Archive for December, 2008

31
Dec
08

Best of 2008 #2

Best Comic Series

Forget those over long cross book series that DC and Marvel create to syphon your dollars. The best was 100 Bullets, a smart series with a loyal and even smarter fan base

Happiest Moment on TV

Watching Fox news announce that Obama won!

When the announcement was made, the camera panned out as not to show the anchors faces, and yes this is an image from MSNBC, you wont find any footage of the racist network’s announcement

Best Movie

Batman Dark Knight

You’ve seen the movie, you know why

Best Runner Up

Mamet film ask’s is there honor in anything, a masterpiece

Best Video

I’ll give it to Kanye, he’s not afraid to go there

Best CD

I’m sorry folks, these girls are in their 60’s and they come with it, from gospel to outrageous Back to Now delivers

Image of the Year
Lets face it, art is back in politics and not since Che has a single image dominated the media all this, and Sheppard Fairy allowed it to used for free

The Speech of the Century

Obama solidified MLK legacy with this short yet powerful speech that we repeated over and over again

Moment of the Year, Obama wins

30
Dec
08

Best of 2008 Part 1#

Everyone else has a list here’s mine

Best TV Anchor
Sure this was the year that Keith Olberman became a cable celebrity, and Katie Couric found her footing, but it was Chris Mathews that took journalism back to new hieghts by doing it the old skool way

Above one of the many Republicans he laid to waste in 2008

Best Book Promo

I have no idea what its about, but I want to know more

Second best book Promo

Takes the book promo to an eerie new level

Best interview and prediction of election outcome
Mos Def and Cornell West on Real Time

