![]() home | radio show | freestyle archive | interviews | photo gallery | contact September 30, 2005DJ Monkone in the UKFor our friends overseas, here is where you can catch our DJ Monk One on his latest Award Tour: Saturday 1st Oct – Choice Cuts @ Hogans + RiRa, Dublin With The New Mastersounds
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September 29, 2005AUDIO: Interview with B+ of Keepintime/BrasilintimeThis morning on WBAI's morning show we interviewed the esteemed author/photographer/filmmaker Brian Cross AKA B+ about his new film Brasilintime.. you can check out the audio here, about 40 minutes into the hour. And if you're in or near NYC you can catch a live Brasilintime event on Sunday night, with J Rocc, Cut Chemist and Madlib performing alongside the drum gods Paul Humphrey, Kerf Redlaw and Joao Parahyba (of Trio Mocoto). The details are here.
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September 28, 2005Stevie Wonder "A Time To Love" Album ReviewBelieve it or not, Stevie Wonder released a new album this week and nobody noticed. The actual "A Time to Love" CD doesn't hit stores until October 18th, but Motown quietly gave it a "digital release" on itunes last tuesday, presumably as a ploy to beat the Oct 1st deadline for Grammy eligibility. I got an advance copy right before my radio show on Saturday, and will now be able to tell my grandchildren about the time I world-premiered a Stevie Wonder album. (and on the same night that I interviewed the Skullsnaps!) I've given it a few more listens since then, and I must say this is not a bad album at all, much better than I expected. It's also good enough that, like "Musicology", it will be overhyped by many fans and critics as a "return to form" that is "on par with his classics." Do not listen to these people. This is strictly a Phase 3 Stevie album. Stevie's career has had 3 phases: Phase 3 is similar to Godfather 3. Far, faaarrrrr short of the majesty that came before, but perfectly enjoyable if you block 1 and 2 from your mind, and judge it on its own terms. So don't get gassed. Keep your expectations realistic and approach it strictly as Phase 3 material, and you should me more than satisfied. I'd rank it way ahead of Conversation Peace and Jungle Fever (potentially his best Phase 3 album, had it not contracted a deadly strain of the New Jack Swing virus). Not quite on par with "In Square Circle" or "Characters," but close. Lately on his uptempo songs Stevie likes to spit big bursts of syllables in this RZAesque offbeat-onbeat flow, which I'm not always feeling, but on the better tracks here I can work with it. The best of these is the opener "If Your Love Cannot Be Moved", on which Doug E Fresh drops a beat that sounds a lot like "Freaks", and then Stevie builds a groove that sounds a little like "Another Star". This one keeps growing on me every time I play it. The first half of the album stays around this level, with at least three other tracks that compete with his Phase 3 hits (like say, "You Will Know"). "How Will I Know" is a sweet little jazz-lite duet with his daughter Aisha (the baby heard on "Isn't She Lovely"), whom I mistook for Alicia Keys. "Please Don't Hurt My Baby" is funkier than I ever expect Stevland to get these days, except for that one cheesy bridge thing. Honestly I kinda run out of steam during the second half, and the album loses me. But maybe this has more to do with my lack of album-length stamina after so much mp3-shuffling? Then again, I doubt I would ever run out of steam halfway through Talking Book, or Innvervisions, or Talking Book and Innervisions played 5 times played back-to-back. But of course this is breaking my own rules. Like I said, you don't want to think about that Phase 2 stuff right now. Just approach this as the album after "Conversation Peace", and leave it at that. You should come away very happy.
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September 27, 2005Stop Lying About the MashupsAny history of "mashups" that cites everyone from Frank Zappa to Andrew Lloyd Webber as antecedents, but does not mention Ron G or any of his blend brethren even once, deserves to be deleted. I mean seriously. Can anyone volunteer to edit that? EDIT: Even worse, I can only find two other places, in all my googling, where that connection has ever been made.. this baffles me.
Posted by jsmooth995 at 07:46 PM
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September 26, 2005Kanye West Dropped by Pepsi... Or Is He?You may have gotten some form of this email, reporting that Pepsi has dropped Kanye West as a spokesman: SUBJECT: Kanye West Dropped by Pepsi!!! Umm, not to nitpick but I think the civil rights movement involved more pressing issues than the loss of a celebrity sponsorship? Either way, when I looked for confirmation of the story all I found was this reply from Pepsi, claiming it's just a rumor: Pepsi Says They Didn't Can Kanye Probably a good idea to stop drinking soda anyway. (not that i'm capable of doing it)
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September 19, 2005NY Times on Hip-Hop and KatrinaDavid Banner made a great impression on me when I interviewed him
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September 16, 2005Davey D's New Orleans/Houston AudioDavey D has the Katrina radio coverage on lock:
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Grim Reports From the AstrodomeJeff Chang passes on word from the inside: Frustration and Survival In the Astrodome
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September 15, 2005Bill Maher on Bushvia guerillanews: "Mr. President, this job can't be fun for you any more. There's no more money to spend--you used up all of that. You can't start another war because you used up the army. And now, darn the luck, the rest of your term has become the Bush family nightmare: helping poor people. Listen to your Mom. The cupboard's bare, the credit cards maxed out. No one's speaking to you. Mission accomplished.
