Karl Marx Was Right
The mainstream is waking to the prescience of the old man’s ideas.
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Sean Jacobs, Founder-Editor of Africa is a Country, is on the faculty of The New School.
The mainstream is waking to the prescience of the old man’s ideas.
Cote d’Ivoire is Africa’s best team at the moment. FIFA says so. Egypt, the current African champions, are second.
There’s no record that Hugh Masekela could play football. But he acted like he could kick a ball in a music video.
Tupac Shakur’s intensity did not just appeal to just young people in the United States, but also on the continent.
[Winehouse's] style provides a way of singing derivations of black music without resembling modern R. & B. In fact, avoiding the sound of current R. & B. may be its guiding principle. White singers generally seem to use it more than black singers, though it is open to anyone who wants to use its limited vocabulary. “Back to Black” also sounds nothing like current R. & B., but chooses rich, older source material; Winehouse’s collaboration with Ronson catalyzed her songwriting, and a radical change in her vocals pushes the album. Her tone is darker, the control is infinitely stronger, and her range sounds as if it had gained an entire lower octave. And then there’s the accent, which isn’t simply the Southgate speaking voice that makes “cool” sound like “coal.” Winehouse’s singing sounds, even to a nonpolitical ear, like some sort of blackface. She slurs words and drops consonants; you hear “dat” and “dis” in place of “that” and “this” several times. Is “Back to Black” meant to be literal?
And this essay from 2008 by academic Daphne A Brookes in The Nation:Black women are everywhere and nowhere in Winehouse's work. Their extraordinary craft as virtuosic vocalists is the pulse of Back to Black, an album on which Winehouse mixes and matches the vocalizing of 1940s jazz divas and 1990s neo-soul queens in equal measure. Piling on a motley array of personas, she summons the elegance of Etta "At Last" James alongside roughneck, round-the-way allusions to pub crawls and Brixton nightlife, as well as standard pop women's melancholic confessionals about the evils of "stupid men." What holds it all together is her slinky contralto and shrewd ability to cut and mix '60s R&B and Ronnie Spector Wall of Sound "blues pop" vocals with the ghostly remnants of hip-hop neo-soul's last great hope, Lauryn Hill. Who needs black female singers in the flesh when Winehouse can crank out their sound at the drop of a hat?
Anyway RIP Amy Winehouse. Tribute by the Dutch DJ Kypksi: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nuGcScKJItc * Dylan Valley sent me this this video by South African singer, Jamali (who won Coca Cola Popstars a couple years ago). It is a really bad pop song, but the video may get some attention, "kind of a faux Lady Gaga video with really weird and problematic imagery of slavery. Basically the three members of Jamali are being auctioned off in the video as 'exotic beauties'.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcInzVa6DJo * I've posted before about the strange relationship between American (including African-American) comedians and Africa and whether they're laughing with or at us. I have found some new sources. I found this video, below, from a recent set by Aries Spears (remember him from MAD TV and his imitations of rap artists)' doing his "Africa" bit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1HmAbANXPo Not that funny. Instead, I find this recent stand-up by fellow comedian Godfrey (son of Nigerian immigrants) hilarious: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8oE-gWzImxI * South African parody rappers, Die Antwoord, is playing a gallery opening in New York City in October. Anton Kannemeyer will exhibit his work at Jack Shainman Gallery. * If you're around in Amsterdam on August 19, go watch the South African trio Bittereinder at Paradiso. * Also in Amsterdam on August 28: Made in Africa Weekend: Doin’ it in the Park. Guests performing are Baloji, Secousse, D.j. Threesixty and others. * Finally, later this month it will be the 6th anniversary of late August 2005's Hurricane Katrina. We'll sign off with Ohio rapper Stalley's 2010 song and video which release coincided with the 5th anniversary of Katrina. Nothing to celebrate today 6 years later: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_uPUjci4v4