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Wikipedia

M.I.A. (rapper)

Mathangi "Maya" Arulpragasam[2] MBE[3] (born 18 July 1975), known by her stage name M.I.A. (an initialism for both "Missing in Action" and "Missing in Acton"), is a British rapper and singer. Her music combines elements of alternative, dance, electronic, hip hop and world music with electronic instruments and samples.

M.I.A.

M.I.A. in April 2016
Born
Mathangi Arulpragasam

(1975-07-18) 18 July 1975 (age 47)
Hounslow, London, England
Occupations
  • Rapper
  • singer
  • record producer
  • activist
Years active2000–present
Children1
Parent
RelativesKali Arulpragasam (sister)
AwardsFull list
Musical career
Genres
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
Labels
Websitewww.miauk.com

Born in London to Sri Lankan Tamil parents, M.I.A. and her family moved to Jaffna in northern Sri Lanka when she was six months old. As a child, she experienced displacement caused by the Sri Lankan Civil War, which made the family return to London as refugees when M.I.A. was 11 years old; the war had a defining influence on M.I.A.'s artistry. She started out as a visual artist, filmmaker and designer in 2000, and began her recording career in 2002. One of the first acts to come to public attention through the Internet,[4] she saw early fame as an underground artist in early 2004 with her singles "Sunshowers" and "Galang".

M.I.A.'s first two albums, Arular (2005) and Kala (2007), received widespread critical acclaim for their fusion of hip hop, electronic, and world musics. The single "Paper Planes" from Kala reached number four on the US Billboard Hot 100 and sold over four million copies. Her third album Maya (2010) was preceded by the controversial single-short film "Born Free". Maya was her best-charting effort, reaching the top 10 on several charts. Her fourth studio album, Matangi (2013), included the single "Bad Girls", which won accolades at the MTV Video Music Awards. M.I.A. released her fifth studio album, AIM, in 2016. She scored her first Billboard Hot 100 number-one single as a featured artist on Travis Scott's "Franchise" (2020), and two years later, released her sixth studio album Mata, featuring lead single "The One".[5]

M.I.A.'s accolades include two American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) awards and two MTV Video Music Awards. She is the first person of South Asian descent to be nominated for an Academy Award and Grammy Award in the same year.[6] She was named one of the defining artists of the 2000s decade by Rolling Stone, and one of the 100 most influential people of 2009 by Time. Esquire ranked M.I.A. on its list of the 75 most influential people of the 21st century. According to Billboard, she was one of the "Top 50 Dance/Electronic Artists of the 2010s".[7] M.I.A. was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2019 Birthday Honours for her services to music.[8]

Life and career

1975–1999: Early life

Mathangi "Maya" Arulpragasam was born on 18 July 1975,[9] in Hounslow, London, the daughter of Arul Pragasam,[10] a Sri Lankan Tamil engineer, writer, and activist, and his wife, Kala, a seamstress. When she was six months old, her family moved to Jaffna in northern Sri Lanka, where her brother Sugu was born.[11] There, her father adopted the name Arular and became a political activist and founding member of the Eelam Revolutionary Organisation of Students (EROS), a political Tamil group affiliated with the LTTE. The first 11 years of Arulpragasam's life were marked by displacement caused by the Sri Lankan Civil War.[11] Her family went into hiding from the Sri Lankan Army, and Arulpragasam had little contact with her father during this period. She has described her family as living in "big-time" poverty during her childhood but also recalls some of her happiest memories from growing up in Jaffna.[11][12][13] Maya attended Catholic convent schools such as the Holy Family Convent, Jaffna, where she developed her art skills—painting in particular—to work her way up her class.[14][15]

During the civil war, soldiers would put guns through holes in the windows and shoot at the school, which she notes as "fun."[15] Her classmates were trained to dive under the table or run next door to English-language schools that, according to her, "wouldn't get shot."[15] Arulpragasam lived on a road alongside much of her extended family and played inside temples and churches in the town. Due to safety concerns, Arulpragasam's mother relocated herself and her children to Madras in India, where they lived in a derelict house and received sporadic visits from their father, who was introduced to the children as their "uncle" in order to protect them.[11][16] The family, minus Arular, then resettled in Jaffna temporarily, only to see the war escalate further in northeast Sri Lanka. During this time, nine-year-old Arulpragasam's primary school was destroyed in a government raid.[17][18]

Her mother then returned with her children back to London in 1986, a week before Arulpragasam's 11th birthday, where they were housed as refugees.[11] Her father arrived on the island and became an independent peace mediator between the two sides of the civil war in the late 1980s–2010.[19] Arulpragasam spent the rest of her childhood and teenage years living on the Phipps Bridge Estate in the Mitcham district of south London, where she learned to speak English, while her mother brought the children up on a modest income. Arulpragasam entered the final year of primary school in the autumn of 1986 and quickly mastered the English language. Hers was one of only two Asian families on the estate at the time,[19] in an atmosphere she has described as "incredibly racist."[20]

While living in England and raising her children, Arulpragasam's mother became a Christian in 1990 and worked as a seamstress for the Royal Family for much of her career.[12] She worked from her home in London's Tooting area. Arulpragasam had a difficult relationship with her father, due to his political activities in the 1980s and complete absence during much of her life. Prior to the release of the first album, which Arulpragasam had named after her father, he emailed her: "This is Dad. Change the title of your album. I'm really proud. Just read about you in the Sri Lanka Times. Dad."[21] She chose not to change the album title. Arulpragasam attended the Ricards Lodge High School in Wimbledon. Following high school, she attended Central Saint Martins by gaining admittance through unconventional means despite not having formally applied.[22] In 2000, she graduated from London's Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design with a degree in fine art, film, and video.[12]

2000–2002: Visual art and film

While attending Central St Martins College, Arulpragasam wanted to make films and art depicting realism that would be accessible to everyone, something that she felt was missing from her classmates' ethos and the course criteria. At college, she found the fashion courses "disposable" and more current than the film texts that she studied.[23] Maya told Arthur magazine "[Students there were] exploring apathy, dressing up in some pigeon outfit, or running around conceptualising ... It missed the whole point of art representing society. Social reality didn't really exist there; it just stopped at theory."[23] She cited "radical cinema" including Harmony Korine, Dogme 95 and Spike Jonze as some of her cinematic inspirations during film school.[24] As a student, she was approached by director John Singleton to work on a film in Los Angeles after he had read a script she had written, though she decided not to take up the offer.[24][25] For her degree, M.I.A. prepared her departmental honours thesis on the film CB4.[26]

Arulpragasam befriended students in the college's fashion, advertising and graphics departments.[23] She met Justine Frischmann, front woman of the British band Elastica, through her friend Damon Albarn at an Air concert in 1999, and Frischmann commissioned Arulpragasam to create the cover art for the band's 2000 album, The Menace, and video document their American tour.[14][17][18] Arulpragasam returned to Jaffna in 2001 to film a documentary on Tamil youth, but was unable to complete the project because she encountered harassment.[25][27] In 2001, Arulpragasam's first public exhibition of paintings after graduating took place at the Euphoria Shop on London's Portobello Road. It featured graffiti art and spray-paint canvasses mixing Tamil political street art with images of London life and consumerist culture.[18][28] The show was nominated for an Alternative Turner Prize and a monograph book of the collection was published in 2002,[9] titled M.I.A.. Actor Jude Law was among early buyers of her art.[14][28][29]

2003–2005: Musical beginnings and Arular

 
M.I.A. performing at Sónar on her Arular Tour

Arulpragasam cites the radio broadcasts she heard emanating from her neighbours' flats in the late 1980s as some of her first exposures to her earliest musical influences.[19] From there, she developed an interest in hip-hop and dancehall, identifying with "the starkness of the sound" in records by Public Enemy, MC Shan and Ultramagnetic MCs; and the "weird, distinct style" of acts such as Silver Bullet and London Posse.[30][31] In college she developed an affinity for punk and the emerging sounds of Britpop and electroclash.[32] M.I.A. cites The Slits, Malcolm McLaren and The Clash as major influences.[33][34]

By 2001, Arulpragasam designed the cover for Elastica's last single "The Bitch Don't Work", and went on the road with the band to video document their tour. The tour's supporting act, electroclash artist Peaches, introduced Arulpragasam to the Roland MC-505 and encouraged her to make music, a medium in which Arulpragasam lacked confidence.[17][32] While holidaying together in Bequia in the Caribbean, Arulpragasam began experimenting with Frischmann's MC-505.[12][14] She adopted her stage name, "M.I.A.", standing for "Missing In Acton" during this time.[13] In her 2012 book Arulpragasam writes, "M.I.A. came to be because of my missing cousin. I wanted to make a film about where he was since he was M.I.A. (Missing in Action) in Sri Lanka. We were the same age, went to the same schools growing up. I was also living in Acton at the time. So I was living in Acton looking for my cousin missing in action."[35] Of her time in Bequia, she said "I started going out to this chicken shed with a sound system. You buy rum through a hatch and dance in the street. They convinced me to come to church where people sing so amazingly. But I couldn't clap along to hallelujah. I was out of rhythm. Someone said, 'What happened to Jesus? I saw you dancing last night and you were totally fine.' They stopped the service and taught me to clap in time. It was embarrassing".[15] Returning to West London, where she shared an apartment with Frischmann, she began working with a simple set-up (a second-hand 4-track tape machine, the MC-505, and a radio microphone), composing and recording a six-song demo tape that included "Lady Killa", "M.I.A.", and "Galang".[36][37]

In 2003, the independent label Showbiz Records pressed 500 vinyl singles of "Galang", a mix of dancehall, electro, jungle, and world music, with Seattle Weekly praising its a cappella coda as a "lift-up-and-over moment" evoking "clear skies beyond the council flats."[38][39] File sharing, college radio airplay, and the rise in popularity of "Galang" and "Sunshowers" in dance clubs and fashion shows made M.I.A. an underground sensation.[40] M.I.A. has been heralded as one of the first artists to build a large fanbase exclusively via these channels and as someone who could be studied to re-examine the internet's impact on how listeners are exposed to new music.[41][42][43] She began uploading her music onto her MySpace account in June 2004. Major record labels caught on to the popularity of the second song she has written,[44] "Galang", and M.I.A. was eventually signed to XL Recordings in mid-2004.[30][45] Her debut album, to be titled Arular was finalised by borrowing studio time.[46]

M.I.A.'s next single, "Sunshowers", released on 5 July 2004, and its B-side ("Fire Fire") described guerrilla warfare and asylum seeking, merging ambiguous references to violence and religious persecution with black and white forms of dissidence.[47] These themes inspired her treatment for the music video, the first she wrote. It was filmed in the jungles of South India, which she has described as her favourite.[12][48] "Galang" was re-released in 2004. In September 2004, M.I.A. was first featured on the cover of the publication The FADER,[49] in its 24th issue.[50] The music video for "Galang" made in November of that year showed multiple M.I.A.s against a backdrop of militaristic animated graffiti, and depicted scenes of urban Britain and war that influenced her art direction for it. Both singles appeared on international publications' "Best of the Year" lists and subsequently "Best of the Decade" lists. The songs "Pull Up the People", "Bucky Done Gun" and "" were released as 12-inch singles and CDs by XL Recordings, which along with the non-label mashup mixtape of Arular tracks, Piracy Funds Terrorism, were distributed in 2004 to positive critical acclaim.[16]

M.I.A. made her North American live debut in February 2005 in Toronto where concertgoers already knew many of her songs.[18] In March 2005, M.I.A.'s debut album Arular was released worldwide to critical acclaim after several months delay.[51][52] The album title is the nom de guerre that M.I.A.'s father took when he joined the Tamil independence movement, and many of the songs acknowledge her and her father's experiences in Jaffna. While making Arular in her bedroom in west London, she built tracks off her demos, using beats she programmed on the Roland MC-505.[18][53] The album experiments with bold, jarring and ambient sounds, and its lyrics address the Iraq War and daily life in London as well as M.I.A.'s past.[34][46][54]

"Galang", "Sunshowers", "Hombre" and the funk carioca-inspired co-composition "Bucky Done Gun" were released as singles from Arular. The release of the latter marked the first time that a funk carioca-inspired song was played on mainstream radio and music television in Brazil, its country of origin.[55] M.I.A. worked with one of her musical influences Missy Elliott, contributing to the track "Bad Man" on her 2005 album The Cookbook.[46] Despite initial fears that her dyslexia might pose problems while touring, M.I.A. supported the album through a series of festival and club shows, including the Bue Festival in Buenos Aires, a free headlining show at Central Park Summerstage, the Summer Sonic Fest and the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, where she played an encore in response to crowd enthusiasm, a rare occurrence for the festival generally and the first encore following a tent performance at Coachella.[46][56][57] She also toured with Roots Manuva and LCD Soundsystem, and ended 2005 briefly touring with Gwen Stefani and performing at the Big Day Out festival.[58][59] On 19 July 2005, M.I.A. was shortlisted for the Mercury Music Prize for Arular.[60] According to the music review aggregation Metacritic, it garnered an average score of 88 out of 100, described as "universal acclaim".[61] They reported in 2010 that Arular was the seventh best reviewed album of 2005 and the ninth Best-Reviewed Electronic/Dance Album on Metacritic of the 2000–09 decade.[62][63] Arular became the second most featured album in music critics' Year-End Top 10 lists for 2005 and was named best of the year by publications such as Blender, Stylus and Musikbyrån.[51]

2006–2008: Kala and world recognition

 
M.I.A. performing at the Prince in Melbourne in February 2006

In 2006, M.I.A. recorded her second studio album Kala, this time named after her mother. Due to visa complications in the United States, the album was recorded in a variety of locations — India, Trinidad, Liberia, Jamaica, Australia, Japan, and the UK. Eventually the album was completed in the US.[64][65]

Kala featured live instrumentation and layers of traditional dance and folk styles such as soca and the urumee drum of gaana, rave music and bootleg soundtracks of Tamil film music, incorporating new styles into her avant-garde electronic dance music.[66][67] The songs, artwork and fashion of Kala have been characterised as simultaneously celebratory and infused with raw, "darker, outsider" themes, such as immigration politics, personal relationships and war.[65][68] In February 2007, the first track from the album to be made available to the public was "Bird Flu", which was posted with an accompanying music video to her MySpace.[69][70] Later that year, M.I.A. featured in the song "Come Around", a bonus track on Timbaland's 2007 album Shock Value and a track on Kala.[64] The album's first official single "Boyz" was released in June 2007, accompanied by a music video co-directed by Jay Will and M.I.A., becoming M.I.A.'s first top ten charting song. The single "Jimmy", written about an invitation to tour genocide-affected regions in Rwanda that the singer received from a journalist while staying in Liberia, was released next.[64] The single "Paper Planes", described a "satire on immigrant stereotypes",[71] and the EP Paper Planes – Homeland Security Remixes EP were released digitally in February 2008, the single eventually selling three times platinum in the US and Canada, certified Gold in New Zealand,[72][73] and becoming the 29th most downloaded song in the digital era in the US and earning a Grammy nomination for Record of the Year.[72][74][75] "Paper Planes" is to date XL Recordings' second best selling single, and by November 2011 it had sold 3.6 million copies in the US, currently the seventh best-selling song by a British artist in the digital era.[76] In 2007, M.I.A. also released the How Many Votes Fix Mix EP which included a remix of "Boyz" featuring Jay-Z.[77]

Like its predecessor, universal acclaim met Kala's release in August 2007 and the album earned a normalised rating of 87 out of 100 on Metacritic.[78] Kala was a greater commercial success than Arular. To support Kala, M.I.A. performed at a series of music festivals on the Kala Tour featuring performances in Europe, America and Asia. She performed three dates opening for Björk in the US and France.[79][80] In 2008, M.I.A. provided guest vocals on Buraka Som Sistema's kuduro song "Sound of Kuduro", recorded in Angola with an accompanying video.[81] The same year, M.I.A. and director Spike Jonze filmed a documentary in Woolwich, South London, in which they both appeared with Afrikan Boy, a Nigerian immigrant rapper and she disclosed plans to launch her own record label, Zig-Zag.[82][83][84] She ended the year with concerts in the United Kingdom.[85] By year end, Kala was named the best album of 2007 by publications including Rolling Stone and Blender.[86] Metacritic reported in 2010 that Kala was the tenth Best-Reviewed Electronic/Dance Album on the website of the 2000–09 decade, one position below her debut album Arular.[62] M.I.A. performed on the People vs. Money Tour during the first half of 2008.[34] She cancelled the final leg of her tour in Europe through June and July after revealing her intentions to take a career break and work on other art projects, go back to college and make a film.[34]

In 2008, M.I.A. started her independent record label N.E.E.T. Recordings.[87] The first artist signed to the label was Baltimore rapper Rye Rye, who performed with M.I.A. at the Diesel XXX party at Pier 3 in Brooklyn in October 2008 where it was revealed that M.I.A. was pregnant with her first child.[88] During her performance at the 2008 Bonnaroo Music Festival, M.I.A. announced it was her “last show ever”, following by cancelling a British tour and saying she would then focus on recording new material.[89] However, a few days afterwards Danny Boyle called her, wanting her to collaborate with A. R. Rahman in the score of his film Slumdog Millionaire.[90] The result was the song "O... Saya", for which M.I.A. was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song and a World Soundtrack Award for Best Original Song Written Directly for a Film for the song.[91][92][93] M.I.A. was due to perform at the Oscars ceremony two weeks after her Grammy Award performance, but could not as she had just given birth to her son.[94] M.I.A. is the first person of Asian descent to be nominated for an Oscar and Grammy award in the same year.

2009–2011: Maya

 
M.I.A. performing at the Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival in August 2009

At the 2009 BRIT Awards in February, M.I.A. was a nominee for Best British Female Artist.[95] Seeking to promote new, underground music with N.E.E.T., M.I.A. signed more bands including Baltimore musician Blaqstarr, indie rock band Sleigh Bells and visual artist Jaime Martinez by late 2009.[96] 3D photographic images of M.I.A. by Martinez were commissioned in April of that year.[97][98] In August 2009, M.I.A. began composing and recording her third studio album in a home studio section in her Los Angeles house.[99] In January 2010, M.I.A. posted her video for the song "Space".[100][101] While composing it, she helped write a song with Christina Aguilera called "Elastic Love" for Aguilera's album Bionic.[102] By April 2010, the song and music video/short film "Born Free"[103] were leaked online.[104] The video-film short was directed by Romain Gavras and written by M.I.A., depicting genocide against red-haired adolescents being forced to run across a minefield and caused controversy due to its violent content.[105][106] The video was removed from YouTube the same day it was released, then reinstated with an age restriction, then removed once more.[107] Although not an official single, the song charted in Sweden and the United Kingdom. M.I.A.'s third album, Maya — stylised as /\/\ /\ Y /\ — was released on 23 June 2010 in Japan with bonus tracks before its release in other countries.[108][109] Maya became M.I.A.'s highest charting album globally. Its release in the US was delayed by two weeks.[108] The album garnered a generally favourable, although divided, reception from critics.[110] A more internet-inspired album illustrating how a multimedia artist worked within the music industry, elements of industrial music were incorporated into M.I.A.'s sound for the first time, and it was seen as a stylistic shift towards the more experimental.[111] She described the album in an interview with Dazed & Confused as a mix of "babies, death, destruction and powerlessness".[96][112][113][114]

On 11 May 2010, the first official single from Maya, "XXXO", was released and reached the top forty in Belgium, Spain and the UK.[115][116] "Steppin' Up", "Teqkilla", and "Tell Me Why" were also released as promotional singles exclusively on iTunes in the days leading to the release of Maya, with "Teqkilla" reaching the top 100 in Canada on digital downloads alone.[117]

 
M.I.A. performing at Peace & Love during the Maya Tour, 2011 following the release of her Vicki Leekx mixtape

The video for "XXXO" was released online in August. M.I.A. hinted in an interview to Blitz that a music video is being made with director Spike Jonze for the single "Teqkilla."[118] She completed her live tour dates on the Maya Tour in summer of 2011.[119][120][121]

From 2000 until 2010, she directed the video for Elastica single "Mad Dog God Dam" and videos for her songs "Bird Flu", "Boyz", "S.U.S. (Save Ur Soul)", "Space" and "XXXO" as well as personally choosing the directors for the videos of her songs Galang, Sunshowers, which she described in 2005 and again in 2011 as being her favourite video experience and favourite video adaptation of a song of hers, in her words as of 2011, "If you watch only one of my videos, please try Sunshowers", "Jimmy," "Born Free," and "Bad Girls.", a video inspired by YouTube videos of car stunts and photographs, including one of an Arab female trucker, from the Middle East,[122] which she described as her second favourite music video.[123][124] She directed a video for Rye Rye's "Bang".[125][126] She judged in the Music Video category at the inaugural Vimeo Festival & Awards in New York in October 2010.[127]

M.I.A. released her second mixtape, Vicki Leekx, on 31 December 2010, and followed this with Internet Connection: The Remixes, an EP to a bonus track from Maya in January 2011.[128] M.I.A. performed on the song "C.T.F.O." on SebastiAn's album Total. On 21 April 2011, it was reported that M.I.A. had been in the studio with Chris Brown, the Cataracs, Swizz Beatz and Polow da Don.[129] On 24 July 2011, the day after Amy Winehouse's death, M.I.A. uploaded a previously-unreleased Maya/Vicki Leekx demo titled "27" to her SoundCloud account. The song was released as a tribute to the 27 Club.[130][131]

2012–2014: Matangi

M.I.A. co-wrote the song "Give Me All Your Luvin'" with Madonna and Nicki Minaj for the album MDNA and performed it at the Super Bowl XLVI halftime show. Controversially, instead of singing the lyric "shit" in the song, M.I.A. extended the middle finger to the camera. The N.F.L. responded by filing a lawsuit suing M.I.A. for millions in damages and demanding a public apology from M.I.A.[132] Maya and her legal team also responded by saying that the league's claim of "wholesomeness" in the lawsuit is hypocritical since the N.F.L. itself has had multiple situations of their own players and coaches behaving badly as well as health problems within the league, particularly concussions.[132] In September 2013 Maya released a video statement regarding the lawsuit.[133] In her statement Arulpragasam said, "They're basically [saying] it's OK for me to promote being sexually exploited as a female, than to display empowerment, female empowerment, through being punk rock. That's what it boils down to, and I'm being sued for it."[133] The lawsuit was settled in August 2014; the terms of the settlement remain private.[134]

M.I.A. is also featured in "B-Day Song", another song included on MDNA.[135][136][137]

The first buzz track of her fourth album, "Bad Girls", taken from her Vicki Leekx mixtape, premiered on 30 January 2012, was released globally the day after, and was followed by a music video directed by Romain Gavras on 3 February 2012. From her 2018 documentary Matangi/Maya/M.I.A., she revealed that she did not know Madonna planned to release the music video for "Give Me All Your Luvin'", about 10 minutes apart on the same day she would release "Bad Girls" (cited from Matangi/Maya/M.I.A. by Steve Loveridge, 2018, at 1:14:49 ). This received nominations for Video of the Year at the 2012 MTV Video Music Awards and at the 55th Grammy Awards.[138] The song became one of M.I.A.'s most successful singles, charting in the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Canada, United States, Switzerland, South Korea and Belgium. On 29 April 2012 she posted a preview of a new song to YouTube, titled "Come Walk With Me".[139] The full version of Come Walk With Me was shared one and a half year later, in September 2013.[140]

M.I.A. officially signed to Jay-Z's Roc Nation management in May 2012.[141][142] Rihanna welcomed her to the family, tweeting, "welcome home MIA."[143] She guested during Jay-Z's set at the Radio 1 Festival in Hackney on 23 June 2012.

