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Elevation Sundays

Originally published at DetroitFashionPages.com

Man! It’s cold! It’s that bone chilling Michigan cold where the wind whips through you like a chainsaw. By most estimates, it’s the icy temperatures on this frigid February evening that have transformed Ann Arbor’s hottest hip hop night from a steamy, sweaty mass of bodies into a warm, intimate family affair.

Elevation Sundays at The Firefly was founded three years ago by two members of Ann Arbor’s Sky Children hip hop family. Martin “DJ Graffiti” Smith and Jackson Perry of hip hop phenoms Now On approached Susan Chastain, owner of the legendary A2 jazz hang out and asked for a Sunday night spot. Continue reading

VIDEO: Loving Detroit, Leaving Detroit: Part 1 – Detroit’s Daughter

Originally published at Think.MTV.com

http://tstatic0.fluxstatic.com/-/Clients/Common/Flash/Thinkubator/Player.swf

In January, the Detroit News reported that Michigan lost 90,000 residents in 2007. This was three times the population loss in 2003, the first year economists identified Michigan’s one state recession.

The city of Detroit has been steadily losing residents for years. Native Detroiters who love the city feel compelled to move in search of better opportunity elsewhere.

This is the first in a series that explores why so many residents who love Detroit feel they must leave Detroit.

Kwame Kilpatrick IS Hip Hop

Originally published at Think.MTV.com


Whether you like it or not, Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick IS Hip Hop. The 37 year-old chief executive was famously dubbed “The Hip Hop Mayor” at the beginning of his first term, and while the title was meant as an insult, he embraced the image, and the moniker stuck.

Though he stopped sporting a diamond stud in his left ear during his second mayoral campaign, the former captain of the Florida A&M football team still dons the style and swagger of the hip hop aesthetic. Even the scandals that follow Kwame around like members of his entourage – wild parties with strippers, SUVs, luxury resorts and spas in Cali, infidelity and text messages – seem more akin to the typical lifestyle of a platinum-selling rapper or an NBA All-Star, than it should the mayor of the nation’s 11th largest city.

But Kwame Kilpatrick is Hip Hop. He typifies the young Black man who came of age listening to the sound of the boom bap. As glass ceilings in corporate America begin to open for the men and women who were once called Generation X and those of Generation Y to follow, the nation’s corporate style is changing.

Apple’s Steve Jobs turned heads among the suits over a decade ago by striding confidently through the halls of power in blue jeans and a sport coat. In 2007 former drug dealer Shawn Carter resigned his post as CEO of hip hop’s most storied multi-million dollar brand, Def Jam. For better or worse, Kwame Kilpatrick is the brash, young political leader who has symbolized this shift for the past six years.

Those who have grown up with and love Hip Hop celebrate its triumphs, and are embarrassed by its missteps, and Kwame Kilpatrick is Hip Hop. He is applauded for helping to improve the city’s downtown, for encouraging economic development and working to attract much needed business to the struggling municipality. Beyond the lifestyle scandals, the mayor has been criticized for instituting a $300.00 fee for trash collection in the nation’s second poorest city. He has been accused of providing money for beautification projects in higher income neighborhoods while neglecting less affluent parts of town.

Still it is Kwame’s baller status that makes headlines in a materialistic, hip hop driven media climate. His policy decisions – both good and bad – are overshadowed by his love of bling, money and women.

To his detractors, Kilpatrick represents everything bad about hip hop and everything bad about Detroit. Comments on one message board label the lawyer and former state legislator “a thug”, “a goon”, “a street person”, and “a scum bag”. He is compared to another infamous figure in hip hop, Death Row Records chief Suge Knight.

Among many of his supporters, however, this pejorative language is nothing more than thinly-veiled racism, or still another dose of anti-Detroit Haterade. The animosity of outsiders adds to the feeling among Detroiters that the city is always being dumped on. “Kwame is one of us”, they say, and “good or bad, we’ll stand behind our own.”

Kilpatrick matured during his second term as mayor. His attempts to keep his personal life on the down low have been thwarted by a media intent on digging up dirt that can sell newspapers, drive web hits and attract eyeballs in a competitive news environment. The text messages that were leaked to the Detroit Free Press were created during his first term. The aftermath, plotting to cover up a secret settlement with the cops who were fired for investigating his activities and lying about his affairs under oath, show an older, wiser man trying to hide the mistakes of his carefree youth.

