Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Levi Tafari

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Levi Tafari

Employer
  
Jack Molonue

Books
  
Rhyme don't pay

Years active
  
1987–present

Home town
  
Occupation
  
Role
  
Writer

Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Levi Tafari


Levi Tafari uploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons446LeviTa

Education
  
Wellington College Belfast

Plastic fantastic by levi tafari


Levi Tafari was born and raised in the city of Liverpool by his Jamaican parents. He attended catering college, where he studied classical French cuisine and graduated with distinction. In the early 1980s, while working as a caterer, he started attending the Liverpool 8 Writers Workshop and decided to become a performance poet. Tafari was a firm member of the Rastafarian movement and although his early performances were in that community, he saw it as his duty to reach a wider audience and began performing overseas.

Contents

Levi Tafari httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Tafari self-identifies as an Urban Griot (the griot being the traditional consciousness raiser, storyteller, newscaster and political agitator). He has four collections of poetry, Duboetry (1987), Liverpool Experience (1989), Rhyme Don’t Pay (1998) and From the Page to the Stage (2006). His plays have been performed at the Blackheath Theater in Stafford and the Unity Theatre, Liverpool. He was also the first person to use the term "duboetry." Several of his musical tracks can be found on compilation albums and he has recorded poetry, which has been released on audiocassette.

Levi Tafari Writing Liverpool Museum of Liverpool Liverpool museums

Tafari often runs creative writing workshops at schools, colleges, universities and prisons. Most recently he has applied his work to working with the British Council, undertaking tours to the Czech Republic, Jordan, Portugal, Germany and Singapore. He was Writer in Residence at Charles University in Prague. He has also appeared in many television programs including Blue Peter and Grange Hill. He also made a film about Rastafarianism for BBC television's Everyman program.

Levi Tafari Levi Tafari Literature

In 2001 Tafari toured with scrap recycle band, Urban Strawberry Lunch. He has also worked with the Ghanaian drum and dance ensemble Delado, the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, jazz musician Dennis Rollins, and his own reggae band, Ministry of Love. Currently, Tafari is preparing a new collection of poems, experimenting in the recording studio with new sounds along with guitarist Eiko Falckenberg and he continues to perform his work in venues across the globe.

Levi Tafari What it means to be a black Scouser as poet Levi Tafari talks about

In early 2009 Tafari worked with children from Elmgrove Primary School in Belfast for their live performance in St George's Market. He attended the performance on 2 April 2009.

Levi Tafari Levi Tafari levitafari Twitter

Levi tafari


Biography

Levi Tafari Levi Tafari And Liverpools Reggae Roots Bido Lito

  • Duboetry (1987)
  • Liverpool Experience (1989)
  • Rhyme Don't Pay (1998)
  • From the Page to the Stage (2006)
  • Party mania (2015)

  • Levi Tafari Levi Tafari poetry workshop with Rafiki youth project Wigan UK

    Levi Tafari Race Relations Act at 50 Scouse Rastafarian performs poem BBC News

    Filmography

    Actor
    1992
    Grange Hill (TV Series) as
    Special Guest Poet
    - Episode #15.11 (1992) - Special Guest Poet
    Self
    1997
    Everyman (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - From Babylon to Zion (1997) - Self

    References

    Levi Tafari Wikipedia