In October 2012, M.I.A. released an autobiographical book titled M.I.A. documenting "the five years of M.I.A. art that spans across three LPs: Arular, Kala, and Maya."[35] The book contains artwork as well as a foreword by frequent collaborator Steve Loveridge and various essays by M.I.A. On 3 March 2013, she released an 8-minute mix recording as part of a Kenzo fashion show in Paris.[144]

 
M.I.A. performing at the Zénith de Paris in 2014

Matangi, was recorded across the world with different collaborators. In relation to her previous albums, she described her fourth as "basically all of them together", akin to an anthology.[145] The album was released on Interscope and M.I.A.'s label N.E.E.T. Recordings.[146] Release dates of 31 January 2013[147] and later, 15 April 2013[144] were announced, but the album remained unreleased.[148] M.I.A. later revealed that the original project for Matangi was not accepted by Interscope, which claimed that the record was "too positive".[149] "Bring the Noize", produced by French producer Surkin and Switch,[150] was announced as the second single and was released on 17 June 2013. Soon after the single was released, the official video for "Bring the Noize" premiered on 25 June via Noisey.[151] On 9 August 2013, the album received an official release date of 5 November 2013 after M.I.A. threatened to leak the album due to the numerous delays by Interscope.[152]

Matangi received generally positive reviews from music critics. In its first week of release, the album sold 15,000 copies and peaked at number 23 on the Billboard 200, falling to number 90 in its second week.[153]

On 31 December 2013 M.I.A. announced that she was leaving Roc Nation.[154]

2015–2019: AIM and Matangi/Maya/M.I.A

On 13 July 2015, M.I.A. released a five-minute video titled "Matahdatah Scroll 01 Broader Than a Border" which features two of her tracks: Matangi's "Warrior" and a new track "Swords". The music is sampled from Yo Yo Honey Singh's Manali Trance. The video was filmed in India and West Africa and shows different forms of dancing in those regions.

On 27 November 2015, M.I.A. released "Borders" as her new single on iTunes, prior to that her new single was announced via her Instagram account. Serving as both a rallying cry and a call for compassion, the track mocks first world problems and shares her views on the escalating global refugee crisis.[155] The self-directed video that accompanied its release[156] shows her joining "those attempting to flee their homes by cramming on boats, wading in the ocean and climbing barbed-wire fences".[155] In January 2016, the French football club Paris Saint-Germain sued M.I.A. for wearing a version of their club's T-shirt in her "Borders" video that changed the words "Fly Emirates" to "Fly Pirates".[157][158]

In late February 2016, she released "Boom ADD", an expanded version of the "Boom Skit", which appeared on M.I.A.'s fourth studio album Matangi; it is a diss-track to the NFL's lawsuit of her performance at the Super Bowl XLVI.[159] On 9 September 2016, she released her fifth studio album AIM to mixed reviews, with "Poc Still A Ryda", a lyrical mix of the songs on the album, preceding the album's release.[160] On 8 February 2017, she released a new song, along with a music video, entitled "P.O.W.A", a previously unreleased song from her recording sessions for AIM.[161][162]

In 2018, Matangi/Maya/M.I.A. was released, a 90-minute documentary film chronicling M.I.A.'s rise to fame and political activism surrounding the Sri Lankan Civil War.[163] Directed and produced by Steve Loveridge, the film premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival and later saw a wide release in select theatres in the U.K. and the U.S. in September 2018.[164][165] The film won the World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award at Sundance.[166] Following the film's release on digital platforms in December 2018, M.I.A. premiered the official music video for "Reload", a previously-unreleased song originally written with Justine Frischmann in 2004 for Arular, which appears on the film's soundtrack.[167]

2020–present: Mata

 
M.I.A. performing at Primavera Sound 2022

On 31 January 2020, M.I.A launched a Patreon page to fund new music, saying that her new album is "nearly finished".[168] On 22 March 2020, M.I.A. released "OHMNI 202091", her first song in three years, and suggested that a new record would arrive the same year.[169] On 9 September, she shared a standalone song titled "CTRL" on her website.[170] She was featured alongside Young Thug on the single "Franchise" by rapper Travis Scott, which was released on 25 September 2020.[171] The song debuted at number one on the US Billboard Hot 100, earning M.I.A. her first number-one single on the chart.[172]

On 1 November 2021, M.I.A. announced in an Instagram post that her sixth album is called Mata. As to the concept of the album, she described it as a way "to reflect who I am, what we want to build."[173]

On 11 November, it was announced that M.I.A. would release a new single titled "Babylon" on Friday, 12 November. The single was released alongside the rappers 2010 mixtape Vicki Leekx, sold as NFTs to raise money for the Courage Foundation.[174] An accompanying music video was released on her website ohmni.com and features video footage of Arulpragasam earlier in her life.[175]

On 26 May 2022, M.I.A. shared the lead single from Mata on The Zane Lowe Show, titled "The One".[176] The second single from the album, "Popular", was released on 12 August 2022 along with its official music video. Mata was released on 14 October 2022.

Artistry

Musical style and influences

M.I.A.'s music features styles such as electro, reggae, rhythm and blues, alternative rock, hip hop, grime, rap ballads and Asian folk and references to her musical influences such as Missy Elliott, Tamil film music, Lou Reed, the Pixies, Timbaland, Beastie Boys, and London Posse.[33][36][47][177] She was a childhood fan of Boney M, composer A. R. Rahman and pop artists Michael Jackson and Madonna,[23][36] also she has cited Björk as an inspiration and has been influenced by The Slits, Public Enemy, Malcolm McLaren and The Clash.[33][178] Noting her early inspirations, she said "When I would go to bed, I'd listen to the radio and dream about dancing and Paula Abdul and Whitney Houston, and that's how I fell asleep. When my radio was burgled, I started listening to hip hop".[23] She has revealed her ideal karaoke song would be "Germ-Free Adolescents" by X-Ray Spex.[179] M.I.A. describes her music as dance music or club music for the "other", and has been described as an "anti-popstar" for refusing to conform to certain recording industry expectations of solo artists.[66] M.I.A.'s early compositions relied heavily on the Roland MC-505, while later M.I.A. experimented further with her established sound and drew from a range of genres, creating layered textures of instruments, electronics and sounds outside the traditional studio environment.[66][67]

Jimmy Iovine, the chairman of M.I.A.'s American distribution label Interscope, compares M.I.A. to Reed and punk rock songwriter Patti Smith, and recalled, "She's gonna do what she's gonna do, I can't tell her shit."[180] "The really left-of-center artists, you really wonder about them. Can the world catch up? Can the culture meet them in the middle? That's what the adventure is. It doesn't always happen, but it should and it could."[181] Richard Russell, head of XL Recordings, states, "You've got to bend culture around to suit you, and I think M.I.A has done that" adding that M.I.A.'s composition and production skills were a major attraction for him.[182][183] As a vocalist, M.I.A. is recognisable by her distinctive whooping, chanting voice, which has been described as having an "indelible, nursery-rhyme swing."[55] She has adopted different singing styles on her songs, from aggressive raps, to semi-spoken and melodic vocals. She has said of the sometimes "unaffected" vocals and delivery of her lyrics, "It is what it is. Most people would just put it down to me being lazy. But at the same time, I don't want [that perfection]," saying some of the "raw and difficult" vocal styles she used reflected what was happening to her during recording.[23][64]

Public image and stage

Critic Sasha Frere-Jones, writing for The New Yorker, praised the self-made "unpretentious, stuck together with Scotch tape" style that M.I.A. achieves with her Roland MC-505 drum machine and keyboard unit, noting that several artists had tried to emulate the style since.[184] Her considerable influence on American hip hop music as an international artist is described by Adam Bradley and Andrew DuBois in The Anthology of Rap as making her an "unlikely" hip hop celebrity, given that the genre was one of several influences behind M.I.A.'s "eccentric and energizing" music and that the musician's unclassifiable sound was one example of how hip hop was changing as it came into contact with other cultures.[185] Similarly, Jeffrey H. Wallenfeldt writes in The Black experience in America : from civil rights to the present that no single artist may have personified hip hop in the 21st century better than M.I.A., in her "politically radical lyrics drawing from widely diverse sources around the world".[186] The Guardian critic Hattie Collins commented of M.I.A.'s influence: "A new raver before it was old. A baile funk/pop pioneer before CSS and Bonde do Rolê emerged. A quirky female singer/rapper before the Mini Allens had worked out how to log on to MySpace. Missing In Action (or Acton, as she sometimes calls herself) has always been several miles ahead of the pack."[187] The twisting of western modalities in her music style using multilingual, multiethnic soundscapes to make electroclash-pop albums is noted by Derek Beres in Global beat fusion: the history of the future of music (2005) to defy world music categorisation.[188] In the book Downloading Music (2007), Linda Aksomitis notes the various aspects of peer-to-peer file sharing of music in the rise in popularity of M.I.A., including the advantages and disadvantages of the internet and platforms such as MySpace in the launch of her career.[189] Andy Bennett and Jon Stratton explore in Britpop and the English Music Tradition (2010) how M.I.A. alongside musicians such as Sway and Dizzee Rascal created music that both explored new soundscapes and commented on social issues as well. Bennett and Stratton argue that the innovation that generates new musical genres such as grime and dubstep are, inevitably, political in nature. The success of grime-influenced artists such as M.I.A. is analyzed as a way in which white Britons adapted to the increasingly multicultural musical mix, which they compare with bands of the Britpop genre.[190] Furthermore, her work being used as a global resource for the articulation of differently located themes and its connections to many music traditions is noted by Brian Longhurst in Popular music and society (2007) to illustrate such processes of interracial dialogue.[191] Gary Shteyngart writing in GQ notes that "M.I.A. is perhaps the preeminent global musical artist of the 2000s, a truly kick-ass singer and New York-Londony fashion icon, not to mention a vocal supporter of Sri Lanka's embattled Tamil minority, of which she's a member."[184]

M.I.A.'s stage performances are described as "highly energetic" and multimedia showcases, often with scenes of what Rolling Stone critic Rob Sheffield describes as "jovial chaos, with dancers and toasters and random characters roaming the stage," bringing various crowds with interests in art, music and fashion.[114] Camille Dodero, writing in The Village Voice opined that M.I.A. "works hard to manifest the chaos of her music in an actual environment, and, more than that, to actively create discomfort, energy, and anger through sensory overload."[192] Her role as an artist in and voice lender to the subaltern is appreciated by theorists as having brought such ideas to first world view.[193][194][195][196] USA Today included her on its list of the 100 Most Interesting People of 2007 and she was named one of Time Out's 40th Birthday London Heroes in 2008. The same year, Esquire listed M.I.A. as one of the 75 Most Influential People of the 21st century, describing her as the first and only major artist in world music, and in 2009 she was cited in Time magazine's Time 100 as one of the world's most influential people for her global influence across many genres.[33][193][197][198] In December 2010, USA Today listed M.I.A. at number 63 on its list of the "100 People of 2010".[199] M.I.A. placed number 14 on Rolling Stone's Decade-End Readers' Poll of "Top Artists Of The Decade."[200] Rolling Stone named her one of eight artists who defined the 2000s decade.[201]

Themes and artwork

M.I.A. has become known for integrating her imagery of political violence with her music videos and her cover art. Her politically inspired art became recognised while she exhibited and published several of her brightly coloured stencils and paintings portraying the tiger, a symbol of Tamil nationalism, ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka and urban Britain in the early 2000s. Lyrics on Arular regarding her experiences of identity politics, poverty, revolution, gender and sexual stereotypes, war, and the conditions of working class in London were hailed as new and unorthodox, setting her apart from previous artists.[34][47] The album references the PLO and the Tamil independence movements and features culture jamming, multi-lingual slang, strident and subtle imagery. Her albums' social commentary and storytelling have incited debate on the "invigoratingly complex" politics of the issues she highlighted in the album, breaking taboos while the US Military was engaged in the 2003 Iraq War in the Middle East during the Bush administration.[12][46][202][203] Government visits to her official website following her debut album's release in 2005, and a US refusal to grant M.I.A. a travel visa coupled with her brief presence on the US Homeland Security Risk List in 2006 due to her politically charged lyrics led to her second album Kala being recorded in a variety of locations around the world.[13][196][204][205] The American Civil Liberties Union described the actions as part of a trend of ideological exclusion by the state which was detrimental to democracy by "censoring and manipulating debate".[206][207] In October 2016, she revealed on her Instagram that she had finally been approved for a US visa.[208][209]

 
Afrikan Boy, an afrobeats and grime London MC with Nigerian roots supporting M.I.A. at the Rock en Seine Festival, 2007

On Kala, M.I.A.'s songs explored immigration politics and her personal relationships. Many related her experiences during recording sessions in Madras, Angola, Trinidad shantytowns, Liberia and London, and were acclaimed.[34][65] The album's artwork was inspired by African art, "from dictator fashion to old stickers on the back of cars", which like her clothing range, she hoped would capture "a 3-D sense, the shapes, the prints, the sound, film, technology, politics, economics" of a certain time.[210] I-D magazine described the "bleeding cacophony of graphics" on her website during this time as evoking the "noisy amateurism" of the early web, but also embodying a rejection of today's "glossy, professional site design" which was felt to "efface the medium rather than celebrate it."[211] Jeff Chang, writing for The Nation, described a "Kala for the Nation" and the album's music, lyrics and imagery as encompassing "everywhere—or, to be specific, everywhere but the First World's self-regarding 'here'", stating that against a media flow that suppresses the "ugliness" of reality and fixes beauty to consumption, M.I.A. forces a conversation about how the majority live, closing the distance "between 'here' and everywhere else". He felt that Kala explored poverty, violence and globalisation through the eyes of "children left behind."[212]

Her third album, Maya, tackled information politics in the digital age, loaded with technological references and love songs, and deemed by Kitty Empire writing in The Observer to be her most melancholic and mainstream effort.[213] Her genocide-depicting 2010 video for the single "Born Free" was deemed by Ann Powers writing in the Los Angeles Times to be "concentrating fully" on the physical horror of gun butts and bullets hitting flesh, with the scenes giving added poignancy to the lyrical themes of the song.[195] Interpreted as a comment on the Arizona immigration law, America's military might and desensitised attitudes towards violence, others found that the video stressed that genocide still exists and violent repression remains commonplace.[214] Some critics described the film as "sensationalist". Neda Ulaby of NPR described the video as intended for "shock value" in the service of nudging people into considering real issues that can be hard to talk about.[215][216][217] M.I.A. revealed that she felt "disconnected" during the writing process, and spoke of the Internet inspiration and themes of information politics that could be found in the songs and the artwork.[218][219]

M.I.A. views her work as reflective, pieced together in one piece "so you can acquire it and hear it." She states, "All that information floats around where we are—the images, the opinions, the discussions, the feelings—they all exist, and I felt someone had to do something about it because I can't live in this world where we pretend nothing really matters."[17] On the political nature of her songs she has said, "Nobody wants to be dancing to political songs. Every bit of music out there that's making it into the mainstream is really about nothing. I wanted to see if I could write songs about something important and make it sound like nothing. And it kind of worked."[220] Censorship on MTV of "Sunshowers" proved controversial and was again criticised following the Kala release "Paper Planes".[17][221] YouTube's block and subsequent age gating/obscuring of the video for "Born Free" from Maya due to its graphic violence/political subtext was criticised by M.I.A. as hypocritical, citing the Internet channel's streaming of real-life killings.[11][112][222] She went on to state, "It's just fake blood and ketchup and people are more offended by that than the execution videos", referring to clips of Sri Lankan troops extrajudicially shooting unarmed, blindfolded, naked men that she had previously tweeted.[11] Despite the block, the video remained on her website and Vimeo, and has been viewed 30 million times on the internet.[216][222] Lisa Weems writes in the book Postcolonial challenges in education how M.I.A. pointed out in her music how immigrants, refugees and persons of the third world can and do resist through economic, political and cultural discursive practices.[223] In light of her influence in modern culture and the historical and political significance embedded in both the instrumental music and lyrics of her songs, J. Gentry of Brown University instructs a course from summer 2012 titled "Music & Politics: From Mozart to M.I.A.", with the objective of academically exploring and examining the political messages and contexts of music and the way "music has consistently participated in and reflected the political debates of its time".[224]

Fashion and style

 
M.I.A. performing on the People vs. Money Tour

M.I.A. cites guerrilla art and fashion as major influences. Her mother works as a seamstress in London. An early interest in fashion and textiles–designing confections of "bright fluorescent fishnet fabrics"—was a hallmark of her time at Central Saint Martins College. M.I.A. was a roommate of fashion designer Luella Bartley and is a long-time friend of designer Carri Mundane.[225][226] Clothes from her limited-edition "Okley Run" line—Mexican and Afrika line jackets and leggings, Islamic-inspired and water melon-print hoodies, and tour-inspired designs–were sold in 2008 during New York fashion week.[34][227][228] She commented, "I wanted to tie all my work together. When I make an album, I make a number of artworks that go with it, and now I make some clothes that go with it too. So this Okley run was an extension of my Kala album and artwork."[227] Spin described her designs as "1000 watt Malcolm McLaren-meets-Basquiat", that complimented her personal style that could "run from futurist aerobic instructor to new wave pirate to queenly candy raver".[34][229]

Contrary to her present style, M.I.A.'s Arular era style has been described as "tattered hand me downs and patched T-shirts of indigents", embodying the "uniform of the refugee" but modified with cuts, alterations and colours to fashion a distinctly new style and apparel line.[230] M.I.A. built on this during the Kala era with a "playful" combination of baggy T-shirts, leggings and short-shorts. She incorporated eccentric accessories in bold patterns, sparkle and "over-saturated" neon colour to fashion her signature style which inspired flocks of "garishly-clothed all-too-sassy" new-rave girls with bright red tights, cheetah-skin smock and faded 1980s T- shirts. Her commodifying and performance of this refugee image has been noted to "reposition" perceptions of it in the wider public. Hailed as presenting a challenge to the mainstream with her ironic style, M.I.A. has been praised for dictating such a subcultural trend worldwide, combining "adolescent" frustrations of race and class with a strong desire to dance.[231] Eddy Lawrence of Time Out commented how her multi genre style contributed to her being beloved of the broadsheet fashionistas yet simultaneously patron saint and pin-up for the Day-Glo nu-rave kids.[232] Similarly, Mary Beth Ray, in the book Rock Brands: Selling Sound in a Media Saturated Culture writes that M.I.A.'s hybrid style addressed a number of social and political issues including power, violence, identity and survival in a globalised world, while using avenues that challenged "traditional" definitions of what it meant to be a contemporary pop artist.[233]

