Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Call for Submissions for a Black Arts West Anthology of Poems for Amiri Baraka, Edited by Marvin X




COMMENT

Marvin, with the passing of our beloved Amiri Baraka, flooding tears started coming into our work. However, just as The Creator & Ancestors would have it, Amiri has left us all with a song to carry along. As such, I saw your Call To Action for Poets to submit poetry in honor of him.


Seeing that you are asking for the donation of $100 from Poets to help with the publication costs, & knowing that this might be a hardship for some (me included), may I suggest that you consider putting together an Amiri Baraka Poetry Festival @ different locations here on the West Coast to be used as a fundraiser for the book publication project? 

I see the emerging of new works resulting from this effort: namely, a national and international tour of a lineup of Poets & Musicians, live recordings for sale to the general public, & appearances of those who participate in the tour working as much as they want to revitalize the Black Arts Movement & keep it forever more front & center in the hearts.
--Chache'--










Split this Rock Poetry Festival


savethedate14

LATEST NEWS


2014 Festival Registration Now Open!

Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness 2014 invites poets, writers, activists, and dreamers to Washington, DC for four days of poetry, community building, and creative transformation. Featuring readings, workshops, panel discussions, youth programming, parties, and activism, the festival offers opportunities to speak out for justice, build connection and community, and celebrate the many ways poetry can act as an agent for social change.
 Registration ends on Thursday, March 20, 2014.
Download this year's schedule in PDF format:
*Schedule is Subject to Change - Last updated 1/8/14*
Note: Online registration is preferred but if you have trouble accessing the form, click here for a hard copy.  For assistance, contact Camisha Jones at camisha@splitthisrock.org or 202-787-5210.

Eliza Griswold Wins Inaugural Freedom Plow Award for
Poetry & Activism

Split This Rock & The CrossCurrents Foundation present the inaugural Freedom Plow Award for Poetry & Activism to:
Eliza Griswold
for her work collecting & introducing the folk poems
of Afghan women to America
Congratulations, Eliza!
(Eliza Griswold photo by: Antonin Kratochvil)


Announcing the 2014 Festival Featured Poets!

Split This Rock is pleased to announce the 16 poets who will feature at the fourth national biennial Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness in Washington, DC, March 27-30, 2014. Among the most significant and artistically vibrant writing and performing today, they also exhibit exemplary public citizenship as activists, teachers, and supporters of marginalized voices. The poets to be featured are Sheila Black, Franny Choi, Eduardo C. Corral, Gayle Danley, Natalie Diaz, Joy Harjo, Maria Melendez Kelson, Yusef Komunyakaa, Dunya Mikhail, Shailja Patel, Wang Ping, Claudia Rankine, Tim Seibles, Myra Sklarew, Danez Smith, and Anne Waldman. They represent the great diversity of poets writing and performing in the United States today.

 

Please Support Split This Rock

Split This Rock depends on a strong financial foundation. Your tax-deductible contribution supports grassroots outreach, communications, and planning for the biennial festival and other programs — and helps us create a stable organization you can count on to serve your interests as a socially engaged poet. Gifts of any size are deeply appreciated. We hope you'll consider giving $50, $100, or more—or adding a recurring donation. Donate online or mail contributions to: Split This Rock, 1112 16th Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20036. We thank you.

Third World Press Tribute to AB

Amiri Baraka

(1934 to 2014)

Third World Press pauses to pay tribute to Amiri Baraka—poet, activist, historian, cultural critic.  He was one of the most significant voices of our times. As we reflect and honor this man and his legacy, we are also reminded of his words, his revolutionary voice, and his unmistakable urgency.
Amiri
 
baraka
“always
come in a
place
later.”
rushin to catch words that came before him
tho that don’t much matter,
him got his own words, music, dance, dramatics
& bright ideas even if some of them used cars
& don’t work.                              but baraka works
works harder than 15 men his age,
da, da da, do    who been around
long enough to tell his time
in places where people have tried to
beat the beat & tempo out of his talk & walk.
monk, trane & duke played secrets
that saved him and us even if we didn’t
accurately hear their da da, doos
baraka did.  they spoke musically to him.
he gave us his many languages & genius.
his comin in time is getting better & best & less late,
even for this sage still makin up stories
actin on his own stage & firing truthpoems
that compel liars & politicians to exit early and often.

For Amiri Baraka

 
© 2004 by Haki R. Madhubuti
from Run Toward Fear: New Poems and a Poet’s Handbook published by Third World Press
 
