Showing posts with label Civil Rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Civil Rights. Show all posts

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Writin is Fightin Fighting the Good Fight Rest In Peace Amiri Baraka



I like that Alexs Pate states in the video below “Amiri was before beat,” because though Mr. Baraka was part of the movement, even publishing, Kerouac and Ginsberg before he started Yugen magazine, he is often not thought of as part of this very significant beat shift in literary thinking, especially poetry.

Amiri Baraka strikes a chord in me for many reason, one reason because of his bravery.   Still I search for that consistent core or reserve and resolve to be who I am and do the right thing.  He is asked in this video what is the cost of truth telling. I feel that I have made great and significant gains but sometimes not. 
 I’m not quite sure what institution Amiri Baraka didn’t buck while being himself and following what he learned and what he believe in.  For instance he distanced himself from Black Nationalism to become a Marxist.
           He imparted some insight to this shift stating, "As long as the black writer was obsessed with being an accepted, middle class, Baraka wrote, he would never be able to speak his mind, and that would always lead to failure. Baraka felt that America only made room for white obfuscators, not black ones."           
            His life at the very least exemplifies, an Ismael Reed, quote, “writin is fightin,” from Reed's essay titled, Writin is Fightin: Thirty Seven Years of Boxing on Paper. I love that Baraka was more than sympathetic toward Castro and Cuba, which he made plain with, Cuba Libre, an essay and as a member of the Fair Play for Cuba committee in 1960 and through, ‘A Declaration of Conscience,’ a literary endeavor in favor of Castro’s regime that he co authored.

     
       Alexs Pate’s intro is rather long but, actually 
one of the few intros you don’t want to fast 
forward through. Amir Baraka starts at 9:34
Perhaps the following bespeaks my simple-mindedness, but of all his endeavors, of all there would be to discuss I would have loved to talk to him about his name change.  I legally changed my name in the early 90s and to this time, January 2014 still many are insulted and hurt feelings continue with many refusing to speak it or even write it in legal documents. I approached it thinking of its permanence more or less like a tattoo.  Interestingly, out of all the stakeholders (many more than I thought there could be) the only one who heard the why and embraced me, Cavana Ibeji Opo Faithwalker, was my father after whom I was named.
            Many laugh at us Africans-American half-breeds and we at ourselves as the misspellingess, most prolific name changers on the planet from Shanaynay to Tequila to Mercedes to Trevon, Malik, and Jamal.  I am not positing that we should all change our names or even that we corner the market on name changing and creating anew. I do affirm it is one of our weapons of mass construction to reclaim our very souls and bodies as we have light to do so.  However, we must stop and look at the continuum from Shanaynay to Amiri and realize that  “X” marks the spot.  “X” may be the alpha and omega of our kujichagulia, our self-determinism.  Poor Shaniqua political at birth, political by birth, political when she just wants a proper future for her son.  Take heart in Amiri.  
Thank you Amiri Baraka (born Everett LeRoi Jones; October 7, 1934 – January 9, 2014), formerly known as LeRoi Jones and Imamu Amear Baraka

Sunday, July 29, 2012


Many Cleveland poets and musician will probably be participating in 100,000 poets for change.  The Nia Coffeehouse will be participating.  Here is some info on 100,000 PaMfC. Leave a comment especially if you'd like to participate.  What should the creative community be doing? What good does it do?


Sunday, May 27, 2012

Nia Coffeehouse dates and Protest songs from our readers


Home base for the Nia Coffeehouse is at 2555 Euclid Heights Boulevard in St. Alban in Cleveland Heights 44118.   For more information Ph. 216/759-0790, leave a message here in comments or at Leftthumbprint@gmail.com.  

Follow us on facebookhttp://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Nia-Coffeehouse/129467261263 and on Google +.


In this bloggissue:

  1. Announcement and information about our next Nia Coffeehouse events
  2. More on protest jazz and music
  3. Comments and favorites from our readers
  4. Wade in the Water
Our next happenings...
  1. Our next Nia Coffeehouse @ St. Alban music and poetry set is June 26th @ 6:00pm. Nia is coming at you with healthy music, phenomenal words, and some healthy eats for you. And unless we say otherwise, Always Open Mic.  