Heated and often outrageous , but it was a dialogue this country needs

Bravest Moment
Oprah uses her star power to endors Obama and explains why

Best Magazine Cover

   Of course it was crass, but it went to the heart of the issue

Mo tomorrow

29
Dec
08

12 Tips to Being a Better Dad

I found this at Zen Habits.
I’m often asked about raising six kids, and being productive and achieving goals and changing habits in the midst of raising so many kids. But here’s the thing: I do all the other stuff, the productivity stuff, because of my kids.
They, and my wife, are my reason for being.
It is my lifelong goal to be the best dad possible, and while there are many ways I can still improve, I think I’m a pretty great dad already, when I sit back and think about it. I know there are some readers who are just starting out in their careers as dads, and this post is for you.
How can you be a great dad? As always, my list of tips:
1. Put their interests first, always. Do you enjoy drinking or smoking? Guess what — it’s not good for them, and you’re setting an example with everything you do. I quit smoking about 18 months ago not for my sake, but for my kids. Now, it is still important to take care of yourself (otherwise you can’t take care of them), but you should still have them in mind.
2. Protect them. As a dad, one of your main roles is protector. There are many ways you need to do this. Safety is one: child-proof your home, teach them good safety habits, set a good example by using your seatbelt, make sure they use a car seat if below a certain age & weight, etc. But financial protection is also important: have life insurance, car insurance, an emergency fund, a will.
3. Spend your spare time with them. When we get home from work, often we’re tired and just want to relax. But this is the only time we have with them during the weekdays, often, and you shouldn’t waste it. Take this time to find out about their day, lay on the couch with them. On weekends, devote as much time as possible to them. While work may be your passion, it won’t be long before they’re grown and no longer want to spend time with you. Take advantage of these years. The thing kids want most from their dads is their time.
4. Give them hugs. Dads shouldn’t be afraid to show affection. Kids need physical contact, and not just from their moms. Snuggle with them, hug them, love them.
5. Play with them. Go outside and play sports. Do a treasure hunt. Have a pillow fight. Play Transformers or Pokemon with them. Don’t just watch TV. Show them how to have fun. See100 Ways to Have Fun with Your Kids for Free or Cheap.
6. Do the “mom” stuff. Things that are traditionally considered “mom” duties are not just for moms anymore — changing diapers, feeding, bathing, rocking them to sleep in the middle of the night. Dads should help out as much as they can, sharing these types of duties equally if possible. And in fact, if you’re a dad of a baby, this is the perfect time to bond with your child. You should leap at the chance to do these things, because that’s how you start a life-long close relationship with your child.
7. Read to them. This is one of the most important things you can do for your child. First of all, it’s so much fun. Kids books are really cool, and it’s great when you can share something this wonderful with your child. Second, you are teaching them one of the most fundamentally important skills (reading) that will pay off dividends for life. And third, you are spending time with them, you’re sitting or lying close together, and you are enjoying each other’s company. See the Best All-Time Children’s Books.
8. Stand by mom. Don’t contradict their mother in front of them, don’t fight with her in front of them, and most definitely don’t ever abuse her. How you treat their mother affects their self-esteem, and the way they will treat themselves and women when they grow up. Be kind and respectful and loving of their mother. And always work as a team — never contradicting statements of the other.
9. Teach them self-esteem. Maybe this should be No. 1. Well, these aren’t in any order, but this is one of the most important points. There is nothing you can do that is better than giving them high self-esteem. How do you do this? A million ways, but mainly by showing them (not telling them) that you value them, by spending time with them, by talking and listening to them, by praising things they do, by teaching them (not telling them) how to be competent. Praise and encourage, don’t reprimand and discourage.
10. Teach them about finances. This is a point often missed in articles about dadhood. You might not need to teach your 1-year-old about index funds or portfolio diversity, but from an early age, you can teach them the value of money, how to save money to reach a goal, and later, how earn money and how to manage money properly. You don’t want your child to go into the world knowing as little as you did, do you?
11. Be good to yourself. You shouldn’t give up your entire life when you become a dad. You need to take care of yourself, give yourself some alone time, and some time with your buddies, in order to be a great dad when you’re with your kids. Also take care of your health — eat healthy, exercise — because 1) you can’t take care of your kids if you’re sickly, 2) you are teaching your kids how to be healthy for life, and 3) you want to enjoy those grandkids someday.
12. Be good to the mom. This isn’t the same as No. 8 — you should be good to their mom even when they’re not looking. Take her to dinner, give her a massage, do chores around the house for her, give her some time alone and babysit while she goes out, show affection to her, give her little surprises. Because when mom’s happy, the kids are happy. And dad will be happy too!
Also check out: Great Dad.com

28
Dec
08

Valjeanne Jeffers Immortal

Ms. Jeffers has created an oddly vivid and not so far-fetched neo-Earth in Immortal. Quick paced and well-crafted, I felt a connection with her protagonists and a distilled hatred for her antagonists. The characters’ backstories fit together like the pieces of an intricate puzzle. From the absence of war to the presence of the obscenely paranormal, the frightening and beautiful; dangerous and air-tight; Immortal is filled with yins and yangs that somehow culminate into a satisfying literary balance. A wonderful read from beginning to end.

B. Sharise Moore, author of Taste


HER DREAMS ARE TERRIFYING.

In the year of our  One 3075, Tundra has been at peace for 400 years. There is no racism, poverty or war. Karla is a young Indigo woman working as a successful healer. Yet she is tormented by lucid and erotic dreams. Dreams in which she is IMMORTAL. Two men emerge from these phantasms: the first a Copper colored shape shifter and the other a demon more dead than alive. But when this creature appears in her apartment Karla realizes they share a lust that may one day consume her.

HIS WILL UNLOCK A MYSTERY.

Joseph has always dreamt of becoming an artist, warrior…and a werewolf. Now he’s dreaming of a sorceress who commands that he leave his homeland.

TOGETHER THEY WILL JOURNEY TO THE EDGE OF TIME…

To a nightmarish world of revolution and magic. But will they save Tundra or perish in its destruction?

Q. Where did you find the original impulse to write this novel?
Valjeanne:
For years I devoured science fiction – I’ve spent my last five dollars on Stephen King
Novels and wandered around in libraries looking for new books. My impulse to write grew
from my desire to create my own “scifi” worlds that I could escape into.