M.I.A. was once denied entry into a Marc Jacobs party, but subsequently DJed at the designer's 2008 fashion show afterparty, and modelled for "Marc by Marc Jacobs" in Spring/Summer 2008.[66][234] M.I.A.'s fashion and style landed her on Vogue's 10 Best Dressed of 2008.[235] She turned down her inclusion on People magazine's list of the "50 Most Beautiful People in the World" the same year.[236] M.I.A.'s status as a style icon, trendsetter and trailblazer is globally affirmed, with her distinct identity, style, and music illuminating social issues of gender, the third world, and popular music.[33][231][237] Critics point out that such facets of her public persona underline the importance of authenticity, challenging the globalised popular music market, and demonstrating music's strive to be political.[231] Her albums have been met with acclaim, often heralded as "eclectic" for possessing a genre all their own, "packaging inherent politics in the form of pleasurable dance music."[47][231] M.I.A.'s artistic efforts to connect this "extreme eclecticism" with issues of exile, war, violence and terrorism are both commended and criticised.[47] Commentators laud M.I.A.'s use and subversion of her refugee and migrant experiences, through the weaving of musical creativity, artwork and fashion with her personal life as having dispelled stereotypical notions of the immigrant experience. This gives her a unique place in popular music, while demanding new responses within popular music, media and fashion culture.[230] M.I.A. has been the muse of designers Donatella Versace and Bartley and photographers Rankin and David Bailey, whose spread documents the British musicians who defined the sound and style of rock 'n' roll.[225][238][239][240] On 1 July 2012 Maya attended the Atelier Versace Show in Paris, wearing clothing inspired from the designer's 1992 collection.[241][242][243] In 2013 she released her own Versace Collection.[244]

Legacy

Music culture writer Michael Meyer said that M.I.A.'s record imagery, lyrical booklets, homepages and videos supported the "image of provocation yet also avoidance of, or inability to use consistent images and messages." Instead of catering to stereotypes, he felt that M.I.A. "played with them" creating an uncategorisable and hence unsettling result.[47] Critic Zach Baron felt that it had been shown in her career that M.I.A. had "always been adept at using a larger force against itself."[245] M.I.A. has been hailed as demonstrating dislocation to be a "productive site of departure" and praised for her ability to transform such a "disadvantage" into a creative form of expression.[230]

Regarding her first two albums, Arular and Kala, PopMatters writer Rob Wheaton felt M.I.A. subverted the "abstract, organized, refined" distilling of violence in Western popular music and imagination and made her work represent much of the developing world's decades-long experiences of "arbitrary, unannounced, and spectacular" slaughter, deeming her work an "assault" with realism.[19] Frank Guan of Vulture said that Kala "sounded like the future" and that "M.I.A.'s immediate influence was remarkable", as the album "seems to herald certain trends current in contemporary hip-hop". Guan further gave appraisal to M.I.A. for being the "precursor" for "fashion-rap" acts, including Travis Scott, Lil Uzi Vert, Playboi Carti, and ASAP Rocky.[246] Writing for Dazed Digital, Grant Rinder praised the album for transforming M.I.A. from a "cult hero" to an "international star". Rinder commented that the album was a "tremendous" step forward towards shedding light on the realities of Third World countries that the Western world may not have thoroughly understood. Reflecting on diversity and representation issues in society, as well as politics surrounding President Donald Trump, Rinder said that Kala "feels particularly ahead of its time", and concluded that "M.I.A. was truly a pioneer for a global humanitarian perspective that no artist has been able to deliver quite as well since."[247]

Some detractors criticised M.I.A. early in her music career for "using radical chic" and for her attendance of an art school.[202] Critic Simon Reynolds, writing in The Village Voice in 2005 saw this as a lack of authenticity and felt M.I.A. was "a veritable vortex of discourse, around most likely irresolvable questions concerning authenticity, post-colonialism, and dilettantism". He continued that while swayed by her chutzpah and ability to deliver live, he "was also turned off by the stencil-sprayed projection imagery of grenades, tanks, and so forth (redolent of the Clash with their strife-torn Belfast stage backdrops and Sandinista cred by association)" while the "99 percent white audience punched the air", admonishing what he perceived as a "lack of local character" to her debut album.[248]

Critic Robert Christgau described Reynolds' argument as "cheap tack" in another article written in the publication, stating M.I.A's experiences connected her to world poverty in a way "few Western whites can grasp". He questioned why M.I.A.'s 2001 Alternative Turner Prize nominated images of pastel-washed tigers, soldiers, guns, armoured vehicles, and fleeing civilians that bedeck M.I.A.'s albums and videos were not assumed or analysed as being incendiary propaganda, suggesting that unlike art buyers, rock and roll fans were "assumed to be stupid".[249] Reynolds later argued that M.I.A. was the "Artist of the Decade" in a 2009 issue of The Guardian.[250]

Social causes

Activism

M.I.A.'s commentary on the oppression of Sri Lankan Tamils has drawn praise and criticism.[251] The United States has restricted her access into and out of the country during her career since the release of her debut album.[252] M.I.A. notes that the voicelessness she felt as a child dictated her role as a refugee advocate and voice lender to civilians in war during her career.

Sometimes I repeat my story again and again because it's interesting to see how many times it gets edited, and how much the right to tell your story doesn't exist. People reckon that I need a political degree in order to go, 'My school got bombed and I remember it cos I was 10-years-old'. I think if there is an issue of people who, having had first hand experiences, are not being able to recount that – because there is laws or government restrictions or censorship or the removal of an individual story in a political situation – then that's what I'll keep saying and sticking up for, cos I think that's the most dangerous thing. I think removing individual voices and not letting people just go 'This happened to me' is really dangerous. That's what was happening ... nobody handed them the microphone to say 'This is happening and I don't like it'.

—M.I.A., Clash[253]

M.I.A. attributes much of her success to the "homeless, rootlessness" of her early life.[231] Due to her and her family being displaced from Sri Lanka because of the Civil War, M.I.A. has become a refugee icon. The EMP Museum's 2008 Pop Conference featured paper submissions and discussions on M.I.A. presented on the theme of "Shake, Rattle: Music, Conflict, and Change."[254][255] She has used networking sites such as Twitter and MySpace to discuss and highlight the human rights abuses and war crimes that Sri Lanka is accused of perpetrating against Tamils, citing news articles, human rights group reports, government reports, her own experiences as a child and on her return to the island in 2001 to support calls for a ceasefire. M.I.A. has also used a great deal of tiger print and imagery, a symbol for the Tamil Tigers in both album artwork and music videos, such as seen in "Galang".[citation needed] Being the only Tamil widely known in Western media, M.I.A. has discussed how she feels a responsibility to represent the Tamil minority.[256] M.I.A. has spoken of discussions with witnesses during and after the war as reinforcing the need for international intervention to protect and provide justice to Tamil people.[252][257] As the 2009 Tamil diaspora protests gathered pace, she joined other activists in condemning the actions of the Sri Lankan government against the Tamil populace as a slow "systematic" genocide.[258][259][260] Telling TIME that she didn't see anything wrong in sticking up for 300,000 trapped and dying people, M.I.A. stated that international governments were privy to Sri Lanka's use of widespread censorship and propaganda on the rebellion during the island's civil war to aid its impunity in numerous atrocities on civilians, but had no will to end it.[252][261] Sri Lanka's Foreign Secretary denied that his country perpetrated genocide, responding that he felt M.I.A. was "misinformed" and that "it's best she stays with what she's good at, which is music, not politics."[262] She has also appeared on Real Time with Bill Maher, as well as other television networks, to discuss the issues in Sri Lanka and critique the Sri Lankan government and their censorship of the media.[citation needed]

She has been accused of being a "terrorist sympathiser" and "LTTE supporter" by the Sri Lankan government,[11][263] even by public figures such as Oprah Winfrey, as was stated in a Rolling Stone magazine article, where the singer recalled their exchange: "She shut me down. She took that photo of me, but she was just like, 'I can't talk to you because you're crazy and you're a terrorist.' And I'm like, 'I'm not. I'm a Tamil and there are people dying in my country and you have to like look at it because you're fucking Oprah and every American told me you're going to save the world.'"[264][265]

Two weeks before his death, the Tigers' Political Head B. Nadesan told Indian magazine, The Week, that he felt that M.I.A.'s humanitarianism had been a source of strength to Eelam Tamils and fearless, knowingly amidst the "all-powerful Sri Lankan propaganda machinery that demonises any one who speaks for the Tamils."[266] Miranda Sawyer of The Observer highlighted that M.I.A. was emotional and that this could be limiting her, stating that while she was well informed, "you're not meant to get involved when giving information out about war", and that the difficulty for M.I.A. was that the world "doesn't really care."[11]

Hate mail, including death threats directed at M.I.A. and her son, has followed her activism, which she cited as an influence on the songs on her album Maya.[267]

In 2008, M.I.A. filmed from her Bed Stuy apartment window and posted on YouTube an incident involving a black man being apprehended by white policemen, which in light of the Sean Bell shooting incident, elicited commentary debating the force used for the arrest.[268][269] She has spoken of the combined effects that news corporations and search engine Google have on news and data collection, while stressing the need for alternative news sources that she felt her son's generation would need in order to ascertain truth.[270] She told Nylon magazine that social networking site Facebook and Google's development "by the CIA" was harmful to internet freedom.[271] Some criticised the claim as lacking detail.[11]

In 2010, M.I.A. voiced her fears of the influence of video game violence on her son and his generation, saying, "I don't know which is worse. The fact that I saw it in my life has maybe given me lots of issues, but there's a whole generation of American kids seeing violence on their computer screens and then getting shipped off to Afghanistan. They feel like they know the violence when they don't. Not having a proper understanding of violence, especially what it's like on the receiving end of it, just makes you interpret it wrong and makes inflicting violence easier."[270]

On 20 November 2013 M.I.A. appeared on The Colbert Report and was asked by host Stephen Colbert what she thought of America. After some thought, she said, "Well you know, in my mind, there's no countries, you know it's like; we're all one, we all live on this planet."[272]

On 2 December 2013 Time asked M.I.A. whom she would pick for its "Person of the Year" and she said it would be N.S.A. whistleblower Edward Snowden.[273] On 8 July 2016 M.I.A. tweeted a YouTube video of an episode of Edward Snowden on the HBO show "VICE" entitled "State of Surveillance" which discusses abilities of governments to hack into cellular phones.[274]

M.I.A. has been outspoken about the police killings of citizens in the United States. On 12 July 2016 she tweeted an article that shows that more US citizens have been killed by police than military personnel since 11 September 2001.[275][non-primary source needed]

Anti-vaccination and anti-5G

In 2020, M.I.A. stated that she would "choose death" over a COVID-19 vaccine. She later clarified by saying that she is not against vaccines but that she is "against companies who care more for profit then [sic] humans."[276] That same year, she also commented on the conspiracy theory linking 5G to COVID-19, tweeting "Prevention is always better then [sic] cure. Can you love vax and 5G at the same time?"[277] and expressing the belief that 5G is able to "confuse or slow the body down in healing process as body is learning to cope with new singles wavelength s [sic] frequency etc @ same time as Cov."[276] In October 2022, after American conspiracy theorist Alex Jones was ordered to pay almost $1 billion to the parents of children killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, M.I.A. tweeted: "If Alex Jones pays for lying, shouldn't every celebrity pushing vaccines pay too?"[278]

Politics

I'm not coming at it as a politician, it's my own personal experience. And I just think that that's just what people want to put out there, you know, 'You don't have the right to talk about this'. And they use me as a puppet to explain that to you, that only people who, you know, have a PhD in this shit are allowed to talk about this. Or that only politicians are allowed to talk about politics, and that's why we're fucked, because the cycle is constantly kept within that fucking framework. There aren't more people standing up and telling their personal experience ... if a normal civilian comes up and says 'Hey, this happened in my village and I'm not happy about it', we're not allowed to talk about it. You have to follow this bureaucratic bullshit to get any sort of action, and it's all part of this cycle. Like back in the day, we had ideals of revolution and fighting back, and most of the time that shit starts with individual people having personal relationships, these experiences. And now it's so disconnected and the media can paint a picture for you ... they make so much bureaucracy and politics, and I think taking away the personal aspects, the human aspects of these political issues is really wrong. Whether it's the floods, or starving people in Africa, or whatever. It's all funnelled through this channel, you really are not getting it from the horse's mouth, you know?

—M.I.A., Boston Phoenix[279]

 
M.I.A. speaking at Labour's Charter for the Arts launch in November 2019

M.I.A. endorsed candidate Jan Jananayagam at the 2009 European Parliament election, a last-minute candidate standing on a platform of anti-genocide, civil liberties, financial transparency, the environment and women's rights, who became one of the most successful independent election candidates ever despite her loss in the general election.[280]

In October 2009, she stated that the President of the United States Barack Obama should give back his 2009 Nobel Peace Prize "like John Lennon sent back his MBE."[281] She said in one interview, playing on the famous Lennon phrase "Give Peace a Chance": "I'm a bit beyond being an artist who says, 'Give peace a chance.' Part of me is like, 'Give war a chance,' just to stir it up, you know what I mean?"[66]

In 2010, she condemned the Chinese Government's role in supporting and supplying arms to the Sri Lankan government during the conflict in an interview with music magazine Mondomix, stating that China's influence within the UN was preventing prosecutions of war crimes committed during the conflict.[282]

Following the 2011 United Kingdom anti-austerity protests and the 2011 London riots, during which her cousin's jewellery shop in Croydon was attacked and looted,[283] M.I.A. criticised the UK Government's response to the rioters as failing to address the root causes. She recalled the importance of a council funded youth worker she had in her school years and the use of tax money to incentivise a new business job creation program amongst the working class. She stated that the top forty companies in Britain who banked offshore should be made to pay taxes in the UK and "cut the poor people some slack."[284]

M.I.A. has been a supporter of WikiLeaks and Julian Assange.[285] In her own book, M.I.A. wrote regarding WikiLeaks, "So obviously I love WikiLeaks because, after I'd gone through the whole backlash, they were the first news information site to confirm any news on the Sri Lankan war in the truest form; they were the first to release information stating the truth about what had happened to the Tamils as I knew it and to reveal that the United Nations was aware that the Sri Lankan government was lying—war crimes had been committed but their hands were tied because any time anyone tried to impose sanctions, governments would walk out. I support WikiLeaks because of that."[286] She composed the theme to Assange's television show The World Tomorrow and later stood by Assange's side as he held a press conference at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London where Assange was successfully granted political asylum by Ecuador in August 2012. "I ask President Obama to do the right thing. The United States must renounce its witch hunt against WikiLeaks," Assange said at the press conference.[287] She posted a photo of Assange from within the embassy, and later tweeted, "hummmm after this day 2things have 2 happen. ... ., either 500 cops turn up outside every rape case reported even if it's without charge. or we get raped by the powerz that be and we deal 4eva."[288][289][290] The tweets were in reference to an arrest warrant the Swedish Prosecutor's Office issued in August 2010 for Assange on two charges: rape and molestation. Earlier in 2012 Britain's Supreme Court denied an appeal by Assange to avoid extradition to Sweden to face these charges.[285] In November 2013, Assange appeared via Skype to open M.I.A.'s New York City concert.[291] Also, on 18 September 2014 Maya tweeted a link to a documentary on YouTube entitled "The Internet's Own Boy: Aaron Swartz". The documentary is about the life of Aaron Swartz, who was a computer programmer, writer, political organiser and Internet hacktivist. In the same tweet Maya included a link and invitation to RSVP to a party to launch Julian Assange's new book "When Google Met WikiLeaks".[292]

 
M.I.A. with partner Ben Bronfman (right) and Twitter founders Evan Williams and Jack Dorsey (left and center respectively)

Ann Powers, in conversation with Billboard said that in trying to handle political issues and creating art, the musician did not want to compromise or keep silent. She notes that this method worked for The Clash, but that this was at a certain time and a certain place, that they benefited from being a band, and that audiences were more used to seeing men being confrontational.[293] Conversely, Denise Sullivan writing in Keep on Pushing: Black Power Music from Blues to Hip-Hop (2011), noted that in contrast to other rock musicians, M.I.A. furthered the legacy of The Clash, "creating a controversy while doing so".[294] Critic Jon Dolan of Spin noted M.I.A. may be a "confused revolutionary? brilliant provocateur?" and one of the most polarising yet thrilling figures in pop music today.[229] Sarahanna, writing in Impose magazine cited composer Igor Stravinsky in describing M.I.A.'s role as an artist who challenged the audience into breaking their mind from a conservative cycle of familiarity.[295] Baron writing in the Village Voice felt that although M.I.A.'s bloodline, politics and grievance meant that she was more informed than most and gave her "every right to be a partisan and were reason for caution," he praised her efforts for leading thousands of American writers including himself to know of the situation in Sri Lanka as "brilliant", noting her mainly humanitarian angle in her protesting of civilian casualties that had been vastly and disproportionately inflicted on Sri Lanka's Tamil minority and her courage in "putting her success and fame on the line to use every opportunity and avenue possible to remind Americans and people around the globe of this conflict" is pretty much the most admirable thing going in pop music.[258]

In a 2 September 2016 interview with The New York Times M.I.A. talked about making the decision to sacrifice fame and money for speech. "I had the choice to shut my mouth and not be political in order to catapult my fame and popularity and my bank balance. But that's not the choice I made."[296]

In June 2017, M.I.A endorsed Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn in the 2017 UK general election. In a video shared on her social channels she said: "I don't usually believe politicians, but I think Corbyn is actually, like, real." She added: "So this is a once in a lifetime opportunity – please go vote. You don't have to trust a politician or vote ever again, but just do it now."[297] In November 2019, M.I.A also endorsed Corbyn in the 2019 UK general election. She said: "I'm grateful that someone like Jeremy Corbyn is running" and called him "the last stand that England has got".[298][299][300]

Media

M.I.A.'s relationship with some media outlets has been controversial.[194] M.I.A. confronted Pitchfork Media in 2007, citing sexism and racist mechanisms as possible reasons for misattribution of some of her work in her career.[194] In 2010, M.I.A. tweeted "Fuck the New York Times", after The New York Times published a critical article by Lynn Hirschberg about M.I.A. and the conflict that portrayed the musician as politically naive and hypocritical. Both M.I.A. and several pop culture media outlets were highly critical of Hirschberg's article and reporting. Hirschberg later published a correction, apologizing for reporting quotes made by the artist out of order.[11][229][295][301] Rob Horning, writing for PopMatters, believed that Hirschberg's incorrect quotes were a deliberate effort to defame the artist.[302] M.I.A. responded on her Twitter account, posting of a telephone number and asking followers to call in and give feedback on the piece, and the revelatory content of the conversations, which she secretly taped.[11][303] In 2010, she expressed disappointment that WikiLeaks distributed their documents to other news publications—including The New York Times—to gain wider coverage, as she stated their "way of reporting" did not work.[304][305][306]

Philanthropy

M.I.A. supports a number of charities, both publicly and privately. She funded Youth Action International to help youth break out of cycles of violence and poverty in war torn African communities and set up school-building projects in Liberia in 2006.[307] She supports the Unstoppable Foundation, co-funding the establishment of the Becky Primary School in Liberia.[308] During her visit to Liberia she met the then President of Liberia and rehabilitated ex-child soldiers. She also appeared as part of a humanitarian mission there, hosting a "4Real" TV-series documentary on the post-war situation in the country with activist Kimmie Weeks.[180][307][309] Following her performance at the 2008 MTV Movie Awards afterparty, she donated her $100,000 performance fee to building more schools in the country, telling the crowd, "It costs $52,000 to build a school for 1,000."[310][311][312] Winning the 2008 Official Soundclash Championships (iPod Battle) with her "M.I.A. and Friends" team, 20% of the following year's championship ticket sales were donated to her Liberian school building projects.[313]

M.I.A. has also donated to The Pablove Foundation to fund paediatric cancer research, aid cancer families, and improve the quality of life for children living with cancer through creative arts programmes.[314] In 2009, she supported the "Mercy Mission to Vanni" aid ship, destined to send civilian aid from Britain to Vanni and controversially blocked from reaching its destination.[315] The country's navy announced that it would fire on any ship that entered its waters, and M.I.A. was singled out on the Sri Lankan army's official website after the singer announced her support for the campaign.[316] In 2011, following her performance at the Roskilde Festival, she donated from the Roskilde Festival Charity Society to help bring justice to Tamil victims of war crimes and genocide and to aid advocacy and ensure legal rights for refugees and witnesses.[317]

Personal life

M.I.A. met DJ Diplo at the Fabric Club in London,[318] in 2003, and the two were romantically involved for five years.[319][320][321][322]

From 2006 to 2008, M.I.A. lived in the Bedford–Stuyvesant neighbourhood of Brooklyn, New York, where she met Benjamin Bronfman,[when?] an American scion of the Bronfman business family and the Lehman banking family who founded Lehman Brothers.[323][324] They became engaged and she gave birth to their son, Ikhyd Edgar Arular Bronfman, on 13 February 2009, three days after performing at the Grammy Awards.[325][326] In February 2012, it was announced that she and Bronfman had separated.[327][328]

M.I.A. was raised by her parents as a Hindu. However, in a 2022 interview she revealed that in 2017 she became a born-again Christian because she saw a vision of Jesus Christ.[329]

Discography

Tours

Honours, awards and nominations

M.I.A. is the only artist to receive nominations for all five of Academy Award, Grammy Award, Brit Award, Mercury Prize and Alternative Turner Prize, and the first artist of Sri Lankan-British descent to be nominated for an Academy and Grammy Award in the same year. She has also been nominated for an MOBO Award, MTV Video Music Award, and MTV Europe Music Award.