 Our featured poet is Judith Mansour.   

Judith after her last event... got kinda rowdy

Judith Mansour
Judith has a BA in English and, Psychology and an MA in English and Creative Writing.  She has been a creative force in the writing, art and literature scene behind the scenes and in front of the mic for years. You can find Judith at LinkedIn  and at  facebook.





Vince Robinson (seated) with past and current Jazz Poet members
 The band- Vince Robinson and the Jazz Poets.  Look for future Nia blogs dedicated just to this powerhouse who has done so much in poetry, jazz and the community but for now go here are no less than ten pages on Vince and the cats take your pick.


So Many Issues Too Little Time

Soon Nia will be looking at beautiful music and laying protest jazz aside unless you our readers want to keep protest alive.
We've got some interesting responses for favorite protest music from you but first we have questions. It is quite possible that most folks feel overwhelmed and powerless to do anything about today's social ills.  For one thing, the "what can little ole me do" syndrome kicks into effect for many and secondly there are so many things that need attention it is overwhelming, for instance there is fracking, homelessness, infant mortality, child abuse, oil spill issues, Kony, Travon Martin; the object or the objects of the occupy everything movement; the Grammy awards categories being cut that Nia thinks is an important cultural, diversity and monetary issue for people of color and the list goes on.  


Musicians: Powerful or Powerless


Should musicians and people in media feel powerless? Many talk about the power of music but maybe it's a fairy tale conjured up by musicians and their managers.  Already the entire burden shouldn't be put on jazz so we can broaden the conversation for now with an emphasis on jazz.

Mark David Ritscher aka Malichi Ritscher, a fixture and musician in the Chicago music scene, apparently didn't think the power of music was enough.    Ritscher's self-immolation in 2006 on downtown Chicago's Kennedy expressway not mentioned by the media for nearly a week . Chicago Sun-Times columnist Richard Roeper, finally wrote  "With all due respect, if he thought setting himself on fire and ending his life in Chicago would change anyone's mind about the war in Iraq, his last gesture on this planet was his saddest and his most futile."[3]
Ritscher left a detailed smoking gun (sorry) pointing at protest as the raison d'ĂȘtre of his actions.  What about protest music, the power of music, the music that soothes the savage beast?  The actual quote is "music has charms to soothe the savage breast" and forgive me for waxing pedantic. It would be remiss of us not to mention that according to Ritscher's son Mark David was a recovering alcoholic fighting depression and yet we say this exposes two more arena's in which one must question the power of music.


Latin Jazz, Grammy Awards Protest
Go to Multi- American for the entire video and more info on the protest


In contrast to Mr. Ritscher's self-immolation members of the Latin Jazz community protested with music and signs and slogan-chanting the elimination of 31 mostly people of color categories from the Grammy Awards. Polka, gospel, Native American and R&B are among the categories that have been removed.  It would be very interesting if musicians took a page from Black folk and started their own Grammy since they as a group are now not allowed to participate; because of this kind of exclusion Black newspapers sprang up, Miss Black America beauty pageant and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) to workers' unions, clubs and restaurants.






Nia would like to hear from musicians and people in the industry; 
  1. What are you doing/ have done with your talents to "fight the power?"  Where and when are you doing it, venues, times and dates if appropriate.  Here is an effort by Cleveland Orchestra member violinist Isabel Trautwein.
  2. Is Nia asking the right questions?
  3. Is Nia defining the "power of music" correctly?

Nia would like to hear from patrons and music lovers;
  1. What place does music hold in your life?
  2. Has music effected change in your life, an epiphany perhaps, set you on a different path, "saved your life," or helped you through a most difficult time in life?  What was the music that "did it?"
What could local musicians do to help local causes say in Cleveland, Ohio? 