This latest Kilpatrick scandal won’t automatically end the mayor’s career as many of his critics hope, but it has added another layer of tarnish to his tailored Teflon suit. Kwame may survive this row because many of his constituents and supporters are hip hop just like he is. The question that remains is: Will the Hip Hop Mayor chill out and stop flossing so much as he matures, or will he continue to live large like the baller he is?

Judicial Watch’s Ten Most Wanted Corrupt Politician List

Watchdog group Judicial Watch recently released their Ten Most Wanted Corrupt Politician list for 2007. Though I’m a bit perturbed that George Bush and Dick Cheney aren’t included (presumably because they are in the all-time hall of infamy), you may be surprised to see who made the list.

Take special note of how many presidential candidates made the cut. Here they are in alphabetical order:

1. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY): In addition to her long and sordid ethics record, Senator Hillary Clinton took a lot of heat in 2007 – and rightly so – for blocking the release of her official White House records. Many suspect these records contain a treasure trove of information related to her role in a number of serious Clinton-era scandals. Moreover, in March 2007, Judicial Watch filed an ethics complaint against Senator Clinton for filing false financial disclosure forms with the U.S. Senate (again). And Hillary’s top campaign contributor, Norman Hsu, was exposed as a felon and a fugitive from justice in 2007. Hsu pleaded guilt to one count of grand theft for defrauding investors as part of a multi-million dollar Ponzi scheme.

2. Rep. John Conyers (D-MI): House Judiciary Chairman Conyers of Detroit reportedly repeatedly violated the law and House ethics rules, forcing his staff to serve as his personal servants, babysitters, valets and campaign workers while on the government payroll. While the House Ethics Committee investigated these allegations in 2006, and substantiated a number of the accusations against Conyers, the committee blamed the staff and required additional administrative record-keeping and employee training. Judicial Watch obtained documentation in 2007 from a former Conyers staffer that sheds new light on the activities and conduct on the part of the Michigan congressman, which appear to be at a minimum inappropriate and likely unlawful. Judicial Watch called on the Attorney General in 2007 to investigate the matter. [Is it possible that Conyers’ failure to press for the impeachment of Cheney and Bush has something to do with the skeletons in his own closet?] Continue reading

Nadir Named Michigan Correspondent for MTV’s 2008 Choose or Lose Campaign

On December 20, 2007, MTV announced their collaboration with AP Online Video Network for coverage of the 2008 Elections. As you will see below, they have selected a citizen journalist from each state to file weekly stories from a youth perspective throughout the year. The MTV Michigan correspondent will be funk/soul artist Nadir Omowale.

MTV TAPS 51 STATE-BASED CITIZEN JOURNALISTS FOR
“CHOOSE OR LOSE ‘08”

AP Online Video Network & Top Mobile Carriers to Distribute
Weekly “Street Team ’08” Reports

Knight Foundation Grant Helps Power
Mobile Media Election Coverage Experiment

December 20, 2007 – New York, NY – MTV, as part of its Emmy-winning “Choose or Lose” campaign (www.ChooseorLose.com), today unveiled “Street Team ’08”: a specially recruited group of 51 citizen journalists – one from every state and Washington, D.C. – who will cover the 2008 elections from a youth perspective and tailor their reports for mobile devices. The members will contribute weekly, multi-media reports (short form videos, blogs, animation, photos, podcasts) that will be distributed via a soon-to-launch WAP site, MTV Mobile, Think.MTV.com and to the more than 1,800 sites in the Associated Press Online Video Network. Carefully selected by MTV after an extensive nationwide search, the one-of-a-kind press corps will be armed with mobile media like laptops, video cameras and cell phones, and charged with uncovering the untold political stories that matter most to young people in their respective states. Continue reading

Is That What You Wanted?! – New Music from Nadir

Montage by Christopher Land

New music by Nadir
Click HERE to Listen, Download and Share

Is That What You Wanted?!
© 2007 (Mitchell, Omowale)

Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!

