Thursday, September 14th, 2006

New Photos by Glen E. Friedman!

No iconic shots of straight-edge or hardcore hip-hop F–k You Heroes here, these photographs (here in a downloadable 11-minute slide show) are probably his most mystical yet (though more in a Godfrey Reggio materialist way than a hippy-dippy way).

posted by @ 8:32 am | 1 Comment

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

Farai Chideya Takes Over

Just an extra-large up to our homie Farai Chideya, who takes over at NPR’s News & Notes this week, the leading African American-targeted show on public radio. Another example of one of the great minds of the hip-hop generation getting their deserved props and responsibility.

Does it make a difference? Hell yes. Just check the moving package Farai and her team pulled together today for the 10th anniversary of Tupac’s death.

Here’s to Farai and more relevant programming for us on NPR!

(While you’re surfing, also be sure to check out Farai’s side project, Pop and Politics, now broadcasting on broadband from USC.)

posted by @ 12:08 pm | 0 Comments

Tuesday, September 12th, 2006

Deep Bass Therapy



Just returned from Deep Bass Therapy sessions at the Numusic Festival in Stavanger, Norway with Mad Professor, DJ Spooky, and the great, the one and only DJ Kool Herc. Cindy Campbell–original b-girl!–even showed me some steps to try out with my now quickly recovering body. Plus a big up to Afra and the grand Incredible Beatbox Band–who lived up to the billing and more…

Spent the next day with a long list from leading journalist Oyvind Holen, the man who literally wrote the book on the history of Norsk rap, HipHop Holen (which means “hip-hop heads”), trying to pick up the country’s GDP. Thanks especially for the recs on Tommy Tee (sort of like a 1-man Norwegian Neptunes), Gatas Parliament (communist flow, yes!), Tungtvann (a little bit black-metal, a little bit psych-rock, a little bit dancehall). I couldn’t find anything by the compelling Norwegian-Chilean-indigenous crew Dark Side of the Force who turned in a great set Friday night, but I understand they have a new record coming soon.

I missed a lot of the shows I wanted to see either because I got there too late or there was just way too much going on. But I did catch great sets from ridiculously loud and enjoyable Next Life (think Swans plus Nina Hagen minus artyfartiness), neo-post-neopostpunk 120 Days (who are signed to Vice and will be touring the US soon), producer/professor/DJ (yes, professor) Ewan Pearson, and the aging kiddie-punks Stereo Total, and 2 DJs who dressed up as a wolf and a bear.

Two other random non-hip-hop thoughts:

1) Stereo Total > White Stripes

2) Jack Black > Jack White

Chris Porter found us all the cheap food spots (because normally lunch could run you like $25), educated us dumb Americans about Norwegian history, and was generally the kind of person you always want to travel with. Geeta Dayal updated us on the latest depressing news from the Voice, shocked us with info on rental prices in Berlin, and pulled an all-nighter at the club the last night. Seems like she made it home in one piece though! Me and Ed of the best named band in the world Duran Duran Duran braved passport control, airport food, and multiple security checkpoints at Frankfurt.

Much love to all my new friends for the wonderful hospitality, especially the sweet Ms. Human Nature Anita, Hannah In The House, Martyn the Grand Orchestrator, and SuperStein Rockstone. If I ever get around to making another one, I might even name my next child Stavanger.

posted by @ 3:47 pm | 0 Comments

Tuesday, September 12th, 2006

Everything Is Beautiful

I am back, no thanks to Blogger Beta and lower back pains. I am back, thanks to cortisone epidurals, a stack of good magazines and books, and the love of friends and family.

Just learned minutes ago that Can’t Stop Won’t Stop has been nominated for an Asian American Literary Award. Now I have a glacier’s chance against Bush science of winning, but just to have the book become a finalist makes this a wonderful day.

Much more importantly, I just want to note that it is the 15th anniversary of the Asian American Writers’ Workshop’s this year. They are an incredible resource and important institution for our community. If you’re somewhere near NYC on the 28th, definitely see if you can make it to the gala event, and if not, support AAWW in any way you can.

posted by @ 2:43 pm | 0 Comments

Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006

Book ‘Em Danno

Since I got tagged by O-Dub, here’s my take on the Summer Reading meme.

1. One book that changed my life:
City of Quartz by Mike Davis

Really, I could fill tens of thousands of blog entries with all the books that have changed my life, starting with Henry and Martha’s Subway Art and Steven Hager’s Hip-Hop and moving on up.

I picked City of Quartz because I might never have gone down the path that led to Can’t Stop Won’t Stop if I hadn’t read this in late 1991/early 1992, just before I moved to LA to enroll in the Asian American Studies program at UCLA. It made it possible for me to understand William Gibson, Compton’s Most Wanted, and social ecology all at once.

