Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

24
Sep
10

“We Rock Long Distance” – Kickstarter and Trailer Launch!

This afternoon, my producer Lauren DeSteno and I launched our first fundraising campaign for We Rock Long Distance. This feature-length documentary follows three Twin Cities hip-hop artists who use their music to collaborate across geography and generations: M.anifest, Maria Isa, and Tou SaiK Lee.

At the end of October, I will travel to Accra, Ghana for a month with M.anifest to document his collaboration with his grandfather, world renowned ethnomusicologist and composer J.H. Kwabena Nketia, as well as follow him on a 10-city tour throughout Ghana. Here’s a preview of what’s to come:

We need your help to make this happen. Please visit our Kickstarter page and support the project. A donation at ANY level helps!

And spread the word! Follow us on Twitter and Facebook, re-post our fund-raising and project updates to your social networks, write an article, take a photo, make a video, however you see fit to help us tell this story!

Thanks for your support!

21
Dec
09

Review of M.anifest – “The Birds and the Beats”

My belated review of M.anifest’s free mixtape, The Birds and the Beats, is live over at the Twin Cities Daily Planet.

Watch this week for reviews of Lightning and Thunder, Vol. 2 and Analyrical’s First Date. Sorry I couldn’t write them before their respective release shows this past weekend, I was laid out cold by the flu.

03
Nov
09

Alphä – “Disneyland” (Live at The Lounge”)

Alphä performing “Disneyland” at the Lounge in Minneapolis, MN. For more from Alphä, see his MySpace.

24
Oct
09

Videos from “Up in Arms”

Here are the spoken word performances from this month’s “Up in Arms” event, which took place at Macalaster College. The event was designed to raise awareness and funds for the family of Fong Lee, who was shot and killed by a Minneapolis Police Officer in 2007 and featured many, many of the Twin Cities’ best spoken word and hip-hop artists, as well as guest artists from across the nation. I’m editing the hip-hop performances and will hopefully have those up in the next week or so.

For more information on the Fong Lee case, see here, here, and here.

07
Jul
09

Historic Hmong Hip-Hop Collaboration

Duce Khan and Tsis K, the two best MCs who rap in Hmong, performed together live for the first time at Boom Bap Village 2009. 

16
May
09

Videos from the El Guante/Big Cats! EP release show

Here are some videos from the release show for Start A Fire, the debut EP from producer Big Cats! and MC/poet/activist El Guante. Sorry about the poor lighting, some of the Nomad’s lights were broken that night.

13
May
09

Video from Fong Lee Rally

Here’s a short video I put together from Monday’s rally for Fong Lee. For more information, see the Twin Cities Daily Planet.

15
Apr
09

New Videos!

09
Feb
09

K’naan at the Varsity Theater this Wednesday Night

knaan

Here’s a short review and concert preview I wrote for the Daily Planet on the Somali MC K’naan. It’s an early show, doors are at 6pm, with M.anfiest and Muja Messiah opening.

29
Jan
09

New EP from FranzDiego.com

the_franzdiego_dotcom_ep_front

Building on the momentum from Illuminous 3’s debut album Room in December, FranzDiego.com recently dropped his own debut effort. With beats from Fire Like Water, PC, Noam the Drummer and Big Quarters brothers Medium Zach and Brandon All Day, the self-titled, 7-song EP is available for free download here.

Big upped for both his musical skills as well as community organizing efforts, especially as part of Yo! the Movement, both elements get expressed on Franz’s EP. Whether it be his shit-talkin’ and boastin’ on the laid-back opener, “Oh Geez,” spit over thumped upright bass and scratchy-record keyboards, or the more explicit political emphasis on the underrepresented in the Twin Cities (and Everywhere, USA, really) on “Old Man.” Throughout, of course, he’s always reppin’ the Southside (“my diction’s a depiction of wear I’m living at”) and you can almost see the thumb-and-index-finger “Southside” gesture thrown up to the music. But there’s also a number of thoughts on mixed-race kids, which Franz is proud to call himself, and the particular spot they hold in the Cities, something that’s not normally heard, here in the Cities or elsewhere. On the back end of “Who I Are,” he raps:

The Half Latino who spits raps to Gringos
and gets patronized as a token backwards people
I rep for my brethren
even though I don’t fit the description of a kid’s skin filled with melanin

In fact, the chorus of the radio-destined “Who I Are” (“Build, Build!”) might be a summation of the entire album, a short but packed expression of all the ways politics meets hip-hop, and how these intersections can be dope and enlightening and beneficial all at the same time, for those on the dance floor and the shop floor.




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