Q Who inspired the characters of your novel?
Valjeanne: All of my characters are collages of people I’ve met and oftentimes loved in my journey –
including myself. The heroine of Immortal is based upon a young woman who befriended
me when I was ten years old.

Q. Looking at the book now, what surprises you?
Valjeanne : My own imagination surprises me! I go back and read Immortal and Immortal II
and I can believe the dialogue, the sex scenes; or that I wrote about folks shape
shifting into werewolves and demons.

Q. Many writers describe themselves as “character” or “plot” writers.
Valjeanne:
Which are you? What do you find to be the hardest part of writing?
I guess if I have chose one I’d say: character driven. I work very hard to make Immortal’s
characters “real people” and by that I mean believable: folks who curse, make love,
make mistakes, lie and dream just like the rest of us. “Perfect” characters just don’t cut it with me, because real people are flawed. The hardest part of writing I’ve found is struggling to create new and different realities – in other words something fresh and not a rehash of other
writer’s work.

Q. Who has influenced you in your writing?
Valjeanne: I have many but Octavia Butler, Stephen king and Tananarive Due are probably
my strongest influences.

Q. What was the book that most influenced your life and why?
Valjeanne: Wild Seed by Octavia Butler had the strongest influence on me. In Wild Seed I
found folks that I could readily identify with written by a Black female author.
I think that’s when I really started to believe that I, a Black woman, could create
alternate worlds.

Q. What are your 2 favorite books and why?

Valjeanne
: Meji by Milton Davis and Taste by B. Sharise Moore. I love the way Milton blends
African mythology and history in Meji. And Taste is a wonderfully unique mix of erotica and science fiction.

Q. What are you currently working on?

Valjeanne:
I’m putting the finishing touches on Immortal II: The Time of Legend. I’m also writing Stealer of Souls which is the third novel in the Immortal series.

Click here to order Immortal on lulu

click here to read excerpt

Click here to reach Valjeanne Jeffers


26
Dec
08

My Soul has gone North

Special thanks to JMS for this blog

Northern soul is a type of mid-tempo and uptempo heavy-beat soul music (of mainly African American origin) that was popularized in Northern England from the mid 1960s onwards. The term also refers to the associated dance styles and fashions that emanated from the Twisted Wheel club in Manchester and spread to other dancehalls and nightclubs, such as the Golden Torch (in Stoke-upon-Trent), the Highland Rooms at the Blackpool Mecca and the Wigan Casino

Northern soul dancing was usually athletic, resembling the later dance styles of disco andbreak dancing. Featuring spins, flips, and backdrops, the northern soul dancing style was inspired by the stage performances of visiting American soul acts such as Little Anthony & The Imperials and Jackie Wilson. click here for complete article

 

 

24
Dec
08

Happy Billie Holidays

Thanks to the Lumo Crew for this blog



Billie Holiday (April 7, 1915 – July 17, 1959)
Lady Day

23
Dec
08

sci-fi/fantasy writer Iya Ta’Shia Asanti

To borrow from an insightful blog Obama is representative of the Black american we seldom see in publishing. Meaning, he is not a whore-monger, drug-dealer, drug user or absent baby-daddy. He is not a slave to designer labels and he does not wear bling. We have not seen him ducking into a bodega to buy a forty, he does not congregate on street corners, and no source has come forward to reveal that he smoked a blunt before his debates with John McCain. If he wears a “wife-beater” it’s hidden beneath his shirt, exactly where it’s supposed to be. He does not wear his pants down around his knees, nor does he throw up gang signs at the end of his wildly televised speeches.

OK so after nearly a decade of the market being deluged with books focusing on the aforementioned stereotypes what happens now?

Will publishers change gears and begin publishing works written by African American that speak to a multitude of people? Or will they remain stagnet and committed to a shattered belief system?

