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    "result": {"data":{"site":{"siteMetadata":{"title":"sThus"}},"markdownRemark":{"id":"02619d04-044c-59d9-ba2f-3cf718c12f94","excerpt":"Story In 1991 I was at high school with John Miller, Rozallaʼs brother when her break-through single “Everybodyʼs Free (To Feel Good)” was released. It was…","html":"<h2>Story</h2>\n<p>In 1991 I was at high school with John Miller, Rozallaʼs brother when her break-through single “Everybodyʼs Free (To Feel Good)” was released. It was amazing to have a Zimbabwean song topping the international music charts. This was at the height of the rave scene and Rozalla became known as ʻThe Queen of Raveʼ. This was also at a time when protests in South Africa were boiling over. In Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave) I combine some of these elements and also later events such as my experience of attending large public raves in Europe and later in Zimbabwe. The video expresses a personal reality and also the cultural gap between white and black that I was experiencing. These were two fundamentally different scenarios, yet each was guided by crowd psychology and longing for a different reality.</p>\n<h2>Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave) Movie Poster</h2>\n<div class=\"gellary\">\n<img src=\"https://m7071.gitlab.io/cdn/2005/01/untitled-zimbabwean-queen-of-rave/646kCdDWTISRXtUxz96uzgod30k.jpg\" title=\"Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave) poster 0\" alt=\"Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave) poster 0\">\n</div>\n<h2>Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave) Cast &#x26; Crew</h2>\n<table>\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th></th>\n<th></th>\n</tr>\n</thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Production Company:</strong></td>\n<td></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Country:</strong></td>\n<td></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Language:</strong></td>\n<td></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Runtime:</strong></td>\n<td>4</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Adult:</strong></td>\n<td>No</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Genres:</strong></td>\n<td></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Website:</strong></td>\n<td><a href=\"https://vimeo.com/42524979\">https://vimeo.com/42524979</a></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td><strong>Release date:</strong></td>\n<td>2005-01-01</td>\n</tr>\n</tbody>\n</table>\n<h2>Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave) – Trailer</h2>","fields":{"slug":"/untitled-zimbabwean-queen-of-rave/"},"frontmatter":{"description":"In 1991 I was at high school with John Miller, Rozallaʼs brother when her break-through single “Everybodyʼs Free (To Feel Good)” was released. It was amazing to have a Zimbabwean song topping the international music charts. This was at the height of the rave scene and Rozalla became known as ʻThe Queen of Raveʼ. This was also at a time when protests in South Africa were boiling over. In Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave) I combine some of these elements and also later events such as my experience of attending large public raves in Europe and later in Zimbabwe. The video expresses a personal reality and also the cultural gap between white and black that I was experiencing. These were two fundamentally different scenarios, yet each was guided by crowd psychology and longing for a different reality.","title":"Untitled (Zimbabwean Queen of Rave)","date":"January 01, 2005","tags":[],"coverImg":"https://m7071.gitlab.io/cdn/2005/01/untitled-zimbabwean-queen-of-rave/646kCdDWTISRXtUxz96uzgod30k.jpg"}},"allMarkdownRemark":{"edges":[]}},"pageContext":{"slug":"/untitled-zimbabwean-queen-of-rave/","previous":{"fields":{"slug":"/two-women-and-a-man/"},"frontmatter":{"title":"Two Women and a Man","tags":[]}},"next":{"fields":{"slug":"/untitled-1/"},"frontmatter":{"title":"Untitled №1","tags":[]}},"pageNumber":283,"tags":[]}},
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