She was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2019 Birthday Honours for her services to music.[8] She accepted the title (bestowed on British citizens in recognition of their service to the arts) in honor of her mother who had “spent her life in England hand sewing thousands of medals for the Queen”.[330] In 2022, she received an honorary award from University of the Arts London for outstanding contributions to the creative industries.[331]

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Sources and further reading

  • Aksomitis, Linda (2007). Downloading Music. Detroit: Greenhaven Press. ISBN 978-0-7377-3646-5.
  • ^ Arulpragasam, Maya (2002). M.I.A. No. 10 (Paperback ed.). Pocko Editions. ISBN 1-903977-10-X
  • Bennett, Andy, Stratton, Jon (2010). Britpop and the English Music Tradition. Ashgate Publishing. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-0-7546-6805-3. OCLC 663973447.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Beres, Derek (2005). Global beat fusion: the history of the future of music. Lincoln, Neb.: iUniverse. pp. 20–21, 194. ISBN 978-0-595-34899-2. OCLC 62334812.
  • Beth Ray, Mary (2011). Rock Brands: Selling Sound in a Media Saturated Culture. Rowman & Littlefield: Lexington Books. p. 242. ISBN 978-0-7391-4634-7. OCLC 664667183.
  • Bradley, Adam, DuBois, Andrew (2010). The Anthology of Rap. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-14190-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Dodero, Camille (22 October 2007). "CMJ: This is Another Piece About M.I.A. at Terminal 5". The Village Voice. Archived from the original on 5 February 2013.
  • Frere-Jones, Sasha (22 November 2004). "Bingo in Swansea – Maya Arulpragasam's World". The New Yorker.
  • Gibney, Mark; Loescher, Gil (2010). Global refugee crisis: a reference handbook (second ed.). Santa Barbara, Calif. : ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-455-9. OCLC 639162716.
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rapper, several, terms, redirect, here, other, singers, singer, disambiguation, mathangi, maya, arulpragasam, born, july, 1975, known, stage, name, initialism, both, missing, action, missing, acton, british, rapper, singer, music, combines, elements, alternati. Several terms redirect here For other singers see Mia singer and Mia disambiguation Mathangi Maya Arulpragasam 2 MBE 3 born 18 July 1975 known by her stage name M I A an initialism for both Missing in Action and Missing in Acton is a British rapper and singer Her music combines elements of alternative dance electronic hip hop and world music with electronic instruments and samples M I A MBEM I A in April 2016BornMathangi Arulpragasam 1975 07 18 18 July 1975 age 47 Hounslow London EnglandOccupationsRapper singer record producer activistYears active2000 presentChildren1ParentArul Pragasam father RelativesKali Arulpragasam sister AwardsFull listMusical careerGenresDance world hip hop electronica progressive rap 1 experimentalInstrument s VocalsLabelsNEET XL Mercury Interscope Virgin EMI Showbiz Polydor Roc Nation IslandWebsitewww wbr miauk wbr comBorn in London to Sri Lankan Tamil parents M I A and her family moved to Jaffna in northern Sri Lanka when she was six months old As a child she experienced displacement caused by the Sri Lankan Civil War which made the family return to London as refugees when M I A was 11 years old the war had a defining influence on M I A s artistry She started out as a visual artist filmmaker and designer in 2000 and began her recording career in 2002 One of the first acts to come to public attention through the Internet 4 she saw early fame as an underground artist in early 2004 with her singles Sunshowers and Galang M I A s first two albums Arular 2005 and Kala 2007 received widespread critical acclaim for their fusion of hip hop electronic and world musics The single Paper Planes from Kala reached number four on the US Billboard Hot 100 and sold over four million copies Her third album Maya 2010 was preceded by the controversial single short film Born Free Maya was her best charting effort reaching the top 10 on several charts Her fourth studio album Matangi 2013 included the single Bad Girls which won accolades at the MTV Video Music Awards M I A released her fifth studio album AIM in 2016 She scored her first Billboard Hot 100 number one single as a featured artist on Travis Scott s Franchise 2020 and two years later released her sixth studio album Mata featuring lead single The One 5 M I A s accolades include two American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers ASCAP awards and two MTV Video Music Awards She is the first person of South Asian descent to be nominated for an Academy Award and Grammy Award in the same year 6 She was named one of the defining artists of the 2000s decade by Rolling Stone and one of the 100 most influential people of 2009 by Time Esquire ranked M I A on its list of the 75 most influential people of the 21st century According to Billboard she was one of the Top 50 Dance Electronic Artists of the 2010s 7 M I A was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire MBE in the 2019 Birthday Honours for her services to music 8 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 1975 1999 Early life 1 2 2000 2002 Visual art and film 1 3 2003 2005 Musical beginnings and Arular 1 4 2006 2008 Kala and world recognition 1 5 2009 2011 Maya 1 6 2012 2014 Matangi 1 7 2015 2019 AIM and Matangi Maya M I A 1 8 2020 present Mata 2 Artistry 2 1 Musical style and influences 3 Public image and stage 3 1 Themes and artwork 3 2 Fashion and style 4 Legacy 5 Social causes 5 1 Activism 5 2 Anti vaccination and anti 5G 5 3 Politics 5 4 Media 5 5 Philanthropy 6 Personal life 7 Discography 8 Tours 9 Honours awards and nominations 10 References 11 Sources and further reading 12 External linksLife and career Edit1975 1999 Early life Edit Mathangi Maya Arulpragasam was born on 18 July 1975 9 in Hounslow London the daughter of Arul Pragasam 10 a Sri Lankan Tamil engineer writer and activist and his wife Kala a seamstress When she was six months old her family moved to Jaffna in northern Sri Lanka where her brother Sugu was born 11 There her father adopted the name Arular and became a political activist and founding member of the Eelam Revolutionary Organisation of Students EROS a political Tamil group affiliated with the LTTE The first 11 years of Arulpragasam s life were marked by displacement caused by the Sri Lankan Civil War 11 Her family went into hiding from the Sri Lankan Army and Arulpragasam had little contact with her father during this period She has described her family as living in big time poverty during her childhood but also recalls some of her happiest memories from growing up in Jaffna 11 12 13 Maya attended Catholic convent schools such as the Holy Family Convent Jaffna where she developed her art skills painting in particular to work her way up her class 14 15 During the civil war soldiers would put guns through holes in the windows and shoot at the school which she notes as fun 15 Her classmates were trained to dive under the table or run next door to English language schools that according to her wouldn t get shot 15 Arulpragasam lived on a road alongside much of her extended family and played inside temples and churches in the town Due to safety concerns Arulpragasam s mother relocated herself and her children to Madras in India where they lived in a derelict house and received sporadic visits from their father who was introduced to the children as their uncle in order to protect them 11 16 The family minus Arular then resettled in Jaffna temporarily only to see the war escalate further in northeast Sri Lanka During this time nine year old Arulpragasam s primary school was destroyed in a government raid 17 18 Her mother then returned with her children back to London in 1986 a week before Arulpragasam s 11th birthday where they were housed as refugees 11 Her father arrived on the island and became an independent peace mediator between the two sides of the civil war in the late 1980s 2010 19 Arulpragasam spent the rest of her childhood and teenage years living on the Phipps Bridge Estate in the Mitcham district of south London where she learned to speak English while her mother brought the children up on a modest income Arulpragasam entered the final year of primary school in the autumn of 1986 and quickly mastered the English language Hers was one of only two Asian families on the estate at the time 19 in an atmosphere she has described as incredibly racist 20 While living in England and raising her children Arulpragasam s mother became a Christian in 1990 and worked as a seamstress for the Royal Family for much of her career 12 She worked from her home in London s Tooting area Arulpragasam had a difficult relationship with her father due to his political activities in the 1980s and complete absence during much of her life Prior to the release of the first album which Arulpragasam had named after her father he emailed her This is Dad Change the title of your album I m really proud Just read about you in the Sri Lanka Times Dad 21 She chose not to change the album title Arulpragasam attended the Ricards Lodge High School in Wimbledon Following high school she attended Central Saint Martins by gaining admittance through unconventional means despite not having formally applied 22 In 2000 she graduated from London s Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design with a degree in fine art film and video 12 2000 2002 Visual art and film Edit While attending Central St Martins College Arulpragasam wanted to make films and art depicting realism that would be accessible to everyone something that she felt was missing from her classmates ethos and the course criteria At college she found the fashion courses disposable and more current than the film texts that she studied 23 Maya told Arthur magazine Students there were exploring apathy dressing up in some pigeon outfit or running around conceptualising It missed the whole point of art representing society Social reality didn t really exist there it just stopped at theory 23 She cited radical cinema including Harmony Korine Dogme 95 and Spike Jonze as some of her cinematic inspirations during film school 24 As a student she was approached by director John Singleton to work on a film in Los Angeles after he had read a script she had written though she decided not to take up the offer 24 25 For her degree M I A prepared her departmental honours thesis on the film CB4 26 Arulpragasam befriended students in the college s fashion advertising and graphics departments 23 She met Justine Frischmann front woman of the British band Elastica through her friend Damon Albarn at an Air concert in 1999 and Frischmann commissioned Arulpragasam to create the cover art for the band s 2000 album The Menace and video document their American tour 14 17 18 Arulpragasam returned to Jaffna in 2001 to film a documentary on Tamil youth but was unable to complete the project because she encountered harassment 25 27 In 2001 Arulpragasam s first public exhibition of paintings after graduating took place at the Euphoria Shop on London s Portobello Road It featured graffiti art and spray paint canvasses mixing Tamil political street art with images of London life and consumerist culture 18 28 The show was nominated for an Alternative Turner Prize and a monograph book of the collection was published in 2002 9 titled M I A Actor Jude Law was among early buyers of her art 14 28 29 2003 2005 Musical beginnings and Arular Edit M I A performing at Sonar on her Arular Tour Arulpragasam cites the radio broadcasts she heard emanating from her neighbours flats in the late 1980s as some of her first exposures to her earliest musical influences 19 From there she developed an interest in hip hop and dancehall identifying with the starkness of the sound in records by Public Enemy MC Shan and Ultramagnetic MCs and the weird distinct style of acts such as Silver Bullet and London Posse 30 31 In college she developed an affinity for punk and the emerging sounds of Britpop and electroclash 32 M I A cites The Slits Malcolm McLaren and The Clash as major influences 33 34 By 2001 Arulpragasam designed the cover for Elastica s last single The Bitch Don t Work and went on the road with the band to video document their tour The tour s supporting act electroclash artist Peaches introduced Arulpragasam to the Roland MC 505 and encouraged her to make music a medium in which Arulpragasam lacked confidence 17 32 While holidaying together in Bequia in the Caribbean Arulpragasam began experimenting with Frischmann s MC 505 12 14 She adopted her stage name M I A standing for Missing In Acton during this time 13 In her 2012 book Arulpragasam writes M I A came to be because of my missing cousin I wanted to make a film about where he was since he was M I A Missing in Action in Sri Lanka We were the same age went to the same schools growing up I was also living in Acton at the time So I was living in Acton looking for my cousin missing in action 35 Of her time in Bequia she said I started going out to this chicken shed with a sound system You buy rum through a hatch and dance in the street They convinced me to come to church where people sing so amazingly But I couldn t clap along to hallelujah I was out of rhythm Someone said What happened to Jesus I saw you dancing last night and you were totally fine They stopped the service and taught me to clap in time It was embarrassing 15 Returning to West London where she shared an apartment with Frischmann she began working with a simple set up a second hand 4 track tape machine the MC 505 and a radio microphone composing and recording a six song demo tape that included Lady Killa M I A and Galang 36 37 In 2003 the independent label Showbiz Records pressed 500 vinyl singles of Galang a mix of dancehall electro jungle and world music with Seattle Weekly praising its a cappella coda as a lift up and over moment evoking clear skies beyond the council flats 38 39 File sharing college radio airplay and the rise in popularity of Galang and Sunshowers in dance clubs and fashion shows made M I A an underground sensation 40 M I A has been heralded as one of the first artists to build a large fanbase exclusively via these channels and as someone who could be studied to re examine the internet s impact on how listeners are exposed to new music 41 42 43 She began uploading her music onto her MySpace account in June 2004 Major record labels caught on to the popularity of the second song she has written 44 Galang and M I A was eventually signed to XL Recordings in mid 2004 30 45 Her debut album to be titled Arular was finalised by borrowing studio time 46 M I A s next single Sunshowers released on 5 July 2004 and its B side Fire Fire described guerrilla warfare and asylum seeking merging ambiguous references to violence and religious persecution with black and white forms of dissidence 47 These themes inspired her treatment for the music video the first she wrote It was filmed in the jungles of South India which she has described as her favourite 12 48 Galang was re released in 2004 In September 2004 M I A was first featured on the cover of the publication The FADER 49 in its 24th issue 50 The music video for Galang made in November of that year showed multiple M I A s against a backdrop of militaristic animated graffiti and depicted scenes of urban Britain and war that influenced her art direction for it Both singles appeared on international publications Best of the Year lists and subsequently Best of the Decade lists The songs Pull Up the People Bucky Done Gun and were released as 12 inch singles and CDs by XL Recordings which along with the non label mashup mixtape of Arular tracks Piracy Funds Terrorism were distributed in 2004 to positive critical acclaim 16 M I A made her North American live debut in February 2005 in Toronto where concertgoers already knew many of her songs 18 In March 2005 M I A s debut album Arular was released worldwide to critical acclaim after several months delay 51 52 The album title is the nom de guerre that M I A s father took when he joined the Tamil independence movement and many of the songs acknowledge her and her father s experiences in Jaffna While making Arular in her bedroom in west London she built tracks off her demos using beats she programmed on the Roland MC 505 18 53 The album experiments with bold jarring and ambient sounds and its lyrics address the Iraq War and daily life in London as well as M I A s past 34 46 54 Galang Sunshowers Hombre and the funk carioca inspired co composition Bucky Done Gun were released as singles from Arular The release of the latter marked the first time that a funk carioca inspired song was played on mainstream radio and music television in Brazil its country of origin 55 M I A worked with one of her musical influences Missy Elliott contributing to the track Bad Man on her 2005 album The Cookbook 46 Despite initial fears that her dyslexia might pose problems while touring M I A supported the album through a series of festival and club shows including the Bue Festival in Buenos Aires a free headlining show at Central Park Summerstage the Summer Sonic Fest and the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival where she played an encore in response to crowd enthusiasm a rare occurrence for the festival generally and the first encore following a tent performance at Coachella 46 56 57 She also toured with Roots Manuva and LCD Soundsystem and ended 2005 briefly touring with Gwen Stefani and performing at the Big Day Out festival 58 59 On 19 July 2005 M I A was shortlisted for the Mercury Music Prize for Arular 60 According to the music review aggregation Metacritic it garnered an average score of 88 out of 100 described as universal acclaim 61 They reported in 2010 that Arular was the seventh best reviewed album of 2005 and the ninth Best Reviewed Electronic Dance Album on Metacritic of the 2000 09 decade 62 63 Arular became the second most featured album in music critics Year End Top 10 lists for 2005 and was named best of the year by publications such as Blender Stylus and Musikbyran 51 2006 2008 Kala and world recognition Edit M I A performing at the Prince in Melbourne in February 2006 In 2006 M I A recorded her second studio album Kala this time named after her mother Due to visa complications in the United States the album was recorded in a variety of locations India Trinidad Liberia Jamaica Australia Japan and the UK Eventually the album was completed in the US 64 65 Kala featured live instrumentation and layers of traditional dance and folk styles such as soca and the urumee drum of gaana rave music and bootleg soundtracks of Tamil film music incorporating new styles into her avant garde electronic dance music 66 67 The songs artwork and fashion of Kala have been characterised as simultaneously celebratory and infused with raw darker outsider themes such as immigration politics personal relationships and war 65 68 In February 2007 the first track from the album to be made available to the public was Bird Flu which was posted with an accompanying music video to her MySpace 69 70 Later that year M I A featured in the song Come Around a bonus track on Timbaland s 2007 album Shock Value and a track on Kala 64 The album s first official single Boyz was released in June 2007 accompanied by a music video co directed by Jay Will and M I A becoming M I A s first top ten charting song The single Jimmy written about an invitation to tour genocide affected regions in Rwanda that the singer received from a journalist while staying in Liberia was released next 64 The single Paper Planes described a satire on immigrant stereotypes 71 and the EP Paper Planes Homeland Security Remixes EP were released digitally in February 2008 the single eventually selling three times platinum in the US and Canada certified Gold in New Zealand 72 73 and becoming the 29th most downloaded song in the digital era in the US and earning a Grammy nomination for Record of the Year 72 74 75 Paper Planes is to date XL Recordings second best selling single and by November 2011 it had sold 3 6 million copies in the US currently the seventh best selling song by a British artist in the digital era 76 In 2007 M I A also released the How Many Votes Fix Mix EP which included a remix of Boyz featuring Jay Z 77 Like its predecessor universal acclaim met Kala s release in August 2007 and the album earned a normalised rating of 87 out of 100 on Metacritic 78 Kala was a greater commercial success than Arular To support Kala M I A performed at a series of music festivals on the Kala Tour featuring performances in Europe America and Asia She performed three dates opening for Bjork in the US and France 79 80 In 2008 M I A provided guest vocals on Buraka Som Sistema s kuduro song Sound of Kuduro recorded in Angola with an accompanying video 81 The same year M I A and director Spike Jonze filmed a documentary in Woolwich South London in which they both appeared with Afrikan Boy a Nigerian immigrant rapper and she disclosed plans to launch her own record label Zig Zag 82 83 84 She ended the year with concerts in the United Kingdom 85 By year end Kala was named the best album of 2007 by publications including Rolling Stone and Blender 86 Metacritic reported in 2010 that Kala was the tenth Best Reviewed Electronic Dance Album on the website of the 2000 09 decade one position below her debut album Arular 62 M I A performed on the People vs Money Tour during the first half of 2008 34 She cancelled the final leg of her tour in Europe through June and July after revealing her intentions to take a career break and work on other art projects go back to college and make a film 34 In 2008 M I A started her independent record label N E E T Recordings 87 The first artist signed to the label was Baltimore rapper Rye Rye who performed with M I A at the Diesel XXX party at Pier 3 in Brooklyn in October 2008 where it was revealed that M I A was pregnant with her first child 88 During her performance at the 2008 Bonnaroo Music Festival M I A announced it was her last show ever following by cancelling a British tour and saying she would then focus on recording new material 89 However a few days afterwards Danny Boyle called her wanting her to collaborate with A R Rahman in the score of his film Slumdog Millionaire 90 The result was the song O Saya for which M I A was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song and a World Soundtrack Award for Best Original Song Written Directly for a Film for the song 91 92 93 M I A was due to perform at the Oscars ceremony two weeks after her Grammy Award performance but could not as she had just given birth to her son 94 M I A is the first person of Asian descent to be nominated for an Oscar and Grammy award in the same year 2009 2011 Maya Edit M I A performing at the Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival in August 2009 At the 2009 BRIT Awards in February M I A was a nominee for Best British Female Artist 95 Seeking to promote new underground music with N E E T M I A signed more bands including Baltimore musician Blaqstarr indie rock band Sleigh Bells and visual artist Jaime Martinez by late 2009 96 3D photographic images of M I A by Martinez were commissioned in April of that year 97 98 In August 2009 M I A began composing and recording her third studio album in a home studio section in her Los Angeles house 99 In January 2010 M I A posted her video for the song Space 100 101 While composing it she helped write a song with Christina Aguilera called Elastic Love for Aguilera s album Bionic 102 By April 2010 the song and music video short film Born Free 103 were leaked online 104 The video film short was directed by Romain Gavras and written by M I A depicting genocide against red haired adolescents being forced to run across a minefield and caused controversy due to its violent content 105 106 The video was removed from YouTube the same day it was released then reinstated with an age restriction then removed once more 107 Although not an official single the song charted in Sweden and the United Kingdom M I A s third album Maya stylised as Y was released on 23 June 2010 in Japan with bonus tracks before its release in other countries 108 109 Maya became M I A s highest charting album globally Its release in the US was delayed by two weeks 108 The album garnered a generally favourable although divided reception from critics 110 A more internet inspired album illustrating how a multimedia artist worked within the music industry elements of industrial music were incorporated into M I A s sound for the first time and it was seen as a stylistic shift towards the more experimental 111 She described the album in an interview with Dazed amp Confused as a mix of babies death destruction and powerlessness 96 112 113 114 On 11 May 2010 the first official single from Maya XXXO was released and reached the top forty in Belgium Spain and the UK 115 116 Steppin Up Teqkilla and Tell Me Why were also released as promotional singles exclusively on iTunes in the days leading to the release of Maya with Teqkilla reaching the top 100 in Canada on digital downloads alone 117 M I A performing at Peace amp Love during the Maya Tour 2011 following the release of her Vicki Leekx mixtapeThe video for XXXO was released online in August M I A hinted in an interview to Blitz that a music video is being made with director Spike Jonze for the single Teqkilla 118 She completed her live tour dates on the Maya Tour in summer of 2011 119 120 121 From 2000 until 2010 she directed the video for Elastica single Mad Dog God Dam and videos for her songs Bird Flu Boyz S U S Save Ur Soul Space and XXXO as well as personally choosing the directors for the videos of her songs Galang Sunshowers which she described in 2005 and again in 2011 as being her favourite video experience and favourite video adaptation of a song of hers in her words as of 2011 update If you watch only one of my videos please try Sunshowers Jimmy Born Free and Bad Girls a video inspired by YouTube videos of car stunts and photographs including one of an Arab female trucker from the Middle East 122 which she described as her second favourite music video 123 124 She directed a video for Rye Rye s Bang 125 126 She judged in the Music Video category at the inaugural Vimeo Festival amp Awards in New York in October 2010 127 M I A released her second mixtape Vicki Leekx on 31 December 2010 and followed this with Internet Connection The Remixes an EP to a bonus track from Maya in January 2011 128 M I A performed on the song C T F O on SebastiAn s album Total On 21 April 2011 it was reported that M I A had been in the studio with Chris Brown the Cataracs Swizz Beatz and Polow da Don 129 On 24 July 2011 the day after Amy Winehouse s death M I A uploaded a previously unreleased Maya Vicki Leekx demo titled 27 to her SoundCloud account The song was released as a tribute to the 27 Club 130 131 2012 2014 Matangi Edit M I A co wrote the song Give Me All Your Luvin with Madonna and Nicki Minaj for the album MDNA and performed it at the Super Bowl XLVI halftime show Controversially instead of singing the lyric shit in the song M I A extended the middle finger to the camera The N F L responded by filing a lawsuit suing M I A for millions in damages and demanding a public apology from M I A 132 Maya and her legal team also responded by saying that the league s claim of wholesomeness in the lawsuit is hypocritical since the N F L itself has had multiple situations of their own players and coaches behaving badly as well as health problems within the league particularly concussions 132 In September 2013 Maya released a video statement regarding the lawsuit 133 In her statement Arulpragasam said They re basically saying it s OK for me to promote being sexually exploited as a female than to display empowerment female empowerment through being punk rock That s what it boils down to and I m being sued for it 133 The lawsuit was settled in August 2014 the terms of the settlement remain private 134 M I A is also featured in B Day Song another song included on MDNA 135 136 137 The first buzz track of her fourth album Bad Girls taken from her Vicki Leekx mixtape premiered on 30 January 2012 was released globally the day after and was followed by a music video directed by Romain Gavras on 3 February 2012 From her 2018 documentary Matangi Maya M I A she revealed that she did not know Madonna planned to release the music video for Give Me All Your Luvin about 10 minutes apart on the same day she would release Bad Girls cited from Matangi Maya M I A by Steve Loveridge 2018 at 1 14 49 This received nominations for Video of the Year at the 2012 MTV Video Music Awards and at the 55th Grammy Awards 138 The song became one of M I A s most successful singles charting in the United Kingdom Australia France Canada United States Switzerland South Korea and Belgium On 29 April 2012 she posted a preview of a new song to YouTube titled Come Walk With Me 139 The full version of Come Walk With Me was shared one and a half year later in September 2013 140 M I A officially signed to Jay Z s Roc Nation management in May 2012 141 142 Rihanna welcomed her to the family tweeting welcome home MIA 143 She guested during Jay Z s set at the Radio 1 Festival in Hackney on 23 June 2012 In October 2012 M I A released an autobiographical book titled M I A documenting the five years of M I A art that spans across three LPs Arular Kala and Maya 35 The book contains artwork as well as a foreword by frequent collaborator Steve Loveridge and various essays by M I A On 3 March 2013 she released an 8 minute mix recording as part of a Kenzo fashion show in Paris 144 M I A performing at the Zenith de Paris in 2014 Matangi was recorded across the world with different collaborators In relation to her previous albums she described her fourth as basically all of them together akin to an anthology 145 The album was released on Interscope and M I A s label N E E T Recordings 146 Release dates of 31 January 2013 147 and later 15 April 2013 144 were announced but the album remained unreleased 148 M I A later revealed that the original project for Matangi was not accepted by Interscope which claimed that the record was too positive 149 Bring the Noize produced by French producer Surkin and Switch 150 was announced as the second single and was released on 17 June 2013 Soon after the single was released the official video for Bring the Noize premiered on 25 June via Noisey 151 On 9 August 2013 the album received an official release date of 5 November 2013 after M I A threatened to leak the album due to the numerous delays by Interscope 152 Matangi received generally positive reviews from music critics In its first week of release the album sold 15 000 copies and peaked at number 23 on the Billboard 200 falling to number 90 in its second week 153 On 31 December 2013 M I A announced that she was leaving Roc Nation 154 2015 2019 AIM and Matangi Maya M I A Edit On 13 July 2015 M I A released a five minute video titled Matahdatah Scroll 01 Broader Than a Border which features two of her tracks Matangi s Warrior and a new track Swords The music is sampled from Yo Yo Honey Singh s Manali Trance The video was filmed in India and West Africa and shows different forms of dancing in those regions On 27 November 2015 M I A released Borders as her new single on iTunes prior to that her new single was announced via her Instagram account Serving as both a rallying cry and a call for compassion the track mocks first world problems and shares her views on the escalating global refugee crisis 155 The self directed video that accompanied its release 156 shows her joining those attempting to flee their homes by cramming on boats wading in the ocean and climbing barbed wire fences 155 In January 2016 the French football club Paris Saint Germain sued M I A for wearing a version of their club s T shirt in her Borders video that changed the words Fly Emirates to Fly Pirates 157 158 In late February 2016 she released Boom ADD an expanded version of the Boom Skit which appeared on M I A s fourth studio album Matangi it is a diss track to the NFL s lawsuit of her performance at the Super Bowl XLVI 159 On 9 September 2016 she released her fifth studio album AIM to mixed reviews with Poc Still A Ryda a lyrical mix of the songs on the album preceding the album s release 160 On 8 February 2017 she released a new song along with a music video entitled P O W A a previously unreleased song from her recording sessions for AIM 161 162 In 2018 Matangi Maya M I A was released a 90 minute documentary film chronicling M I A s rise to fame and political activism surrounding the Sri Lankan Civil War 163 Directed and produced by Steve Loveridge the film premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival and later saw a wide release in select theatres in the U K and the U S in September 2018 164 165 The film won the World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award at Sundance 166 Following the film s release on digital platforms in December 2018 M I A premiered the official music video for Reload a previously unreleased song originally written with Justine Frischmann in 2004 for Arular which appears on the film s soundtrack 167 2020 present Mata Edit M I A performing at Primavera Sound 2022 On 31 January 2020 M I A launched a Patreon page to fund new music saying that her new album is nearly finished 168 On 22 March 2020 M I A released OHMNI 202091 her first song in three years and suggested that a new record would arrive the same year 169 On 9 September she shared a standalone song titled CTRL on her website 170 She was featured alongside Young Thug on the single Franchise by rapper Travis Scott which was released on 25 September 2020 171 The song debuted at number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 earning M I A her first number one single on the chart 172 On 1 November 2021 M I A announced in an Instagram post that her sixth album is called Mata As to the concept of the album she described it as a way to reflect who I am what we want to build 173 On 11 November it was announced that M I A would release a new single titled Babylon on Friday 12 November The single was released alongside the rappers 2010 mixtape Vicki Leekx sold as NFTs to raise money for the Courage Foundation 174 An accompanying music video was released on her website ohmni com and features video footage of Arulpragasam earlier in her life 175 On 26 May 2022 M I A shared the lead single from Mata on The Zane Lowe Show titled The One 176 The second single from the album Popular was released on 12 August 2022 along with its official music video Mata was released on 14 October 2022 Artistry EditMusical style and influences Edit Galang source source 21 second sample of M I A s single Galang from album Arular First released in 2003 with its mix of 505 beats and claps edgy vocals and lyrics it marked M I A s emergence in underground independent music circles worldwide Bird Flu source source Short clip of Bird Flu showing the Gaana inspired track s use of urumee drums Problems playing these files See media help M I A s music features styles such as electro reggae rhythm and blues alternative rock hip hop grime rap ballads and Asian folk and references to her musical influences such as Missy Elliott Tamil film music Lou Reed the Pixies Timbaland Beastie Boys and London Posse 33 36 47 177 She was a childhood fan of Boney M composer A R Rahman and pop artists Michael Jackson and Madonna 23 36 also she has cited Bjork as an inspiration and has been influenced by The Slits Public Enemy Malcolm McLaren and The Clash 33 178 Noting her early inspirations she said When I would go to bed I d listen to the radio and dream about dancing and Paula Abdul and Whitney Houston and that s how I fell asleep When my radio was burgled I started listening to hip hop 23 She has revealed her ideal karaoke song would be Germ Free Adolescents by X Ray Spex 179 M I A describes her music as dance music or club music for the other and has been described as an anti popstar for refusing to conform to certain recording industry expectations of solo artists 66 M I A s early compositions relied heavily on the Roland MC 505 while later M I A experimented further with her established sound and drew from a range of genres creating layered textures of instruments electronics and sounds outside the traditional studio environment 66 67 Jimmy Iovine the chairman of M I A s American distribution label Interscope compares M I A to Reed and punk rock songwriter Patti Smith and recalled She s gonna do what she s gonna do I can t tell her shit 180 The really left of center artists you really wonder about them Can the world catch up Can the culture meet them in the middle That s what the adventure is It doesn t always happen but it should and it could 181 Richard Russell head of XL Recordings states You ve got to bend culture around to suit you and I think M I A has done that adding that M I A s composition and production skills were a major attraction for him 182 183 As a vocalist M I A is recognisable by her distinctive whooping chanting voice which has been described as having an indelible nursery rhyme swing 55 She has adopted different singing styles on her songs from aggressive raps to semi spoken and melodic vocals She has said of the sometimes unaffected vocals and delivery of her lyrics It is what it is Most people would just put it down to me being lazy But at the same time I don t want that perfection saying some of the raw and difficult vocal styles she used reflected what was happening to her during recording 23 64 Public image and stage EditCritic Sasha Frere Jones writing for The New Yorker praised the self made unpretentious stuck together with Scotch tape style that M I A achieves with her Roland MC 505 drum machine and keyboard unit noting that several artists had tried to emulate the style since 184 Her considerable influence on American hip hop music as an international artist is described by Adam Bradley and Andrew DuBois in The Anthology of Rap as making her an unlikely hip hop celebrity given that the genre was one of several influences behind M I A s eccentric and energizing music and that the musician s unclassifiable sound was one example of how hip hop was changing as it came into contact with other cultures 185 Similarly Jeffrey H Wallenfeldt writes in The Black experience in America from civil rights to the present that no single artist may have personified hip hop in the 21st century better than M I A in her politically radical lyrics drawing from widely diverse sources around the world 186 The Guardian critic Hattie Collins commented of M I A s influence A new raver before it was old A baile funk pop pioneer before CSS and Bonde do Role emerged A quirky female singer rapper before the Mini Allens had worked out how to log on to MySpace Missing In Action or Acton as she sometimes calls herself has always been several miles ahead of the pack 187 The twisting of western modalities in her music style using multilingual multiethnic soundscapes to make electroclash pop albums is noted by Derek Beres in Global beat fusion the history of the future of music 2005 to defy world music categorisation 188 In the book Downloading Music 2007 Linda Aksomitis notes the various aspects of peer to peer file sharing of music in the rise in popularity of M I A including the advantages and disadvantages of the internet and platforms such as MySpace in the launch of her career 189 Andy Bennett and Jon Stratton explore in Britpop and the English Music Tradition 2010 how M I A alongside musicians such as Sway and Dizzee Rascal created music that both explored new soundscapes and commented on social issues as well Bennett and Stratton argue that the innovation that generates new musical genres such as grime and dubstep are inevitably political in nature The success of grime influenced artists such as M I A is analyzed as a way in which white Britons adapted to the increasingly multicultural musical mix which they compare with bands of the Britpop genre 190 Furthermore her work being used as a global resource for the articulation of differently located themes and its connections to many music traditions is noted by Brian Longhurst in Popular music and society 2007 to illustrate such processes of interracial dialogue 191 Gary Shteyngart writing in GQ notes that M I A is perhaps the preeminent global musical artist of the 2000s a truly kick ass singer and New York Londony fashion icon not to mention a vocal supporter of Sri Lanka s embattled Tamil minority of which she s a member 184 M I A s stage performances are described as highly energetic and multimedia showcases often with scenes of what Rolling Stone critic Rob Sheffield describes as jovial chaos with dancers and toasters and random characters roaming the stage bringing various crowds with interests in art music and fashion 114 Camille Dodero writing in The Village Voice opined that M I A works hard to manifest the chaos of her music in an actual environment and more than that to actively create discomfort energy and anger through sensory overload 192 Her role as an artist in and voice lender to the subaltern is appreciated by theorists as having brought such ideas to first world view 193 194 195 196 USA Today included her on its list of the 100 Most Interesting People of 2007 and she was named one of Time Out s 40th Birthday London Heroes in 2008 The same year Esquire listed M I A as one of the 75 Most Influential People of the 21st century describing her as the first and only major artist in world music and in 2009 she was cited in Time magazine s Time 100 as one of the world s most influential people for her global influence across many genres 33 193 197 198 In December 2010 USA Today listed M I A at number 63 on its list of the 100 People of 2010 199 M I A placed number 14 on Rolling Stone s Decade End Readers Poll of Top Artists Of The Decade 200 Rolling Stone named her one of eight artists who defined the 2000s decade 201 Themes and artwork Edit M I A has become known for integrating her imagery of political violence with her music videos and her cover art Her politically inspired art became recognised while she exhibited and published several of her brightly coloured stencils and paintings portraying the tiger a symbol of Tamil nationalism ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka and urban Britain in the early 2000s Lyrics on Arular regarding her experiences of identity politics poverty revolution gender and sexual stereotypes war and the conditions of working class in London were hailed as new and unorthodox setting her apart from previous artists 34 47 The album references the PLO and the Tamil independence movements and features culture jamming multi lingual slang strident and subtle imagery Her albums social commentary and storytelling have incited debate on the invigoratingly complex politics of the issues she highlighted in the album breaking taboos while the US Military was engaged in the 2003 Iraq War in the Middle East during the Bush administration 12 46 202 203 Government visits to her official website following her debut album s release in 2005 and a US refusal to grant M I A a travel visa coupled with her brief presence on the US Homeland Security Risk List in 2006 due to her politically charged lyrics led to her second album Kala being recorded in a variety of locations around the world 13 196 204 205 The American Civil Liberties Union described the actions as part of a trend of ideological exclusion by the state which was detrimental to democracy by censoring and manipulating debate 206 207 In October 2016 she revealed on her Instagram that she had finally been approved for a US visa 208 209 Afrikan Boy an afrobeats and grime London MC with Nigerian roots supporting M I A at the Rock en Seine Festival 2007 On Kala M I A s songs explored immigration politics and her personal relationships Many related her experiences during recording sessions in Madras Angola Trinidad shantytowns Liberia and London and were acclaimed 34 65 The album s artwork was inspired by African art from dictator fashion to old stickers on the back of cars which like her clothing range she hoped would capture a 3 D sense the shapes the prints the sound film technology politics economics of a certain time 210 I D magazine described the bleeding cacophony of graphics on her website during this time as evoking the noisy amateurism of the early web but also embodying a rejection of today s glossy professional site design which was felt to efface the medium rather than celebrate it 211 Jeff Chang writing for The Nation described a Kala for the Nation and the album s music lyrics and imagery as encompassing everywhere or to be specific everywhere but the First World s self regarding here stating that against a media flow that suppresses the ugliness of reality and fixes beauty to consumption M I A forces a conversation about how the majority live closing the distance between here and everywhere else He felt that Kala explored poverty violence and globalisation through the eyes of children left behind 212 Her third album Maya tackled information politics in the digital age loaded with technological references and love songs and deemed by Kitty Empire writing in The Observer to be her most melancholic and mainstream effort 213 Her genocide depicting 2010 video for the single Born Free was deemed by Ann Powers writing in the Los Angeles Times to be concentrating fully on the physical horror of gun butts and bullets hitting flesh with the scenes giving added poignancy to the lyrical themes of the song 195 Interpreted as a comment on the Arizona immigration law America s military might and desensitised attitudes towards violence others found that the video stressed that genocide still exists and violent repression remains commonplace 214 Some critics described the film as sensationalist Neda Ulaby of NPR described the video as intended for shock value in the service of nudging people into considering real issues that can be hard to talk about 215 216 217 M I A revealed that she felt disconnected during the writing process and spoke of the Internet inspiration and themes of information politics that could be found in the songs and the artwork 218 219 M I A views her work as reflective pieced together in one piece so you can acquire it and hear it She states All that information floats around where we are the images the opinions the discussions the feelings they all exist and I felt someone had to do something about it because I can t live in this