Kenan Thompson is Wrong..Here’s 3 Funny Black Women that Should be on SNL

Kenan Thompson

Kenan Thompson

By now everyone has heard about the controversial remarks made by actor/comedian Kenan Thompson of Saturday Night Live during an interview with TV Guide, where he basically explained the reason why there has only been 4 African-American females comedians in the show’s almost 40 year history was because there simply aren’t that many Black women comedians and the ones that are around aren’t qualified..Talk about a cop-out of an excuse..

Kenan was grossly inaccurate in downplaying the number of Black female comics on the scene. There are scores..Aisha Tyler, Monique, Loni Love, Lunel, Kim Wayans, Sheryl Underwood or my sister Robin Cee.. are a few that come to mind.. (yeah I’m gonna give the fam a plug)

Kenan was also off the mark for misplacing blame.  Instead of putting it on the array of talented Black female comics for lack of diversity , Kenan should’ve blamed the oversight on his boss, SNL executive producer Lorne Michaels.

Now in the interview Kenan stated that most of the Black female comics ‘weren’t ready’.. It’s a bit unclear what he meant by that..Did he mean they were limited to stand up and not able to do improve?  Did he mean they couldn’t do impressions which are often called for during SNL skits? Maybe SNL was looking for established names, or maybe they were looking for up and comings…Whatever the case.. here’s a few Black female comedians/actors who could rock it if they were on SNL…

Wanda Sykes

Wanda Sykes

Wanda Sykes is one of my all time favorite comedians. She has an impressive body of work that spans her doing TV shows like Curb Your Enthusiasm, The Chris Rock Show and The New Adventures of Old Christine to name a few to having her own TV show The Wanda Sykes Show to appearing in all sorts of movies like Evan Almighty, Nutty Professor II and My Super Ex-Girlfriend..

Wanda has an impressive resume and is funny as hell as demonstrated in the clip below. In addition she brings star power and excitement to a show that in recent days has come across as stale and in need of a boost..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zmyRog2w4DI

Sarah Jones

Sarah Jones

Sarah Jones doesn’t get the props she deserves.Many know her for her appearances on shows like Def Poetry Slam where she blew up the spot calling out sexism.. But Jones is a seasoned actress who has won a Tony and an Obie award.

She is one of the best impressionist around and gets seriously busy in her numerous one women shows where she’s played up to 8 different characters..Todate Sarah has done 4 different off Broadway  one women shows..

Sarah’s theater background easily qualifies her for SNL which performs before a live audience and as you can see from the clip below she can go in and out of characters with the greatest of ease. I’d love to see her and SNL comedian Jay Pharaoh do a skit together.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sucza6EOIf0

Issa Rae

Issa Rae

Issa Rae The 6 new cast members recently added to SNL aren’t A-List folks who are household names. They seem to be folks who probably been paying dues and are now getting the ‘proverbial’ big break. Well if that’s the case, Issa Rae should be part of that class.

She’s been grinding away, paying dues and made a name for herself with her independent project ‘The Misadventures of Awkward Blackgirl‘. The show which was only shown on line blew up and brought Issa critical praise. Since then she’s gone on to produce 3 other projects; ‘Ratchet Piece Theater‘, ‘Flyguys‘, and ‘Roomieloverfriends‘.. She also hosts a TV talk show called Exhale which airs on Aspire TV..She is also developing a new project called ‘I Hate LA Dudes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzGHeZSwgCA

We could list a dozens more talented female actress/comedians who should get a shot at SNL..Instead of concluding that Black female comedians are lacking, how about investing in their projects and help them to hone their talents. Such investments are not limited to SNL, but to the public at large who should at the very least raise awareness of those who are ion the trenches grinding away. To be honest, it might behoove the folks at SNL to get down and join the programs and projects these aforementioned women have going on…

 

 

 

Robert King of Angola 3 & Former Panther Malik Rahim Say Good Bye to Herman Wallace

Herman-Wallace-full April-2013Former Black Panther and political prisoner, Herman Wallace of the Angola 3 was buried yesterday. His funeral coincidently took place one week before the 47th anniversary of the Black Panther Party. There is no doubt his legacy, his death, the plight of political prisoners and the torture behind solitary confinement will cast a shadow and be addressed at the Panther Reunion (Oct 17-19) at the Arlene Francis Center in Santa Rosa..Get more info on that HERE.

