Saturday, April 23, 2016

Miles Davis & Chaka Khan: Human Nature (live in Montreux 1989)

San Francisco Chronicle: Black Panthers at 50 Years Old






50 years on, Black Panthers honored
 
Steve McCutchen, left, who joined the party in 1968; Timothy Thompson, who joined in 1970; Elaine Brown, former chair; Melvin Dickson, who joined in 1969; 
Bobby McCall, who joined in 1970; and Malik Edwards.

As a high school senior in Sacramento, James Mott cut class to watch the Black Panthers march into the state Capitol in their leather jackets and berets, carrying shotguns.

Mott couldn't resist falling in behind them, and now he is at the front of the line as the Black Panther Party cranks up to mark its 50th anniversary celebration, beginning with an all-day symposium Saturday at Laney College. "

The Black Panthers were the single greatest effort by blacks in the United States for freedom and self-determination," he said, as keynote speaker for a news conference Friday at the Oakland Museum of California. The museum will be the site of a three-day conference on the Panthers that will take over the entire 7.5-acre museum compound for three days, Oct. 20-23. The symposium will coincide with the museum exhibit "All Power to the People: Black Panthers at 50," which will include original Panther berets and rarely seen photographs of day-to-day life among the Panthers, taken by party members. The marquee item, borrowed from Stanford, will be the original draft of the Panther "10 Point Platform and Program" written by hand by party co-founder Bobby Seale. Seale noticeably absent

Seale, who has written a screenplay about his life in the Panthers, was noticeably absent from Friday's event. That's because he is putting on his own 50th anniversary events on behalf of the National Alumni Association of the Black Panther Party, which he says will draw more than 200 Panthers to the Bay Area in October. Also absent was David Hilliard, founding member and chief of staff of the Panthers. He was on the schedule but called in sick. This left it to several later members, led by Mott, who now goes by the name Saturu Ned, 67, and Elaine Brown, 73-year-old former chairwoman of the Black Panther Party. Brown, an activist and one-time presidential candidate, arrived with her right arm in a sling, the result of a much-publicized dustup with Oakland City Councilwoman Desley Brooks, in an Oakland soul food joint. Brown has filed suit against the city and Brooks for $7 million, claiming injuries that required surgery.

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf was on hand for the news conference to claim her own link to the Panthers. This is based on the fact that Schaaf is also 50 and is the 50th mayor of Oakland. "Growing up in Oakland with the Black Panther Party gave me a skeptical eye," Schaaf began her remarks, later concluding them by declaring October to be Black Panther History Month in the city of Oakland.

There was no specific event that launched the Black Panther Party, but the generally agreed-upon date is Oct. 15, 1966. The one person who does not agree on that date is Seale, who was reached by phone Friday, as his plane landed after a speech at the University of Oregon. Seale said the founding date was Oct. 22, 1966, which was his 30th birthday and the day he and the late Huey Newton finished the "10 Point Platform and Program" for the Black Panther Party for Self Defense (as it was originally called). 

John Coltrane - Blue train

Ishmael Reed says Marvin X is Plato teaching on the streets of Oakland!


 
photo Kamau Amen Ra

Marvin X as Plato
By Marvin X

After stopping by  Marvin X's outdoor classroom at 14th and Broadway, downtown Oakland, Ishmael Reed told the students gathered around Marvin X, "He's the modern day Plato, teaching his students on the street." Marvin told the people gathered in front on DeLauer's bookstore, "Ishmael Reed is my elder. He's always been supportive of my projects and I deeply appreciate him for this." 

Ishmael had come to the bookstore /24/7 new stand to get a copy of the Sunday Los Angeles Times which carried a review of his latest book. He said the review cut him up as usual. He said people cut him up for his views on Alice Walker and other feminists, but according to Ishmael the most critical review of Walker's Color Purple was by Toni Morrison.

The people who stop at the open air classroom include a cross section of Oakland's humanity, including whites, blacks, youth and elders. David Glover, director of OCCUR, stopped through to advise Marvin to be a part of the cultural committee for the Ron Dellums administration soon to take the reins of Oakland.

A young sister stopped to say she was in pain because her friends are being killed on the streets for no reason. She has vowed not to be a victim but she is traumatized at the loss of some many friends. She is 19.

The police officer who works the beat that includes 14th and Broadway, comes through picking up litter. Seems a waste of time for the officer to pick up litter when there are so many unsolved homicides. The officer is known to post up at 12 o'clock to listen to Plato talk with his variety of students. 