Publishers may remain committed to a shattered belief system, but its the Black writing community’s job to expose our own talents, which is one of the many things that will happen on this blog  starting with sci-fi/fantasy writer, poet, filmmaker, producer, and founder-your world tv Iya Ta’Shia Asanti who talks about her newest novel

the-seer2The Seer Legacy of Stone & Spirit-

Correction officer by day, psychic by night, Violet Brown struggles to understand her medium abilities while her dreams lead her to a fourth world where ancient African dieties perform miracles in every day life. Violet’s main spirit guide materializes to take her on a journey to rediscover her African roots and reconnect her with the last living descendent of her tribe. As she searches for Olokun, her ancestral sister, Violet finds herself in the middle of a deadly ring of human traffickers who have kidnapped Olokun. As she tries to make sense of the magic and mysticism that has become her reality, Violet meets the love of her life, a handsome attorney, named Darryl Collins who will one day be her saving grace. Will Violet find Olokun before she is sold off into human slavery? Will the Orisa’s, the God’s of West Africa, be strong enough to protect Violet from a regime more deadly than anything she could ever imagine? Is Darryl the man she thinks he is or is he a lying, cheating dog like her ex, David? There is only one person who knows the answers to these questions. And she is Violet Brown, the world’s most gifted Seer….

Q. Where did you find the original impulse to write The Seer?

Ta’Shia. The Seer is based in theory on my own life experiences as a seer and medium, as well as my journey is exploring African history pre-slavery and becoming a Yoruba priestess.

Q. Who inspired the characters of your novel
Ta’Shia. The characters in my book were inspired by the Orisa, dieties of the West African spiritual tradition, Ifa, as well as the ancesters who came to visit me in my dreams for nearly 20 years.

Q. Looking at the book now, what surprises you?

Ta’Shia I thought mainstream America would really have a problem with this book but so far, it has touched all who’ve read it.

Q. Many writers describe themselves as “character” or “plot” writers.
Ta’Shia. Which are you? What do you find to be the hardest part of writing?

I would classify myself as a Character writer though I love a strong and moving plot.

Q. Who has influenced you in your writing?

Ta’Shia. Eric Jerome Dickey, Octavia Butler are two of my greatest influences though I’m a fan of Robin Cook and a huge lover of all things Sidney Sheldon.

Q. What was the book that most influenced your life and why?

Ta’Shia. One of the books that really moved me was Robin Cook’s Outbreak as well as Sydney Sheldon’s If Tomorrow Comes.

Q. What are your 2 favorite books and why?

Ta’Shia. Two of my favorite books are The Other Woman by Eric Jerome Dickey and The Interruption of Everything by Terri McMillan. I also love EJD’s newest hitman series, Sleeping With Strangers etc.


Q. What are you currently working on?

Ta’Shia. I am currently working on the sequel to The Seer. It’s called, The Bones Do Talk.

To order The Seer click here

Visit her at Black Science Fiction Society

or at http://www.tashiaasanti.com


22
Dec
08

How will HDTV affect your mind

With all the attention being placed on digital media and the choice between purchasing  a 40 inch flat screen vs. a 60 inch flat screen, we forget that little is known about how the new high definition TVs (HDTVs) will affect brain function. Given that the technology involves staring at a more detailed picture, it is possible that the effects will be the same as regular TVs, but significantly stronger. Consequently if TV is bad HDTV can only be worse

What we do know is that those who control the media will still control the airways to further their agenda

