Thursday, April 17, 2014

Photo Essay :The Black Arts Movement 50 Years On, University of California, Merced, Feb 28 thru March 2, 2014

Wednesday, March 05, 2014

THE BLACK ARTS MOVEMENT 50 YEARS ON






I'd originally wanted to go to the U.C. Merced conference on the Black Arts Movement because it was one in a series of events that were to lead up to Amiri Baraka's 80th birthday. When news of his death came in January, I wanted even more to attend, and reconfigured my paper a bit to start at the beginnings of Baraka's long discography of recordings with musicians, with further installments to follow (including at the ICA in London next month). At Merced, I was part of a panel titled "Word, Sound and Power," with papers by Geoffrey Jacques on Langston Hughes's The Panther and the Lash and Anna Everett on teaching Black film and other media of the era. And let's face it, I'd go anywhere to see Juan Felipe Herrerra with a banjo.





Another attraction was the chance to meet up with so many old friends, and to make new ones. In the audience at our panel I discovered somebody who had been a student at Federal City College in the same years I was there.  





We all owe a deep debt of gratitude to Kim McMillon, President of the African Diaspora Student Association, and her many colleagues and students who pulled off such a vibrant weekend, starting pretty much from scratch.





















Wednesday, April 16, 2014

The Black Arts Movement Poet's Choir and Arkestra





The Black Arts Movement Poet's Choir and Arkestra. Eastside Arts has pledged $1,000.00 for the 27 City BAM tour. Mr. and Mrs. Ovis Collins pledge $1,000.00; Pamela Young-King pledges $1,000.00. If you support the BAM Tour, submit your name and pledge amount. Call

510-200-4164; email jmarvinx@yahoo.com

The Malcolm X Jazz Festival presents Marvin X and the BAM poet's choir & Arkestra, May 17, Oakland

Marvin X and Black Arts Movement's father of music, Sun Ra, who called his band the Arkestra.

The Malcolm X Jazz Festival is proud to announce the lineup for this year's festival will present Howard Wiley, Faye Carol, The Last Poets and Marvin X with the Black Arts Movement Poet's choir and Arkestra, including percussionist Tacuma King, violinist Tarika Lewis, Zena Allen on Kora. Poets include Ayodele Nzinga, Aries Jordan, Ginny Lim and Juan Felipe Herrera, et al.


This year's event is in honor of Black Arts Movement founder Amiri Baraka. Sponsored by Eastside Arts Cultural Center, the date is Saturday, May 17, Noon until 6pm. and San Antonio Park, Foothill and East 19th Street, Oakland. Free event.

The Black Arts Movement Poet's Choir and Arkestra. Eastside Arts has pledged $1,000.00 for the 27 City BAM tour. Mr. and Mrs. Ovis Collins pledge $1,000.00; Pamela Young-King pledges $1,000.00. If you support the BAM Tour, submit your name and pledge amount. Call
510-200-4164; email jmarvinx@yahoo.com

First USA Statue of Liberty was a Black Woman

 
 
The first Statue of Liberty given to the US by France was a Black woman that the US turned down so France replaced that one with the version currently in New York harbor. This Black Lady Liberty also made by France is found on the Island of St. Martin. 

French historian Edouard de Laboulaye, chairman of the French Anti-Slavery Society, together with sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, proposed to...
the French government that the people of France should present the United States – through the American Abolitionist Society – the gift of a Statue of Liberty in recognition of the Black soldiers who won the Civil War in the United States, earning themselves their freedom. It was widely known then that it was Black soldiers who played the pivotal role in winning the war, and this gift was supposed to be a tribute to their prowess.

When the statue was presented to the U.S. Minister to France in 1884, it was rejected on the notion that the dominant view of the broken shackles would be offensive to a defeated U.S. South, who despised their former captives and would not want to be faced with a constant reminder of Blacks winning their freedom.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Marvin X 70 poem





Down in da country
down by da grape vine
got ma wine and ma woman
and I'm doin just fine

got love in da country
got honest people too
got love in da country
honest people too

Ain't like in da city
ain't no city blue

Got good food in da country
fill ya up real nice
Got good food in da country
fill ya up real nice

food, wine and woman
nigguh doin just right
down in da country
might spend da night

hear da birds in da mornin'
just fo da break of day
hear da birds in da morning
just fo da break of day

dat's why I love da country
like to hear what da birds
got ta say!
dat's why I love da country
like to hear what da birds
got ta say

birds up early in da mornin'
tryin ta make dey way
up early in da mornin'
tryin ta make dey way.

wish somebody would hear me
wish somebody say hey!

Just a country boy
escaping city life
just a country boy
escaping city life

wanna have some fun
plus I'm lookin fa a wife.

Come here country girl
you so nice so sweet
come here country girl
you so nice so sweet

just like a plum
nice enough ta eat.

--Marvin X
4/12/14