Thursday, December 5, 2013

What we share



This 
This rectangle
this rectangle is my tangible link to Madiba
from the desolation of a small cell with a bedroll (no mattress), a stainless steel bowl and a stool
the only creature comforts afforded during those 27 years. 
From a dark cell to the quarries.
where you were to chip and chisel and cough and breathe in toxic dust stirred up by your chipping and chiseling.

That same toxic dust is your final foe.
Not apartheid, not prison, not hate, not greed, not age
That same toxic dust you stirred up while working hard labor under the watchful eyes of armed guards.
Breathing in, day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, decade after...
That same toxic dust will not prevail.

Your steely resolve, your purpose, your strength, your wisdom, your freedom, our freedom will be always and for ever more...
It is the rock from the same limestone quarry where you labored
Mandela. 46664. Icon. Statesman. President of the New South Africa. Elder.
This rectangular rock resembles your resilience in a just and rightful cause.
Limestone. This piece of rock...
is my only tangible connection to Mandela

but oh, the intangibles.

(c) C. Denise Johnson 2013


Editor's note: The limestone came from Robben Island, the bracelet in Capetown, South Africa 2009

Monday, November 25, 2013

So much bigger

Those are some of the last words he wrote in his last blog entry dated Nov. 17.
A week has passed and now he's gone. 

I was gonna write that I'm sick of death but really, I'm tired of it. Only two days ago I was online checking out Be The Match, the National Bone Marrow Registry. Now I am just stunned.

Dr. Rex L. Crawley has been battling cancer for a long time and even though he has transitioned at age 49, he went out a winner. How you ask? Just read his last blog entry. We should be so lucky to lead our lives as he lived his - with integrity.



Dr. Rex L. Crawley, Ph.D. ~ Rest with God

"I have decided to allow my situation to be used by God to help increase awareness at a large scale. I want people to know that they could save a life simply by registering with the Be The Match registry. There are people dying everyday because they have no donor matches and no other transplant options and you could be the one to save their lives. How awesome would that be? How awesome would that feel?

This thing is so much bigger than me and I am so glad and blessed to be a part of it."


Thursday, November 7, 2013

Only the strong survive... through arts


This past week has been such a challenge for me to retain what sanity I have left. Between bureaucratic ineptitude, racist ignorance, outright bad-taste in Halloween costumes and dramatized history, it's truly astonishing that I have not gone clear-the-eff-off!

When one is homeless the Dept. of Public Welfare will use it's office address to fill in that particular blank line in their paperwork so, when your benefits are about to end they send out your notification of pending termination to themselves. I found this out when I went to pick-up prescription refills. So naturally, I make a follow-up phone call (and it doesn't help that this occurs doing the gov't. shutdown) for clarification. When I finally get a human on the line I'm told that I have to re-apply for benefits all over again. In the meantime, I'm running out of meds that I take everyday for diabetes, blood pressure, menopause symptoms, antidepressants, cholesterol, allergies, migraines... so I jump through a bunch of hoops get statements from my shrink and therapist to underscore the urgency for me to get my meds and to please expedite my paperwork, I'm told that I have to wait...up to 30 days. *sigh* 

Boo? Your ass!
While this is going on I kept seeing repeated incidents of white people in blackface ("Crazy Eyes" from Orange is the New Black) or wearing indian costumes as the owner of the Washington DC NFL franchise insists that tradition allows his team to keep it's "redskins" name. Then there are other folks wearing dead Trayvon Martin outfits (hoodie, bloody "bullet" hole, skittles, Arizona tea - with blackface). And this is what a "post-racial America" looks like? GTFOHWTS - immediately. Boo? Your ass!