Here’s article on TV effects on the brain  here

21
Dec
08

Hipspters, the Same old rap

Found this article against the title Hipster Rap

“If Andre 3000 came out right now they’d call him hipster rap,” says The Bronx’s Mickey Factz. “Right now it’s a trend for 50 Cent and Lil Wayne to sing with a vocoder. What we’re doing isn’t a trend, it’s real. When 50 Cent raps over beats like this will they call him hipster rap?” Factz refers to his new remix with the Cool Kids, “Rockin’ ‘n Rollin,” whileindicting the buzz term of the moment, “hipster rap.” Factz runs freely when choosing beats (from “Rockin’ ‘n Rollin’s” Clipse-ish accordion all the way to electro and house) and subject matter (from gold sneakers to Sean Bell). “Hipster Rap” is the box into which a wave of similarly fearless artists including the Knux, the Cool Kids, and even Duck Down signees Kidz in the Hall, have been placed. These so-called hipster rappers are unified by disdain for that very category and by doing what they feel is right for their sound, regardless of eclecticism or consequences. Mickey Factz feat. the Cool Kids- “Rockin N Rollin” “It’s not about a styIe of music,” says Krispy Kream of Hollywood via New Orleans duo the Knux. “It’s about having the courage to bend genres.” Krispy is talking about the influence of Outkast on his group and this new lane of rappers unafraid to take chances and be themselves, who across regions took the ATLiens’ artistic example to heart. “Outkast are the trendsetters of the modern era,” says Double O of New Jersey and Chicago’s Kidz in the Hall. “The groups that you see now, Outkast made it cool to be who you want to be and also made it viable. They were able to evolve and they were the first to say the way I feel now is not the way I felt two years ago and I’ll represent that.” The boxed-in groups and soloists all recoil from the idea of self-conscious, trendy images and the notion of hipster rap. They sound fatigued when answering questions about it but stand unfazed in their creative convictions, whatever bigger stars of who they’re often fans of might say, or what a magazine or two might call them. But they do agree that something new is taking place. “There’s definitely something bubbling,” says Double O. “Every generation has to create their own golden era for themselves.” The Cool Kids- “Black Mags” “A lot of us are definitely coming from a more artistic side of things and trying to keep it creative,” says Mikey Rocks of The Cool Kids, a duo hailing from Michigan and Chicago. “People group artists like us into this hipster rap category which is associated with not being able to rap very well, you’re all about crazy clothes, or looking a certain way. They judge artists like us right from the beginning based off of appearance or a name without peeping the music. It’s human nature to put things you haven’t seen before into a category or a group.” The Knux- “Cappuchino” The Knux prize musicianship and a self-described garage band aesthetic over lyrical acrobatics, though Almillio is confident he can “swallow *****s all day” and Krispy is the same. The rest of the aforementioned MCs are similarly assured. But there’s not necessarily a sound that holds everyone together. The Cool Kids appeared from nowhere last year with Afrika Islam’s keyboard and a dusty song about bikes called “Black Mags” that they rode all the way into a Rhapsody commercial. Mickey Factz is a rapper who takes his Bronx heritage seriously but is free from convention. Kidz in the Hall are signed to Duck Down, sample Masta Ace, and collaborate with everyone from Bun B to Black Milk. Given all this, an ethos rather than a specific form of music links everyone together. “I don’t think there is a general sound because everyone’s doing their thing. The Cool Kids sound is not the Knux sound is not the Kidz in the Hall sound is not the Kid Sister sound is not the Spank Rock sound,” says Double O. “It’s not the sound of the 90s but it’s the feel of the 90s,” adds Rah Almillio of the Knux. “It has that ‘95 feel, it’s natural not contrived. You didn’t know what was coming next then. Everyone strived to be different from the other artists.” “You can be good but not original. Give me something to intrigue my ears already,” says Almillio. “The word I hear most about our sound is ‘refreshing.’ People use the word refreshing to describe our music. That’s a good word.” Along with Andre 3000 and Big Boi, Pharrell Williams and Kanye West are antecedents that align these new outcasts. This is in addition to the benefits of the Internet era where artists can develop themselves and reach fans free of industry constraints. The Internets may have killed the music industry but not music itself. This factor combined with the new rap icons’ presence definitely created a space for these neophyte acts. “Kanye, Pharrell, and Lupe opened up doors,” reasons Mikey Rocks, “because they were among the first successful artists that made it okay for black guys to be different. Before them it wasn’t okay to be an eclectic black guy. You couldn’t wear different clothes or address certain subject matter. These dudes opened up a whole new door for black artists to be who they are and I really appreciate that. They allowed the public to see that there are black artists that aren’t on the same old Hip-Hop thug ****. It’s become more acceptable to be able to tell your own stories, you don’t have to tell this pre-made rap story.” CRS- “US Placers” “The internet let’s people do what they want and also because of the Pharrells and the Kanyes, people can get out there and be themselves,” adds Double O. “It’s reality rap in a new form.” “The new revolution of file sharing and MySpace and the credible blogs helps us,” adds Rocks. “It’s a direct window from the artist to the listeners, if they don’t like it they’re gonna tell you about it. It’s a no holds barred connection, it’s not watered down, it’s not your publicist talking. That honesty is a good thing.” Rocks is confident in his B-boy stance no matter how others take his rhymes or regardless of what he’s wearing. However, there are trends in styIe and clothing that get thrown into the hipster rap box with the groups named, to the artists’ shared dismay. The