Friday, January 23, 2015

Gilles Peterson: Hanging with a master

There's a  zen phrase along the lines of "do not seek the wise, seek what they sought".

I consider myself a musical seeker, and while I do not 'seek the wise', I'm grateful when I find myself in their company on our shared quest.  Props to selector-par-excellence Gilles Peterson for a great set in Brooklyn this evening.



Gilles doesn't play in the States very frequently, so it's always a treat to be able to catch him.  While this set wasn't as revelatory as the first time I heard him, it was excellent nonetheless...

As is his wont, he crossed genres at will, moving from new D'Angelo joints, to Carioca Funk, to Banging House, to Jazz Dance stormers, to Cumbia jams, to Classics, to... well you get the point.

Eclectic though he is, he has a very strong conception (as the jazz cats like to describe it...).  I always learn from him, and just as importantly, I dance like a fool :-)

Speaking of dancing, I also have a great appreciation for the diverse crowd that Gilles brings out... definitely more about the music than "the scene".  Kindred spirits.  Respect!

To learn more, check out www.gillespetersonworldwide.com


Monday, January 19, 2015

What dreams may come. Reflections on Dr. King

( dug this out of my email archives... it was a draft of an internal company communication for 2013, meant to commemorate the 50 year anniversary of the March on Washington... this version never survived the committee editing process... but a few friends have thought it was decent, so I figured I'd share )

I'm writing on behalf of Black@TW to let you know that today marks the 50th anniversary of the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom here in the U.S.


The first thing I want to do is ask you not to read the rest of this email... not right now anyway... much better would be to spend a non-billable hour doing the following:
  1. Reading Wikipedia's comprehensive and imho balanced entry on the march (estimated time: ~45 minutes, but I'm a slow reader)
  2. View the Rev. Dr. Martlin Luther King Jr.'s full I Have a Dream speech ( time: ~17 minutes )
By doing these two things, you'll have much greater knowledge of this event than the average American, and you'll be able to make an informed choice about whether the rest of this email is worth your time :-)

Go ahead, I'll wait...

... you back?  Cool!  And why might the rest of this email be worth your time?

[ warning, the opinions expressed below are solely those of Cliff and not necessarily those of Black@TW or any other TW person or entity ;-) ]

The "standard narrative" is a simplification

The standard narrative about The March on Washington typically goes like this:

On a hot August day in 1963, 250,00 people peacefully assembled in our Nation's Capital to hear Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. deliver his famous 'I Have a Dream' speech.  The March on Washington had a major influence on the passage of the Civil Rights act in 1963 and the Voting Rights act in 1964.


I think most observers would agree that this description is factual.  And I get it, narratives that last need to be simple.  My issue is not with the facts, but it's with the connotation of inevitability, magic, and divine providence that this simplification supports & promotes.  This was destined to happen, right?  On August 28th, there was this spontaneous gathering in the Capitol on the side of justice and righteousness.  A great historical figure gave a kick ass speech and then we passed the Civil Rights Act... yay! (yes, that was sarcasm)

Because you read the Wikipedia entry, you already know that this march was in no way predestined.  There were active attempts to prevent it.  The PA system was sabotaged the day before the gathering.  There were extensive compromises made so that the event could go forward, speeches were edited so as not to provoke the powers that be... if you don't believe me, ask John Lewis.  You know that the National Mall's Park Police were in position to cut the audio if they deemed it necessary ( see that uniformed white guy next to Dr. King during his speech? ) You know that even in this time, the Black community did not necessarily speak with one voice, with Malcolm X being a key critic.  

Why is the "destiny" implication an issue for me?  Because the tacit assumption that "sooner or later, things will just work out", is morally lazy at best, and an abdication of each of our personal responsibility at worst.

Another simplification is that the march was "The Dr. Martin Luther King show".  Again, I get it.  It is a really kick ass speech... one of the best ever.  King's prodigious oratory skill combined with a mass media capable of broadcasting this into "every home in America" certainly had an impact... I would never deny that, and I'm thankful for it.

But, because you've read the Wikipedia article, you know that the march was "coordinated" by multiple organizations and their leaders (known as the "big six").  You also know that the nitty gritty organizing and coordination was overseen by by Bayard Rustin, a gay black man who will posthumously receive the Medal of Freedom today from the President.  You also know that Rustin worked with several hundred volunteers in Washington D.C. and hundreds more around the country to pull off the event.

The point:  Dr. King deserves every bit of praise and admiration he receives for seizing that moment and helping us all see what is possible for this nation,  but it's important... no, critical to remember that he was just 1/250,000th of the story on that day.

Our common historical recollection "shifts the frame" towards the land of feel-good

Again, I blame this on the greatness of the back half of the speech.  Because you watched the entire speech, you notice how most contemporary "looks back" on this day focus on the final 7 minutes or so, where Dr. King is looking forward and articulating his "dream".  As many times as I've seen the speech, it still gives me goosebumps.  I get why we would focus on this.... it's ridiculously inspiring.

However, if you widen the frame to the full speech, you know that Dr. King spends just as much time talking about where Black people stood in that moment, and it wasn't pretty. He spoke of obligations that America had yet to meet.  "Checks returned marked 'insufficient funds' ".  He talked about "rude awakenings" that lay in store if the Nation did not follow a path towards justice and righteousness.  He also implored Black folks not to quench their thirst for justice by drinking from the cup of hatred... what does it say about those times, our history as a nation, that he needed to implore us so?

That was then...

Fast forward 50 years... how much progress towards justice and righteousness has been made?  I want to pause here and make a comment about the coverage of this anniversary in the media... they ask the same question I just asked:  How much as changed in the last 50 years?  But again, there's an implicit message that this march should have changed so much more.  Marches and speeches can inspire individuals, they can threaten power structures, but they cannot in and of themselves effect real and lasting positive change... I think we're seeing that in other global contexts in the present, sadly.

All of that to say, I don't ask "where are we today?" with the assumption that The March on Washington should get all the credit nor all the blame...

So, where are we today? (imho)

The Good
  • Symbolic political progress:  Obama's election is the obvious one.  A fair number of African American cabinet members over the past few decades, even in Republican administrations ;-)
  • (relative to pre-civil rights act, a little bit of ) Economic progress:  in 1965, things *really* sucked for Black folks economically, today they suck a little bit less. (See "the bad" below)
  • Some progress on reducing education, employment, and residential discrimination - Anecdotes: In the late 60s, in order to get to her newly integrated honors high school, my mom had to dodge dogs let out by residents of the White neighborhood between her house and school.  In the 80s, I went to an integrated, middle class public high school where we had very few racial issues.  in 1974, my Dad was able to get a job as a Systems Analyst with IBM in part due to their active efforts to hire minority candidates (which they did as a way to avoid antitrust action, but still...) I write this email after having put my biracial daughter to bed in the moderately affluent (but predominantly white) Chicago suburb in which we live.  I feel a consistent low level of isolation living out here, but the schools are good, and no one is throwing bricks through my window.  That's actually progress. But there's some serious discontinuity of even this progress when you look at different socio-economic strata within the Black community.
  • Moving towards parity in base-level educational attainment:  In 1960, Whites graduated high school at twice the rate of Blacks.  Today, while there's still a gap, it's much smaller.  [ Image | Source ]
The Bad
  • Not enough economic progress by a long shot!
    • Income:  Since 1965, the gap in median income between Whites and Blacks as been remarkably consistent.  One could interpret this as the U.S. having made no progress towards income parity.  [ Image | Source ]
    • Wealth:  Even as the income gap has held steady, the White/Black wealth gap as widened, with Black wealth trending very flat.  Wealth parity is getting worse [ Image | Source ]
    • Tenuous upward mobility:  According to one study, Blacks born into middle class families in the 1960s had a 45% likelihood of sliding down to the "lower class" as adults.  Whites, by comparison, had a 16% likelihood. [ Source ]
  • Educational attainment gap widens after High School.  [ Image | Source ]
  • Despite Legislation, High levels of segregation persist (De Jure, De Facto, Po-tay-to, Po-tah-to...)
What can I do?

Something symbolic you can do is ring the online Freedom Bell today at 3pm.

As far as more substantive actions... remember that funny story from The March?  The "big six" were late because they were meeting with members of Congress, so The March started without them!  They eventually caught up to take a picture "leading" the people :-)

What do you think  you can do? The one thing I know you don't have to do is wait.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

India Bound...


Heading to India for a bit... a good excuse for some "visual remixing"

Here's the album cover for the soundtrack to Bollywood Action film "The Burning Train"


This cover was remixed by Stones Throw for Madlib's "Beat Konducta in India Vol 1."  can you spot Madlib?


I re-remixed the Stones Throw cover... can you spot me?


Heaven help us all if I actually ever obtain some real photoshopping skillz :-)

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Cataloging!




And so it begins continues...

The collection will be cataloged in 2015!  [ Full digitization is a multi-year effort we'll worry about later ;-) ]