Knox Family's 2009 EP |
Single-Minded, “In These Streets”
Maybe
it’s because the percolating bass and percussive claps at the beginning of this
record call to mind the funk that would prefigure hip hop, but it’s not a hip
hop record I first think of when the Knox Family’s “In These Streets” comes
on. It’s not a funk record either,
although the band I’m thinking of was certainly influenced by both funk and
early hip hop. The Clash’s “Somebody Got
Murdered” wells up out of my subconscious the moment MC Jerm raps “Yo man, I
don’t think they heard you” and a voice cries out in the dark, “a murder!”
And that makes sense. A big part of the Clash’s appeal was a bracing honesty that confronted the walls that keep us apart. Seattle’s The Knox Family takes us from behind any four walls we might like to think protect us and out into the darkness to confront reality. Toni Hill’s beautiful vocal is key to the intimacy of that journey as she reminds us, “Somebody’s praying in these streets/somebody’s dying in these streets/somebody’s hustling in these streets” and then takes it all in her immediate embrace with, “Somebody’s singing for you and me.”
Toni Hill's 2008 "Only Love" |
The
rest of the record goes further into the muck and mire that’s the current human
condition. Most important? The light it shines.
In
verse one, Julie C’s sassy and knowing rhymestyle catalogues a mind-numbing
list of offensives in the “all out war against poor populations,” including
intimidation tactics carried out by everyone from the FCC to the beat cop, gang legislation, privatized prisons and deaths
caused by “non-lethal” weapons. This
verse and the second are rapped against sirens that spiral between the left and
right channels of the speakers and another voice in the night, making an
unclear sound but plainly in distress….
Somebody hustling or somebody dying.
And
then Hill sings again, backed by a 5 note key progression that mines the same
territory Timbaland’s been working lately but suggests a bigger, explicit
dream— hope for every voice that currently goes unheard and faith in those
voices to change the world.
Julie
C’s second verse starts at the heights of Wall Street and follows the “global economic
collapse.” She somehow hits on all of
it, from the political stakes that lead to bank bailouts to the foreclosure of
the homes of those small enough to fail. Before she’s finished, Julie C describes a globalized war between the
rich and the poor.Julie C's 2011 "Sliding Scale"
With
the stakes this high, Hill begins to tic off more of what “singing for you and
me” means—“we gotta get together/’cause we need/ to heal the sick and
hopeless/yes, indeed/to strive for peace and justice/equality/love for you and
me.” With keys washing in behind her,
Hill’s voice grows more reassuring and inspiring as she touches on each key to
the future.
The
third and final verse starts after the record’s turned the corner toward a fade
out. Julie C raps a sign off and then,
like James Brown throwing off his cape, she launches into, “Yo, violence is a
symptom not the disease.” The dissonant
sirens are gone now, replaced by flute-like keys and more percussion including
high hat and snappy wood block beats. Something’s
different about this last highly charged verse, though the signs stay grim,
“Why is the city of Seattle dropping another 110 million to open a new jail we
don’t need, while the district can’t even find a measly 3.6 to keep our schools
from closing?”
And this cape-dropping allows for a new intimacy. This last verse feels like an urgent whisper being passed on a
streetcorner. “Want to know what’s
really going on?” Julie C asks. “Just
follow the paper trail to downtown Olympia, Wall Street, D.C./As long as
poverty pimps keep profiting from our problems/We can’t wait for change/We
gotta create our own solutions/Straight from the peoples’ movement.”
But
it’s more than that. It’s a singular
piece of revolutionary art unlike anything else. It’s the blues of “The Message” wedded to a
concrete basis for political unity. And
it’s a spiritual, with Toni Hill’s refrains insisting that the human spirit was
made to fulfill our dreams. It’s a song
to suggest a new genre—not protest music so much as revolution rock—good for
dancing, crying, shouting and even (especially?) blueprinting our dreams into
reality.
For more information: http://bgirlmedia.com/
Learn more about the effort here: https://poorpeoplesarmy.com/