fashion is often termed retro and is casually spoken of as those tight pants and funny colors. Add to that mix scarves, punk rock belts, snug shirts, multi-colored Nike dunks and a general 80s sensibility and you provide easy fodder for the industry’s reigning gangsta rappers, the Game and G-Unit, even if they’re perhaps commenting on a media designation, or a clothing styIe, rather than anyone’s specific music. “I work with Kanye,” the Game recently told AllHipHop. “You know the leader of the hipsters and that’s my man. I leave the little mini-hipsters to everybody else man.” “It bothers the **** out of me,” says Lloyd Banks, who also offered his opinion to AllHipHop. “Think about an aspiring artist, somebody that’s right now with the pad and he had Biggie and Pac, he had 50, he had Snoop. Then the **** changes up. What do you write about…the *****s wearing glitter belts and tight ass pants?” “Them *****s need a new name first,” said the Game in his interview, proving that him and G-Unit can at least agree on one thing. “The hipsters that sound like a ****in group at the convalescence home or some **** – the hipsters, [them] *****s better not be like, ‘Yo I’m a hipster.’ That ain’t cool.” The rappers thrown into the hipster rap mix generally and ironically agree with the Game about the term of the day. Some established artists are defenders of retro curiosities though, like Immortal Technique, himself sometimes labeled a “conscious rapper.” Despite truly being a hardcore CNN for current events, he sees looking backwards as something positive. “People **** on them, I guess what they call Hipster Rap or whatever the **** it is,” says Tech. “I think it [prompts] a lot of people to look into the history of Hip-Hop because that’s been the big issue… ‘If you’re really making a tie to the 80s’…well then let’s talk about what the 80s is. Now a lot of rappers are becoming aware of the fact they have to be accountable for what they say and they have to do the knowledge. So it’s reverberating inside the minds of kids. Kids want to know more about that political era that Hip-Hop came out of; about the things that were going on in the black and Latino community during that time.” Tech also adds: “If it comes at the price of some people that are confused about fashion or whatever… I don’t want to wear tight clothes but who the **** am I to criticize anybody else? I’m not here to point fingers at nobody because when you do that, there’s three fingers pointing back at you.” Online will be the forum where the most hate and debate on these groups takes place. It is worth recalling that a group named De La Soul once eschewed the Uptown drug dealer fashions of LL Cool J and Eric B. & Rakim for something more related to their daily lives, and sampled across genres in their music. Revisionist history aside, De La Soul were labeled as “hippies” rather than hipsters. Even then, it boiled down to the oft-asked question of what was Hip-Hop and what was not. That said, the MCs and producers down to the one are non-discriminating Hip-Hop junkies. Krispy and Almillio lovingly quote 2Pac and mention how “you feel Pac in your bones,” as well as giving full and unsolicited props to Scarface and Juvenile. Mickey Factz emphasizes that he didn’t grow up a hipster and that he listened to Rakim, Nas, and Biggie. Mikey Rocks says, “As soon as I was born, my parents were playing Slick Rick, I was born into this.” Kidz in the Hall are students of the genre who can analyze its every aspect in conversation. These acts are Hip-Hop purists at heart. “If you can move a crowd with words, that’s the key,” says Kidz in the Hall MC Naledge. “The poetry of Hip-Hop. It doesn’t matter whether I rhyme over a rock track, boom bap, something futuristic, an electro beat or accapella. It has a certain feel to it when someone is passionately pouring his heart into his words talking about his lifestyIe or someone else’s lifestyIe, telling stories, words rhyming. There’s a way it’s done. The voice is your instrument, the poetry is the instrument.” They also share strong opinions on rap versus the rap game. “We need to stop supporting people that don’t respect our craft,” says Almillio. “Go ahead and hustle but don’t mess up our thing.” “Put this in there for me,” says Krispy. “We don’t worship money.” Kidz in the Hall’s new video for “Driving Down the Block” from their latest album, The In Crowd, debuted on TRL of all places, the Cool Kids sell out shows all over the world without an album [they've recently announced The Bake Sale EP on Chocolate Industries will be available in June], the Knux have a deal with Jimmy Iovine’s Interscope, and Mickey Factz continues building a strong live and on-line buzz. These new rumblings may have mass appeal in an era where Hip-Hop for everyday people stands out. “I come from a city where things do happen,” says Almillio. “But you hear people talk about how I came out the door and some ***** let off some shots and those things went on but nobody talks about the rest of it. So are you really real?” “I’m human,” says Factz. “I can speak on Sean Bell and on buying a sneaker made of gold that you wear like a chain on the street and then I can talk about struggling to pay my phone bill and how today I have a job interview and I’m gonna skip on it. People are gonna relate to it because it’s real life.” Though the artists reject the hipster rap category, they’re not wasting too much time on it. Regardless of where the movement goes or what it’s called, they for now have lofty role models and a down to earth approach and attitude that focuses on the art form. “When Rakim came out, no one had his flow or his swagger, everything was totally different,” says Mickey Factz. “When Biggie and Nas came out, everyone was trying to sound like Fu-Schnickens and Das-Efx. Certain people had a set idea of how they wanted to rap and they changed how rap was looked at from then on.” “People are afraid to be different. But we’ll take the bullet,” says Krispy. “We’re staying on the move,” says Mikey Rocks, “and continuing this grind with the music. The music is the most important because nothing is possible without it. We keep that at the forefront.” —article courtesy of Allhiphop.com

