Synaesthesia at the Studio Museum in Harlem - Karma M. Johnson
An Uptown Cultural Landmark Explores New Dimensions in Sound
It would seem that a sensory environment drenched in sampled blackness is once again rewiring the aesthetic sensibilities of the general populace. Even the spin-talk of government officials makes use of rhythm, rhyme and meter in ways directly borrowed from black vernacular as filtered through commercialized hip-hop music (small ‘h’ intentional). Catch phrases like ‘24/7’ now grace tv spots for Citibank. Diagonal lines mimic spray-can scrawl in animated advertisements for cartoons and clothing. If the Smithsonian Institution’s recent inauguration of its Hip-Hop collection and the past decade’s experience of Hip-Hop as a growth industry within academia offer any indication, perhaps it is this: the time has come to recognize Hip-Hop as a culture whose apex during our era has transformed nearly every arena of public discourse, just as black cultural developments have done in every epoch of our history. (more…)
Now I’m sure that many in our circle of progressive relatively earthy children of the children of the civil rights era went out to see Dave’s return to the screen. This part documentary, part concert, part series of comedic narrations is a vivid glimpse into Dave’s private life and his working collaboration with the Okayplayer set (The Roots, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, Jill Scott, Erykah Badu, Cody Chestnut, Martin Luther, etc.) Having all run in the same underground circles since the beginnings of their careers, this impromptu block party was in some ways a celebration of this crew and it’s ever-increasing audience in the face of mainstream hip hop’s identity crisis. The very fact that Dave could spread the word about a concert on a Bed-Stuy block in a matter of days and get the turnout, buzz and starpower it took to make it real is a testament to the kind of power he wielded nearly two years ago, long before his controversial bouncing.