world where we pretend nothing really matters 17 On the political nature of her songs she has said Nobody wants to be dancing to political songs Every bit of music out there that s making it into the mainstream is really about nothing I wanted to see if I could write songs about something important and make it sound like nothing And it kind of worked 220 Censorship on MTV of Sunshowers proved controversial and was again criticised following the Kala release Paper Planes 17 221 YouTube s block and subsequent age gating obscuring of the video for Born Free from Maya due to its graphic violence political subtext was criticised by M I A as hypocritical citing the Internet channel s streaming of real life killings 11 112 222 She went on to state It s just fake blood and ketchup and people are more offended by that than the execution videos referring to clips of Sri Lankan troops extrajudicially shooting unarmed blindfolded naked men that she had previously tweeted 11 Despite the block the video remained on her website and Vimeo and has been viewed 30 million times on the internet 216 222 Lisa Weems writes in the book Postcolonial challenges in education how M I A pointed out in her music how immigrants refugees and persons of the third world can and do resist through economic political and cultural discursive practices 223 In light of her influence in modern culture and the historical and political significance embedded in both the instrumental music and lyrics of her songs J Gentry of Brown University instructs a course from summer 2012 titled Music amp Politics From Mozart to M I A with the objective of academically exploring and examining the political messages and contexts of music and the way music has consistently participated in and reflected the political debates of its time 224 Fashion and style Edit M I A performing on the People vs Money Tour M I A cites guerrilla art and fashion as major influences Her mother works as a seamstress in London An early interest in fashion and textiles designing confections of bright fluorescent fishnet fabrics was a hallmark of her time at Central Saint Martins College M I A was a roommate of fashion designer Luella Bartley and is a long time friend of designer Carri Mundane 225 226 Clothes from her limited edition Okley Run line Mexican and Afrika line jackets and leggings Islamic inspired and water melon print hoodies and tour inspired designs were sold in 2008 during New York fashion week 34 227 228 She commented I wanted to tie all my work together When I make an album I make a number of artworks that go with it and now I make some clothes that go with it too So this Okley run was an extension of my Kala album and artwork 227 Spin described her designs as 1000 watt Malcolm McLaren meets Basquiat that complimented her personal style that could run from futurist aerobic instructor to new wave pirate to queenly candy raver 34 229 Contrary to her present style M I A s Arular era style has been described as tattered hand me downs and patched T shirts of indigents embodying the uniform of the refugee but modified with cuts alterations and colours to fashion a distinctly new style and apparel line 230 M I A built on this during the Kala era with a playful combination of baggy T shirts leggings and short shorts She incorporated eccentric accessories in bold patterns sparkle and over saturated neon colour to fashion her signature style which inspired flocks of garishly clothed all too sassy new rave girls with bright red tights cheetah skin smock and faded 1980s T shirts Her commodifying and performance of this refugee image has been noted to reposition perceptions of it in the wider public Hailed as presenting a challenge to the mainstream with her ironic style M I A has been praised for dictating such a subcultural trend worldwide combining adolescent frustrations of race and class with a strong desire to dance 231 Eddy Lawrence of Time Out commented how her multi genre style contributed to her being beloved of the broadsheet fashionistas yet simultaneously patron saint and pin up for the Day Glo nu rave kids 232 Similarly Mary Beth Ray in the book Rock Brands Selling Sound in a Media Saturated Culture writes that M I A s hybrid style addressed a number of social and political issues including power violence identity and survival in a globalised world while using avenues that challenged traditional definitions of what it meant to be a contemporary pop artist 233 M I A was once denied entry into a Marc Jacobs party but subsequently DJed at the designer s 2008 fashion show afterparty and modelled for Marc by Marc Jacobs in Spring Summer 2008 66 234 M I A s fashion and style landed her on Vogue s 10 Best Dressed of 2008 235 She turned down her inclusion on People magazine s list of the 50 Most Beautiful People in the World the same year 236 M I A s status as a style icon trendsetter and trailblazer is globally affirmed with her distinct identity style and music illuminating social issues of gender the third world and popular music 33 231 237 Critics point out that such facets of her public persona underline the importance of authenticity challenging the globalised popular music market and demonstrating music s strive to be political 231 Her albums have been met with acclaim often heralded as eclectic for possessing a genre all their own packaging inherent politics in the form of pleasurable dance music 47 231 M I A s artistic efforts to connect this extreme eclecticism with issues of exile war violence and terrorism are both commended and criticised 47 Commentators laud M I A s use and subversion of her refugee and migrant experiences through the weaving of musical creativity artwork and fashion with her personal life as having dispelled stereotypical notions of the immigrant experience This gives her a unique place in popular music while demanding new responses within popular music media and fashion culture 230 M I A has been the muse of designers Donatella Versace and Bartley and photographers Rankin and David Bailey whose spread documents the British musicians who defined the sound and style of rock n roll 225 238 239 240 On 1 July 2012 Maya attended the Atelier Versace Show in Paris wearing clothing inspired from the designer s 1992 collection 241 242 243 In 2013 she released her own Versace Collection 244 Legacy EditMusic culture writer Michael Meyer said that M I A s record imagery lyrical booklets homepages and videos supported the image of provocation yet also avoidance of or inability to use consistent images and messages Instead of catering to stereotypes he felt that M I A played with them creating an uncategorisable and hence unsettling result 47 Critic Zach Baron felt that it had been shown in her career that M I A had always been adept at using a larger force against itself 245 M I A has been hailed as demonstrating dislocation to be a productive site of departure and praised for her ability to transform such a disadvantage into a creative form of expression 230 Regarding her first two albums Arular and Kala PopMatters writer Rob Wheaton felt M I A subverted the abstract organized refined distilling of violence in Western popular music and imagination and made her work represent much of the developing world s decades long experiences of arbitrary unannounced and spectacular slaughter deeming her work an assault with realism 19 Frank Guan of Vulture said that Kala sounded like the future and that M I A s immediate influence was remarkable as the album seems to herald certain trends current in contemporary hip hop Guan further gave appraisal to M I A for being the precursor for fashion rap acts including Travis Scott Lil Uzi Vert Playboi Carti and ASAP Rocky 246 Writing for Dazed Digital Grant Rinder praised the album for transforming M I A from a cult hero to an international star Rinder commented that the album was a tremendous step forward towards shedding light on the realities of Third World countries that the Western world may not have thoroughly understood Reflecting on diversity and representation issues in society as well as politics surrounding President Donald Trump Rinder said that Kala feels particularly ahead of its time and concluded that M I A was truly a pioneer for a global humanitarian perspective that no artist has been able to deliver quite as well since 247 Some detractors criticised M I A early in her music career for using radical chic and for her attendance of an art school 202 Critic Simon Reynolds writing in The Village Voice in 2005 saw this as a lack of authenticity and felt M I A was a veritable vortex of discourse around most likely irresolvable questions concerning authenticity post colonialism and dilettantism He continued that while swayed by her chutzpah and ability to deliver live he was also turned off by the stencil sprayed projection imagery of grenades tanks and so forth redolent of the Clash with their strife torn Belfast stage backdrops and Sandinista cred by association while the 99 percent white audience punched the air admonishing what he perceived as a lack of local character to her debut album 248 Critic Robert Christgau described Reynolds argument as cheap tack in another article written in the publication stating M I A s experiences connected her to world poverty in a way few Western whites can grasp He questioned why M I A s 2001 Alternative Turner Prize nominated images of pastel washed tigers soldiers guns armoured vehicles and fleeing civilians that bedeck M I A s albums and videos were not assumed or analysed as being incendiary propaganda suggesting that unlike art buyers rock and roll fans were assumed to be stupid 249 Reynolds later argued that M I A was the Artist of the Decade in a 2009 issue of The Guardian 250 Social causes EditActivism Edit M I A s commentary on the oppression of Sri Lankan Tamils has drawn praise and criticism 251 The United States has restricted her access into and out of the country during her career since the release of her debut album 252 M I A notes that the voicelessness she felt as a child dictated her role as a refugee advocate and voice lender to civilians in war during her career Sometimes I repeat my story again and again because it s interesting to see how many times it gets edited and how much the right to tell your story doesn t exist People reckon that I need a political degree in order to go My school got bombed and I remember it cos I was 10 years old I think if there is an issue of people who having had first hand experiences are not being able to recount that because there is laws or government restrictions or censorship or the removal of an individual story in a political situation then that s what I ll keep saying and sticking up for cos I think that s the most dangerous thing I think removing individual voices and not letting people just go This happened to me is really dangerous That s what was happening nobody handed them the microphone to say This is happening and I don t like it M I A Clash 253 M I A attributes much of her success to the homeless rootlessness of her early life 231 Due to her and her family being displaced from Sri Lanka because of the Civil War M I A has become a refugee icon The EMP Museum s 2008 Pop Conference featured paper submissions and discussions on M I A presented on the theme of Shake Rattle Music Conflict and Change 254 255 She has used networking sites such as Twitter and MySpace to discuss and highlight the human rights abuses and war crimes that Sri Lanka is accused of perpetrating against Tamils citing news articles human rights group reports government reports her own experiences as a child and on her return to the island in 2001 to support calls for a ceasefire M I A has also used a great deal of tiger print and imagery a symbol for the Tamil Tigers in both album artwork and music videos such as seen in Galang citation needed Being the only Tamil widely known in Western media M I A has discussed how she feels a responsibility to represent the Tamil minority 256 M I A has spoken of discussions with witnesses during and after the war as reinforcing the need for international intervention to protect and provide justice to Tamil people 252 257 As the 2009 Tamil diaspora protests gathered pace she joined other activists in condemning the actions of the Sri Lankan government against the Tamil populace as a slow systematic genocide 258 259 260 Telling TIME that she didn t see anything wrong in sticking up for 300 000 trapped and dying people M I A stated that international governments were privy to Sri Lanka s use of widespread censorship and propaganda on the rebellion during the island s civil war to aid its impunity in numerous atrocities on civilians but had no will to end it 252 261 Sri Lanka s Foreign Secretary denied that his country perpetrated genocide responding that he felt M I A was misinformed and that it s best she stays with what she s good at which is music not politics 262 She has also appeared on Real Time with Bill Maher as well as other television networks to discuss the issues in Sri Lanka and critique the Sri Lankan government and their censorship of the media citation needed She has been accused of being a terrorist sympathiser and LTTE supporter by the Sri Lankan government 11 263 even by public figures such as Oprah Winfrey as was stated in a Rolling Stone magazine article where the singer recalled their exchange She shut me down She took that photo of me but she was just like I can t talk to you because you re crazy and you re a terrorist And I m like I m not I m a Tamil and there are people dying in my country and you have to like look at it because you re fucking Oprah and every American told me you re going to save the world 264 265 Two weeks before his death the Tigers Political Head B Nadesan told Indian magazine The Week that he felt that M I A s humanitarianism had been a source of strength to Eelam Tamils and fearless knowingly amidst the all powerful Sri Lankan propaganda machinery that demonises any one who speaks for the Tamils 266 Miranda Sawyer of The Observer highlighted that M I A was emotional and that this could be limiting her stating that while she was well informed you re not meant to get involved when giving information out about war and that the difficulty for M I A was that the world doesn t really care 11 Hate mail including death threats directed at M I A and her son has followed her activism which she cited as an influence on the songs on her album Maya 267 In 2008 M I A filmed from her Bed Stuy apartment window and posted on YouTube an incident involving a black man being apprehended by white policemen which in light of the Sean Bell shooting incident elicited commentary debating the force used for the arrest 268 269 She has spoken of the combined effects that news corporations and search engine Google have on news and data collection while stressing the need for alternative news sources that she felt her son s generation would need in order to ascertain truth 270 She told Nylon magazine that social networking site Facebook and Google s development by the CIA was harmful to internet freedom 271 Some criticised the claim as lacking detail 11 In 2010 M I A voiced her fears of the influence of video game violence on her son and his generation saying I don t know which is worse The fact that I saw it in my life has maybe given me lots of issues but there s a whole generation of American kids seeing violence on their computer screens and then getting shipped off to Afghanistan They feel like they know the violence when they don t Not having a proper understanding of violence especially what it s like on the receiving end of it just makes you interpret it wrong and makes inflicting violence easier 270 On 20 November 2013 M I A appeared on The Colbert Report and was asked by host Stephen Colbert what she thought of America After some thought she said Well you know in my mind there s no countries you know it s like we re all one we all live on this planet 272 On 2 December 2013 Time asked M I A whom she would pick for its Person of the Year and she said it would be N S A whistleblower Edward Snowden 273 On 8 July 2016 M I A tweeted a YouTube video of an episode of Edward Snowden on the HBO show VICE entitled State of Surveillance which discusses abilities of governments to hack into cellular phones 274 M I A has been outspoken about the police killings of citizens in the United States On 12 July 2016 she tweeted an article that shows that more US citizens have been killed by police than military personnel since 11 September 2001 275 non primary source needed Anti vaccination and anti 5G Edit In 2020 M I A stated that she would choose death over a COVID 19 vaccine She later clarified by saying that she is not against vaccines but that she is against companies who care more for profit then sic humans 276 That same year she also commented on the conspiracy theory linking 5G to COVID 19 tweeting Prevention is always better then sic cure Can you love vax and 5G at the same time 277 and expressing the belief that 5G is able to confuse or slow the body down in healing process as body is learning to cope with new singles wavelength s sic frequency etc same time as Cov 276 In October 2022 after American conspiracy theorist Alex Jones was ordered to pay almost 1 billion to the parents of children killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting M I A tweeted If Alex Jones pays for lying shouldn t every celebrity pushing vaccines pay too 278 Politics Edit I m not coming at it as a politician it s my own personal experience And I just think that that s just what people want to put out there you know You don t have the right to talk about this And they use me as a puppet to explain that to you that only people who you know have a PhD in this shit are allowed to talk about this Or that only politicians are allowed to talk about politics and that s why we re fucked because the cycle is constantly kept within that fucking framework There aren t more people standing up and telling their personal experience if a normal civilian comes up and says Hey this happened in my village and I m not happy about it we re not allowed to talk about it You have to follow this bureaucratic bullshit to get any sort of action and it s all part of this cycle Like back in the day we had ideals of revolution and fighting back and most of the time that shit starts with individual people having personal relationships these experiences And now it s so disconnected and the media can paint a picture for you they make so much bureaucracy and politics and I think taking away the personal aspects the human aspects of these political issues is really wrong Whether it s the floods or starving people in Africa or whatever It s all funnelled through this channel you really are not getting it from the horse s mouth you know M I A Boston Phoenix 279 M I A speaking at Labour s Charter for the Arts launch in November 2019 M I A endorsed candidate Jan Jananayagam at the 2009 European Parliament election a last minute candidate standing on a platform of anti genocide civil liberties financial transparency the environment and women s rights who became one of the most successful independent election candidates ever despite her loss in the general election 280 In October 2009 she stated that the President of the United States Barack Obama should give back his 2009 Nobel Peace Prize like John Lennon sent back his MBE 281 She said in one interview playing on the famous Lennon phrase Give Peace a Chance I m a bit beyond being an artist who says Give peace a chance Part of me is like Give war a chance just to stir it up you know what I mean 66 In 2010 she condemned the Chinese Government s role in supporting and supplying arms to the Sri Lankan government during the conflict in an interview with music magazine Mondomix stating that China s influence within the UN was preventing prosecutions of war crimes committed during the conflict 282 Following the 2011 United Kingdom anti austerity protests and the 2011 London riots during which her cousin s jewellery shop in Croydon was attacked and looted 283 M I A criticised the UK Government s response to the rioters as failing to address the root causes She recalled the importance of a council funded youth worker she had in her school years and the use of tax money to incentivise a new business job creation program amongst the working class She stated that the top forty companies in Britain who banked offshore should be made to pay taxes in the UK and cut the poor people some slack 284 M I A has been a supporter of WikiLeaks and Julian Assange 285 In her own book M I A wrote regarding WikiLeaks So obviously I love WikiLeaks because after I d gone through the whole backlash they were the first news information site to confirm any news on the Sri Lankan war in the truest form they were the first to release information stating the truth about what had happened to the Tamils as I knew it and to reveal that the United Nations was aware that the Sri Lankan government was lying war crimes had been committed but their hands were tied because any time anyone tried to impose sanctions governments would walk out I support WikiLeaks because of that 286 She composed the theme to Assange s television show The World Tomorrow and later stood by Assange s side as he held a press conference at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London where Assange was successfully granted political asylum by Ecuador in August 2012 I ask President Obama to do the right thing The United States must renounce its witch hunt against WikiLeaks Assange said at the press conference 287 She posted a photo of Assange from within the embassy and later tweeted hummmm after this day 2things have 2 happen either 500 cops turn up outside every rape case reported even if it s without charge or we get raped by the powerz that be and we deal 4eva 288 289 290 The tweets were in reference to an arrest warrant the Swedish Prosecutor s Office issued in August 2010 for Assange on two charges rape and molestation Earlier in 2012 Britain s Supreme Court denied an appeal by Assange to avoid extradition to Sweden to face these charges 285 In November 2013 Assange appeared via Skype to open M I A s New York City concert 291 Also on 18 September 2014 Maya tweeted a link to a documentary on YouTube entitled The Internet s Own Boy Aaron Swartz The documentary is about the life of Aaron Swartz who was a computer programmer writer political organiser and Internet hacktivist In the same tweet Maya included a link and invitation to RSVP to a party to launch Julian Assange s new book When Google Met WikiLeaks 292 M I A with partner Ben Bronfman right and Twitter founders Evan Williams and Jack Dorsey left and center respectively Ann Powers in conversation with Billboard said that in trying to handle political issues and creating art the musician did not want to compromise or keep silent She notes that this method worked for The Clash but that this was at a certain time and a certain place that they benefited from being a band and that audiences were more used to seeing men being confrontational 293 Conversely Denise Sullivan writing in Keep on Pushing Black Power Music from Blues to Hip Hop 2011 noted that in contrast to other rock musicians M I A furthered the legacy of The Clash creating a controversy while doing