19
Dec
08

Hipster Rap: The Savior Of Hip Hop?

Yesterday I featured an article that look at Hipster Rap from a West Coast perspective I found this article that shares an East Coast view

Mickey Factz

Mickey Factz

I live in Bushwick, Brooklyn which is virtually a hop, skip and a jump from the notorious neighborhood of Williamsburg in New York. Notorious, not in the sense that it’s likely to get your ass lit up like Grandma’s glaucoma “medicine”, but in the sense that you come across perhaps the most universally despised people in all of New York city, the hipsters. Now seeing that I’m best friends with many a “hipster” myself (and some would probably argue that my ass is a hipster but I would literally scream and beg to differ to my bloody torture chamber death but I digress), I don’t really personally have anything against them (other than say their choice in ironic haberdashery) but they do seem to spring up in various different neighborhoods in the city like cockroaches; bringing the wonders of gentrification and retro ‘80s t-shirts. Once, they’re there, they’re there to stay. The definition of a hipster is pretty nebulous as what qualifies one as a hipster is broad and sweeping but there is one unifying theme that unites all hipsters: No hipster considers themselves, in fact, a hipster. It’s a dirty word signifying pretension and a tragic taste in culture. Nobody voluntarily wants to be thought of as a hipster. It’s actually a pretty good determiner if you have to defend yourself as not a hipster, your tight jeans wearing ass is probably a hipster. Sorry, to break it you, folks. We all deal.

The Cool Kids

The Cool Kids

The Cool Kids

Bronx rapper, Mickey Factz, recently caught major feelings from Nah Right’s Eskay when he was classified as a hipster rapper. He went to great pains to categorically reject the notion as did the Kidz In The Hall when confronted with that same notion. Lord knows an aspiring rapper wouldn’t want to be associated with white upper middle class douche bags in thick black framed glasses (Full Disclosure: I wear black framed glasses quite regularly, myself) even though they are often fond of those same thick black framed glasses himself. Hipster rap has become short-hand in recent times for a retro aesthetic that leans on a late ‘80s/early ‘90s sound and culture. The Cool Kids, Wale, The Knux, Jay Electronica, Lupe Fiasco, MickeyFactz and the Kidz In The Hall all have an aesthetic and style that leans heavily on what is being dubbed as “hipster rap.” Pretty much all of them hate it. I’m not necessarily sure that’s a good thing. I think they should embrace it.