12 Years a Slave
I decided to escape the madness with some quality mental stimulation. Having already listened to the audiobook version of 12 Years a Slave narrated by Louis Gossett, Jr., I figured I was ready for the film adaptation of Solomon Northrop's memoir. This unflinching look at "the peculiar institution" of slavery made Roots look like a tea party (unintended irony). Image that you are a free black who was kidnapped in 1841 and sold into slaveryI never understand the gravity of the brutality our ancestors endured just to survive; I doubt that any of us living today truly do. I know I wasn't trying to hear about when I was coming of age in the dawn of the Black Power Movement borne in direct opposition of the non-violent Civil Rights movement. And what I learned about slavery in public school was sanitized and humiliating to my pre-adolescent sensibilities.

Venus
Switching gears (or not) I put on my critics hat to review a production of Venus, Suzan-Lori Parks' play, inspired by the macabre recounting of the life of the Hottentot Venus during the early 1800s, an voluptuous African woman who, like Northrop, was tricked and transplanted from her home into a life of exploitation. However, instead of being a slave, her physique becomes the top draw of a sideshow where she is the main attraction and depicted as a freak, an oddity, wild beast and savage. For a price, patrons have the opportunity to grope and touch her buttocks, genitalia and breasts. The actress in the title role manages to convey the humanity and grace of a soul who is continually used and degraded. 



Blue/Orange
The latest production for me to review is called Blue/Orange a socio-psychodrama of a chess match about two determined psychiatrists advocating polar opposite approaches to treating a border-line schizophrenic (aka as the more politically correct multiple personality disorder) who claims to be the son of Idi Amin. Explorations of culturally-competent treatments, contexts of normalcy and preconceptions and prejudices abound with lots of questionable ethics abound from all involved parties. Seating surrounds the stage like a boxing ring as each player jab and spar for position, pride, salvation and vindication; yet the audience is the ultimately the judge of the final outcome. Yeah, participatory observation is regarded to truly appreciated the script.

Lots of fiber to digest indeed, but fortunately the 43rd Pitt Jazz Seminar and Concert was just the needed respite my exhausted and weary spirit required. A soaring and swinging evening was precisely what was needed to get back to where I needed to be... this was musical therapy.  
  