Baraka II
 
 
i saw The Dead Lecturer in a Chicago airport.
pacing, fast walking probably quick thinking about
unfinished projects like plays, poems and essays about
“successful” negroes supporting Bush & Ghost
and the secrets of whites with rhythm and
mass graves in Rwanda;
mostly Tales  of The System of Dante’s Hell out of school
really way past graduate courses taught
on the rough-neck streets
of Newark. A kind of Funk Lore in 3/4 time.
recently, i saw Black Fire, In Our Terribleness—older and
small but still a witness with missing teeth, grayer hair with a
fast smile in a blue shirt, accentuated by a smokin Egyptian
print tie—on the south side of Chicago.
Spirit Reach with his Hard Facts was alone and
standing close to a pay phone without an assistant,
credit or debit cards, without lovers of literature or Jello
supporting him. No Kawaida Studies here.
his aloneness frightens me, approaching him I wondered
why this genius of serious music,
of transcendent literature wasn’t
surrounded by readers, fans, collectors of fine words on pages
seeking instructions and autographs.
It’s Nation Time is still asleep.
where were the Blues People and Black Magic folks?
S.O.S. for the Slave ships and The Motion of History souls.
where were the consumers of best sellers, few sellers & the
new line of negro confessional booty-call stores. maybe
they just didn’t notice this Wise, Why’s, Y’s poet,
this lover of language, passionate protectors of
sound and the laughter of children.
maybe they were blinded by their bones of contradiction—
and pimp juice traversing their veins. they looked past this
original and complicated seer of Black life, this The Moderns
updated, reworked beyond Transbluesency,
there will be no Eulogies here,
no Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note,
just an older and able African son going Home,
pacing the floor of Midway Airport
on the southside of Chicago, thinking and
alone with a swift—smile. 
“whats happenin bro?”
 
 
© 2004 by Haki R. Madhubuti
from Run Toward Fear: New Poems and a Poet’s Handbook published by Third World Press
 
 
 
 
Baraka III
 
It’s difficult to be talented 
& genius
yet, often called crazy to your face
in a place that rewards moneymakers
who build and worship skyscrapers as monuments
to the individuality of dollar
bill collecting and preemptive war making
& whose poets and artists are viewed
as handicapped, a bit mad with water colored hands & ideas.
artists who work at beauty, wear words
bathed in nature & music,
talk in complex sentences, odd metaphors & swinging
feet are confusing to themselves and others.
they also think too much about
the nature of flags and forests,
the truth of institutions & religions
of language and lawyers, bankers & brokers;
the why & who of homelessness,
the question of collateral damage and
the battle between cultures, races & classes out of school.
 
actually, being a complete artist
in a place that worships skyscrapers, money, war,
misconceived thought and hummer2,  over children
   requires a bit of madness.
 
 
© 2004 by Haki R. Madhubuti
from Run Toward Fear: New Poems and a Poet’s Handbook published by Third World Press
 
Haki R. Madhubuti
Poet, Founder and Publisher of Third World Press

His latest book is Honoring Genius: Gwendolyn Brooks: The Narrative of Craft, Art, Kindness and Justice.
Copyright © 2014 Third World Press Inc., All rights reserved.
You're receiving this campaign because you signed up previously at www.thirdworldpressinc.com or TWPBooks.com.

Our mailing address is: 
Third World Press Inc.
7822 S. Dobson
P.O. Box 19730
ChicagoIL 6061

Billie Holiday : Fine and mellow (1957)





Billie Holiday – Fine & Mellow Lyrics


Songwriters: BILLIE HOLIDAY
Billie holiday

My man don't love me
Treats me oh so mean
My man he don't love me
Treats me awfully
Hes the, lowest man
That Ive ever see

He wears high trimmed pan
Stripes are really yellow
He wears high trimmed pan
Stripes are really yellow

But when he starts in to love me
Hes so fine and mellow

Love will make you drink and gamble
Make you stay out all night long repeat
Love will make you drink and gamble
Make you stay out all night long repeat

Love will make you do things
That you know is wrong

But if you treat me right baby
Ill stay home everyday
But if you treat me right baby
Ill stay home everyday

But you're so mean to me baby
I know you're gonna drive me away

Love is just like the faucet
It turns off and on
Love is just like the faucet
It turns off and on

Sometimes when you think it's on baby
It has turned off and gone

Have you heard a woman moan late into the night cause her man is gone?









Have you heard
a woman moan
late into the night
cause her man is gone?
Have you heard
a woman wail
just before dawn
cause her man is gone
Have you heard her cry

Oh, Jesus  Jesus Jesus
before noon time
cause her man is gone

"He wears hard gray pants
stripes are really yellow
He wears hard gray pants
stripes are really yellow
but when he starts to love me
he's so fine and mellow."

Have you heard a woman cry
cause her man is gone.
She wanted to slap him
one more time
but her man is gone
wanted to tell him
one more time
what's on her mind
but her man is gone
wanted to dig up his bones
to kiss him one more time
but her man is gone.
--Marvin X
1/27/14
Newark, NJ

Monday, January 27, 2014

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


Marvin X at NYU Feb 4


Marvin X in Fresno at Hinton Center, Feb 22



Black Arts Movement Conference, University of California, Merced
Feb 28 thru March 2, 2014
Kim McMillan & Marvin X, Producers



Black Arts Movement East St. Louis--Eugene Redman


Poet/ Professor Emeritus, Dr. Eugene Redman, East St. Louis, MO
He will participate in the Black Arts Movement Conf., UC Merced





Marvin X in Harlem for private reception

On the eve of NYU's tribute to poets Jayne Cortez and Amiri Baraka, Marvin X will be honored at a private reception, hosted by poet/activist Rashidah Ismaili Sat., Feb 1, 2014. With Walter Mosley, Sister Rashidah will moderate the NYU conversation and reading by nationally and internationally known poets Mrs. Amina Baraka, Sandra Esteves, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Arthur Pfister, Felipe Luciano, Haki Madhubuti, Sonia Sanchez, Rene McClean, Askia Toure, Quincy Troop, Ted Wilson and Marvin X.