so 294 Critic Jon Dolan of Spin noted M I A may be a confused revolutionary brilliant provocateur and one of the most polarising yet thrilling figures in pop music today 229 Sarahanna writing in Impose magazine cited composer Igor Stravinsky in describing M I A s role as an artist who challenged the audience into breaking their mind from a conservative cycle of familiarity 295 Baron writing in the Village Voice felt that although M I A s bloodline politics and grievance meant that she was more informed than most and gave her every right to be a partisan and were reason for caution he praised her efforts for leading thousands of American writers including himself to know of the situation in Sri Lanka as brilliant noting her mainly humanitarian angle in her protesting of civilian casualties that had been vastly and disproportionately inflicted on Sri Lanka s Tamil minority and her courage in putting her success and fame on the line to use every opportunity and avenue possible to remind Americans and people around the globe of this conflict is pretty much the most admirable thing going in pop music 258 In a 2 September 2016 interview with The New York Times M I A talked about making the decision to sacrifice fame and money for speech I had the choice to shut my mouth and not be political in order to catapult my fame and popularity and my bank balance But that s not the choice I made 296 In June 2017 M I A endorsed Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn in the 2017 UK general election In a video shared on her social channels she said I don t usually believe politicians but I think Corbyn is actually like real She added So this is a once in a lifetime opportunity please go vote You don t have to trust a politician or vote ever again but just do it now 297 In November 2019 M I A also endorsed Corbyn in the 2019 UK general election She said I m grateful that someone like Jeremy Corbyn is running and called him the last stand that England has got 298 299 300 Media Edit M I A s relationship with some media outlets has been controversial 194 M I A confronted Pitchfork Media in 2007 citing sexism and racist mechanisms as possible reasons for misattribution of some of her work in her career 194 In 2010 M I A tweeted Fuck the New York Times after The New York Times published a critical article by Lynn Hirschberg about M I A and the conflict that portrayed the musician as politically naive and hypocritical Both M I A and several pop culture media outlets were highly critical of Hirschberg s article and reporting Hirschberg later published a correction apologizing for reporting quotes made by the artist out of order 11 229 295 301 Rob Horning writing for PopMatters believed that Hirschberg s incorrect quotes were a deliberate effort to defame the artist 302 M I A responded on her Twitter account posting of a telephone number and asking followers to call in and give feedback on the piece and the revelatory content of the conversations which she secretly taped 11 303 In 2010 she expressed disappointment that WikiLeaks distributed their documents to other news publications including The New York Times to gain wider coverage as she stated their way of reporting did not work 304 305 306 Philanthropy Edit M I A supports a number of charities both publicly and privately She funded Youth Action International to help youth break out of cycles of violence and poverty in war torn African communities and set up school building projects in Liberia in 2006 307 She supports the Unstoppable Foundation co funding the establishment of the Becky Primary School in Liberia 308 During her visit to Liberia she met the then President of Liberia and rehabilitated ex child soldiers She also appeared as part of a humanitarian mission there hosting a 4Real TV series documentary on the post war situation in the country with activist Kimmie Weeks 180 307 309 Following her performance at the 2008 MTV Movie Awards afterparty she donated her 100 000 performance fee to building more schools in the country telling the crowd It costs 52 000 to build a school for 1 000 310 311 312 Winning the 2008 Official Soundclash Championships iPod Battle with her M I A and Friends team 20 of the following year s championship ticket sales were donated to her Liberian school building projects 313 M I A has also donated to The Pablove Foundation to fund paediatric cancer research aid cancer families and improve the quality of life for children living with cancer through creative arts programmes 314 In 2009 she supported the Mercy Mission to Vanni aid ship destined to send civilian aid from Britain to Vanni and controversially blocked from reaching its destination 315 The country s navy announced that it would fire on any ship that entered its waters and M I A was singled out on the Sri Lankan army s official website after the singer announced her support for the campaign 316 In 2011 following her performance at the Roskilde Festival she donated from the Roskilde Festival Charity Society to help bring justice to Tamil victims of war crimes and genocide and to aid advocacy and ensure legal rights for refugees and witnesses 317 Personal life EditM I A met DJ Diplo at the Fabric Club in London 318 in 2003 and the two were romantically involved for five years 319 320 321 322 From 2006 to 2008 M I A lived in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighbourhood of Brooklyn New York where she met Benjamin Bronfman when an American scion of the Bronfman business family and the Lehman banking family who founded Lehman Brothers 323 324 They became engaged and she gave birth to their son Ikhyd Edgar Arular Bronfman on 13 February 2009 three days after performing at the Grammy Awards 325 326 In February 2012 it was announced that she and Bronfman had separated 327 328 M I A was raised by her parents as a Hindu However in a 2022 interview she revealed that in 2017 she became a born again Christian because she saw a vision of Jesus Christ 329 Discography EditMain article M I A discography Arular 2005 Kala 2007 Maya 2010 Matangi 2013 AIM 2016 Mata 2022 Tours EditArular Tour 2005 Kala Tour 2007 People vs Money Tour 2008 Maya Tour 2010 Matangi Tour 2013 2014 AIM Tour 2017 2018 Honours awards and nominations EditMain article List of awards and nominations received by M I A M I A is the only artist to receive nominations for all five of Academy Award Grammy Award Brit Award Mercury Prize and Alternative Turner Prize and the first artist of Sri Lankan British descent to be nominated for an Academy and Grammy Award in the same year She has also been nominated for an MOBO Award MTV Video Music Award and MTV Europe Music Award She was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire MBE in the 2019 Birthday Honours for her services to music 8 She accepted the title bestowed on British citizens in recognition of their service to the arts in honor of her mother who had spent her life in England hand sewing thousands of medals for the Queen 330 In 2022 she received an honorary award from University of the Arts London for outstanding contributions to the creative industries 331 References Edit Dowling Marcus 22 November 2013 M I A and the Challenge of Marketable Diasporic Trap Music HipHopDX Retrieved 15 July 2021 Famous birthdays for July 18 Vin Diesel Kristen Bell United Press International 18 July 2019 Archived from the original on 19 July 2019 Retrieved 7 August 2019 Rapper M I A born Mathangi Maya Arulpragasam in 1975 age 44 Yoo Noah 8 June 2019 M I A Named Member of Most Excellent Order of the British Empire Pitchfork Retrieved 3 October 2021 How M I A Reimagined Art for the Internet Age Another 21 September 2018 Retrieved 8 May 2020 M I A Returns With The One Confirms New Album MATA pastemagazine com 26 May 2022 Retrieved 12 August 2022 One Direction Chris Brown MIA win big at MTV VMAs NME NME 7 September 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2020 M I A Chart History Billboard Archived from the original on 16 November 2019 Retrieved 16 November 2019 a b No 62666 The London Gazette Supplement 8 June 2019 p B15 MIA s baby s name revealed NME UK 23 March 2009 Archived from the original on 17 April 2019 Retrieved 2 April 2012 Iqbal Nosheen 20 May 2017 MIA This a white country you don t have to spell it out to me The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 May 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l Sawyer Miranda 13 June 2010 MIA I m here for the people The Observer London Guardian Media Group Retrieved 23 July 2010 a b c d e f Mangla Ismat 4 October 2004 Not So Missing in Action Nirali Magazine Archived from the original on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 13 May 2007 a b c Empire Kitty 20 March 2005 Flash forward The Observer UK Guardian Media Group Retrieved 30 March 2007 a b c d Maclean Craig 4 August 2007 Agent Provocateur The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 16 September 2010 a b c d Fortunato John I AM M I A HERE S ME RAW Beer Melodies High Times Archived from the original on 15 February 2011 Retrieved 28 August 2011 a b Kellman Andy M I A Short biography allmusic Retrieved 30 March 2007 a b c d e Harrington Richard 16 September 2005 M I A No Loss For Words The Washington Post Retrieved 9 November 2008 a b c d e McKinnon Matthew 3 March 2005 Tigress Beat Canada CBC Retrieved 30 December 2008 a b c d Wheaton Robert 6 May 2005 London Calling For Congo Columbo Sri Lanka PopMatters Archived from the original on 24 January 2009 Retrieved 6 May 2007 OxfordUnion 10 May 2017 M I A Full Q amp A Oxford Union retrieved 20 June 2017 McLean Craig 4 August 2007 Agent provocateur Telegraph Retrieved 9 December 2014 Interview with M I A from ARTHUR No 16 May 2005 Arthur Magazine 11 February 2007 Retrieved 16 August 2018 a b c d e f Orlov Piotr 2004 2005 Interview with M I A from Arthur Magazine Arthur Vol 16 a b John Singleton M I A once eyed a career as a film maker Contactmusic com 4 October 2005 Retrieved 20 August 2006 a b Epstein Daniel 29 December 2005 Interview M I A SuicideGirls Retrieved 20 August 2006 Kehinde Wiley November 2008 Retrieved 25 November 2011 Binelli Mark 15 December 2005 Guerrilla Goddess Rolling Stone Retrieved 6 September 2010 a b Gibbons Fiachra 30 November 2002 Crucified artist up for Alternative Turner Prize The Guardian UK Retrieved 28 December 2008 Weiner Jonah January February 2005 The Next Best Thing M I A Blender p 50 a b Pytlik Mark 14 March 2005 Interview M I A Pitchfork Media Archived from the original on 17 March 2005 Retrieved 12 April 2006 Reeves Jackson 10 April 2008 Exclusive Interview with M I A The Miscellany News Vassar College Archived from the original on 5 October 2008 Retrieved 6 July 2008 a b Pearson Gemma 2004 M I A Fused Magazine Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 4 September 2007 a b c d e Todd Bella 22 September 2008 MIA Interview Time Out Retrieved 6 October 2008 a b c d e f g h Ali Lorraine 20 November 2008 M I A With a Rebel Yell Spin Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b Arulpragasam Mathangi 2012 2012 M I A New York Rizzoli p 13 ISBN 978 0 8478 3917 9 a b c Shapiro Peter 17 June 2005 Talking about her revolution The Times UK Retrieved 30 September 2008 Garcia Nicholas 24 July 2007 M I A Boyz Drowned in Sound Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 9 September 2007 Matos Michaelangelo 17 March 2004 Stormy Tipsy Mya M I A Seattle Weekly Retrieved 21 October 2008 Frere Jones Sasha 22 November 2004 Bingo in Swansea Maya Arulpragsam s world The New Yorker Retrieved 24 May 2008 Schatz Lincoln 27 June 2008 M I A Esquire Esquire Retrieved 13 January 2011 Timmermann Josh 24 February 2005 M I A Arular Review Stylus Magazine Archived from the original on 27 February 2005 Retrieved 24 December 2007 Sung Hannah M I A Is Back in Action AOL Music Canada Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 27 August 2007 Slant Staff 25 January 2010 Best of the Aughts Singles Slant Retrieved 16 September 2010 Hirschberg Lynn 25 May 2010 M I A s Agitprop Pop The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 22 October 2015 Interview with Jonathan Dickins HitQuarters 14 July 2008 Archived from the original on 5 July 2015 Retrieved 24 March 2011 a b c d e Simmons Will M I A Stylus Magazine Archived from the original on 29 March 2006 Retrieved 22 November 2007 a b c d e f Meyers Michael Emig Rainer 2009 Missing in Act i on Asian British Pop music between resistance and commercialization Word amp image in colonial and postcolonial literatures and cultures Rodopi pp 261 273 ISBN 978 90 420 2743 5 Gavras Romain 7 July 2010 MIA by Romain Gavras Interview Retrieved 31 October 2010 The FADER www thefader com Retrieved 22 October 2015 FADER The 8 August 2010 Premiere Issue 24 M I A Cam ron The FADER Archived from the original on 13 November 2013 Retrieved 13 November 2013 a b Metacritic 31 December 2005 M I A Arular 2005 Reviews Metacritic Retrieved 24 February 2007 Southall Nick 21 June 2004 Summer Dubbin 2004 Stylus Magazine Retrieved 22 November 2007 Lindsay Cam 2007 M I A s Outsider Art Exclaim Archived from the original on 1 December 2007 Retrieved 18 September 2007 De Tijd M I A Arular De Tijd in Dutch Retrieved 4 May 2005 a b W H January 2006 M I A Spin No 1 p 57 M I A Lines Up Tour Will Open Several Gwen Stefani Shows MTV 8 August 2005 Retrieved 16 January 2011 Coldplay NIN Top Coachella With Emotional Performances MTV 2 May 2005 Retrieved 1 October 2007 Mower Sarah April 2006 Keeping It Real Vogue 293 Presenter M Myers 11 May 2005 M I A 2005 Live Performances Where the music matters Live Performances Seattle USA KEXP FM 90 3 FM Archived from the original on 25 May 2005 Forrest Emma 4 September 2005 MIA Myself and I The Guardian London Retrieved 19 April 2006 M I A Arular 2005 Reviews Metacritic 31 December 2005 Retrieved 23 December 2007 a b Dietz Jason 31 December 2009 The Best Music of the Decade MetaCritic Metacritic Archived from the original on 21 December 2009 Retrieved 30 September 2010 MetaCritic Best Albums of 2005 Metacritic 31 December 2005 Retrieved 24 February 2007 a b c d Breihan Tom 18 July 2007 Status Ain t Hood interviews M I A The Village Voice Archived from the original on 15 September 2008 Retrieved 23 August 2010 a b c Life in Exile The Fader 8 June 2007 Retrieved 9 February 2008 a b c d e Durbin Jonathan 27 November 2007 M I A Bona Fide Hustla releases Kala Paper Retrieved 23 August 2010 a b Bidder Sean 31 December 2008 M I A Fact Magazine FACT Retrieved 23 August 2010 M I A Person in Focus in Japanese Asahi Shimbun Japan 15 6 August 2007 M I A s Out for Blood With New Track Rolling Stone 5 February 2007 Archived from the original on 6 February 2007 Retrieved 4 February 2009 MIA returns with Bird Flu NME UK 27 September 2006 Retrieved 4 February 2009 YouTube Archived from the original on 10 January 2011 Retrieved 22 October 2015 a b Gold amp Platinum Searchable Database Recording Industry Association of America Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 Retrieved 14 December 2010 user must enter M I A and Paper Planes in search fields and click Go Latest Gold Platinum Singles RadioScope New Zealand Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 17 May 2011 Thompson Paul 13 February 2008 DFA Adrock Remix M I A s Paper Planes on New EP Pitchfork Media Archived from the original on 6 March 2008 Retrieved 14 September 2009 The 51st Annual Grammy Awards Winners List Grammy Archived from the original on 4 December 2008 Retrieved 3 December 2008 Grein Paul 24 November 2011 Chart Watch Extra Adele Tops Brit Tally Archived 22 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Yahoo Retrieved 3 February 2012 Freeload M I A Boyz with Jay Z and Wale The Fader Retrieved 7 December 2008 M I A Kala 2007 Metacritic Retrieved 5 September 2007 Robson Daniel 5 October 2007 A globalist rapper pauses for breath The Japan Times Archived from the original on 29 March 2008 Retrieved 19 December 2008 M I A adds U S dates to Summer Tour Pitchfork Media 28 June 2007 Archived from the original on 1 July 2007 Retrieved 30 May 2008 M I A Picks Best Global Sound Rolling Stone May 2008 Spike Jonze M I A Afrikan Boy Shemko 20 August 2007 M I A Spike Jonze Spends Saturday With Spike Spends Saturday With London UK VBS tv Retrieved 23 October 2008 Swash Rosie 25 September 2007 Sugababes aren t so sweet without Mutya MySpace of the week Afrikan Boy The Guardian UK Retrieved 23 August 2010 Fitzmaurice Larry 28 February 2011 Listen New Old M I A Zig Zag Pitchfork MIA announces new UK tour NME UK 18 October 2007 Retrieved 19 December 2008 MetaCritic Best Albums of 2007 Metacritic Archived from the original on 27 December 2007 Reid Shaheem 8 September 2008 T Pain Proves His Rap Skills On Pr33 Ringz Andre 3000 Wants You To Say He s Wack Mixtape Monday Plus M I A has a fan in Kanye West MTV Retrieved 12 September 2008 John S W Macdonald 13 October 2008 This Week In M I A News Baby On Board New York Observer Archived from the original on 8 February 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2011 M I A calls Bonnaroo her last show ever NME 16 June 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Perez Rodrigo 24 November 2008 DANNY BOYLE AND POP SENSATION M I A TALK SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE SOUNDTRACK MTV Retrieved 12 October 2010 Kaufman Gil 23 January 2009 M I A Honored By Oscar Nod Wants To Book Dave Chappelle For Baby Shower MTV Retrieved 12 October 2010 Nominees for the 81st Academy Awards Academy of Motion Picture Arts amp Sciences Academy Awards Oscars org 22 January 2009 Retrieved 23 August 2010 Nominees 9th World Soundtrack Awards announced World Soundtrack Academy 18 August 2009 Retrieved 7 October 2010 Slumdog Millionaire composer M I A wants to play Oscars New Musical Express UK 17 February 2009 Retrieved 23 August 2010 Full list of awards and nominees for 2009 Brit Awards The Independent Retrieved 3 February 2012 a b Meer Malik 7 August 2010 MIA takes on Google YouTube and Wikipedia The Guardian UK Retrieved 23 August 2010 Rye Rye N E E T Records Debut Single MTV 8 September 2008 Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 12 September 2008 Awesome New M I A Images Pitchfork Media 20 April 2010 Retrieved 12 August 2010 Interview with BLAQSTARR artist DJ and producer for M I A and Rye Rye HitQuarters 26 July 2010 Archived from the original on 21 May 2019 Escobedo Shepherd Julianne 12 January 2010 We Think MIA Just Posted a New Song Video But We re Not 100 Positive The Fader Retrieved 26 May 2010 MIA announces new album tracklisting NME UK 27 April 2010 Retrieved 26 May 2010 Christina Aguilera wraps new album collaborates with Flo Rida Rap Up 1 October 2009 Retrieved 1 October 2009 YouTube Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 22 October 2015 Pickard Anna 28 April 2010 Does MIA s Born Free video overstep the mark Pickard of the Pops The Guardian Retrieved 22 October 2015 MIA releases violent video for new song Born Free NME UK 26 April 2010 Retrieved 27 May 2010 Respers France Lisa 27 April 2010 M I A music video elicits strong online response CNN Retrieved 27 May 2010 YouTube YouTube Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 22 October 2015 a b Dombal Ryan 7 August 2010 M I A Names LP Bumps Release Date Pitchfork Media Retrieved 23 August 2010 CD 未定 3rd Album 3ヶ月期間限定価格盤 M I A Neowing in Japanese Retrieved 21 April 2010 Y by M I A Metacritic Retrieved 5 July 2010 Bennett Matthew M I A Y Review BBC Retrieved 29 June 2010 a b Noakes Tim July 2010 Shock to the System Dazed amp Confused No 87 p 85 Album Cover M I A Y Rap Up Retrieved 23 August 2010 a b Sheffield Rob 28 June 2010 M I A Invasion of the Bona Fide Art Hustlers Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 1 July 2010 Retrieved 12 August 2010 M I A XXXO Ultratop Archived from the original on 23 July 2010 Retrieved 5 August 2010 Top 40 Official UK Singles Archive 24th July 2010 Official Charts Company Retrieved 19 July 2010 M I A Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc Retrieved 31 July 2010 User must click Launch to open the Visualizer tool then select Canadian Hot 100 from the drop down menu Sudoeste TMN Colbie Caillat com disco novo M I A filma com Spike Jonze BLITZ Blitz in Portuguese 7 August 2010 Archived from the original on 19 February 2011 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Pinheiro Davide 6 August 2010 Sudoeste atrai os estreantes Diario de Noticias in Portuguese Archived from the original on 6 August 2010 Retrieved 9 August 2010 MIA and Tinchy Stryder to play Underage Festival BBC 8 March 2010 Retrieved 27 May 2010 Beau succes du rap de MIA a Rennes Le Monde in French France 14 December 2010 Retrieved 31 December 2010 YouTube Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 22 October 2015 Bird Flu M I A San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival 8 July 2007 Archived from the original on 24 November 2015 Retrieved 19 October 2007 Boyz M I A Music Video MTV 27 June 2007 Retrieved 19 February 2009 Catucci Nick 1 July 2009 M I A Directed Video a Kaleidoscopic Kick in the Head New York Retrieved 7 September 2010 M I A Video XXXO Interscope 11 August 2010 Archived from the original on 27 January 2011 Retrieved 7 September 2010 Lipshutz Jason 30 July 2010 Billboard Bits M I A Becomes a Film Judge OZZFest Offers Unholy Marriages Billboard Retrieved 12 August 2010 Arulpragasam Maya 3 December 2010 M I A Twitter Retrieved 18 December 2010 Baker Ernest 22 April 2011 M I A is Working With Chris Brown Polow Da Don amp Swizz Beatz Complex Retrieved 2 April 2012 Lapatine Scott 24 July 2011 M I A 27 Stereogum Retrieved 13 November 2016 Koren Daniel 25 July 2011 New M I A 27 Pretty Much Amazing Retrieved 13 November 2016 a b Jacobs Matthew 19 September 2013 M I A Caught In Legal War With NFL Over Super Bowl Middle Finger Huffington Post Retrieved 24 September 2013 a b Makarechi Kia 23 September 2013 MIA Releases Video On NFL Suit Says Young Cheerleaders More Offensive Than Her Middle Finger Huffington Post Retrieved 24 September 2013 NFL settles lawsuit with singer M I A over Super Bowl middle finger Sports Illustrated 22 August 2014 Retrieved 26 September 2015 Ganz Caryn 28 November 2011 M I A Confirms She s Working With Madonna and Nicki Minaj Spin Retrieved 17 December 2011 Gardner Tim 5 February 2012 M I A flips middle finger during Super Bowl halftime show USA Today Retrieved 6 February 2012 Frere Jones Sasha 6 February 2012 M I A Shouldn t have apologized The New Yorker Retrieved 15 February 2012 Dombal Ryan 30 January 2012 Premiere M I A Bad Girls Pitchfork Retrieved 30 January 2012 M I A Come Walk With Me YouTube 29 April 2012 Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 3 May 2012 Listen M I A Come Walk With Me News Pitchfork 3 September 2013 Retrieved on 28 May 2014 MIA Joins The Roc Nation Family 25 May 2012 Archived from the original on 28 June 2012 Retrieved 3 July 2012 M I A SIGNS TO ROC NATION MANAGEMENT 24 May 2012 Retrieved 25 May 2012 Rihanna 24 May 2012 1 Twitter com a b MIA previews new album with eight minute Matangi mix for Kenzo listen NME 4 March 2013 Retrieved 14 April 2013 M I A Bad Girls Comment Response Official Noisey Specials 03 Noisey Vice 15 February 2012 Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 28 February 2012 M I A Matangi N E E T Interscope Rapreviews com 5 November 2013 Retrieved on 28 May 2014 Murray Robin 25 