As a transforming work in the field of geography, a map of hidden histories, a manual for change, and perhaps most appealing of all to me, a nonfiction noir, City of Quartz taught me that intellectual work could be made accessible, relevant, and if it was really great, perhaps even prophetic. Since that time, I’ve met hundreds of people–from urban planners to gang peacemakers–who have read it and feel exactly the same way I do about it.

(It’s being re-released in a new edition this September. See link above.)

2. One book you have read more than once:
The Autobiography of Malcolm X

I bet that if you polled our part of the blog universe, this book would probably would be at the top of the first three categories on this list for most of us. I read it in one of my first freshman seminars, and it dropped me off the fence and into anti-apartheid/anti-racist activism. I don’t know how many times I’ve reread it since–the pages are brittle and the binding is pretty worn. Might be time to get another copy.

3. One book you would want on a desert island:
Palomar by Gilbert Hernandez

Nothing like Heartbreak Soup, comfort food for los perdidos, to ease the feeling of being stranded. Where are these desert islands anyway? And is there good surfing to be had?

4. One book that made you laugh:
Mumbo Jumbo by Ishmael Reed

I know folks will be running out to see “Idlewild” this weekend. If it’s a fraction as funny as Mumbo Jumbo it could be a masterpiece. Mumbo Jumbo had that promethean spirit we ascribe these days to hip-hop’s old school, just like the Jes Grew virus that drives the narrative, and in fact, I think the emerging hip-hop literature comes back down to this book. But it’s also a really nuanced, coded novel, another book that repays multiple reads. It’s like a Richard Pryor or a Ghostface album, actually, where the deeper you go beyond the laughs, the better it gets.

Gotta also mention Lalo Alcaraz’s La Cucaracha, the funniest illegal comic strip in the world, and anything by Keith Knight.

5. One book that made you cry:
American Purgatorio by John Haskell

A novel about one modern man’s descent into a living hell after the death of his wife. The book begins in a clinical and tic-ridden kind of voice, but it’s soon apparent that there’s something very wrong with the narrator. I didn’t weep so much as I felt really melancholy for a long time after reading this.

6. One book that you wish you had written:
The Retreat From Race by Dana Takagi and Bitter Fruit by Claire Jean Kim

I never could have written these books. Both are by brilliant scholars who confronted and explained some of the most vexing, perplexing issues I have ever encountered. In both cases, I was too young and too close to understand what was really going on. Professor Takagi and Professor Kim’s books sorted it all out for me.

Dana’s book did a post-mortem on the late-80s Asian American fair college admissions movement that I was deeply involved in, and it turned out to be a prophetic look at the death of affirmative action. As progressive Asian Americans we wanted to fight discrimination in admissions to elite universities and, more importantly, to throw into question the entire false idea of meritocracy. But we unwittingly set in motion right-wing forces who eventually were able to destroy affirmative action. Now, the meritocracy myth is stronger than ever. We won the battle, and lost the war.

Professor Kim’s book took a hard look at Black-Asian relations through the lens of the Flatbush boycott. She went back to the scene and interviewed all the principals involved–including Sonny Carson, the late father of Professor X and a central activist in Brooklyn’s Black Power Movement. Many progressives of color–Black and Asian both–distanced themselves or denounced Carson during the 80s, but Claire refused to be intellectually dishonest, and so comes out with a portrait of the boycott that’s incredibly balanced and only reinforces the tragedy of the failure of the Third World progressive movement.

I think both these books remain undersung classics of ethnic studies, but that would lead me into talking my disillusionment with ethnic studies, and that’s another long thread for another time.

7. One book you wish you had never written:

I’ve only written one book so far and I’m not that mad at it!

8. One book you are currently reading:
River of Shadows by Rebecca Solnit

The San Francisco-based writer Rebecca Solnit has been called a next-gen Joan Didion, except to me she doesn’t have any of the upper-class baggage (book critics may call it familiarity, I call it baggage…), and is decidedly and passionately progressive, never choosing to hide behind a mask of irony or detachment, a problem I sometimes have with Didion.

I first encountered her writing in Hollow City, an angry look at the Mission District and San Francisco and probably the best book on gentrification to come out of the millennial boom/bust, and again with this widely circulated essay on the anti-war movement, the basis for a book on activism called Hope In The Dark. River of Shadows came out in between and is just awe-inspiring.

It has been described as the story of a photographer (Eadward Muybridge) and a railroad robber baron (Leland Stanford) and how they came together to form the technological breakthroughs that led to both Hollywood and Silicon Valley.

But it’s so much more than that–it’s a history of the gold rush and the railroads, San Francisco and immigration, the Chinese and the city authorities, the Indian Wars in the Northern California lavabeds, the mythification of Yosemite Valley and the destruction of its indigenous people, the beginnings of photography, the beginnings of cinema, the relationship between art, capital, and science, the spread of realism and impressionism, modernity, speed, and a million other things. It answers questions I didn’t even know I had.

It’s weird to read a book on 19th century history and finish feeling you understand older obsessions such as DJ Spooky’s Rhythm Science, Christopher Doyle or videos like this (Orbital’s “The Box” dir. Jes Benstock and Luke Losey 1996) in a new way. Plus, it’s written with the elegance and resonance of poetry.

(Postscript…Lourdes happened to rent Xiao Jiang’s movie “Electric Shadows” this weekend, and it’s really interesting to watch with the book. It kind of extends the River of Shadows narrative into modernist and then communist China. It’s also a classic bittersweet Chinese tragedy with a weepy ending.)

9. One book you’ve been meaning to read:
Taylor Branch’s MLK books and Robert Caro’s LBJ books

If I can ever get myself a month of nothing to do and no money to have to make, I’m gonna read all 70,000 pages of these books, I swear.

10. Who I tagged:
Julianne (you still out there?), SFJ, Joe Twist, Forward Ever.

posted by @ 4:23 am | 2 Comments

Monday, August 21st, 2006

Stuff and Things…


Don’t worry Ted, Theo Epstein’s running for the phone right now.

+ Why we’re happy Billy got rid of Ted Lilly a while back.

+ If you’re in Berkeley on Thursday, please join this very important conference:
Making Another World Possible:
Women Leaders in the Immigrant Rights, Global Justice, and Post-Katrina Reconstruction Efforts
.

+ The latest on Lt. Ehren Watada:
* Analysis
* News Updates

+ Rebecca Solnit on another Ted, the radical (in both senses of the word) architect Teddy Cruz
* Download PDF directly here.

+ Clamor Magazine vs. American Apparel. According to the Clamor staff, American Apparel has threatened legal action over a Clamor exposé of the company’s business practices. You can continue to follow the case at the magazine’s blog.

posted by @ 7:10 pm | 0 Comments

Monday, August 21st, 2006

Heard Ya Missed Me

Been away trying to get out, get relaxed, and get well.

That process is not over. Work is backing up, calls are going unanswered, things are getting cancelled, appointments are not being kept. I apologize. But I am on life’s DL. Give me a couple of weeks and I’ll be back like Huston Street.

At the same time, Blogger goes down and has some bizarre beta-testing going on with the dreaded Googlists. WTF?

So radio silence has reigned.

But life isn’t all bad, especially in baseball. The A’s are killing and the Red Sox are deader every day. (Somewhere in Walnut Creek, a bunch of investment bankers are quietly tossing their Ortiz jerseys and going online to order a Frank Thomas, right now.) The Yankees–all praises due to the Emperor–will collapse soon now that they have to leave Boston to face reality (first up, the AL West where real baseball gets played).

More fun and games this fall.

Stay tuned to this space.

posted by @ 6:31 pm | 6 Comments

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

Mike Stern: Cover Pimp

Mike Stern does it again. Heading off for a minute. Peace.

posted by @ 9:38 pm | 2 Comments

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

Brent Rollins: Summer Tee Pimp

Our CSWS cover boy B to the R gets his Ltd. Ed. Stussy World Tour thang on. Plus overdue recognition and a hilariously gratuitous interview. Those of us who wish he had a website, well, these links are the closest we’ll get for now.

posted by @ 8:29 pm | 0 Comments

Thursday, July 27th, 2006

Rise In Incidence of Going Dumb Seen

In the Yay, we have this little thing called “Spare The Air” day where when it’s mad hot, they let you ride BART for free. Nice consumer-friendly environmentally correct idea, right?

Well, seems like now the whole thing is being called into question by the regular paying BART customers because fools were getting too hyphy on the trains. Here’s the shocking report from the SF Chronicle:

The free rides brought an extra 20,000 to 30,000 patrons to the already-taxed system during each Spare the Air Day, an increase of 8 to 10 percent over normal.

There were packed cars, blaring boom boxes, food and drink containers (which are banned) being tossed everywhere — even reports of homeless people flocking in to beat the heat.

BART police reported that the additional complaints mostly involved teenagers fighting with each other, intimidating passengers and generally behaving badly.

Now I’m pretty sure most of the complaints were filed by Red Sox fans from Walnut Creek saving 2 tanks of gas on their Hummers by taking BART to get to the Coliseum. (“My god, Jim! What is this yadadamean business?!”) But anyway the issue is now on the table. Will BART end its Spare The Air days? Will schools see a new “GO SMART TAKE BART” campaign this fall?

Who cares!

posted by @ 7:11 am | 1 Comment



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