The East Meets West of Troost compilation, The Griot Gathering,
is a unique album in the strictest sense.
For starters it explicitly tackles Kansas City issues--from the disregard
for human life at the Honeywell plant, to the dismantling of the public school system,
to the racist dress code in the Power & Light District—while contemplating their
connection to a range of universal issues including the fate and purpose of hip
hop. That focused directness underscores
its uniqueness, but that also unifies the album because it works like a train
of thought.
On “The Colonel’s Brief,” longtime Honeywell worker and
human rights fighter Maurice Copeland declares the necessity of political
dissent as an act of patriotism. With “Community
Update,” Rapper Dirty D (aka King Kihei) focuses on the nuclear weapons plant
issues that motivate Copeland’s activism, stressing its significance to the
larger community. Then, Cherith Brook’s “Honeywell”
directly calls out the Kansas City nuclear weapons plant for giving hundreds of
workers chronic beryllium disease. Sahjkaya’s
reggae-flavored “Nuclear Weapons” contemplates the insanity of nuclear testing,
and, on “Self Destruction,” rappers Theodore “Priest” Hughes and Desmond “3-3-7”
Jones (aka The Recipe) specifically tie the suicidal nature of nuclear weapons
production and the military industrial complex to the orchestrated ignorance
and destruction of American society as a whole.
Dirty D’s and the Recipe’s “Recess/Parent Teacher Conference”
take the focus on social destruction to the specifics of a public education
system under attack. Sahjkaya returns
with “Political Strings” to call out the “set up” that needs to be fought
down. With “Power and Lights Out,” Dirty
D confronts the fatal flaw in the KC Chamber of Commerce’s crown jewel, and the
Recipe asks “What Happened to Hip Hop” in this moment of need. R&B singer Flowrese brings a refrain that
questions each of the rapper’s answers—“money”…”greed”…”igonorance”—by keeping
the question of hip hop open, “Did we lose sight of what kept us strong, what
helped us to hold on?”
The last track, “Palm of Your Hand,” another collaboration
between Dirty D and the Recipe (with a distinct, building intensity at least in
part thanks to producer Smart Alec) is all about hanging onto that sight and holding
on. Against a staggered heartbeat rhythm
and an impassioned, obscure R&B sample—“everywhere you go/everywhere you
stand/you know you hold my heart in the palm of your hand”—each rapper testifies
to his vulnerability at the mic, his need for the audience to hear him to
complete what he’s trying to create. It’s
a manifesto that blasts through the line between artist and audience—“strap
your heart to your palm and make them haters heads bop!”
The Griot Gathering Web Page
Power and Lights On, Part Two
On Tuesday, April 15th I tagged along with the 250
person-strong Pay Up KCP&L Tax Day Parade from Barney Allis Plaza to the
Bank of America Building (which houses not only Bank of America but also
KCP&L and Great Plains Energy), AMC Theaters and Computer Sciences Corp. Designed to highlight the way these
organizations' millionaire CEO’s and the corporations themselves avoid paying
taxes 99% of Americans do, this was an amazingly effective piece of street
theater. Marchers told their 99% stories
and organizers presented oversized checks estimating taxes left unpaid by the rich. The march was
generally accompanied by honking horns and smiles by passers by, and, after an
initial show of force, even the poker-faced security at Bank of America did not
seem unsympathetic.
Because of its profit driven model, the utilities company
(and its parent company Great Plains Energy) uses decreases in its profits as
an excuse to raise rates and downsize.
Last year, the company eliminated 150 positions, and it has raised rates
by 66% over the past six years. Meanwhile,
this company pays no federal income taxes and, as Lenny Jones of the SEIU
Healthcare union pointed out, CEOs aren’t paying tax rates comparable to their
administrative staff.
The demonstration was peaceful, good-natured and
unifying. A mock court proceeding
outside of the Bank of America building brought much needed humor to a serious
situation, while unforgettably illustrating the fundamental injustice. If demonstrations seek to help people feel
their strength in the face of power, the Tax Day Parade managed to not only
achieve that aim but find the fun in the process.
Pay Up KCP&L will meet again on May 1st at
9:00 a.m. at the JC Nichols fountain before confronting a meeting of KCP&L
shareholders from 10:00 to 11:30. If you
could make it, I know you wouldn’t be sorry, and your support would be more
than welcome.
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