Your comments on Protest music

Ian Heams from Barnet a borough of London writes:
"I totally agree Oscar Brown Jr and also that satire and humour can be found in the MUSIC as well as the lyrics. At our local pub on Sunday (The Mitre) the band playing there (Big Chief) played Fats Waller's "Ain't Misbehaving" to a ska beat. It worked a treat and the humour of the contrast between old and new wasn't lost. There's also a tension between a song by a black composer/performer being played to rhythm mostly thought of as being developed by white artists."For me Jazz works best when it's in fusion with other music and the players are pushing the boundaries."
Ian concerning Nina Simone: 
"There's a woman who understands, and owns, her own feelings and is big enough to respect other people and allow them theirs. Great performance."

From musician: Simmie Davis PROTEST SONGS. I aint got time to die, Lift evry voice and sing, To be young gifted and black.


From pitmonkey
"One of the most powerful protest songs is surely, "Wade in the water". Still sung today, it is well known for the double meaning of it's lyrics which continually remind us of the horrors of slavery which, after 300 years still exists in various forms."
"Wade in the Water" is the name of a Negro spiritual first published in New Jubilee Songs as Sung by the Fisk Jubilee Singers (1901) by John Wesley Work II and his brother, Frederick J. Work (see Fisk Jubilee Singers).
The main chorus is:
Wade in the water.
Wade in the water children.
Wade in the water.
God's gonna trouble the water.
The song relates to both the Old and New Testaments. The verses reflect the Israelites' escape out of Egypt as found in Exodus:14.[1] The chorus refers to healing: see John 5:4, "For an angel went down at a certain season into the pool, and troubled the water: whosoever then first after the troubling of the water stepped in was made whole of whatsoever disease he had."
Many internet sources and popular books claim that songs such as "Wade in the Water" contained explicit instructions to fugitive slaves on how to avoid capture and the route to take to successfully make their way to freedom.[2] This particular song allegedly recommends leaving dry land and taking to the water as a strategy to throw pursuing bloodhounds off one's trail.
 - Wikipedia

Here is a cool version of Wade in the Water by Kevin Whallum:


Wade in the Water - Jazz Version from unityall on GodTube.


Sunday, May 20, 2012

Protest Jazz and Spoken Word

Jazz is known for it's musical humor and satire, it only makes since that humor and satire would be present in lyrics written to and for jazz as a tool that enhances protest.  Last Nia blog we looked at protest without lyrics this week let's look at the spoken word traveling from in front of the music to melody without music to pure spoken word. Oscar Brown, Jr., runs the gamut.
 Oscar Brown, Jr (October 10, 1926 – May 29, 2005) was an American singer, songwriter, playwright, poet, and civil rights activist who created lyrics for jazz protest and whose lyrics easily crossed over into the realm of poetry and spoken word. Here is Oscar Brown Jr.'s "Forty Acres and a Mule" music and lyrics. As you will see it is not about reparations but face value broken promises observed from street level.  Notice how the spoken word comes down and dances around a tight driving 4/4 cymbal and upright bass with a 2/4 rim shot:


 



Here is an interesting counter point to "Forty Acres and Mules," spoken word  jazz with jazz great Oscar Brown on Def Poetry Jam more or less singing spoken word without any music in "I Apologize" but laying down a much tighter meter (4/4 maybe?):




Here is a show tune by Rodgers and Hammerstein that floated by unscathed until it got to ... not Mississippi but Georgia.  Quoting Rene Marie in an article last August in Jazz Times,
Who woulda thunk that this lovely song written by Rodgers and Hammerstein about racial prejudice could be snuck into South Pacific? Rodgers and Hammerstein were repeatedly pressured to remove the song from the musical, with lawmakers in Georgia actually going so far as to introduce legislation that would make illegal the performance of any creative works with ideas that stemmed from “Communist” thinking. According to James Michener (author of the book that inspired the musical), “The authors replied stubbornly that this number represented why they wanted to do the play in the first place. … [E]ven if it meant the failure of the production, it was going to stay in.”


Artist's Choice: Rene Marie on Protest Music

Today’s top jazz performers pick 10 favorite tracks by the players, singers and styles that helped define them.