With respect to Wallace’s funeral KPFA News Reporter Ann Garrison covered it and spoke with Angola 3 member Robert King who is now free.. (Albert Woodfox is still locked up ) and Malik Rahim former Black Panther and founder of Common ground Collective in New Orleans.

Here’s what Ann wrote and her conversation:

Friends and supporters of Herman Wallace held a memorial service and buried him in New Orleans, the city where he was born, on Saturday, October 12th. Wallace was one of the Angola 3 who were convicted of killing a guard at Angola State Prison in 1972.

They have always maintained their innocence and said that they were actually convicted for organizing a chapter of the Black Panther Party in Angola Prison, to push for an end to brutal and inhumane prison conditions.

Robert King was held in solitary confinement for 29 years before his conviction was overturned and he was released; Herman Wallace was held in solitary for 41 years, as was Albert Woodfox, who remains in solitary confinement.

Wallace was released in an ambulance, dying of cancer, on October 2nd, after a federal judge ruled that his indictment had been un-Constitutional. He died three days later on October 4th.

Angola 3 member Robert King and Malik Rahim, former Black Panther and founder of the Common Ground Collective, attended the memorial service and helped bury their lifelong friend. KPFA’s Ann Garrison spoke to them the next day.

Click the link below to download or listen to the HKR Intv

Click the link below to download or listen to the HKR Intv

ANN-MALIK-KING-HERMAN-WALLACE-FUNERAL

Celebrating Columbus Day and its Legacy of Genocide & Slavery

Columbus was a killer

Columbus was a killer

Today many folks throughout this country will take the day off to celebrate and pay tribute to a man who set the stage for genocide and the slave trade here in the United States. Yes we’re talking about the man they call Christopher Columbus who is still being taught to us in schools as the guy who ‘discovered’ America.

The myth of Columbus being a great explorer comes at a time when we have History text books being re-written in states like Texas and  being banned in states like North Carolina and Arizona..Rarely are is there any mentions of any of his heinous inhumane crimes or the fact that he was an inept explorer who got lost and wound up on this country he supposedly discovered..

Instead what we have gotten over the years are feeble attempts to rework Columbus’ image and make him into some great explorer or an Italian hero. What gets ignored are the millions of people all over the North and South American continent who have protested Columbus and use this day as a way to remind folks of Indigenous rights.  From the huge Mapuche protests in Chile where more than 15 thousand folks showed up demanded a return to ancestral lands to the ongoing battles with the Idle No More Movement who just held a big march in Sacramento, California calling for  indigenous self-determination , the honoring of treaties and sustainability to numerous movements fighting back and protesting the stealing a destruction of Native Lands via the KeyStone XL Pipeline.

The only thing worse than perpetuating the benign myth of Columbus is not talking about how our founding fathers were slave owners and how  Thomas Jefferson’s celebrated mistress Sally Hemmings was a slave. When the Declaration of Independence was signed with the edict ‘All men are Created Equal’, those who were enslaved were seen as 3/5th human. Yes, today we must reconsider Columbus Day. We can start by changing the offensive name of that NFL Team in Washington DC and stop using Native Americans as Mascots for sports teams and military weapons.

Here’s a few reminders that have come out over the years…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=il5hwpdJMcg

Below is a video of actor Benjamin Bratt who is reading the words of Bartolome de las Casas, a historian who described the atrocities committed against the Taino people of the island of Hispaniola via Columbus and subsequent explorers. These accounts were included in Howard Zinn’s influential People’s History of the United States

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KTgMALmY5A

The late great scholar Dr John Henrik Clarke gives a very thorough history lecture on Christopher Columbus and he forces of oppression he set into motion. He painstakingly details  the rise of European slave trade into Africa and the rise of religious oppression, which was used to justify it. He talks about the genocide of native Americans. This is the first part of a seven part lecture…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avM3POsSzYI

Don’t be one to clown Columbus Day while cheering for that football team in DC talking about its tradition to use racial slurs for a team.. To do so is to further dehumanize people

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hXeyH9bH4oE

We’ll leave out with a song from Flipsyde that gives a breakdown of US History

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gI1fCMmir1Y

Was reminded by this cut from Head Roc out of Washington DC about this Cris Columbus song