‘August in August’ serves up tasty morsels of theater

Another extraction from the Draft file

(This originally ran in the August 24, 2011 edition of the  New Pittsburgh Courier)
by C. Denise Johnson
For New Pittsburgh Courier
    Generally speaking in theater circles, revivals refer to new productions of long –
remembered and highly regarded works returning to the Great White Way. Liberty
Avenue may not be Broadway, but last weekend saw the much-anticipated return of
the “August in…” theater sampler to Pittsburgh’s Cultural District in the August Wilson
Center for African American Culture.
    Begun as a collaboration between the Cultural Trust’s Janice Burley Wilson and
Pittsburgh Playwrights Theater Company founder Mark Clayton Southers, it experienced
growing pain and hiatuses while attracting Broadway luminaries James Earl Jones and
Charles Dutton in tribute to Pittsburgh’s Hill District griot.
    A near-capacity house was treated to performances from nationally respected
actors, Broadway veterans and some of the best talent from southwest Pa. in scenes from
ten plays comprising August Wilson’s “Century Cycle” that portray African American
life in each decade of the 1900s.
    To present “August in August” in the AWC in Wilson’s hometown was a full
circle moment reminiscent of the African sankofa bird that returns to where it began.
Metaphors aside, the symbolism was not lost on the audience as they were treated to soul
food in the words and wisdom dispensed through Wilson’s pen.
    The evening began with a taste of things to come in a very brief scene from “Gem
of the Ocean” of an uninvited visitor intent on conferring with Aunt Ester. The ensuing
scuffle disturbs Aunt Ester who queries the insistent intruder with “Didn’t he tell you to
come back Tuesday?”
    We do return, but this time we’re in recording studio awaiting the arrival of Ma
Rainey (Vanessa German). This scene from “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” features
Antonio Fargas (best known as “Huggy Bear” from the 1970 Starsky & Hutch cop
series); film, TV actor and Swissvale native David Conrad; and members of the August
Wilson Center Theatre Ensemble.
    In “Radio Golf,” Harmon Wilks receives a brilliant object lesson in
gamesmanship, race and reality from urban philosopher Sterling; followed by an excerpt
from “Jitney” where Youngblood comes clean to the mother of his child about his
suspicious behavior.
     “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone” features Tony Award-winner Stephen McKinley
Henderson as Bynum sharing his perspective on women and “Two Trains Running”
highlights dialogue on current events (funerals, finance and real estate) steeped in
authenticity as served up by Anthony Chisholm, Sala Udin and Fargas to close out the
first half.
     The second act opened with a scene from “King Hedley” where Tonya and King
argue over whether or not she should keep the child she’s carrying. Powerful
performances from AWCTE member Joshua Elijah Reese and August Wilson
Monologue winner Emily Kolb (an incoming college freshman) captivated the audience,
as did its follow up, a scene between Chrystal Bates and Kevin Brown from “The Piano
Lesson.” Both excerpts highlight the struggle of the sexes for balance with their world
and each other.
    The “dance” between Hedley (Fargas) and Bernice (Andrea Frye) in “Seven
Guitars” sheds a different light on the male-female battle of wills (call this one a draw).
    Family conflict is the centerpiece of the “Fences” excerpt that has McKinley reprising his
Broadway role of Bono and Udin as Troy (the Broadway role played by Denzel
Washington). It’s hard to imagine Washington measuring up to the emotional stakes
ratcheted up by Udin in the confrontation with son Corey (played by Carter Redwood) in
the climatic scene.
    A collective exhale of the built of tension is released with the evening’s closing
scene from “Ma Rainey” with a hilarious, scene-stealing turn by Michaelangelo Turner.
    It truly took a village to put on “August in August” and, as attested by Wilson’s
widow Constanza who was in attendance closing night, would have met his approval
with it’s multigenerational participation onstage and backstage with crew, costumers
(Cheryl El-Walker, Kennedy Guess, Grace Hines, Deryck Tines) and actors. Three high
school monologue winners (Kolb, Devaughn Robinson and Heaven Bobo) held their own
along side theatre and Broadway vets.
     The ensemble spirit was shared among the directors (including JaSonte Roberts
Dean, Tami Dixon, Kim El, Frye, Henderson, Joseph Martinez, Redwood and Southers)
and cast (Jeffrey Carpenter, Jason Shavers, Mark Conway Thompson and Bria Walker).
    Special kudos go to composer Kathryn Bostic who brought her Broadway Wilson
sensibilities to bear on providing the music to providing the comfortable and familiar
soundtrack to underscore the product.
    'August in August' is a fitting conclusion to a season of transition at the AWC and
an appropriate first finale for Southers’ tenure as Artist Director of Theater Initiatives of
the namesake facility of his mentor.

A Boot to the Head ...from Michael Moore

(This had been sitting in the draft file for over three years... seriously, my bad!)


I received this email earlier today. Considering that election day is coming up, I decided that the possible outcome required me to post this immediately. 