Iraqi oil underneath the sand…
An endless search for weapons has began.
NeoConservatives are on the take,
And I’m still waiting on my yellowcake.

Call 9-11 there’s some fishy shit
Goin’ on, goin’ on, goin’ on.
All our surpluses turned to deficits
And all the money’s gone over there and here at home, yeah.

Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!

The flood is rising from the hurricane…
These muthafuckas were vacationing.
NeoImperialist hypocrites
Stole the election and the government.

Call 9-11 there’s some fishy shit
Goin’ down, goin’ down, goin’ down.
Who is the enemy combatant here?
They just take more and more while the world is at war, yeah.

Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!

Well, the family business is oil, spies and war.
Shoulda known all along who you been workin’ for.
Mission accomplished. The nation’s disgraced.
That Dick just shot a muthafucka in the face!

Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!
Is That What You Wanted?!

Did you wanna start a civil war?
Did you want the cash? Did you want the oil?
Did you crash the planes? I wanna know.
What about the war games that very morning?

Is That What You Wanted?!

Les Nubians: Nubian Voyagers

Originally published at DetroitFashionPages.com

I first encountered Les Nubians in 1998 at a listening station in the now defunct Tower Records store in Nashville, Tennessee. I pressed the play button while examining the cover art of the Afropean soul duo’s debut album, Princesses Nubiennes.

As the first track, “Demain”, faded from African rhythms into a jazzy hip hop groove, a sultry female voice sang to me in French, “Tu crois que le monde est a toi/ Qu’il t’appartient.” Suddenly, I was the mirror image of the RCA/Victor dalmatian, head cocked to one side in disbelief. I had never heard anything like this before.

I listened to one verse and one chorus, and then pressed stop. I didn’t want to hear any more. I immediately walked to the counter, and bought the album. I have been a Les Nubians devotee ever since.

I’m sure this experience was not a unique one. Over the years, Les Nubians have been embraced by listeners around the world as they have released three albums, and garnered a long list of accomplishments. Continue reading

Holiday Hustle

December is looking to be a very busy month for Nadir, as he tours the Midwest playing with a few of the area’s top bands, does a few solo performances, and gets with Distorted Soul for another hot show.

Saturday, December 1 is Noel Night, and Nadir has two solo singer/songwriter performances on tap. His first show is at Goodwell’s Market on Willis at 6:15p, and the second at Barnes & Noble on Warren at 8:15p.

Monday, December 3 kicks off a weekly funk night at Black Lotus Brewing Company in Clawson. Nadir is a member of Boombox Hero, an all-star quartet made up of some of Detroit’s best musicians. The band features Swami Harper of the Black Bottom Collective on keyboard, Emily Rogers from Lola Valley and Clear Gray on bass, Djallo Djakate, who plays with Spencer Barefield and many others, on the drums, and Nadir is supplying the guitar and vocals. Boombox Hero will reach into their bag of eclectic funk every Monday from 9:00 to midnight at Black Lotus.

Friday, December 7, Nadir is playing bass for Funkeestation, a band known for their jazzy funk, Motown and soul classics. Nadir and Funkeestation will be at Andiamo Lakerfront Bistro in St. Clair Shores at 9:00p.

Saturday, December 8, Nadir is back with Distorted Soul for their monthly soul experience at The Village Idiot in Maumee, Ohio. Make sure to mark your calenders because beginning in 2008, Nadir and Distorted Soul will be at the Village Idiot the second Friday of each month.

Tuesday, December 11 at 8:30p, Nadir makes his much awaited return to The Elbo Room in Chicago for a solo singer/songwriter performance. Also appearing on the bill will be Agents of Change, Tristan James, and avery r. young.

For details on these and others upcoming dates, visit our Events page.

Change::The Music – Detroit Rallies for Impeachment on Oct. 6

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On Oct. 6, 2007 artists and activists in Detroit held an event called Change::The Music. Proceeds from the event will be used to fund a billboard in downtown Detroit asking House Judiciary Chair John Conyers to impeach George Bush and Dick Cheney. For more information visit www.changethemusic.net.

Click HERE and listen as Nadir discusses the October 6 Change::The Music event and impeachment on WDET-FM’s Detroit Today program.

© Nadir Omowale