A brother came by to challenge Plato, telling him he didn't know anything, especially since he wasn't from the south, New Orleans in particular. Plato told him New Orleans was as much a killing floor as Oakland, look at the recent deployment of National Guard to stop the murders.

Another brother came through and invited Marvin to speak with youth at a West Oakland school. He agreed, telling the brother, "I recently spoke with children at the Black Repertory Group's summer camp. I was deeply impressed with their intelligence. They asked serious questions, as serious as any I've received from college and university students across the country."

On Sunday, July 30, Plato was given a book party in Richmond, another Bay Area killing floor. But the party, hosted by Sister Shukuru, was probably the most powerful gathering of black consciousness people in Richmond history. The party was attended by movement elders and organizers, including Alona Cliffton, Phil Hutchins of SNCC, Margo Dashiel, Dr. James Garrett, Dr. J. Vern Cromartie, Jim Lacey, Ann Lynch, Suzzette Celeste, Richmond poet President Davis representing conscious hip hop.
Poet Opal Palmer Adisa gave a reading of her work that was as spicy and hot as a two dollar pistol in South Philly.

The audience was enraptured by the musical accompaniment of Elliott Bey Savoy, who backed Marvin's reading and the audience discussion. A brother showed a video of himself reading Marvin X's poem The Origin of Blackness in Venezuela. He read in Spanish, then English. The poem was originally written in English/Arabic. Marvin then read an updated version on the theme of the poem, Black History is World History. Much thanks to Sister Shukuru, a great organizer, formerly with Brooklyn's East.
*   *   *   *   *
photo Pendarvis Harshaw

posted 3 August 2006 /Chickenbones.com

Miles Davis - So What

Cover art by Emory Douglas, Love and War, poems by Marvin X, 1995

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/519P6v0E7nL._SX328_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

Marvin X poem Apology to My Higher Self and Miles Davis - Time After Time (Live 1985)





Apology to My Higher Self



Oh, Higher Self


I apologize to you

Greater Self

Holy Self

Righteous Self

I  seek to harm no one

but to glorify You always and forever

Have mercy on me

have mercy on myself

Oh, Higher Self

pleae forgive me for allowing my lower self to rule

Please have mercy on me Higher Self, Divine Self

If I will only flow in the flow of You

pick me up Higher Self

when my lower self comes to call

the whispering devil whispers into the hearts of men

and women and children



to take us all  down under

to the thrashing floor

the road where wise men fear to tread

down in the dungeon

rat hole

I become the rat

associating with the rats

dwelling in the dungeon

of my mind



Lift me up Highter Power

let me dwell with You forever

in the Upper Room

surely I know truth from lies

surely I know fire from water

yet I walk into the fire

I am burned again again again

easy to lead in the wrong direction

hard to lead in the right direction,

the Elijah lesson teach  us



And why do we love the devil

because he gives us nothing!

Take me Higher Power

into your loving hands

save me from the fire

whose fuel is men and stones,

Qur'an.

let not the weakness of my lower self

ontrol me

let me cast away illusions

a donkey is not a stalion

Oh Higher Power

catch me if I fall

take me forward faster

time after time

time after time.



--Marvin X



9/28/14



from Sweet Tea/Dirty Rice, New and Selected Poems, 2016, Marvin X, Black Bird Press, Berkeley CA, unpublished.

Friday, April 22, 2016

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Marvin X Video Archives



 

Video #1: The President of Laney College, Oakland CA, Dr. Elnora T. Webb, speaks at BAM 50th Anniversary Celebration

RBG| WHITE SUPREMACY 2 -In The Crazy House Called America- Marvin X

 

Marvin X at University of Chicago Sun Ra Symposium Roundtable Discussion, May 21-22, 2015

 

Marvin X at New York University: An Evening with Poets Honoring the Lives of Poets Jayne Cortez and Amiri Baraka, 2014

 

Marvin X on Wall Street Part 1 WBAI Interview


Marvin X at the Philadelphia International Locks Conference


Marvin X at Yoshi's San Francisco Part II


MARVIN X reading In the Name of Love, produced by Ahi Baraka


Marvin X- "Black History is World History" (poem written in the 80's)@Fr...