The notion of hipster rap is actually pretty damn awesome. It uses the old school aesthetic of 80’s rap and culture and updates it for a modern audience. In a sense, as an audience we are getting the best of both worlds. It’s swaggerific enough for fans of shitty LCD rap to be conned into listening to but purposely old school enough to keep geezer’s like myself (all of my 24 years and counting) to get behind. If anything is gonna save hip hop, at least, artistically, this genre could be it.

Chicago’s unfortunately named, the Cool Kids are perhaps the biggest “stars” of the burgeoning sub-genre, perhaps are the most dogged in their adherence to their retro dogma. Their Totally Flossed Out LP is full of RickRubin-esque minimal but booming 808 production and Run-DMC tandem rhyming but it updates it with “chopped and screwed” hooks and use of dark, menacing synths. “Black Mags” is a stunning, dystopian ode to the pleasures of BMX-biking and “88” is a banger that sounds as if something that would come out of Oakland circa…well, 1988. The Cool Kids’ craft, a consciously retro look as well, rocking colorful t-shirts, vintage Jordans and enough dookie rope chains to make even Raekwon admit they were only built for the finest of Cuban links.

Another group that is making major noise, The Kidz In The Hall, are prepped to release their sophomore release, The In Crowd, are a group that met in college when emcees Naledge and Double-0 competed against each other at a University of Pennsylvania talent show. The group is heavily informed by the sounds of the Native Tongues and other early 90s artists. The stunning single for their second album, “Driving Down the Block (Low End Theory)”, samples Masta Ace’s classic “Jeep Ass Niguh” for a chopped and screwed hook but sounds like the artistic cousin of the menacing minimalist thump of “Grindin’.” The drums and break beat informs a Too Short-esque production but the plinkin’ synths add a modern edge to the song. The song just plain bangs. The Kidz In The Hall are also able to bridge a social conscious with dark bangers that seem destined for the club if given a chance by the radio to break through the Southern monotony. It’s truly a modern sound.

Perhaps, the group that I’m most excited about are New Orleans’ own, The Knux. The Knux are in the tradition of 3 Feet High and Rising De La Souland the mighty Outkast. The duo compromised of brothers, Krispy Kreamand Rah Al Millio, sound as if they were cloned from Big Boi’s lyrical DNA and transported back to the time of high-top fades and gazelle shades. “Cappuccino”, the brilliant funky new single off their upcoming album,Remind In 3 Days, is THE best song released all year. The song is funky, fresh and sounds like it’s channeling M.I.A.’s “Paper Planes” by way of the Pharcyde It’s an ode to sexual frustration and the pleasures of being fresh. The group displays humor about their own vulnerabilities that is almost completely absent in modern hip hop. It’s a triumph of the genre and if this does not get major airplay on both pop and hip hop radio than the notion of a benevolent deity goes completely out the window. It’s too good to be languishing in backpack rap circle purgatory.

The aspect that I like the most about the burgeoning genre of hipster rap is that it’s not informed of the sermonizing of pandering socially conscious rap of modern backpack rap. It’s not trapped in antiquated notions of what real hip hop should be about. It’s simply just damn fun to listen to. It’s become the most rank of clichés to hail alternative hip hop groups as a “breath of fresh air” against the sordid ignorance of modern mainstream hip hop. Hipster rap isn’t a “breath of fresh air” but rather the vengeful but fun-loving wrath of yesteryear manifesting itself against the forces of cliché in modern hip hop. You can’t help but nod your head, smile or scowl when posed in your b-boy stance when listening to this shit. The hipsters may have completely ruined indie rock, haircuits, and fashion with their dreaded irony but they might as well save hip hop. Who the fuck knew?

Kid Sister

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December 2008
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