Mark Anthony Neal's Blog, page 747

March 21, 2015

Curating the Malcolm X Mixtape Project

At the The Legacy of Malcolm X conference at Duke University, Zaheer Ali discusses The Malcolm X Mixtape Project, a digital humanities project documenting Malcolm X's musical legacy that—by the time of its completion—will include nearly 50 songs released from 1970 to the present, covering a range of music genres, including spoken word, world music, hip hop, rock, punk, and folk. 
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Published on March 21, 2015 07:53

March 20, 2015

Jay Smooth: Why Race Conversations are like Crappy Auto-tune Songs

"In this installment of Fusion's Illipsis, Jay Smooth argues that our racial discourse has become just as shallow and predictable as the latest cookie cutter pop songs on the radio, lamenting the endless cycle of gaffe, backlash and defensiveness that dominates media coverage of racism, and wonders how the "purists and connoisseurs" of racial justice can dig deeper for the vital conversations that don't get as much airplay."
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Published on March 20, 2015 09:33

Rape and Accountability: America's Untested Rape Kit Problem

With sexual assaults occurring every two minutes, Al Jazeera America examines  the national problem of 400,000 untested Rape Kits in the US.
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Published on March 20, 2015 09:18

Black Art Being Obedient to the Needs of The Movement

On this  episode of Left of Black on The Root, Jazz pianist Jason Moran, who scored the film SELMA, and dancer and choreographer Ron K. Brown discuss the need for  Black Art to be "obedient" to the needs of Social Justice Movements. Moran and Brown are collaborators on The Subtle One .

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Published on March 20, 2015 07:01

Moving Visuals for Rapsody's "The Man" (dir. Cam Be)

Fresh off her stellar cameo on Kendrick Lamar's "Complexion (Zulu Love)" from To Pimp a Butterfly, Rapsody and her label Jamla release the  Cam Be directed visuals  from "The Man" from Beauty and the Beast (Jamla, 2014).  The recording channels Laura Nyro's "The Man Who Sends Me Home" from New York Tendaberry (1969) and #BlackLivesMatter.
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Published on March 20, 2015 06:29

March 19, 2015

The Last of the Old Lions Goes Home: Dr. Yosef Ben Jochannan

Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Dr. Yosef Ben Jochannan, Dr. Chancellor Williams
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Published on March 19, 2015 20:44

"Stuff that happens in the breaks"—Pianist Vijay Iyer on his New Recording 'Break Stuff'

Vijay Iyer discusses his new recording Break Stuff, with his trio including bassist Stephan Crump and drummer Marcus Gilmore. On the album Iyer pays tribute to Thelonious Monk, Billy Strayhorn, and Detroit Techno pioneer Robert Hood.
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Published on March 19, 2015 09:13

Left of Black S5:E24: Preaching on Wax & the Shaping of Modern African American Religion

Left of Black S5:E24: Preaching on Wax and the Shaping of Modern African American Religion
Left of Black host and Duke University Professor Mark Anthony Neal (@NewBlackMan) is joined via Skype  by Religion Historian Lerone A. Martin, author of the new book, Preaching on Wax: The Phonograph and the Making of Modern African American Religion (New York University Press, 2014). Martin is Assistant Professor of Religion and Politics at the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis.Left of Black is a weekly Webcast hosted by Mark Anthony Neal and produced in collaboration with the John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University and in conjunction with the Center for Arts, Digital Culture & Entrepreneurship (CADCE).*** Episodes of Left of Black are also available for free download in @ iTunes U*** Follow Left of Black on Twitter: @LeftofBlack
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Published on March 19, 2015 08:41

March 18, 2015

History of Hip-Hop: The Midterm Prompt (or Provocation)