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ztdFfcS2GY

 

Philly Cops Captured in Disturbing Video Abusing Stop and Frisk Tactics

Philly PoliceOver the past few years, there has been a pervasive counter argument to those who oppose the police policy of Stop and Frisk, that if you have nothing to hide, there should be no problem in having cops ‘momentarily‘ detain you…

Such arguments have been uttered by Mayors like Michael Bloomberg as well as other elected officials who would like to adopt such policies to their respective cities. We’ve heard police commissioners like Raymond Kelly who heads up NYPD defend the practice, ensuring us that law-abiding citizens have nothing to hide. Law makers have stated that Stop and Frisk is a small price to pay for public safety..

For the hundreds of thousands who have been stopped, being innocent and having nothing to hide has not resulted in slight inconveniences. far too often the encounters teeter on life and death scenarios ..

We saw this with unarmed Ramarley Graham in the Bronx who was killed in front of his grandmother. The cop who shot him Richard Haste was not indicted.

We saw this in Pittsburgh, Pa with Jordan Miles, an honor student beaten by police within an inch of his life.. There’s a long, long list of abusive behavior by police during these stops with little or no change in sight..

Screen Shot 2013-10-12 at 6.31.49 AMBelow is a video highlighting the latest incursion. This took place in Philadelphia two weeks ago and is  indeed scary. It clearly shows you what so many have long complained about..This is not police work what we are seeing. This is bullying and abuse of power and two officers ‘hunting’ for Black men to mess with. Its part of much larger policy of containment.

in the video the two cops are shown cursing and berating the two men detained. They threaten them and warn them to stay out of Philadelphia, even though they live in the neighborhood.  It was truly demoralizing, which seems to be the end game of these encounters. Where’s Philly’s Mayor Michael Nutter ?

This incident comes on the heals of a retired Philly Cop named Herbert Spellman speaking out and saying Stop and Frisk is demeaning..He was recently profiled and accosted by Philly police while on his way to a bus stop. You can read about that HERE.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4exZ-jXgWE#t=277

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGc505WuxpE

Ramona Africa Speaks on History of MOVE & New Film ‘Let the Fire Burn’

Let the Fire BurnLast week we got a chance to peep the new documentary ‘Let the Fire Burn‘ which chronicles the MOVE Organization out of Philadelphia and the set of tragic events that took place on Osage Avenue May 13th 1985 when the City’s first African-American Mayor Wilson Goode allowed a bomb to be dropped on their headquarters.. The end result was 11 people killed including 5 children..

The movie gives a run down of some of the conflicts in the 1970s between MOVE members and the Philly’s notorious police department and former police commissioner turned Mayor Frank Rizzo who was a tyrant of a man. The film shows the infamous confrontation in 1978 which left one police officer named James Ramp, dead. MOVE members maintained it was ‘friendly fire‘ by the police who killed the officer, Philly police saw it differently.. A brutal beating of MOVE member Delbert Africa was caught on film as he surrendered himself to police with his hands up. 9 MOVE members were convicted for the killing of Ramp and given long prison sentences which continue to this day..

That conflict cemented the turbulent relationship between MOVE members and police which came to boiling point in 1985..Let the Fire Burn shows in grisly detail what went down that day including the Mayor ordering the fire department to let the fire burn resulting in 61 Non Move houses burn to the ground..

The movie also shows the community commission hearings that were held after the bombing whose members were hand-picked by Mayor Goode. They concluded, the Mayor, the City and the police were negligent..

Ramona Africa

Ramona Africa

We spoke with Ramona who is the only surviving member of that bombing who gave us an in-depth, insightful break down about MOVE, how and why they were founded by John Africa who was killed in the 85 bombing. She talked at length about the organization’s philosophies and what she experienced the day of the bombing..

Let the Fire Burn leaves one with many questions that needed to be answered and thankfully Ramona was able to fill in all the crucial gaps and then some.. She also talked about the recent passing of Birdie Africa (Michael Ward) who was prominently featured in the documentary. He was the only other survivor and was around 13 at the time of the bombing. His mom died in the fire.

Ramona also talks about a crucial part in the documentary where questions were raised as to why MOVE members would turn around and run back into a burning home. She talks at length about how the police had fired over 10 rounds and as MOVE members attempted to leave the burning building, police began firing on them forcing many to retreat..

During our conversation with Roman Africa we talked about how the bombing on Osage Avenue had been literally written out of history books along with another tragic bombing of African American homes which took place in 1921 in Tulsa, Oklahoma which was then called Black Wall street.

Ramona Africa concluded by telling us what happened to the 65 innocent families who lost their homes and how the city screwed them over in major way. She also alerted us to a media smear campaign that is currently going on with local media in Philadelphia designed to take away from many of important questions raised in the movie..You can check out film’s trailer and the interview we did with Ramona Africa at the links below…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9eCA0bIezA

Click the link below to download or listen to the HKR Intv

Click the link below to download or listen to the HKR Intv

 

HKR-Roman Africa Intv

3 Dope Songs from Chilean Emcee Anita Tijoux

Ana Tijoux blueToday’s 3 Dope Songs celebrates the work of  Chilean emcee Anita Tijoux also known as Ana Tijoux.. She was born in France to two exiled Chilean parents who later returned after the US backed dictator General Augusto Pinochet was disposed.

She is what many would consider an emcee’s emcee.. Her nice, intense, laid back flows are precise, mesmerizing and often laced with social and political commentary..Her popularity is understated..

At almost every show I’ve seen her perform from Austin, Texas to the Bay Area gets sold out, attracting crowds that know every word to her songs, even as she raps in Spanish and French.

She had been grinding away for a minute. Initially it was with the group Makiza who many compared to NY’s famed Native Tongues because of their sound and style.. They made some noise with a couple of underground bangers in the late 90s that made the charts in Chile..The group put out a couple of albums including; ‘Vida Salvaje‘ and ‘Casino Royal‘ which was released in 2005 to rave reviews..

The following year Makiza broke up and Tijoux went solo. In 2009 she became a break star internationally with the release of her album 1977 which proclaims the year of her birth and is mostly autobiographical. Many in the US got their first peak at her when she touched down at SXSW in 2010 and blew up the spot doing songs off that album including the popular jam Sube which was done with Detroit emcee Invincible. The SXSW stop led to her launching a successful US tour..

anita-tijoux-latinaSince then she’s released two other projects including; Elefant Mixtape and  the album La Bala which was nominated for a Grammy.  Her music has been featured in the video game FIFA 11 and on the hit TV show Breaking Bad. She was also voted as Best Female Emcee Dominating Mics Everywhere on MTV Iggy…Lastly she’s been part of a campaign for women’s empowerment called Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide.

If you don’t know Anita Tijoux, you been missing out.. Check out some her joints below as well our first interview which was done a couple of years ago when I was introduced to her by the group and fellow Chilean emcees Rebel Diaz..

Anita Tijoux SXSW Intv

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Ana Tijoux w/ Quantic  Doo Whop That Thing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kDjbvIU1zU

This is a recent song from Anita Tijoux  where she hooked up with Colombia-based, British-born producer and musician Quantic. Here the two do a dope cover of Lauryn Hill‘s classic hit “Doo Wop (That Thing)”  The lyrics are flipped into Spanish by Tijoux, whose understated yet charismatic flow makes her a beguiling vocal presence, along with a Cumbia beat giving an alternative, tropical slant to this landmark jam.

Ana Tijoux Elephant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDO-_HW5DdA

This is from the mixtape Ana dropped about a year and half ago.. Its a fun video and a warm up to what she had in store on the album LA Bala which would be nominated for a Grammy.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAayt5BsEWg

Anita Tijoux Sacar La Voz ft (Jorge Drexler)

This is vintage Ana Tijoux…low key, but powerful and captivating ..It’s an inspiring song about walking proud, being fearless, even if you have ‘nothing in your pockets’ and standing up in the face of oppression..  One of my favorite cuts from her featured on the La Bala album..

Anita Tijoux Shocked

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=177-s44MSVQ

This is one of Ana Tijoux‘s most popular songs to date which she did a couple of years ago to bring attention and support to the massive student strikes that were going on in Chile, which brought millions of people out to the streets but was ignored here in the US..She later re-did an acoustic version of this song in Tuscon, Arizona to bring attention to the plight of undocumented folks and the harsh anti-immigrant SB 1070 laws.. You can peep that video
below..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkvgAXkd7yM

 

An Interview w/ the First Lady of South Central, YoYo

yoyobuilding-225Went digging in the archives and found this vintage interview w/ one of my favorite emcees and long time friend, YoYo.. She had been on hiatus for a while when we caught up with each other in LA back in 2005.. She was working on some new material and decided to open up and share with us some gems about her life and career at the time..

Folks were first introduced to YoYo when she got down with Ice Cube on a song called ‘It’s A Man’s World‘. It was featured on the classic album ‘Amerikkka’s Most Wanted‘. To say the least people were blown away with this sister who could trade lyrical barbs with Cube and as a result they eagerly awaited for more material..

Since then YoYo he went on to give us 4 albums including; ‘Make Way for the Motherlode‘, ‘Black Pearl’, ‘You Better Ask Somebody‘ and ‘Total Control’ , She’s given us a number of hit songs including the classic; ‘Can’t Play With My Yoyo‘, ‘Girl Don’t Be No Fool‘ and ‘Bonnie and Clyde Theme‘ .

Yo Yo was a breath of fresh air when she hit the scene because she was so outspoken and a strong advocate for women’s empowerment. She also introduced us to the IBWC (Intelligent Black Woman’s Coalition), wrote a number of advise columns and ran a number of Youth programs..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_3qSG4yEL8

YoYo took a break from the music for a while to pursue acting. She appeared in a number of films including; Boys in the Hood, Menace to Society and New York Undercover. She also had a reoccurring role on Martin Lawrence‘s hit TV show. and is now back on the scene ready to blow up..we caught up with her in Los Angeles where she opened up and spoke to us about her relationship with Ice Cube, her trials and tribulations in the industry, her special friendship with 2Pac and where she expects to be in 2005..

Below are the links to our 2 part 2005 interview

Click the link below to download or listen to the HKR Intv

Click the link below to download or listen to the HKR Intv

HKR Intv w/ YoYo pt1

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HKR- Intv w/ YoYo pt2

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The History of the Latin Quarter During Hip Hop’s Golden Era

Paradise the Arkitech

Paradise the Arkitech

The Latin Quarter in midtown Manhattan was the place where every Hip Hop artist came from far and wide to be blessed back in the Golden Era of Hip Hop in the mid to late 80s.

It was the club of clubs. It was the place to be seen. It was a place to hear and see the latest and greatest It was the scene of epic battles and performances..ie KRS-One vs Mele-Mel..

It was where folks like Public Enemy, LL Cool J, 3rd Bass, Schoolly D, Jungle Brothers and numerous others went to get their start..It was hard on folks who didnt bring the ruckus.. Public Enemy and MC Hammer were booed when they first performed at the famed club..

We relive those lofty days with Paradise Gray of X-Clan.. He was the one who ran the show back in the days, booking the acts and making sure the high standards were met.. He has lots of insights and stories to tell..especially about a set of secret meetings between the top artists of the day that would forever change the face of Hip Hop.and usher in an important era centered on social justice. The LQ was where the idea of rocking African leather medallions in lieu of Gold chains was born. The story behind it is fascinating..

On a side note be on the look out for a book penned by Paradise and Italian author Giuseppe Pipitone called ‘The Latin Quarter: Oral and Pictorial History

Download and listen to Breakdown FM Intv

Download and listen to Breakdown FM Intv

Breakdown FM History of the-Latin Quarter pt1

Breakdown FM: History of the Latin Quarter pt2

Enjoy the interview and the pictures..

Paradise Gray & Fab 5 Freddy

Paradise Gray & Fab 5 Freddy

Paradise Gray & LL Cool J

Paradise Gray & LL Cool J

Paradise Gray & Just-Ice

Paradise Gray & Just-Ice

 

Paradise Gray & Chuck D

Paradise Gray & Chuck D

Paradise Gray & Kurtis Blow

Paradise Gray & Kurtis Blow

paradise-Latin quarter

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0h0c9EOo0GU

The Wisdom of Chali 2na..Jurassic 5 is No Joke

chali_2na_Here’s a throwback interview from the Breakdown FM vaults.. It was done in LA 2006.. It’s the one and only Chali 2na of Jurassic 5

In promotion of their highly anticipated album, Feedback, true school Interscope recording artists Jurassic 5 have launched a massive nationwide tour that began on June 18th and will end September 13th 2006. Incorporated within those dates are back to back to back shows in Florida, including one at Club Revolution in Fort Lauderdale on August 5th.