January 2012 M I A Back With New Material Clash Retrieved 29 January 2012 Mlynar Philip 9 May 2013 Producers So Japan Talk Working With M I A on Matangi MTV Hive Viacom International Inc Retrieved 22 May 2013 New MIA album too positive says label Music theguardian com Retrieved on 28 May 2014 Watch the arresting video for M I A s Bring The Noize FACT Magazine Music News New Music Factmag com 25 June 2013 Retrieved on 4 November 2013 M I A Bring The Noize Official Video Music Video Premieres Noisey Noisey vice com Retrieved on 4 November 2013 M I A s Album Matangi Gets a Release Date News Pitchfork 9 August 2013 Retrieved on 4 November 2013 Eminem Is A Monster On Charts With MMLP2 Sales MTV 13 November 2013 Retrieved on 28 May 2014 MIA Leaves Jay Z s Roc Nation News Rolling Stone 2 January 2014 Retrieved on 27 January 2015 a b Roth Madeline 27 November 2015 M I A Tackles The Refugee Crisis In Borders Video Official MTV website MTV com Retrieved 19 September 2016 M I A Director 17 February 2016 BORDERS Vevo Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2016 via YouTube Lilah Rose 11 January 2016 PSG Demands M I A Take Down Borders Music Video HotNewHipHop Retrieved 19 September 2016 Metro co uk Tanveer Mann for 11 January 2016 Paris Saint Germain is suing M I A for wearing football top in video Gordon Jeremy 25 February 2016 MIA releases controversial Boom ADD song Pitchfork Retrieved 26 February 2016 MIA POC THAT STILL A RYDA YouTube 1 June 2016 Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 1 June 2016 Brandle Lars 8 February 2017 M I A Name Drops Rihanna Madonna Mariah and Ariana on New Single Powa Billboard Retrieved 9 February 2017 Dandridge Lemco Ben 8 February 2017 M I A Returns With A New Video For P O W A The Fader Retrieved 9 February 2017 matangi maya m i a www sundance org Sundance Film Festival Retrieved 20 June 2018 Dhaly Rian 20 June 2018 M I A shares first look at poster and release date for Matangi Maya M I A documentary NME NME Retrieved 20 June 2018 Bulut Selim 20 June 2018 M I A announces release of MATANGI MAYA M I A documentary Dazed Digital Retrieved 20 June 2018 2018 SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL AWARDS ANNOUNCED Sundance Film Festival 27 January 2018 Retrieved 21 June 2018 Minsker Evan Blais Billie Braudie Alston Trey 14 December 2018 M I A Shares New Video for Unreleased Song Reload Watch Pitchfork Retrieved 17 December 2018 Yeung Vivian 31 January 2020 M I A says her next album is nearly finished Retrieved 4 March 2021 Lavin Will 23 March 2020 M I A releases OHMNI 202091 her first new song in three years NME Retrieved 23 March 2020 Skinner Tom 9 September 2020 Listen to M I A s thumping new track CTRL NME Retrieved 22 July 2021 Zidel Alex 24 September 2020 Travis Scott Franchise Single Features Young Thug amp M I A HotNewHipHop Retrieved 24 September 2020 Strauss Matthew 5 October 2020 M I A Scores First No 1 Song With Travis Scott s FRANCHISE Pitchfork Retrieved 23 July 2021 M I A Announces Mata Her First Album In Five Years HipHopMill 1 November 2021 M I A Announces 24 Hour NFT Auction pastemagazine com 5 April 2021 Retrieved 12 August 2022 M I A Announces New Song Babylon Consequence of Sound 11 November 2021 Hussey Allison Strauss Matthew 26 May 2022 M I A Reveals New Album Title Shares New Song The One Listen Pitchfork Retrieved 28 May 2022 Cartwright Garth 2006 MIA Awards for World Music 2006 BBC Retrieved 1 October 2008 Inoue Todd May 2005 Rebel Girl The daughter of a Tamil freedom fighter M I A is here to save us all Hyphen Retrieved 30 December 2011 Stroumboulopoulos George Interviewer M I A Interviewee 15 January 2011 M I A The Hour TV Series Toronto Ontario Canada 9 04 minutes in CBC Television a b Yates Steve 16 September 2007 New world order The Observer UK Guardian Media Group Retrieved 13 August 2010 Sisario Ben 19 August 2007 An Itinerant Refugee in a Hip Hop World The New York Times Retrieved 13 August 2010 A amp R Record Label Company Music Publishing Artist Manager and Music Industry Directory HitQuarters 1 September 2008 Retrieved 12 August 2010 de Wilde Gervase 30 July 2010 Richard Russell of XL Recordings interview The Daily Telegraph UK Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b Shteyngart Gary July 2010 She Might Get Loud M I A GQ Retrieved 15 September 2010 Adam Bradley Andrew DuBois 2010 The Anthology of Rap Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14190 0 Jeffrey H Wallenfeldt 2011 The Black experience in America from civil rights to the present 1 ed New York Britannica Educational Pub in association with Rosen Educational Services ISBN 978 1 61530 177 5 Collins Hattie 18 August 2007 Hattie Collins meets rapper MIA The Guardian UK Retrieved 12 August 2010 Beres Derek 2005 Global beat fusion the history of the future of music Lincoln Neb iUniverse pp 20 21 194 ISBN 978 0 595 34899 2 OCLC 62334812 Aksomitis Linda 2007 Downloading Music Greenhaven Press ISBN 978 0 7377 3646 5 Andy Bennett Jon Stratton 2010 Britpop and the English Music Tradition Ashgate Publishing pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0 7546 6805 3 OCLC 663973447 Longhurst Brian 2007 Popular music and society Cambridge UK Polity Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 7456 3162 2 OCLC 237190093 Dodero Camille 22 October 2007 CMJ This is Another Piece About M I A at Terminal 5 New York Music Sound of the City The Village Voice Archived from the original on 12 July 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b M I A The 2009 Time 100 TIME 30 April 2009 Archived from the original on 3 May 2009 Retrieved 23 August 2010 a b c Kapadia Bodi Melissa 2008 Rereading in the Subaltern Language Politics Power PDF Graduate School of Education University of Pennsylvania Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b Powers Ann 27 April 2010 M I A makes her stance utterly clear with Born Free video Los Angeles Times Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b Durham Meenakshi G 20 May 2009 M I A A Production Analysis of Musical Subversion Marriott Chicago Illinois International Communication Association Archived from the original on 9 April 2019 The 75 Most Influential People of the 21st century Esquire 16 September 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2010 Matheson Whitney 20 December 2007 My top 100 people of 2007 USA Today ISSN 0734 7456 OCLC 34155524 Pop Candy s 100 People of 2010 Nos 50 74 USA Today 14 December 2010 Retrieved 14 December 2010 Kaufman Gil 9 December 2009 Green Day Named Top Artists Of The Decade By Rolling Stone Readers MTV Retrieved 14 December 2010 The 2000s Best of the Decade The New Issue of Rolling Stone Rolling Stone 9 December 2009 Retrieved 14 December 2011 a b Lynskey Dorian 22 April 2005 Fighting talk The Guardian UK Retrieved 12 August 2010 M I A Goes Global Rolling Stone August 2007 Stroumboulopoulos George Interviewer M I A Interviewee 11 October 2007 M I A The Hour TV Series Toronto Ontario Canada 9 04 minutes in CBC Television M I A doesn t need a visa just inspiration NBC Universal Microsoft 21 August 2007 Retrieved 4 February 2009 ACLU 12 July 2006 U S Government Increasingly Blocking Entry at the Border Because of Ideology ACLU Says ACLU Retrieved 14 April 2012 Suzanne Ito 28 May 2009 Don t Exclude Ideas at the Border ACLU Retrieved 14 April 2012 Dandridge Lemco Ben 12 October 2016 M I A Has Been Approved For A U S Visa The Fader Retrieved 13 October 2016 M I A Finally Has U S Visa Approved Pitchfork 12 October 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2016 MIA Talks Fashion The Fader 24 October 2008 Retrieved 24 April 2010 Ashlock Jesse 6 February 2008 Trend Back to the Future I D Archived from the original on 1 June 2008 Retrieved 9 October 2010 Chang Jeff 1 November 2007 M I A News from Nowhere The Nation Retrieved 19 October 2010 Empire Kitty 11 July 2010 MIA Y CD review Music The Observer UK Retrieved 13 July 2010 Douglas Haddow 1 May 2010 The real controversy of MIA s video The Guardian UK Retrieved 31 July 2010 MTV Newsroom 22 June 2010 M I A Learned From The Born Free Controversy MTV Archived from the original on 13 July 2012 Retrieved 1 November 2010 a b Cochrane Lauren 25 September 2010 Romain Gavras Born Free director is no stranger to Stress The Guardian UK Retrieved 7 October 2010 Ulaby Neda From Elvis To Lady Gaga Playing With Shock Value In Music NPR org NPR Retrieved 12 August 2010 M I A pukes out schizophrenic album plots fall tour Rap Up Retrieved 24 May 2010 M I A video removed by YouTube BBC 27 April 2010 Retrieved 27 May 2010 Not so Missing in Action Nirali Magazine 4 October 2004 Archived from the original on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 17 November 2011 Breihan Tom 18 December 2007 M I A and the Double Standard of MTV Censorship The Village Voice Archived from the original on 14 April 2010 Retrieved 23 August 2010 a b Montgomery James 30 April 2010 M I A s Born Free Video Obscured By YouTube MTV Retrieved 14 February 2011 Weems Lisa 2011 Postcolonial challenges in education New York Peter Lang ISBN 978 1 4331 0650 7 Gentry J Music amp Politics From Mozart to M I A Brown University Retrieved 17 January 2012 a b Luella Bartley amp M I A Nirali Magazine 11 August 2006 Archived from the original on 14 October 2007 Retrieved 19 December 2006 Emmanuel BoyWonder Ezugwu Head2head Afrikanboy Vs Cassette Playa Rewind Magazine Archived from the original on 30 March 2008 Retrieved 23 September 2008 a b Stylee Fridays MIA Talks Fashion The FADER The Fader Retrieved 12 August 2010 The FADER Style MIA s New Fashion Label The Fader 15 July 2008 Retrieved 11 September 2008 a b c Dolan Jon August 2010 Deconstructing M I A Retrieved 17 January 2012 a b c Ariyam Derick Kirishan 2010 Imagining Sri Lanka Expatriated Revisions of the Nation Master s Theses Dissertations and Graduate Research Overview Rhode Island College 35 Retrieved 24 August 2010 a b c d e Mangino Gabriella Marie 2008 To Congo To Colombo can t stereotype my thing yo M I A s Politics of Difference PDF Arts and Sciences Honors Theses The Ohio State University Department of Comparative Studies Honors Theses 2008 Ohio State University http hdl handle net 1811 32186 Retrieved 24 August 2010 MIA interview Timeout com Retrieved 13 December 2011 Beth Ray Mary 2011 Rock Brands Selling Sound in a Media Saturated Culture Lexington Books p 242 ISBN 978 0 7391 4634 7 OCLC 664667183 The Dark Side of the Marc Jacobs Show and After Party New York 2 September 2010 Retrieved 11 September 2010 M I A Retro Edge Vogue 70 January 2009 Acclaimed rapper s ego is thankfully M I A The Calgary Herald 27 May 2008 Retrieved 12 October 2010 Lee Jennie 25 October 2007 private icon m i a Nylon Retrieved 22 November 2011 Gaby Wilson 21 June 2011 W Unites Fashion And Music With Janelle Chanel M I A Versace And More MTV Retrieved 15 January 2012 Shaw William October 2005 British Rule GQ Features GQ Retrieved 22 April 2008 Noakes Tim 2010 M I A X RANKIN Dazed amp Confused Jessica Alba amp Christina Hendricks Among Beauties At PFW Versace Show Celebrity Gossip net July 2012 Archived from the original on 3 July 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2012 MIAuniverse 1 July 2012 2 Twitter com Versace 1 July 2012 3 Twitter com M I A x Versus Versace collection unveiled Telegraph Fashion telegraph co uk Retrieved on 4 November 2013 Baron Zach 22 June 2010 The education of Maya Arulpragasam Capital New York Retrieved 6 January 2012 Guan Frank 8 August 2017 10 Years After Its Release M I A s Kala Is a Reflection of a Different World Vulture Retrieved 6 May 2020 Dazed 8 August 2017 Looking back at the passion and politics of M I A s Kala Dazed Retrieved 6 May 2020 Reynolds Simon 15 January 2005 Piracy Funds What The Village Voice Retrieved 16 September 2010 Christgau Rob 22 February 2005 Burning Bright The Village Voice Retrieved 16 September 2010 Reynolds Simon 16 December 2009 Notes on the noughties Is MIA artist of the decade The Guardian UK Retrieved 16 September 2010 New Addition M I A Biography Rolling Stone Music Rolling Stone Retrieved 12 August 2010 a b c Jian Ghomeshi Interviewer M I A Interviewee 18 October 2010 M I A Uncut Q Toronto Ontario Canada CBC Radio Retrieved 12 January 2011 Bennett Matthew 28 June 2010 Agent Provocateur M I A Interview Clash Retrieved 23 June 2010 Moscowitz Gary 21 April 2008 Music Dispatch Even Disco is political Mother Jones Retrieved 24 May 2008 Clover Joshua Abstract Terrorflu or Where in The World is M I A Archived 11 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Pop Conference Experience Music Project 2008 Retrieved 24 May 2008 M I A Tells of Sri Lanka Genocide to U S World Fans archived from the original on 12 October 2013 retrieved 22 October 2015 Bhansali Akshay 13 May 2009 M I A Speaks Up For Civilians Trapped In Sri Lankan War MTV Retrieved 10 March 2012 a b Baron Zach 19 May 2009 How and How Not To Talk About Sri Lankan Civil War and M I A in the Same Sentence Village Voice Archived from the original on 17 June 2012 Retrieved 13 December 2011 Janani J T 4 March 2009 The diaspora as genocide resistors PDF Tamil Guardian Archived from the original PDF on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2010 Tavis Smiley Interviewer M I A Interviewee 28 January 2009 M I A Tavis Smiley Los Angeles 12 21 minutes in PBS Transcript M I A Makes the TIME 100 TIME 30 April 2009 Archived from the original on 2 May 2009 Retrieved 16 January 2012 Baron Zach 19 February 2009 Sri Lankan Government Responds to Alleged M I A Slur It s Best That She Stay With What s She s Good At The Village Voice Archived from the original on 22 February 2009 Retrieved 17 September 2010 Aitkenhead Decca 15 November 2010 MIA People forgot what it s like to be punk The Guardian UK Retrieved 15 November 2010 Rapper M I A claims Oprah Winfrey called her a terrorist theGrio 21 March 2015 Retrieved 22 October 2015 Arular 10 Years Later M I A Reflects on Globe Shaking Debut Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 23 March 2015 Retrieved 5 December 2015 Muralidharan Kavita 4 May 2009 Interview B NADESAN LTTE political head THE WEEK MAY 10 2009 The Week Malayala Manorama Benigno Anthony 16 June 2010 M I A New album was inspired by death threats to my son Ikhyd after I criticized Sri Lanka Daily News New York Retrieved 22 June 2010 Gajewski Josh 24 April 2008 M I A can be found at Bed Stuy and soon at Coachella Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 1 March 2009 Retrieved 16 September 2008 Baltin Steve 6 May 2008 M I A Bashes Cops References Sean Bell Spinner com Retrieved 12 January 2012 a b Denver Nate 24 May 2010 M I A Complex Archived from the original on 28 May 2010 Retrieved 8 September 2010 MIA Facebook and Google were developed by the CIA Nylon 1 June 2010 Retrieved 23 December 2010 November 20 2013 M I A The Colbert Report Episode 10027 New York 20 November 2013 Comedy Central Retrieved 21 November 2013 TIME 2 December 2013 4 Twitter com MIAuniverse 8 July 2016 State of Surveillance with Edward Snowden Tweet via Twitter MIAuniverse 12 July 2016 Shock Report More Americans Killed by Police Since 9 11 than Soldiers Killed in War Tweet via Twitter a b Snapes Laura 22 April 2020 MIA claims British Vogue pulled article about her over anti vax comments The Guardian Retrieved 24 September 2020 Clarke Patrick 3 April 2020 M I A clears up her stance on vaccinations following Twitter backlash NME Retrieved 21 January 2022 Cockerell Isobel 14 October 2022 The damage Alex Jones has done is unforgivable It s also irreversible Coda Media Retrieved 18 October 2022 Brockman Daniel 6 October 2010 M I A Fixing the glitch Boston Phoenix Tamil campaigner Euro vote boost BBC 9 June 2009 Retrieved 25 August 2010 Arulpragasam Maya 9 October 2009 M I A Twitter Retrieved 7 October 2011 Bouard Bertrand 7 August 2010 M I A Les Sri Lankais sont devastes casses English translation The Sri Lankans are devastated broken Mondomix in French Rue 89 Retrieved 7 September 2010 Riot hit Tamils in London rebuild amid local support TamilNet 16 August 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2011 Arulpragasam Maya 10 August 2011 M I A Twitter Retrieved 10 September 2011 a b Macneil Jason 22 August 2012 M I A Invited to Attend Julian Assange s Wikileaks London Speech Retrieved 22 August 2012 Arulpragasam Mathangi 2012 2012 M I A New York Rizzoli p 170 ISBN 978 0 8478 3917 9 Stringer David 19 August 2012 Assange Urges U S to End Wikileaks Witch Hunt Time Archived from the original on 22 August 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2012 MIAuniverse 19 August 2012 5 Twitter com MIAuniverse 19 August 2012 6 Twitter com MIAuniverse 19 August 2012 7 Twitter com Minsker Evan Julian Assange Opens M I A s New York Show Via Skype Pitchfork Retrieved 4 November 2013 M I A 18 September 2014 8 Twitter com Wood Mikael 11 June 2010 M I A The Billboard Cover Story Billboard Retrieved 17 January 2012 Sullivan Denise 2011 Keep on Pushing Black Power Music from Blues to Hip Hop Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 55652 817 0 a b Sarahanna In Defense of M I A Impose Magazinedate 28 May 2010 Retrieved 17 January 2012 Coscarelli Joe 2 September 2016 Why M I A Made an Album About Not Hating www nytimes com Retrieved 3 September 2016 Levine Nick 8 June 2017 MIA urges fans to vote for once in a lifetime politician Jeremy Corbyn NME Retrieved 11 June 2017 Grime4Corbyn has relaunched as Rize Up campaign aims to get more young people registered to vote Far Out 25 November 2019 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Thorpe Vanessa 24 November 2019 Celebrities turn out to support Labour s vision for the arts The Guardian Retrieved 27 November 2019 Dawson Brit 25 November 2019 Jeremy Corbyn Lily Allen and M I A launch Labour s Arts for All policy Dazed Retrieved 27 November 2019 Baron Zach 3 June 2010 Lynn Hirschberg s M I A Profile Earns a Correction The Village Voice Archived from the original on 18 June 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2011 Horning Rob 10 June 2010 Backlash to the M I A Backlash PopMatters Retrieved 30 January 2012 M I A Hits Back at NYT MTV 17 June 2010 Retrieved 5 January 2011 Arulpragasam Maya 7 December 2010 M I A Twitter Retrieved 18 December 2010 Arulpragasam Maya 7 December 2010 M I A Twitter Retrieved 18 December 2010 Arulpragasam Maya 7 December 2010 M I A Twitter Retrieved 18 December 2010 a b M I A to host television show NME UK 27 December 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2007 Success Stories Unstoppable Foundation Empowering Lives Through Education Unstoppable Foundation Archived from the original on 12 October 2010 Retrieved 26 August 2010 Top British Singer MTV Crew in Town The Analyst Liberia 7 December 2006 Archived from the original on 12 March 2007 Retrieved 25 August 2010 M I A to build schools in Liberia NME UK 4 June 2008 Retrieved 24 August 2010 M I A Wants To Build Schools In Liberia Contactmusic com 4 June 2008 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Kharas Kev 6 April 2010 Still the world s most wanted MIA NME UK IPC Media 41 The Official Soundclash Championships Time Out 9 June 2009 Retrieved 24 August 2010 The Pablove Foundation Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 16 April 2012 Baron Zach 7 April 2009 The Sri Lankan Government s War with M I A continues The Village Voice Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 Retrieved 7 April 2009 Michaels Sean 8 April 2009 MIA vs The Sri Lankan Army The Guardian UK Retrieved 13 October 2010 M I A IS GIVING AWAY MONEY AT ROSKILDE FESTIVAL Roskilde Festival 2 June 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2011 Pytlik Mark 14 March 2005 Interview M I A Archived from the original on 17 March 2005 Diplo on Dating M I A It s Hard Dating in the Industry YouTube 20 November 2012 Archived from the original on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 17 April 2013 M I A Tears Into Diplo In Fiery Insta Post Accuses Him Of Building His Career Off Her Pedestrian TV 27 August 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2020 Bein Kat 28 August 2017 M I A Says Diplo Didn t Discover Her amp She Helped Bring Major Lazer Together Billboard Retrieved 12 August 2022 Reed Ryan 24 April 2015 Diplo on Breakup With M I A I Was Really Jealous and Sad Rolling Stone Retrieved 12 August 2022 Pompeo Joe 23 November 2009 The Bed Stuy Bronfman New York Observer Archived from the original on 28 November 2009 Retrieved 9 January 2011 Vena Jocelyn 13 October 2008 M I A Confirms Pregnancy I m Creating A Baby MTV Retrieved 23 August 2010 Herndon Jessica Jones Oliver 14 February 2009 M I A It s a B O Y People Retrieved 14 February 2009 Moody Nekesa 14 February 2009 M I A Gives Birth Days After Grammy Performance The Huffington Post Retrieved 12 August 2010 M I A reportedly split from fiance Benjamin Bronfman CTV News 7 February 2012 Retrieved 7 February 2012 Sheppard Ferrari 10 November 2013 M I A Discusses Money Politics Love and Matangi Stop Being Famous Archived from the original on 17 December 2013 Retrieved 2 April 2014 Allison Hussey and Matthew Strauss 26 May 2022 M I A Reveals New Album Title Shares New Song The One Listen Pitchfork Retrieved 6 September 2022 Yoo Noah 8 June 2019 M I A Named Member of Most Excellent Order of the British Empire Pitchfork Retrieved 3 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Honorary Awards 2022 University of the Arts London Retrieved 25 September 2022 Sources and further reading EditAksomitis Linda 2007 Downloading Music Detroit Greenhaven Press ISBN 978 0 7377 3646 5 Arulpragasam Maya 2002 M I A No 10 Paperback ed Pocko Editions ISBN 1 903977 10 X Bennett Andy Stratton Jon 2010 Britpop and the English Music Tradition Ashgate Publishing pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0 7546 6805 3 OCLC 663973447 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Beres Derek 2005 Global beat fusion the history of the future of music Lincoln Neb iUniverse pp 20 21 194 ISBN 978 0 595 34899 2 OCLC 62334812 Beth Ray Mary 2011 Rock Brands Selling Sound in a Media Saturated Culture Rowman amp Littlefield Lexington Books p 242 ISBN 978 0 7391 4634 7 OCLC 664667183 Bradley Adam DuBois Andrew 2010 The Anthology of Rap Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 14190 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dodero Camille 22 October 2007 CMJ This is Another Piece About M I A at Terminal 5 The Village Voice Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Frere Jones Sasha 22 November 2004 Bingo in Swansea Maya Arulpragasam s World The New Yorker Gibney Mark Loescher Gil 2010 Global refugee crisis a reference handbook second ed Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 455 9 OCLC 639162716 Haddad Candice 2011 In the limelight and under the microscope forms and functions of female celebrity Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 4411 5495 8 Harvilla Rob 20 January 2009 How M I A and America Got Her Swagger Back The Village Voice Longhurst Brian 2007 Popular music and society Cambridge UK UK Polity Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 7456 3162 2 OCLC 237190093 Low Bronwen 2011 Slam School Learning Through Conflict in the Hip Hop and Spoken Word Classroom Palo Alto Stanford University Press pp 157 158 ISBN 978 0 8047 7753 7 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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