged as a global phenomenon shaping wider culture too; it has reflected Black community narratives for generations and brought people together from all backgrounds. The artists, music and lyrics have told our stories, captured joy and celebration whilst defining moments and movements.

“Without Sound System there is no Lover’s Rock, there’s no hip hop, there’s no rap, there’s no dancehall, there’s no grime, there’s no garage or dub poetry and more.”

Nick Barley, Director of the National Poetry Centre, said:
“I just loved this evening. It was a wonderful exploration of ideas from across the Atlantic but it was also a really good example of the way I believe that discussion events and poetry events can be.

“It was also international in outlook, rooted here in Leeds, and with Leeds at its heart, with the fantastic community of poets who live here but it was national in scale and international in ambition.

And I think, for the National Poetry Centre, as much as for Out of Many People, this is the level of ambition we want and this is the kind of event which really reflects that ambition.”

Linton Kwesi Johnson, who in 2002 became the second living poet, and the only Black poet, to be published in the Penguin Modern Classics series, said:

“It was very relaxing and good company, nice just to share the stage with the Brazilian writer Conceição Evaristo and Roger Robinson; I saw quite a few familiar faces and of course I’ve been coming to Leeds for over 50 years so I always feel at home when I’m here.

“I don’t know if my work has made any difference at all but I always get a good reception when I come to Leeds, they are very appreciative and 50 years later people still remember me from back in the day so that’s really nice.”

Conceição Evaristo, known as the Mother of poetry in Brazil said she was very excited to participate in Sound System: Music & poetry of the Black Atlantic in Leeds.

“When you understand Jamaica marking a cultural space in England, we can see how the poetry of the colonised subject returns to the space of the coloniser, dictating another rhythm of text, of narrative, of performance that inserts the bodies that were once subjugated.

“It is a poetry that transforms the language that was imposed upon it. It is as if poetry causes breaches, holes in the demarcated language and fills it in another way, with another language.”
Of the Rooted programme, Roger Robinson said it aligns with his work that constantly asks what it means to belong as Black and British.

“The pain of colonialism and slavery has disappeared from the history books but is still present in the people.

“The poet’s job is to translate unspeakable things on to the page…poems are empathy machines” he says in recent works.

Sound System took place at Royal Armouries and opened with a poignant version of Bob Marley’s Redemption Song, performed by Lara Rose, whose work spans visual art, sculpture, poetry, authorship, singing, and songwriting, deeply rooted in Yoruba culture.

ROOTED has been made possible thanks to Arts Council England funding via its National Lottery Project Grants programme and with the support of Out of Many People's partners and supporters