For all of you that don’t know, Jurassic 5 is a very eclectic group of artists from Los Angeles, California that have been in the game since 1993. Originally consisting of two separate groups, the Rebels of Rhythm and Unity Committee, Jurassic 5 is made up of emcees Chali 2na, Akil, Zaakir AKA Soup, Mark 7even, and turntablist/producer DJ Nu-Mark. DJ Cut Chemist was an original member of the group but has since left.

Hip Hop pioneer journalist and activist, Davey D, had the opportunity to interview the deep sounding basso tone voiced member of Jurassic 5, Charles Stewart AKA Chali 2na. Originally from Chicago, many believe that Chali was nicknamed as such simply after Charlie the Tuna, the deep-voiced animated mascot of Starkist. But as he notes, it was really his father who originally gave him the name, who he himself was referred to by his peers as “peewee.”

Considered to be perhaps the most eclectic member of Jurassic 5, Chali is highly influenced by different forms of music, including Reggae, Soul and House. It was his musical well roundedness that led him to become a founding member of the Salsa Funk band Ozomatli (although he is no longer with Ozomatli, he still collaborates with them on occasions). Lyrically, Chali’’s highly complicated style has been compared to the likes of Rakim, often focused on topics surrounding the social and political climate of the times with wit and wisdom. His very artfully creative expression could be traced way back to his original experiences in Hip Hop as a graffiti artist, which complements his overall persona. As he very humbly puts it, “Hip Hop saved my life.”

The following is a short excerpt of a lively interview with Chali that was originally conducted on Breakdown FM and its full length audio version can be accessed through Davey D’s political website www.daveyd.com. For right now, just check out this snippet of what Chali had to say.

-Tony Muhammad-

Download and Listen to the Breakdown FM Intv

Download and Listen to the Breakdown FM Intv

BreakdownFM-Charli2Na-Jurrasic5

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chali-2naDavey D (DD): When you think of Jurassic 5, it hearts back to the days when Hip Hop was flourishing with groups. Now everyone is a solo artist. Now you very rarely see a pair of emcees. One of the challenges of being a group is defining the roles, keeping the chemistry, that sort of stuff. So with Jurassic 5, do you guys have different roles? How do you keep the vibe and how do you keep the chemistry together?

Chali 2na (C2): It is a team thing, like having a basketball team or somethin’. We indeed sink into these roles that we feel most comfortable with and bring to the table. Everything that I bring to the table, eventually it was kind of fashioned for me to do, whether it is the basso tone part of the harmony or the presence itself. I guess that’s my role. For every member there is a role. There are four emcees. We are all on the same wavelength, but I guess different waves. Each part of what we bring to the table is the chemistry and makes Jurassic 5. I guess my role (laugh) is to hold the wall up.

DD: You as Chali 2na come from a very specific tradition of emcees; the basso tone voice, you know, starting with Melle Mel, moving to Chuck D … There are very few that have that, and so you have a lot of responsibility. And so when you get on stage or even when you get in the mic booth, do you feel like you are of a certain class? There’s been that tradition in Black music of, as you put it, of those who “Holds the wall up” and people just have to listen to the guy with “the voice.”

C2: (Laughs) I don’t think I think like that, it’s more like what could I contribute to make the song better; like it needs more of that, or maybe it needs less of me. But, I do feel proud to be part of that lineage of the Rakims and the Melle Mels, for sure. I’m proud of that for real.

DD: When you look over your albums, I’d like to say that you guys boldly go where a lot of other people don’t go as a group out the gate. Like in your song Contribution, man, you guys were talking about raising kids at a time when no one was thinking about it! This other song, Freedom, you guys are boldly talking about Mumia and challenging people! Talk about that and the reason why you guys bring that political spirit when you do your songs, bring up these relevant issues at a time when grown up adults who run these media outlets are saying, “You guys are a little too smart for your audience. Can you talk about a blunt? Something like that?” (Laughs)

C2: Well, for us man, besides all the fun we have and besides rockin’ the crowd, making people dance, moving you’re a**, we want to make your mind follow … In the end, at the bottom of the line of it all, we being Black people in America up on stage, with the mics in our hands, broadcasting our voices amongst the crowd … that privilege was not granted to us all the time in this country. There were a lot of cats that had to die so that we could have the privilege to speak as clear and as concise and as opinionated as we are able to do right now. I think I could speak for the rest of my fellows when I say that when we do have the mic, the responsibility to being allowed to say something that helps and not hurts is evident. It’s on us and there is no way we can shun that responsibility. I feel that the minute we do is the minute that we have taken it for granted.

DD: Talk to us about the song Freedom which is at least 2 years old and is having quite a bit of a resurgence. Why have people immediately embraced it? What was going through y’all minds when you sat this down?

C2: See … we did the song before 9-11 and we were going to talk about the topic of freedom … But after the 9-11 thing, just watching how the world changed. Like, I’m 34. To see the sky stop and no planes fly, I’ve never seen that (before). I’ve never heard the sky like that (before). That bugged me out! To see the world change in an instant and seeing peoples’ civil liberties being threatened! We are pretty political in the sense that we try to keep up with daily events. This whole thing is a scary thing. The thin line of freedom … people are walking on that thin line. But freedom to me is the freedom to be free. So it’s like we had to speak on it from all of our perspectives, like a united front.

DD: Your line specifically talked about Mumia. It almost seemed like you were issuing a challenge to people! It sounded like you were mad as heck!

Mumia Abu Jamal

Mumia Abu Jamal

C2: Well, the line goes, “While we try to free Mumia Abu-Jamal two or three of ya’ll will probably be at the mall.” (Meaning) Just try to go on with your day-to-day lives. Basically, just try to live in life (in the way) that was created. You don’t want this world to be shattered; doing whatever it takes to keep things the way they are. When you have people like Mumia who have been jailed and who’s rights have been abused and certain actions have been misconstrued to the point that he is in jail for life.

… There are a lot of things going on as far as terrorism is concerned, where territory is concerned and it’s going on in our country and in your neighborhood. And it’s not necessarily the government per say, but you may have a corrupt preacher on your block that’s trippin’ and has everybody twisted or some alderman or some senator, someone that everyone looks up to … I mean these things need to be addressed at all times. And we feel that to speak out against evil is one of the stronger things you can do as a person.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsZ8a3jph-Q

Breakdown FM: The History of the Latin Quarter Night Club During Hip Hop’s Golden Era

Paradise the Arkitech

Paradise the Arkitech

The Latin Quarter in midtown Manhattan was the place where every Hip Hop artist came from far and wide to be blessed back in the Golden Era of Hip Hop in the mid to late 80s.

It was the club of clubs. It was the place to be seen. It was a place to hear and see the latest and greatest It was the scene of epic battles and performances..ie KRS-One vs Mele-Mel..

It was where folks like Public Enemy, LL Cool J, 3rd Bass, Schoolly D, Jungle Brothers and numerous others went to get their start..It was hard on folks who didnt bring the ruckus.. Public Enemy and MC Hammer were booed when they first performed at the famed club..

We relive those lofty days with Paradise Gray of X-Clan.. He was the one who ran the show back in the days, booking the acts and making sure the high standards were met..  He has lots of insights and stories to tell..especially about a set of secret meetings between the top artists of the day that would forever change the face of Hip Hop.and usher in an important era centered on social justice. The LQ was where the idea of rocking African leather medallions in lieu of Gold chains was born. The story behind it is fascinating..

On a side note be on the look out for a book penned by Paradise and Italian author Giuseppe Pipitone called ‘The Latin Quarter: Oral and Pictorial History

Download and listen to Breakdown FM Intv

Download and listen to Breakdown FM Intv

Breakdown FM History of the-Latin Quarter pt1

Breakdown FM: History of the Latin Quarter pt2

Enjoy the interview and the pictures..

Paradise Gray & Fab 5 Freddy

Paradise Gray & Fab 5 Freddy

Paradise Gray & LL Cool J

Paradise Gray & LL Cool J

Paradise Gray & Just-Ice

Paradise Gray & Just-Ice

 

Paradise Gray & Chuck D

Paradise Gray & Chuck D

Paradise Gray & Kurtis Blow

Paradise Gray & Kurtis Blow

paradise-Latin quarter

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0h0c9EOo0GU