A Boot to the Head ...from Michael Moore
Tuesday, October 28th, 2010
Friends,
There she was, thrown to the pavement by a Republican in a checkered shirt. Another Republican thrusts his foot in between her legs and presses down with all his weight to pin her to the curb. Then a Republican leader comes over and viciously stomps on her head <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SbnEy_U9pYk>  with his foot. You hear her glasses crunch under the pressure. Holding her head down with his foot, he applies more force so she can't move. Her skull and brain are now suffering a concussion.
The young woman's name is Lauren Valle, but she is really all of us. For come this Tuesday, the right wing -- and the wealthy who back them -- plan to take their collective boot and bring it down hard on not just the head of Barack Obama but on the heads of everyone they simply don't like.
Teachers union? The boot!
Muslim-looking people? The boot!
Thinking of retiring soon? The boot!
Living in a house you can no longer afford? The boot!
Doing a bit better with your minimum wage? The boot!
Stem cell research, the bullet train, reversing global warming? Ha! The boot for all of you!
What? You like your kids being covered by your health plan 'til they're 26? The boot for them and the boot for you!
In love with someone of your own gender? A double boot up the ass for every single one of you sick SOBs!
Hoping there's a few jobs left here in the U.S. when you graduate? How 'bout just a nice boot to your head instead?
And most importantly, the last boot is saved for the black man who probably wasn't born here, definitely isn't a Christian and possibly might be the Antichrist sent here to oversee the destruction of our very way of life. A boot to your head, Obama-devil!
Yes, one big boot is poised to stomp out whatever hopey-changey thing we might have had two years ago and secure this country in the hands of the oligarchs and the culture police.
And if they win on Tuesday, they plan to show no mercy. They will not speak of bipartisanship or olive branches or tolerate any filibuster threats. They will come in and do the job with a mandate they'll perceive the electorate will have given them. They will not fart around for two years like the Democrats did. They will not "search for compromise" or "find middle ground." They will not meet you halfway on the playing field. They know that touchdowns aren't scored at the 50-yard line. Unlike our guys, they're not stupid or spineless.
Make no mistake about it, my friends. A perfect storm has gathered of racists, homophobes, corporatists and born agains and they are on fire. Two years of a black man who secretly holds socialist beliefs being the boss of them is more than they can stomach. They've been sick to death since the night of 11/04/08 and they are ready to purge. They won't need a rope and tree this time to effect the change they seek (why bother when a nice shoe on another's skull will do just fine, thank you).
They simply need to get their base to the polls (done), convince enough people Obama is responsible for the fact they don't have a job or a secure home (done), and then hope enough of us Obama-voters are so frustrated, disappointed and downright mad at the Dems (done) that we'll either stay home Tuesday or, if we vote, we won't be carpooling with 10 others to the polls.
Done? Or not?
These Republicans mean business. Their boots are all shined and ready. But they've got one huge problem:
The majority of Americans don't agree with them.
The majority want the troops home <http://www.pollingreport.com/afghan.htm> . The majority want true universal health coverage<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/09/25/politics/main6899989.shtml> . The majority want the thievery on Wall Street to be stopped <http://www.gallup.com/poll/142967/among-recent-bills-financial-reform-lone-plus-congress.aspx> . The majority believe that global warming is happening <http://thehill.com/blogs/e2-wire/677-e2-wire/121241-sept-28> , that social security shouldn't be privatized <http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-12/republicans-proving-unpopular-with-voters-prepared-to-oppose-obama-in-poll.html>  and that unions are a good thing <http://www.pollingreport.com/work.htm> .
Too bad the majority party has done precious little to bring about the change for which the majority voted. Yes, change takes time. But try telling that to someone who hasn't worked in two years. Or who hears the knock of the foreclosure sheriff at the door. The booted-up minority knows how to make hay in a situation like this. All they need is us, the disappointed, dismayed, disgusted us.
What say you? Stay home and punish the weak-kneed, sell-out Democrats? Or spend every free moment you have between now and Tuesday trying to protect what little progress has been made so we can live to fight another day (even if it is with "allies" like a Democratic Party that will more than likely still not get the message of what they need to do -- and has, in fact, spent much of the past two years giving progressives the boot)? Perhaps our job, post-election, is to provide a gentle but swift boot in the bee-hind of the party whose mascot is an ass.
Right now, we've got 112 hours. Seems like enough.
Yours,
Michael Moore
MMFlint@aol.com
MichaelMoore.com <http://www.michaelmoore.com/>
P.S. I'll be on The Rachel Maddow Show <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/ns/msnbc_tv-rachel_maddow_show/>  tonight! Be sure to tune in to MSNBC at 9:00pm ET/PT. 

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Nathan Davis, Professor of Music Emeritus: Passing the torch


original published in New Pittsburgh Courier
Internationally acclaimed jazz pianist and composer Geri Allen has stepped in as Director of Pitt’s Jazz Seminar and Concert, now in its 43rd year. Allen is continuing the legacy of Professor of Music Emeritus Nathan Davis, the founder and former director of the Pitt Jazz Seminar and Concert, who retired this summer. In January, Allen will join the faculty of the Department of Music as an associate professor and assume leadership of the Department’s program in Jazz Studies.