Marvin X at Memorial for Geronimo Ja Jiga Pratt, Defremery Park, aka Lil' Bobby Hutton Park, Oakland


Marvin X Reads Poetry at the Brecht Forum with Ras Moshe, New York City


WHITE SUPREMACY-2 BY MARVIN X, Buriel Clay Theatre, San Francisco


Marvin X At the Black Caucus of California Community Colleges, Fresno City College

 

Marvin X at African American Museum/Library, Oakland


Marvin X play In the Name of Love, Laney College Theatre, 1981, Oakland


1 - One Day in the Life, a docudrama by Marvin X and Discussion on Art, Drugs and Revolution with Sonia Sanchez, Amina and Amiri Baraka, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath, Marvin X, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996. MC Omowale Clay


3 -One Day in the Life, a docudrama by Marvin X and Discussion on Art, Drugs and Revolution with Sonia Sanchez, Amina and Amiri Baraka, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath, Marvin X, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996, MC Omowale Clay

4 - One Day in the Life, a docudrama by Marvin X and Discussion on Art, Drugs and Revolution with Sonia Sanchez, Amina and Amiri Baraka, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath, Marvin X, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996, MC Omowale Clay

5 - One Day in the Life, a docudrama by Marvin X and Discussion on Art, Drugs and Revolution with Sonia Sanchez, Amina and Amiri Baraka, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath, Marvin X, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996, MC Omowale Clay

6 - One Day in the Life, a docudrama by Marvin X and Discussion on Art, Drugs and Revolution with Sonia Sanchez, Amina and Amiri Baraka, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath, Marvin X, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996 MC Omowale Clay

7 - One Day in the Life, a docudrama by Marvin X and Discussion on Art, Drugs and Revolution with Sonia Sanchez, Amina and Amiri Baraka, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath, Marvin X, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996,  MC Omowale Clay


8 - One Day in the Life, a docudrama by Marvin X and Discussion on Art, Drugs and Revolution with Sonia Sanchez, Amina and Amiri Baraka, Sam Anderson, Elombe Brath, Marvin X, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996, MC Omowale Clay

 

 




 


 

 




RBG| WHITE SUPREMACY 2 -In A Crazy House Called America- Marvin X

Marvin X at African American Museum/Library, Oakland

Marvin X play In the Name of Love, Laney College Theatre, 1981

1 - A Day in the Life - Marvin X and Discussion, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996

3 - A Day in the Life - Marvin X and Discussion, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996

8 - A Day in the Life - Marvin X and Discussion, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996

7 - A Day in the Life - Marvin X and Discussion, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996

6 - A Day in the Life - Marvin X and Discussion, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996

5 - A Day in the Life - Marvin X and Discussion, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996

4 - A Day in the Life - Marvin X and Discussion, Sista's Place, Brooklyn NY, 1996

Marvin X at University of Chicago Sun Ra Symposium Roundtable Discussion

Marvin X at New York University: An Evening with Poets Honoring the Lives of Poets Jayne Cortez & Amiri B...

Marvin X on Wall Street Part 1 WBAI Interview

Marvin X at the Philadelphia International Locks Conference

Marvin X at Yoshi's San Francisco Part II

MARVIN X reading In the Name of Love, produced by Ahi Baraka

Super poem, even better presentation, combined pure artivity with authority, plus the environment of my father and self. I cry in joy as I hear this perfect self expression.--Stevon Williams, actor, singer


Hotep,

On January 19, the Oakland City Council passed legislation establishing the Black Arts Movement Business District. We thank them, especially City Council President Lynette McElhaney and Moveon.org. It is time for the BAM Poets Choir and Arkestra to hit the road to complete the 27 City BAM Tour ancestor Amiri Baraka suggested to continue our cultural revolution and united front of progressive people.

That's why I created a petition to Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, which says:

"We call upon Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf to support a benefit concert for Straight Outta Oakland, The Black Arts Movement 27 City Tour, featuring the Black Arts Movement Poets Choir and Arkestra. We suggest the benefit concert happen at the Paramount Theatre with the Oakland Symphony performing with the BAM Poets Choir and Arkestra. "

Will you sign my petition? Click here to add your name:

http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/straight-outta-oakland?source=c.fwd&r_by=15569191

Thanks! 
Marvin X,
Producer/Director, Straight Outta Oakland, BAM 27 City Tour
Dr. Ayodele Nzinga, Co-producer/director

Ancestor Amiri Baraka, BPP co-founder Bobby Seale, Dr. Ayodele Nzinga, Neo-BAM Director, Ahi Baraka, Marvin X

Marvin X- "Black History is World History" (poem written in the 80's)@Fr...