History of Hip-Hop  #DukeHipHopDuke University | Spring Semester 2015
Mark Anthony Neal, Ph.D. | Twitter: @NewBlackMan9th Wonder (Patrick Douthit) | Twitter: @9thWonderMusic
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“we gon’ be alright, nigga, we gonna be alright”--Kendrick Lamar
“This dark diction has become America's addiction / Those who ain't even black use it /We gon' keep baggin up this here crack music” -- Malik Yusef, “Crack Music” from Kanye West, Late Registration
Consider this if you will as a riff--a riff on post-ness, as in post-Black (though not post-Race); post-Gender; post-Sex; inevitably, post-Human--which gets us to the ghosts in the machine, well before intended, but allows theorist Beth Coleman to make this initial intervention: “The machine by which [B]lackness is produced does not rely on the genitals or teeth or hands but the whole thing...Instead of a small thing being substituted for the whole person, as in a normal perversion, in this case the person is shuttered down. Once emancipated, [B]lack agency must remain a black-market item in order for mastery to be able to respect itself in the morning. Black agency has historical material impact, yet it is invisible.” (Coleman, “Pimp Notes on Autonomy.” from Everything But the Burden: What White People are Taking from Black Culture, ed. Greg Tate, 77, 2003).
So to think out-loud towards some things you should consider and provide ordered language to, in the written form, what is this thing that we might call Hip-Hop?  Is it the big-bang theorized towards some explanation of Black pathology or has it more discrete origins? antecedents?  some thing or things  that have called it into existence?  What does it mean that Hip-hop might be a thingness that is produced by and thus tethered to those that were Thingness themselves? And when a Thingness reproduces a thingness--multiple thingnesses through the centuries in fact--how does that thingness sound?  How does Thingness talk?
Can Hip-Hop be Pop, if it refuses to be post-Race (or post-Gender or post-Sex?); And if it chooses to be post-Race, is it still Hip-Hop or simply a cheaply-made corporate confection, that is aligned with the Thingness that was said to produce it in the first place; a Thingness itself reduced to some sugary or salty substance that blows away in the wind, like a “product of the Morton Company,” as one of the great poets of that Thingness once said amidst her own ego trip.
The Thingness has had a name; a throw-away word, now treated as a $500 privilege when uttered by those of some privilege: R.A.T. Judy on the 1s & 2s now, “nigger was for quite some time the term used to designate African American slaves as commodity” (Judy, “On the Question of Nigga Authenticity,” from That’s the Joint!: The Hip-Hop Studies Reader, ed. Murray and Neal, 108, 2011). Judy still on the mix: “Nigger could mean exceptionally hard work, because niggers, by definition are labor commodities (i.e. nigger is an index of productive labor that is somebody else’s property.) A nigger is both productive labor and value...” (109)
So to  talk about this Thingness--like what happens when the Thingness speaks? like when that Thingness resists (imagine, for a moment, your chair in revolt), like when this Thingness decides to profit from the thingness it has produced, which under antebellum logic, means theft of both the means of production and the spoils of production.
Hip-Hop as acts of resistance that are inherently criminalized, as has been the case with every attempt to flee the plantation/prison/project. So how should the landowners/corporations respond? And there’s no purity in this relationship, as our man about-the-world,Tate, noted on the occasion of a 30th anniversary: “This being America, where as my man A.J.'s basketball coach dad likes to say, ‘They don't pay niggas to sit on the bench,’ hiphop was never going to notgo for the gold as more gold got laid out on the table for the goods that hiphop brought to the market. Problem today is that where hiphop was once a buyer's market in which we, the elite hiphop audience, decided what was street legit, it has now become a seller's market, in which what does or does not get sold as hiphop to the masses is whatever the boardroom approves.”
Is the Sigma Alpha Epsilon controversy simply about who possesses the privilege to utter the thingness produced in the name of Thingness, but repurposed by Thingness? And how is thingness and Thingness gendered, and sexed, and sexualized? And what do we do about the pleasure of it all, especially in our drive to identify the pathology and im/a/morality of thingness and Thingness? R. Kelley (Robin, not Robert), weighs in: “the biggest problem with the way social scientist employ the culture concept in their studies of the [B]lack urban poor is their inability to see what it all means to the participants and practitioners. In other words, they do not consider what Clinton (George, that is) calls the “pleasure principle...rather than hear the singer, they analyze the lyrics; rather than hear the drum they study the song title.  Black music, creativity, and experimentation in language, that walk, that talk, that style, must also be understood as sources of visceral and psychic pleasure” (Kelley, Yo’ mama’s disFUNKtional: Fighting the Culture Wars in America, 41, 1997)
And if Hip-hop might be the thingness that Thingness imagines in its own affirmation of post-Thingness (humanity), what might post-post-Thingness look, sound, and feel like?
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Published on March 18, 2015 20:12

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