Allen was one of the first to graduate from Howard University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in jazz studies. It was at Howard where she began to embrace music from all cultures and it has greatly influenced her work. She met Nathan Davis through one of her instructors who had studied under him. After graduation from Howard, while studying under Kenny Barron in New York City, Davis encouraged her to attend Pitt. She followed Davis’ advice and earned her master’s degree in ethnomusicology in 1982.


Nathan Davis: The General of Jazz
But first, let's focus on the trailblazer himself, Nathan Davis. Although he's well regarded for his numerous accomplishments on the Pitt campus, he is the founder of the first incarnation of the Pittsburgh Jazz Orchestra in the mid-1980. Davis' work goes beyond academic success, says Sean Jones, assistant professor of music at Duquesne University, who, like Davis, is blending a teaching and performing career. Jones is the music director for revamped PJO. “He means a great deal to me as a young African American,” Jones says. “He fought all the battles back then to get the music passed on the younger cats like me.”

In 1969, when Davis took the position at Pitt, it was unheard of to have a person basically known as a performer teaching in the little-explored area of jazz studies, Jones says.But there so many other accolades Davis had garnered that are not so well known. Like at the very beginning of his illustrious tenure at Pitt with the birth of the seminar and concert, as Davis was quoted in Spring 2007 issue of Pittsburgh Quarterly, "I once read in one of those European books, like an encyclopedia of jazz history or whatever, and it said something like, 'Nathan Davis went to Pitt and put Pitt on the map by calling on his expatriate friends from Europe.' That's exactly what I did. People that I knew passed the word around and we always got great artists to talk and play at our seminar. In the beginning, we were paying them no more than 500 bucks. Can you imagine that? Things have changed since then. Now I have supporters like (BNY) Mellon Bank, Dominion, Office of the Provost, The Ford Foundation, and private donors like Larry Werner who contribute on a regular basis. As a result, we have been able to expand the outreach part of our program by taking it international. We were selected by UNESCO's International Music Council to be the first and only jazz group to celebrate International Music Day throughout the world in such places as Bahia, Brazil, Jordan (The Queen Noor Conservatory of Music), the University of Ghana, Bahrain, and elsewhere."

Long-time ally Bill Robinson, is well acquainted with Davis. "I have been associated with Jazz at Pitt since my days as a staff member in Pitt's Office of Urban and Community Services. Nathan Davis is a internationally-known Jazz icon. He is and was a noted author, musician, visionary and highly respected authority on Jazz." Robinson, a member of the Allegheny County Council, calls him the General of Jazz in acknowledgement of Davis' smooth segue from the Army Band to playing throughout Europe.

Why would Davis retire now? Keep in mind upon arriving in 1969 to establish a Jazz Studies Program at Pitt, he thought he'd give three years; it could be said Davis is well overdue. "I had plan to retire years ago on my 70th birthday. I extended my stay in hopes that the University would be able to find a suitable successor(originally the dean and provost felt that they would hire 2-3 new people to cover the various components of the Jazz program: Jazz Seminar,The International Jazz Hall of Fame, the University of Pittsburgh Sonny Rollins Jazz Archives, the Hon. William Robinson Digital recording studio, the International Jazz Archives Journal (distributed in 20 countries ). I decided that, after searching-announcing, etc. for six years, it was now time for me to make the move."

Geri Allen succeeds mentor as Pitt's Director of Jazz Studies

Allen, who was Davis' first choice as his successor, has performed and collaborated with a long list of jazz greats including the Ornette Coleman Quartet, Ron Carter, Tony Williams, Betty Carter, Charles Lloyd, Marcus Belgrave, and many others. Currently, she is director of the Mary Lou Williams Collective and also is touring with drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and bassist Esperanza Spalding in the ACS Trio.