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Will Not Post Bathroom Break PhotoBeen away for a while, but Poplicks and Different Kitchen have been holding it down on the Katrina front and elsewhere. And in the meantime..
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September 09, 2005New Orleans Style Funeral for the Bush PresidencyThis Sunday at 3PM, in NYC: This is a call to musicians who cannot stand another minute of watching people being left to starve and die and be shot at by police, without acting to stop it….
Posted by jsmooth995 at 04:58 PM
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Hip-Hop Reacts to NOLAMatt at Houstonsoreal has blessed us with a new track from K-Otix, "George Bush Don't Care": Mos Def gets his shots in on Katrina Clap (thanks to Mirateck for the tip.) And Davey D put a nice little mix together over here. Y'all know of anything else I should add here?
Posted by jsmooth995 at 04:37 PM
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FEMA's Michael Brown OutLooks like Mike is getting a forced evacuation from employmentville (EDIT: actually he's just getting shifted elsewhere, reports 1115.org). Too bad nobody underneath him is qualified for the job either. We need someone sharp to carry out the government's critical mission in New Orleans.. which is, of course, keeping the press from covering the story.
Posted by jsmooth995 at 01:35 PM
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September 07, 2005Stating the Really Really Really Really Really ObviousAnd come on people, if even the fug yourself crew is stepping up with the charity, you know you can dig something out of those pockets. Talk to your business manager.
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September 06, 2005Revisiting KanyeI just jotted down some quick thoughts to my Kanye West post, and I'll repost them here below the cut, in case that now-humongous thread is too hard to load. 1. Kanye couldn't have chosen a better time to say what he said. The right time to speak is whenever people are listening. If anyone was truly callous enough to use his comments as an excuse not to help dying people, I'm hard-pressed to see how you call Kanye the bad guy in that scenario. And do you really think it matters, from a charity standpoint, what the celebrities actually say on these shows? That they're expected to win you over with the eloquence of their pleas? The celebrity's job is to put a celebrity face on the screen so people will watch the show and see the phone number.. Kanye's 15 seconds off the screen did nothing to impede that process, and he gave voice to the outrage many Americans are feeling right now, helped to spark much needed discussion on it. Plus brought the event far more publicity than it would have had otherwise. He did his job and then some. 2. Many are taking Kanye's last comment to mean that he thinks Bush deliberately conspired to leave Black people behind, that he saw Black people waiting for help and held it back because they were Black. But that is missing the point. He didn't say George Bush hates Black people, he said Bush doesn't care about Black people. And it is ABUNDANTLY clear that those in charge of planning for this disaster, from the Federal government on down, DID NOT CARE about an entire segment of the New Orleans population. The poorest twenty percent of New Orleans were INVISIBLE to the powers that be, as they planned for this disaster, and they enacted a plan that FORGOT THEM COMPLETELY, abandoned them and left them for dead. The government showed without a shred of doubt, through their actions and inaction, that they DID NOT CARE about these people. And yes, the vast majority of these people were Black. Should we dismiss that as a coincidence? Could Kanye have been more precise by stating that America doesn't care about poor people? Maybe. Class and race are always intertwined in these issues, so deeply we could spend a lifetime sorting them out. But the basic truth behind Kanye's rage is clear as ray of sunshine. This is not about George Bush, the individual, seeing that Black people were stranded and holding back help because they were Black. It runs much deeper than that. George Bush didn't hate these people, he and his government forgot them, and that happened long before the levees broke. George Bush is at the head of a government that has abandoned and forgotten this segment of our society on every level, throughout the planning for this disaster, and for decades before that. This is the culmination of decades of America not caring. The only shocking thing about Kanye's words is that anyone is surprised by them.