Well check out the above list and send us some of the protest songs that help define you whether you be a musician or librarian. We'll post your selections and comments.

Here is one of my favorites from Gil Scott Heron, hmmm I think he's talkin' to Black folk  What do you think? The Revolution will not be Televised...

 

 





Monday, May 14, 2012

If It Ain't Got That Sing... can it protest?

Nia Continues the Conversation on Jazz and Protest with a look at Charlie Haden



What exactly is protest music, in this case jazz, without lyrics?  The last issue of the Nia Coffeehouse brought to you Louis Armstrong and Nina Simone with Armstrong's, Black and Blue and Nina Simone's, Goddam Mississippi.  Louis bemoans the plight of African Americans by asking, "what did I do to be so black and blue," and Ms. Simone lashes out at Jim Crow, lynching and the state of Mississippi over the assassination of Medgar Evers with a frustrated exclamation, "Goddam Mississippi!"

As Nia asked the question about protest music in jazz today Charlie Haden crossed our sights.  His album, American Dreams is touted by Byron Woods in, Indy Week dotcom back in 2003 as protest jazz, but is it really?  No doubt Charlie, has "chops" with his effort called, Haunted Hearts making Time magazine's top ten list in 1992 and Down Beat selecting Always Say Goodbye as jazz album of the year in 1994.
In my effort to learn more about American Classical Music I find that it is indeed classical and extremely sophisticated so that the listener has to grow in sophistication to fully enjoy it.  A major part of growing in sophistication is just listening and letting the music have first place for a minute.

One very interesting thing is how the album is touted as protest in the Indy Week. com article, Protest Jazz- Bassist Charlie Haden's American Dream but on Charlie's website patriotism and love of country ( certainly protest constitutes for all but the "love it or leave" ilk love of country) wade through, no gush through the music to the forefront in the description. Whatever happened to there's no such thing as bad publicity? Well certainly there is and the joint is first and foremost a nice piece of work whether it is in your face protest or sappy patriotism.
Give Charlie Haden's "America the Beautiful" a listen; compare it to a Ray Charles version with orchestra and challenge yourself to relegate Ray to the back ground, which is a fun exercise and not as hard as you might think, and focus on how the music takes one to a quite different place than where Charlie Haden's version goes, especially the last stanza.  Love or leave it guys you'll love this America the Beautiful by the Gaither Vocal Band it was a little hard for me to get through although as you would expect from the Gaithers it is very well done.
You might enjoy more about Charlie Haden and his Liberation Music Orchestra here at a devout musician I did.
Where is Charlie Haden today?  Check out Charlie Haden news.

An excerpt from the Byron Woods article:
 "But another Charlie Haden story concerns his protests against the Vietnam War, our country's interventions in El Salvador, and apartheid in South Africa. You can hear them on the three Liberation Music Orchestra recordings he's made since 1970--each recorded, as he's pointed out, while a Republican was president."
Here's Byron Woods at Twitter 
 Nia is still wanting local jazz musicians to showcase protest or involvement in today's society at the Nia Coffeehouse and maybe educate us with some words also.  Bring your band and play with Vince Robinson and the Jazz Poets or let's work out sumpthin. (The Jazz Poets at facebook)

Nia means purpose.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Being at Peace in Our Community


from Poet and Being at Peace in Our Community Progenitor Kathy Smith takes place April 21st @ 2:00pm:

"How we can all become less estranged, and more part of the community?

We welcome you to participate in a series of  events featuring poetry, discussion and
food. The impetus for this series is a drive to improve the relationship and understanding
between people who are leading and policing our communities and all people who live in
the communities to minimize violence and to work better together on solving problems.

Here are some of the immediate problems we’d like to work on solving/discussing:

•Incidents have occurred such as misuse of
force/misuse of authority/improper training on the part of some police officers and
other members of the community.  Some in our community have been stopped and harassed
by for no apparent reason, and like in the case of Trayvon Martin, some children have even been harmed.

• Too much polarization, not enough togetherness
• Not enough working together on common community issues
Addressing and helping solve these social issues can help us work together
on some of the other big issues--economic and environmental--at which

we
will
be
more
effective
addressing
together.