"I feel very blessed to have been given the opportunity (43 years) to work with and serve the faculty, staff -students and administration, at the University of Pittsburgh and the wonderful, warm, loving people of the city of Pittsburgh."

SOUNDS OF HEALING - Sweet Honey in the Rock


a version of this first appeared on THE SOUL PITT website

“…I have always believed art is the conscience of the human soul and that artists have the responsibility not only to show life as it is but to show life as it should be. … Sweet Honey In The Rock has withstood the onslaught. She has been unprovoked by the 30 pieces of silver. Her songs lead us to the well of truth that nourishes the will and courage to stand strong. She is the keeper of the flame.”  – Harry Belafonte

This Saturday brings an opportunity to get your soul and spirit right the healing therapy known as Sweet Honey in the Rock in a 8 p.m. concert at the Byham Theatre.

Times have changed in the four decades in the existence of the seminal a cappella ensemble known as Sweet Honey in the Rock. Since her inception in 1973 as a quartet at a workshop at the D.C. Black Repertory Theater Company in Washington, 20-plus women have contributed to the evolution of this cultural phenomena.

They took their name from the first song they learned, “Sweet Honey in the Rock,” based on a Biblical psalm. “Sweet Honey speaks of a land that is so rich when you break the rocks open, honey flows.

Despite the changes in the cultural fabric that makes up America, SHIR has remained consistent due to its uniqueness. “The group has never been a part of the general music industry,” say Carol Maillard, an original SHIR member. “We haven't fit in any genre other than children’s music. Now with our new cd, we are in a wonderful category, JAZZ VOCAL. To me this recording really show cases the individuals in a brilliant way and also gives the listener the full flavor of the Sweet Honey group sound.”

One could say SHIR is the moral compass of inclusion that carries its message of empowerment and appreciation of all aspects of diversity in music. Under that global umbrella activism, empathy and tributes to grassroot struggles human rights, civil rights, equity, equality and freedom are the connective tissues that connects these musicians to their audience. SHIR’s journey has taken around the world several times, and the universality of their message is the fuel that feeds her.

“No, we didn't plan to be around for forty years. when we started we took whatever came our way and when a singer was ready to move on, she did and there are a new singer,” reflects Maillard. “We have had 24 women in this group. Some left and came back, some stayed a long time. Ysaye Barnwell just retired after 33 years of working with the group. Bernice departed at 30 years and I am sure she is surprised that we wanted to go forward and are still doing all we can to keep the group moving ahead.”

“It is not easy because we are not a top pop group nor a gospel group but we touch so many genres, so many flavors that it's hard not to feel Sweet Honey deep in your heart and want to hear more,” Maillard continued. “Each soloist brings her A game to each style rendered and what you experience rings true not only to the singer and the style but to the artist represented. Who else but Sweet Honey can do that, unapologetically?”

In a nod to the longevity of SHIR, I asked Maillard how she would describe the group to a time  traveller. “Think of a sound that touches you to the core, a melody that is ancient but helps keep your feet planted firmly in the present. It steels you to be ready to face the future,give strength and ammunition to move into the future. It is ancestral, alive, vibrant and soulful. It is truth in sound, honest and pure.”

The current line-up comprises Carol Maillard, Louise Robinson, Nitanju Bolade Casel, Aisha Kahlil, and Shirley Childress (an ASL sign language interpreter). Sweet Honey is also featuring some special guests for select dates, including bassist Parker McAllister, who is featured on the group’s current CD  and vocalist Navasha Daya Hill.

The Pittsburgh Cultural Trust presents the soulful a capella ensemble, SWEET HONEY IN THE ROCK®, at the Byham Theater in Pittsburgh, PA on Saturday, November 9, 2013, at 8:00 p.m. Ticket prices start at $25. For tickets and information, visit www.TrustArts.org, call (412) 456-6666, or in person: Theater Square Box Office, 655 Penn Avenue.  This event is part of the Cohen & Grigsby Trust Presents series.