Posted by jsmooth995 at 06:46 PM
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Journal of a New Orleans NurseThis livejournal has a firsthand account, with photos, of what it was like being stranded in one of New Orleans' biggest hospitals. A couple of excerpts: ...One night, the generator died in the front building. They had to hand bag (Ambu bag) the ventilator patients. Everyone took turns. Patients starting dying. Our trach patient wasn't doing too hot either, but we couldn't move them to ICU (because it was a floor down--the patient was bedbound and there was no generator for venilator use). The doc came in and made him a DNR--"due to emergency conditions, patient's condition deteriorating. DNR." Later the next day, the manpower basically ran out and the docs in ICU decided to put t-pieces on the intubated patients (so if they could breathe on their own, they could. we stopped bagging). We lost 4, I believe. The new morgue was in OR suite number 5...God, I could only imagine the smell. No a/c. Dead bodies. Of course, we had NO MEANS to contact the families to let them know that their loved ones had died, and their bodies may not be recovered for weeks and weeks, making a open casket funeral impossible. Think about it, not knowing your family member died AND no body to have? The dead bodies in the morgue on first floor had floated away. Maintainance had to open the morgue doors to keep the pressure even (?), and those bodies were gone. No body of a loved one. That hurts... More Katrina linkage:
Posted by jsmooth995 at 03:10 PM
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September 04, 2005VIDEO - Charmaine Neville: A Hero From from New OrleansThis is testimony everyone needs to see. Everyone. (yes, by the way, she is one of those Nevilles)
Posted by jsmooth995 at 02:55 PM
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September 02, 2005VIDEO: Kanye West on NBC - "George Bush Does Not Care About Black People"Kanye was nervous, but boy did he ever represent. I hereby retract anything negative I have ever said about him. EDIT: A few thoughts. 1. Kanye couldn't have chosen a better time to say what he said. The right time to speak is whenever people are listening. If anyone was truly callous enough to use his comments as an excuse not to help dying people, I'm hard-pressed to see how you call Kanye the bad guy in that scenario. And do you really think it matters, from a charity standpoint, what the celebrities actually say on these shows? That they're expected to win you over with the eloquence of their pleas? The celebrity's job is to put a celebrity face on the screen so people will watch the show and see the phone number.. Kanye's 15 seconds off the screen did nothing to impede that process, and he gave voice to the outrage many Americans are feeling right now, helped to spark much needed discussion on it. Plus brought the event far more publicity than it would have had otherwise. He did his job and then some. 2. Many are taking Kanye's last comment to mean that he thinks Bush deliberately conspired to leave Black people behind, that he saw Black people waiting for help and held it back because they were Black. But that is missing the point. He didn't say George Bush hates Black people, he said Bush doesn't care about Black people. And it is ABUNDANTLY clear that those in charge of planning for this disaster, from the Federal government on down, DID NOT CARE about an entire segment of the New Orleans population. The poorest twenty percent of New Orleans were INVISIBLE to the powers that be, as they planned for this disaster, and they enacted a plan that FORGOT THEM COMPLETELY, abandoned them and left them for dead. The government showed without a shred of doubt, through their actions and inaction, that they DID NOT CARE about these people. And yes, the vast majority of these people were Black. Should we dismiss that as a coincidence? Could Kanye have been more precise by stating that America doesn't care about poor people? Maybe. Class and race are always intertwined in these issues, so deeply we could spend a lifetime sorting them out. But the basic truth behind Kanye's rage is clear as ray of sunshine. This is not about George Bush, the individual, seeing that Black people were stranded and holding back help because they were Black. It runs much deeper than that. George Bush didn't hate these people, he and his government forgot them, and that happened long before the levees broke. George Bush is at the head of a government that has abandoned and forgotten this segment of our society on every level, throughout the planning for this disaster, and for decades before that. This is the culmination of decades of America not caring. The only shocking thing about Kanye's words is that anyone is surprised by them. and here's a transcript: Mike Myers: [dutifully reads canned plea for charity on teleprompter] Kanye: [abandons teleprompter] "I hate the way they portray us in the media. You see a black family and they say we are looting, you see a white family and they say they are looking for food. And, you know, its been five days because most of the people ARE black. And even for me to complain, I would be a hypocrite because I would turn away from the TV because it's too hard to watch. I've even been shopping before even giving a donation, so now I'm calling my business manager right to see what is the biggest amount I can give. And just to imagine, if I was down there and those are my people down there. If there is anybody out there that wants to do anything that we can help about the way America is set up the help the poor, the black people, the less well off as slow as possible. Red cross is doing as much as they can. We already realize a lot of the people that could help are at war right now, fighting another way. And now they've given them permission to go down and shoot us. Mike Myers: [stands frozen in horror, decides to pretend nothing happened and stick with the teleprompter] Kanye: GEORGE BUSH DOES NOT CARE ABOUT BLACK PEOPLE. Mike Myers: [descends into complete panic]
Posted by jsmooth995 at 09:18 PM
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Why Can't We?
I never thought this particular song would move me to tears. Such a simple message, believing that human beings will do what ought to come naturally, and show up for each other when times get hard. Seems like the simplest thing in the world, more common sense than optimism. But right now I can barely stand to listen to it.. knowing the man behind that message, Allen Toussaint, is one of the 20,000 human beings who spent this week huddled in the Louisiana We did not show up. If you want to deny how race and class are factoring into this, have fun in fantasyland. But surely not even the most wilfully oblivious among us can deny the basic truth here: We did not show up, for the people who needed us the most. We failed. It did not have to be like this. The poorest among us were forgotten and left for dead. I don't really have words to go on from here. (EDIT: According to more recent reports Toussaint was not in the Superdome after all, but holed up in a local hotel..)
Posted by jsmooth995 at 06:57 PM
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September 01, 2005Safe ModeMy PC is brutally spyware/virused out all of a sudden. Posting will thus be stalled for the moment. Hopefully these guys will help.
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