Marvin X Defremery Park

Marvin X Reads Poetry at the Brecht Forum with Ras Moshe

WHITE SUPREMACY-2 BY MARVIN X

Marvin X At the Black Caucus of California Community Colleges, Fresno City College

Prince



Prince dead
no screams howls
from river bed
No purple rain
no name
no free slave
no gain
no am I black/white
no mama/daddy songs
prince gone.
--Marvin X
4/21/16

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Coming soon from Black Bird Press: Sweet Tea/Dirty Rice, New and Selected Poems by Marvin X, 2016


Sweet Tea/Dirty Rice

 New and Selected Poems  

Marvin X

 

Sweet Tea/Dirty Rice is raw, beautiful, painful, low-down and funky, uplifting like hearing Nat Turner has risen.--from the introduction, Dr. Ayodele Nzinga, BAM Oakland, founder, Lower Bottom Playaz


He has always been in the forefront of Pan African writing. Indeed, he is one of the founders and innovators of the revolutionary school of African writing.

--Amiri Baraka   


Marvin X is the USA’s Rumi...X’s poems vibrate, whip, love in the most meta- and physical ways imaginable and un-. He’s got the humor of Pietri, the politics of Baraka, and the spiritual Muslim grounding that is totally new in English –- the ecstasy of Hafiz, the wisdom of Saadi.   

--Bob Holman, Bowery Poetry Club, New York City

His love poems will resound as long and as deeply as any love poems ever written by anyone: Shakespeare, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Sonia Sanchez, Maya Angelou.

--Fahizah Alim

...This is more than poetry--it is singing/song, it is meditation, it is spirit/flowing/flying, it is blackness celebrated, it is prophecy, it is life, it is all of these things and more, beyond articulation....

--Johari Amini (Jewel C. Lattimore)

With respect to Marvin X, I wonder why I am just now hearing about him-I read Malcolm when I was 12, I read Amiri Baraka and Sonia Sanchez and others from the BAM in college and graduate school-why is attention not given to his work in the same places I encountered these other authors? Declaring Muslim American literature as a field of study is valuable because recontextualizing it will add another layer of attention to his incredibly rich body of work.He deserves to be WAY better known than he is among Muslim Americans and generally, in the world of writing and the world at large. By we who are younger Muslim American poets, in particular, Marvin should be honored as our elder, one who is still kickin, still true to the word!

--Dr. Mohja Kahf, Professor of English and Islamic Literature, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville


When you listen to Tupac Shakur, E-40, Too Short, Master P or any other rappers out of the Bay Area of Cali, think of Marvin X. He laid the foundation and gave us the language to express Black male urban experiences in a lyrical way.

--James G. Spady, Philadelphia New Observer Newspaper

 

 
 


 

Marvin X
photo Kamau Amen Ra
Contents


I Am John Coltrane
Christian Terrorists
The Negro Knows Everything
Little African Woman
I Am American
Party of Lincoln Sinking
To Mexico With Love
Don't Let My Son Look Like This
Talkin Ignut
What is Love
I Will Go into the City
For the Women
I Don't Want to Know Your Name
I Release You
Funny thing I Already Knew
Fly Like a Hawk
Oh, Mighty Kora
Poem for Unresolved Grief
You Don't Know Me
It is Fine to Dream
If Only You Knew How Beautiful You Are
African Blues Ain't Blue
Oh, Mighty Kora
Again the Kora
Empire
Don't ask, don't take
Something is Goin on up in here
Post Black Negro
Remembering Dad
And We Wonder
And then there are Angels
Cyberspace Dead
Memorial Day
Dream Time 2
If I Were A Muslim In Good Standing
Old Warriors
In the Temple of X
There Was an Island
A Street Named Rashidah Muhammad (Dessie X)
Poem for Clara Muhammad
Prayer for Young Mothers
This
Yes, it’s all there
When I think about the women in my life
Letter to dead negroes in cyberspace
We’re in love but you don’t know me
Growing up
In my solitude, for Duke
A Day we never thought
Mama’s bones
Love is for the beloved
Lesbian
Poem for unresolved grief
Song for Reginald Madpoet
Benazir Bhutto
Dis Ma Hair
Ancestors II
Facing Mt. Kenya
O, Kora, Elegy for John D
Who are these Jews?
For Jerri Jackmon
When Lemmie Died
And then the end
How does it feel to be a nigger
No black fight
Praise song for Askia Toure
Bank the Bankers
Don't dream bout ma man
Ah, air so fresh
I Am a Revolutionary
Do you want to see me tomorrow
Can you feel the spirit
My people were never slaves
Poem #3 for R
Poem #2 for R
O, Malcolm X
Fathers sing blues too
To Egypt with Love
Letter to my grandson, Jahmeel
Closure
Kamau
Don't Say Pussy
What If



Publication date: Late May, 2016. $19.95. Pre-publication price: $15.00. To pay by credit card, call 510.200.4164. Not available in book stores, order direct from publisher: Black Bird Press,
1222 Dwight Way, Berkeley CA, 94702.