SATURDAY APRIL 21 @ 2-5 PM

BEING AT PEACE IN OUR COMMUNITY

“Introducing Ourselves” @


The Nia Coffeehouse

2555 Euclid Heights Blvd. (At St. Alban Episcopal Church)

Open mic poetry, refreshments and roundtable introductions. Theme of
the evening: “Introducing Ourselves”--however you might wish to interpret
this. Please feel free to bring some food and poetry to share. We will meet
again in May; stay tuned for venue and theme info! "

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Joseph Kony and Uganda's Wounds Still Seeping

Jason Russell creator of the Kony 2012 video and movement


Undoubtedly you've read about allegations leveled at Jason Russell, creator of the now viral Kony 2012 video and his arrest. I'm cynical and chose not to trust the allegations in toto believing that there is some manipulation going on in media and in Mr. Russell's life somewhere, somehow, someway for some reason. It is just suspicious he has no record of anything like this and as soon as this cause gets some juice he makes the news.
Worst case scenario- all the allegations are true, AND Kony is guilty. Uganda's weak defense that Kony is a good boy now and Uganda has been overtaken by warm fuzzies and that Kony is no longer in Uganda does not detract from the illegal and immoral atrocities he has committed. Uganda should be at the forefront of the movement to bring him to justice instead of promoting roadblocks and taking on a Freddie Prince, "it's not my job man," posture.  Thirty thousand (30,000) children, mostly if not entirely Ugandan, have been affected for the rest of their lives.  Imagine deep depression, hopelessness, unbearable guilt, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder at thirteen (13) years of age times 30,000 children dismissed because "Joseph doesn't live hear anymore."

To be sure many decent people in Uganda are incensed at being on the world stage in this light once more and would rather Joseph Kony have no ties to Uganda mentioned.  

Joseph Kony, leader of the Lord's Resistance Army formerly operating in Uganda

The Christian Science Monitor in,

Teacher in Uganda: Why give celebrity status to a killer in Kony 2012,

reports a high school teacher as saying, "The LRA led vicious attacks in northern Uganda for 20 years, killing tens of thousands of people and abducting children as soldiers and slaves. But Kony and his LRA were pushed out of the country by the Ugandan Army, and there have been no LRA attacks here since August 2006. Most of the 1.8 million displaced people have returned and are trying to reconstruct their lives.,"

It is too bad that this refocus on Joseph Kony may show Uganda in bad light once again, but this should not be the main consideration in bringing  crimes against humanity perpetrators to justice, and I dare say this has not been the cry of outrage anywhere else in the world when war criminals are hunted down. 

 It does not matter if Ghandi made the Kony 2012 video or Joseph Stalin did, either way the impetus for his capture and for his being brought to justice needs to be, at the very LEAST maintained.   Mad prayers to Jason and his family believing he will recover quickly and believing what Satan has meant for evil and destruction, God will use for good. Y'all keep up the good fight, let us keep fighting, let us fight more. 

We can't be lead by the perfect person, she or he does not exist unless you look to Jesus, but we can be led by perfect love which casts out fear and overthrows what should not rule this world, what should not rule our lives. Whether evil or good wins you have to choose a trajectory or it will be coercively  chosen for you. Stand up! Stand up! Stand up!  Please do not make the mistake of believing that the spirit of Joseph Kony is not active in your neighborhood.
To bring this closer to home, "we are the richest most prosperous nation in the world and  still we haven't found the political will to end hunger."- James McGovern, US Representative, Massachusetts.  Our style of rape and pillage may be far more insidious than what Joseph Kony exacts.
The  Ugandan Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi asked someone what they thought about Jason Russell's arrest and he named the charges which makes one think there may be a strong connection between Uganda and the event  that the pres knew about it almost immediately. Mr. Prime Minister didn't ask me what I thought about it but here is what I think about it; everybody needs to RE POST and pursue: Right on Jason may God bless to finish the fight: Capture and Arrest Kony Now!







Ugandan Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi