Hip Hop History: Afrika Bambaataa Speaks on the Early Days of Hip Hop & the Zulu Nation

Zulu_Natio symbolNovember marks Hip Hop History Month and hence we wanna kick things off by highlighting the work and perspective of one of Hip Hop’s founding fathers Afrika Bambaataa and the Universal Zulu Nation who celebrate their 40th anniversary this year (2013) Included below are a couple of short clips from documentaries where Bam speaks about Hip Hop culture and Zulu Nation.. The last one is a long interview done by myself and writer Mark Skillz, where Bam opens up and gives an in-depth History lesson.. I also included an article written back in the 90s called From Gangs to Glory

Afrika Bambaataa breaks down the history of the Universal Zulu Nation this is from a BBC documentary

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vq1ONZ7R6IQ&feature=player_embedded#!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8IO2KHjXZg&feature=related

In this interview Afrika Bambaataa gives an in depth look at what Hip Hop was like during the early days in the 1970s.. He talks about the importance of Funk Music.. He talks about the early gangs and the culture of violence. The forming of Zulu nation and the racial tensions that existed in NY as Hip Hop was forming.. Bambaataa also breaks down many of the myths surrounding early Hip Hop.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eL1YntDNRHo

ZULU NATION: FROM GANGS TO HIP HOP GLORY

by – Davey D

afrika-Bambaataa-GangFirst thing we wanna do is offer up our congratulations to Hip Hop’s oldest and largest organization, the Universal Zulu Nation. They are set to celebrate their 29th Anniversary this weekend [November 8-10] where they will be paying tribute to soul music and funk music Godfathers, Sly Stone, James Brown, and George Clinton. They will also pay tribute to Hip Hop’s seminal figures Kool DJ Herc, Grandmaster Flash and Afrika Bambaataa.. For those who are unfamiliar with the Zulu Nation, they began as an organization founded by Afrika Bambaataa at Stevenson High School in the Bronx. Back than it was simply known as ‘The Organization‘.

Bam who once lived the gang lifestyle and was a Gang Lord was trying to change his ways and saw the newly formed group as a way out. Bam who was known for reading and staying up on the teachings of Elijah Muhammad and other African American leaders, changed the name to Zulu Nation after watching a movie of the same name that told the tale of the well known South African tribe.. Bam was inspired by their resistance to Dutch settlers. As Hip Hop became popular, the group became known as the Mighty Zulu Nation and as later the Universal Zulu Nation.

The story behind the evolution of UZN is significant. Back in the days Zulu’s struck fear in many who lived outside of their Bronx River Housing Project strong hold. While they gave birth to Hip Hop’s first B-Boys and B-Girls, the group for the most part was made up of former gang members. Many of them from the Notorious Black Spades which once reigned terror throughout the Bronx in the early to mid 70s. It used to be a really big deal for cats to hang out at Bronx River and not get stuck up. It was a sign of toughness and brought much prestige.

Black spades jacket 2Many of the early crews tried to associate themselves with Zulu Nation for protection from roving bands of stick up kids and other gangs turned crew. It was in this backdrop that Bambaataa and other conscious brothers spent a lot of time teaching and preaching and working with Zulu members to bring about positive change. Bam often talks about how he would do simple things like bestow titles like ‘King’ and ‘Queen’ upon Zulu members in an attempt to instill pride and confidence. His feeling was that if you treated people like royalty then they would turn around and act like royalty in their actions. As Bam’s recording career blew up, he saw too it that many of folks who were from the streets got an opportunity to go on tour with him and the Soul Sonic Force. Sometimes they were employed as roadies. Other times they worked as security. Again Bam’s main objective was to see to it that local cats got a chance to see there was a much bigger world outside the Bronx.

Change didn’t happen over night, but today the testament to all that hard work is the fact that there are vibrant Zulu chapters in more than 20 countries all over the world with estimated membership of over 10 thousand. They have come to embrace and preserve Hip Hop’s key elements and have exemplified what is often considered Hip Hop’s 5th Element-‘Knowledge‘.

Afrika Bambaataa mohawkTo me the beauty of it all is seeing what was once considered a ‘ruthless gang’ evolve’ to a group that has strived and succeeded in serving the community. There are all sorts of stories about Zulus ridding their housing projects of drug dealers and many of the older guys spending time mentoring younger people. There are stories about Zulus escorting women to and from their apartments as well as looking out and helping those in need. This of course is in addition to various Zulu chapters that have involved themselves in local politics including the fight to Free Mumia and get him a new trial. We also can not overlook the fact that it was Zulu Nation members who put out some of Hip Hop’s first records as well as among the first to establish Hip Hop’s first radio shows. Who could forget Zulu Beats with Afrika Islam on WHBI. It’s a shame that there hasn’t been more of a public celebration and acknowledgment of this organization and its accomplishments. In any case, props to them on their 29th anniversary.. For more information and a run down of this week’s schedule check out…http://www.zulunation.com/events.html

by Davey D
Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hXx7ZDYM4d0

3 Dope Songs and an Interview from Soul Legend Lee Fields

Lee Fields

Lee Fields

This is our recent Hard Knock Radio interview with soul music legend Lee Fields. With a career spanning 43 years, releases on twelve different record labels, and having toured the world over with his raucous-yet-tender voice, it’s mind-blowing that the music he’s making today with Brooklyn’s own Truth & Soul Records is the best of his career.He’s been described as a ‘Throwback done right’.. Here’s a brief run down via his bio…

Renowned throughout the global funk community, Lee Fields has poured grunts and screams over dozens of funk and soul hits since the early 1970s. Some of his best known hits include such 45 rpm classics as She’s A Lovemaker, The Bull Is Coming and The Funky Screw, as well as his much sought after Let’s Talk It Over LP which draws four digit bids from collectors worldwide.

There aren’t too many artists making soul music today who had a release in 1969, back when R&B was first beginning to give the drummer some. Lee Fields, however, is one such artist–or maybe he’s better labeled a phenomenon. Since the late sixties, the North Carolina native has amassed a prolific catalog of albums and has toured and played with such legends as Kool and the Gang, Sammy Gordon and the Hip-Huggers, O.V Wright, Darrell Banks, and Little Royal.

“In a curious case of musical evolution, the older Fields becomes, the closer he gets to perfecting the sound of soul that he grew up with as a young man,” so said music writer, scholar, and DJ Oliver Wang about Fields in a piece for NPR in July 2009. The latest LP from Lee Fields and The Expressions, titled Faithful Man, is the next step towards this perfection. A step that may find Fields, The Expressions, and Truth & Soul as a label, finally being bestowed the contemporary soul music crown.

Check out our interview Below

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3 Dope Songs From Lee Fields

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0izlYypNyu0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxWmxVwOK8Y

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3rIA-BCZ0E

Ending Police Terror & the Next Steps for Unions: A Convo w/ The Black Riders, Carl Dix & John Reimann

Black-Riders-Liberation-PartyOct 22 2013 On today’s Hard Knock Radio Show, we caught up with two individuals who belong to organizations that are on the front lines of dealing with police brutality. E Da Ref of the Black Riders Liberation Party and Carl Dix of the Revolutionary Communist Party..

Both gentlemen detailed the work they are doing from community patrols to education workshops to directly confronting the onslaught of police terrorism.. There’s an excellent in-depth article on the BRLP in a recent edition of the SF Bayview.. You can read about them HERE.

Carl Dix who is in the forefront of the fight to end Stop and Frisk toured the country with Dr Cornel West as part of his efforts.. Here’s some information about those efforts HERE

During our interview both talked about the need to take down the current system and replace it with one that is more accountable. They were realistic that such actions will not happen overnight , so they detailed the steps folks can take to help achieve that end.. E Da Ref talked at length about an array of strategies including Confrontation Politics.

Overall today brought forth an enlightening conversation given the fact that today marked the 18th National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality, Repression and the Criminalization of a Generation.

John Reimann

John Reimann

Later in the show we spoke with long time union member and activist John Reimann who talked about the larger implications that will soon unfold as result of the recent BART strike. He laid out key steps unions must take in the future and urged them to take time to connect labor struggles with the struggles everyday people are enduring.

Although the BART strike was settled Reimann felt the unions missed some key opportunities. He also talked about how the unions were forced to strike by BART management who waged unyielding campaign to ‘race to the bottom’. He also addressed the accidental killing of two BART workers who were killed by a trainee who BART management were hoping to have as replacement for striking riders..

You can get more information about John Riemann at http://oaklandsocialist.com/

Right click the link below to download or  stream the HKR Intv

Right click the link below to download or stream the HKR Intv

HKR-10-22-13 Oct22 Resisting Police brutality |BART and Unions Whats the Next steps?

Rocky Rivera Brings the Heat w/ Her Sophomore Album ‘Gangster of Love’

Rocky Rivera redWe caught up with long time journalist turned rapper Rocky Rivera and talked to her about her sophomore album ‘Gangster of Love‘. For those who haven’t heard it.. Its incredible, straight rewind material coupled with nice beats and searing lyrics. Rocky has definitely stepped up her game..

She explained the album builds off the concepts of her first one with an emphasis on War and Love. She noted that she wanted to take time and really explore those concepts from a variety of angles.. Stand out cuts that underscore her desires are ‘Wake Up‘, ‘Call to Arms‘ and ‘Fallen Soldier‘ which is ode to 2Pac and features vocals from his mother Afeni Shakur.

Rocky noted that her journalism roots are still in tact and manifested themselves in the fact that each song there’s a sense of urgency to speak on social-political situations impacting the community…She noted that she feels like a reporter delivering important information or giving voice to points of view that are often marginalized. Once a journalist always a journalist..

During our interview we talked about her recent headlining performance in Brooklyn at Rock the Belles which was a play on the popular Rock the Bells concert. At this show there was an all female line up. Rocky talked about the importance of deejays and promoters making space to include more women. She also talked about her appreciation for the love she was shown in the East Coast.

Rocky RiveraRocky talked about her recent move from her native San Francisco to Oakland and how gentrification has uprooted many communities, in particular communities of color. She noted that she’s happy to be in Oakland and that the energy here is good, but gentrification is still an issue that must be addressed. It reflects income disparity and a continued pattern of mass displacement. ‘That has got to change’ she noted.

We conclude our conversation by talking about her relationship with her partner Bambu who is a dope emcee in his own right.. She assured us the pair do not walk around the house battling or trading barbs with each other, but if we’re lucky they may get together and do an album called Drunken Freestyles.. With a smile, she cautioned that we should not hold our breath…

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

Right click the link below to download or listen to the HKR Intv

HKR-Intv w/ Rocky Rivera

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

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9NTyZqBiRA

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

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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Angela Davis Looks Back at the 16th Street Church Bombings 50 Years Ago

Angela DavisDavey D speaks with activist, scholar and freedom fighter Angela Davis about the 50th anniversary  of the 16th street Birmingham bombings of 1963.

Angela grew up in Birmingham when it was called Bombingham. This was due to the fact the Ku Klux Klan conducted a campaign of terror on Black people and frequently firebombed people’s homes. The gravity of that of that terrorism has not been fully appreciated or understood. Leading up to the 16th street church bombings, there are estimates that close to 80 bombs were set off in Birmingham.

Davis said Black people were under seige but were determined to fight back. The 16th Street Baptist Church had become a symbol of Black Resistance and was a key organizing center for the Civil Rights Movement. After the huge and very successful March on Washington a few weeks earlier, the historic church became even more of thorn in the side for white supremacists and was eventually targeted with fatal results.

16th street Baptist church..4 girlsOn the morning of September 15th 1963, a bomb was placed in the basement of the church. 4 young girls, Denise McNair, who was 11 along with Addie Mae Collins, Carole Robertson and Cynthia Wesley who were all 14, were killed when that bomb went off. Davis who was friends with two of the girls Cynthia Wesley and Carole Robertson who she noted lived two houses down from hers.

In fact the day of the bombing Angela’s mother drove Carole’s mother to the church to pick up her daughter. They had heard about the church being bombed, but sadly didn’t know Carole was one of those killed.

Davis talked at length during our Hard Knock Radio show about how and why this incident was a key turning point in the Civil Rights Movement. It was a wake up call that moved everyone to get more involved.

Davis also noted that on that day two other Black teens, both boys Virgil Ware and Johnny Robertson were also killed. One by the Klan sympathizers and the other by police who sadly had a working relationship with the KKK.

16th street Baptist churchShe also noted that there was a rebellion , the largest of its kind in Birmingham, which has been erased from the history books. She also noted that because of all the bombings, her father and numerous other men in the community began patrolling their neighborhoods armed with guns.. That helped turn the tide on bombings in her neighborhood which was known as Dynamite Hill, but sadly it didn’t prevent the bombing of the 16th street Baptist church…

During our conversation, Davis made it clear that it was important to connect the struggles of 1963 and the tragedies of that day with the struggles and resistance to racial violence going on today. She drew parallels to the case of Oscar Grant and how that a key turning point for many in the Bay Area and how other cases including the one involving Trayvon martin were also key turning point incidents.

16th street baptist church fight latinosWe also talked about how the 16th Street Baptist Church has in recent years been used as a staging area for protest in the fight to end discrimintaion agaisnt undocumented Latinos who now live in Birmingham. Last year thousands gathered at the church to protest an anti-immigrant SB 1070 type law known in Alabama as HB56. A strong coalition of Black and Brown leaders came together to show unity. Davis talked about the importance of connecting those dots between the Civil Rights struggle of the past with the current fight around immigration.

We concluded our interview with Angela Davis by talking about the plight of political prisoner Herman Wallace who was given 2 months to live and is one of the Angola 3. We also talked about the legacy of Attica and the huge uprisings that took place 41 years ago this week.

Below is our interview with Angela Davis. Also if you are in the Bay Area Angela Davis along with fellow Birmingham resident and Civil Rights attorney Margret Burnham will be speaking at First Congregational Church, 2501 Harrison St in Oakland from 5-7:30pm

Later in the HKR show we hear a commentary from political prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal speaks about death row inmate James “Shorty” Dennis

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

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

Hard Knock Radio Angela Davis 16th Bombings 9-13-13_

Our Insightful Intv w/ Syrian-American Journalist Maytha AlHassen on US Intervention

Syrian-American Journalist Maytha AlHassen

Syrian-American Journalist Maytha AlHassen

We speak with journalist, poet and PhD candidate Maytha Alhassen a Syrian-American whose parents and immediate family are still in Syria dealing with the threat of US Intervention.

In our interview the former Al Jazeera host, gives us an in-depth historical breakdown of what life has been like for most Syrians and who are the main players competing for power in this latest conflict. She made it clear this conflict is not two-sided as they like to project here in the US..

Maytha notes its very complicated with many outside forces fueling tensions between various ethnic, religious and sectarian factions that for the most part had managed to co-exist peacefully for decades.

The conflict is also causing major tensions on the borders. Turkey sees things one way. Lebanon sees it another. It’s not easy for those in Syria to simply get up and bounce to another country.

Maytha pointed out there’s a long and sordid history of what it means when the US intervenes in global conflict and so even as there is lots of bloodshed and drama, the US jumping in may make things worse and lead to greater destabilization. The recent interventions in Libya and Iraq were not successful and underscores the United State’s track record is not being very good. There’s a lot to be concerned about and the way things are unfolding suggests that the US wants to jump in, not to save lives but to satisfy, economic and political interests.

At the same time Maytha noted that sitting in a house in Southern Cali is a bit privileged and that family and friends who are on the ground have mixed feelings about this. Some want the US to jump in, believing they can put a quick end to the bloodshed, others do not. What’s clear is that President Assad has been oppressive and so have the folks who served before him hence anything to kick up dust has the potential to move things forward.

For others they are clear, that those vying for power are not all that democratic themselves and in a sense there is the risk of trading one oppressive figure for another. The people caught in the middle are average everyday Syrians who bearing the brunt of the onslaught from all sides.

Check out this incredible insightful interview by clicking the links below

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

Click the link below to download or listen to our Hard Knock Radio  Intv

hard knock radio_09-05-2013 Syria 101

Wanted to add a couple of piece to this interview.. Below are a couple of songs from Syrian Rapper Omar Offendum

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXjEWrhkb6g

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0cvl4O9pbE

Here we have a recent TV interview on Syrian State TV where they go in on President Obama calling him a lowlife and a begger who has lacked an agenda for Black people in the US and is a hypocrite for wanting to bomb Syria while he drones children in other countries. At the same time this same man spews racial insults when referring to British Prime Minister David Cameron who he says he will send to Africa to be eaten by cannibals

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

 

 

 

Hard Knock Radio: The Plight of Florida’s Other Slain Unarmed Teen, Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis

HKR August 15 2013: Today on Hard Knock Radio Anita Johnson sits down with John M. Phillips the attorney for the Jordan Davis family. For those who don’t recall last year Florida had two 17-year-old Black teens who were killed by racist individuals using Stand Your Ground Laws. We all know about the murder of Trayvon Martin and how he was profiled, followed and killed by George Zimmerman but not too many know about Jordan Davis.

Several months after the Trayvon slaying in November 2012, a white man named Michael Dunn saw some Black teenagers in a car and felt he they were playing their music too loud. He confronted them, according to him, words were exchanged. Dunn said he felt threatened and thus emptied his gun into the car containing 6-8 unarmed teenagers. When the gun smoke cleared 17-year-old Jordan Davis laid dead.

We discuss the particulars of the case, what steps are being taken to bring about justice and how they compare to the Trayvon case.

Later in the show we hear a commentary from political prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal and a riveting speech from Michelle Alexander the author of the book ‘The New Jim Crow‘.

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

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

Hard Knock Radio_August 15 2013

Hard Knock Radio: History of Black August | Why All the Turmoil in Egypt?

HKR: August 21 2013: Today on Black August_Oakland_2009 Hard Knock Radio co-host Anita Johnson sits down with long time community activist and former Black Panther Mama Ayanna to discuss the meaning of Black August. They focus on the life and political philosophy of prison movement founder George Jackson who was assassinated this day (Aug 21st ) back in 1971.

They also talk about the Haitian Revolution which was revolt led by enslaved Africans which kicked off in August of 1791

They also discusses the slave revolt led by Nat Turner in Virginia in 1831. 55 whites were killed as whites retaliated and killed 200 Blacks hanging 56 who they believed involved with the resurrection.

Later in the show Davey D sits down and talks with award-winning journalist Mona Eltahawy who is based in Cairo about the ongoing conflict and the roots to it.. They discuss the conditions that led up to what is called the ‘Arab Spring‘ and why Eltahawy saw it as a Revolution. We also talk to her about the Muslim brotherhood and the Military and what those two organizations/ institutions mean to the country. This pt 1 of a two-part interview

Click the link below to download or Listen

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

Hard Knock Radio podcast:_Aug 21 2013

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqtL5iCi3WE