“Great dancers are not great because of their technique, they are great because of their passion.”
Saturday, November 28, 2015
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“Great dancers are not great because of their technique, they are great because of their passion.”
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Links to Excellence – Turning “The Worst” into a Finer Transformation
Arranging this popular tune, The Robert Glasper Trio creates a jazzy serene sound on their latest Covered album, recorded live at Capitol Studios.
Robert Glasper – piano, Vicente Archer – bass, Damion Reid – drums.
www.robertglasper.com
Friday, September 25, 2015
Thursday, August 20, 2015
Links to Excellence – Whiplash: The Score
The movie’s
intense story of a musician’s impassioned desire to become the greatest and
his instructor’s radical techniques to push his students to supreme performance
makes one appreciate the accompanying soundtrack, which equally steals the
show.
Friday, July 24, 2015
Meshell’s Music to Simone
The gift that Nina Simone gave is a voice-spirit that lives on
autonomously and continues to revive itself through films, soundtracks, and
album tributes.
Meshell Ndegeocello’s,
Pour Une Âme Souveraine: A
Dedication to Nina Simone, exemplifies the Simone Renaissance Era with a vocal
restaging of songs on this 2012 album tribute.
Known as a
singer/songwriter, bass player and multi-Grammy nominated artist, what ranks
above Meshell’s titles is a distinction that permeates her work and explains how
a bold standard like “Four Women,” can shift to a gentler assertion and hold
its own.
Cementing a three-year
lead on the resurgence of Simone’s recordings, Ndegeocello speaks with me about her 10th album, being called a genius, and the film
she’s currently scoring.
Interiors of Man: Many singers have performed renditions
of Nina Simone’s “Four Women,” mirroring the same emotional intensity that
Simone brought to the song. Your rendition on Pour Une
Âme Souveraine, is softer but striking, sans the anger and deviates
with a silent ending, adding more. You indicated on NPR that in doing
this, the song captures a universal audience.
Meshell Ndegeocello: The silence is a way to acknowledge all who have experienced the
effects of their color and sexism. Sometimes what you leave out is the
strongest message.
IOM: You also mentioned in the interview
that you’d like people to learn from Simone’s life. What’s the most
valuable lesson you hope others will gain?
MN: As a musician, I hope other musicians can see the effect of
one’s choices, for good or bad. A lot of a career can be because of the
industry but it’s important to see and acknowledge the consequences of our own
decisions, accommodations, resistance. I
also hope people learn from her dedication to music and to social activism. And
sadly to also see the effects of alcohol, drugs and mental health issues - all
brought on by many factors.
IOM: The
word bitter seems to serve you in a paradoxical way, that is, you made an album
entitled Bitter that’s enthrallingly tender; and on your
website you host a Q&A on Bitter, alluding that you’re not
upset about Bitter being overlooked for best album, but you’d
rather focus on creating more music. It seems that extracting or diluting
the aggression and bitterness from a song i.e., “Four Women,” and replacing it
with a tender tone gives rise to some of your best art.
MN: Thank you. It’s wish fulfillment really - I wish it were as easy in life to replace painful experiences by a beautiful melody but I try to remind myself of the possibilities with the music, if nothing else.
IOM:
The Huff Post has described you as a genius. Where do you find the
[cynosure] of genius whether it’s in your work or another’s?
MN: I honestly don’t entertain these topics; when i listen to music or
take in another art I truly give in to the act of experience. I am not a theorist, it’s flattering, but I
reserve that adjective for Henrietta Swan Leavitt, Nina Simone, Tiya Miles & Ornette Coleman.
IOM: Where are you now in your
musical journey, and do you foresee your next project?
MN: I have been presented with the opportunity to record for the label
that has allowed me great freedom, but if I make an instrumental project the
budget is much lower than if I make a vocal recording and that fascinates me. I
find myself just enjoying listening to records and at this moment I am scoring
an incredible documentary about a young man’s experience of migrating to
Grenada. I am also having an inner dialog about the American experience and how
it can lead some to leave and seek the warmth of other suns. I suppose the same
thing can be said of genres, no?
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Links to Excellence – Burns on Jazz
Friday, May 22, 2015
Words from a Blues Legend
“I don't care for the music when they're talking
bad about women because I think women are God's greatest gift to the planet …”
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Johnny Temple Shares Akashic’s Most Inspiring Moments
Photo Credit: Randy Martinez Courtesy of Akashic Books |
This interview on
literature with Akashic Books Founder, Johnny Temple, is one of the most
encouraging interviews I’ve conducted throughout my writing career. Before approaching Temple after attending the
19th Annual Story Festival of Writers Week and hearing him share a
moving story that’s detailed here, I’d been pondering the tragedy in one
allowing their dreams to die under an establishment of rejections while the
haunting belief in the art created screams to be born. Often, I think about several well-known
artists whose dreams were accomplished through independent pursuits and self-belief
or, after someone revived their belief when countless rejections seized
hope.
To the degree that Akashic
has salvaged the voices of amazing writers and brought great stories to literature,
this independent press has been equally rewarded by such writers as Temple shares
in this interview.
Interiors of Man: Since founding Akashic Books, you have
attracted a list of renowned writers from various ethnicities. How has your
study of Black Culture informed the growth of Akashic, along with being a bass
guitarist for an indie band whose influences range from Rock to Reggae?
Johnny Temple: When I was a kid I read books but wasn’t a particularly voracious
reader. I didn’t become passionate about books until I went to college and read Native
Son by Richard Wright. That novel and others I was taught, like Their
Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, helped shape my interest
in literature. And then I read Toni Morrison and my life as a reader changed
forever. Being a musician has of course influenced my literary interests. Toni
Morrison and Bob Marley are two of the cornerstones of my aesthetic tendencies.
IOM: Attending last month’s “Writing to
Publishing” panel discussion presented by Columbia College Chicago, you
emphasized the importance of a writer’s character when considering new
clients. After character assessment, what essentials do you and your
staff look for in deciding to publish an author’s work?
JT: Before questions of character is the quality of the author’s
work. The most important factor, by far, is the caliber of the writing
and the integrity of the work itself.
IOM: What makes an independent press special is
its autonomy to make decisions focused more on artistic value than
commercialism, which facilitates the discovery of distinguished writers who are
often overlooked, as in the case of Marlon James, who as you stated, was about
to give up when you met him in Jamaica. Please share this inspiring story
with Interiors and the rewards in rescuing a great writer from obscurity.
JT: I first met Marlon James at a Calabash Writers Workshop in
Kingston, Jamaica. A few weeks earlier Marlon had connected with Kaylie Jones,
an Akashic author and writing teacher, who was leading a workshop for the
Calabash Writers Workshop. Kaylie urged me to check out Marlon’s manuscript and
I did, and I was both smitten and shocked by the writing. John Crow’s
Devil is a phenomenal and brutal allegory set in a small village in
1950s rural Jamaica. When Kaylie and I met Marlon he was despairing, collecting
a pile of rejection letters from literary agents and publishers in New York
City and elsewhere. He had literally deleted his novel from his hard drive.
Fortunately, we caught him in time and he was able to un-delete John
Crow’s Devil, which Akashic then published to rave reviews and prestigious
award nominations. Marlon’s latest novel, A Brief History of Seven
Killings, published by Riverhead, has taken the mainstream literary world
by storm, with truly outstanding review coverage. Marlon is also teaching at
Macalester College in Minnesota now. So his life has changed significantly from
when we first crossed paths in Jamaica, as has mine.
IOM: Any more discover and rescue missions for
Akashic?
JT: Marlon found and rescued us, as have a lot of other wonderful
authors. I once received a manila envelope in the mail from Chris Abani
containing the pages of his otherworldly and masterful novella Becoming
Abigail. (This story also traces back to Calabash and Jamaica.) Bernice L.
McFadden found Akashic at the Harlem Book Fair and rescued us with her novel Glorious,
and then Gathering of Waters, along with three other earlier novels
of hers that we’ve reissued, including Loving Donovan, for which
Terry McMillan very generously wrote a new introduction. Akashic Books is
defined by these novels and the others that constitute our list.
_____________________________________
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Links to Excellence – Light Speaks to the National Endowment For The Arts
Photo Credit: Michael Childers Courtesy of Rogers & Cowan |
Encouraging Arts
Education is incumbent upon strong voices lending their platform to keeping
arts alive in schools and communities across the nation.
More than an
educational elective, the Arts is a prerequisite
to imparting cultural appreciation and transforming creative minds into
mastered artists.
Here in this Links to
Excellence series, Award-winning Actor, Judith Light, shares with the NEA how
arts education has defined her life, and its significance to the service of
others.
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Roitfeld on Fashion
“Fashion
can’t matter more than the individual.
It’s better to be told ‘you’re beautiful tonight,’ rather than being
asked, ‘who are you wearing?’”
– Carine Roitfeld, Mademoiselle C
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Morrison's Address
There are some
creations that are immutably prophetic.
Songs, books, speeches, observations. Precisely, the Creators of the
works themselves.
Among the
examples I’d consider such as Shakespeare’s Tomorrow,
and Gaye’s, concept album, Toni Morrison's Nobel Lecture in Literature Address is a stunning model that marks recent events.
Presented to the Swedish Academy on December 7, 1993, this timeless
lecture “autopsyizes” language down to its wounds on society; its healing
abilities; and its maintenance of humanity, contingent on the choices we have made and will make with the language that is in our hands. When I heard the audio edition of this
lecture, I gathered from it the way in which language as anything else,
beautiful and meaningful can fall and become dead if handled irresponsibly.
Addressing the dark side of language that oppresses
and incites violence, the timeliness and timelessness of this lecture has been
manifested by youth’s irreverent outbursts on public transits, schoolyards, and
malls requiring shutdowns, to physical unrests across the nation. The words in this speech are timelessly
echoed, as unfortunate wars are provoked with instigative language stirring
raids and riots decade after decade.
After the address, enchantingly told as a story –
allowing sage and youth to assert their views – it was the accountability
offered to both that I found most tender in lieu of blaming the youth. From it, I deemed a need for elders to share
their historical struggles with young to groom consciousness.