12.31.2009

What Did I Do in 2009?



  • Graduated Undergrad with a Double Major in Human Services and Industrial/Organizational Psychology. Trust me, it sounds like a lot more than it is...
  • Started Graduate School, focusing on Counseling...
  • Finally accomplished a dream and published my first (official) collection of poetry (which can be found for sale at Great Publishing).
  • Developed a growing interest/passion for photography.
  • Seen the inauguration of America's first non-white President...
  • ...which, coincidentally, allowed me to see a lot of insensitivity within the Body of Christ, as well as this country itself.
  • Performed in front of my largest crowd to date with The Jedi.
  • Finally bought the Complete Series of Seinfeld & The Wire, both for under $110 apiece, thanks to eBay.
  • Spent an entire summer in Golden/Branson, Missouri, doing ministry work by spreading God's love to dozens, if not hundreds of innercity youth across the country.
  • Mourned the loss of my most influential artist/entertainer.

  • Split, then rekindled one of my most treasured relationships.
  • Finally, after years of torturous pain - I got my first car!
  • ...which, coincidentially, allowed me to get my first flat tire.
  • Moved into a new apartment, with nicer features!
  • Met the face of resolution with an old heartbreak...
  • Twisted my hair again...
  • Attended one of the most fulfilling concerts I have ever been to.
  • Got somewhat closer to my siblings...
  • Got lost in my own city...
  • ...and developed more tales in the story of my life, including but not limited to
    • skinnydipping
    • "pre-game" bonanzas!
    • cooking experiments gone right!
    • recording myself in a studio
    • road trips to DC, VA Beach & NJ
    • discovering the social underground of lynchburg's college life
    • a whole bunch of "almost's". Take it how you want it.
    • coming face-to-face with ignorance, on my side of the fence.
    • a few of my darkest demons
    • re: my love life - a deep affinity for John Legend, John Mayer, James Morrison and Little Brother
    • ...and much, much more. Stay tuned for 2010!

12.07.2009

"That's Just The Way It Is..."




On my Facebook page, I got a message from Kerry Washington. Yes, the Kerry Washington.




I’ve been lusting over her for quite some time now, so naturally, I’d be a little more than shocked.
It read the following:

I’m not going to go into detail about how I found you. 
I am going to make this very simple for you. 
I will be in Virginia for the week, and I am more than interested in you: 
one night only. 
My number is ***-***-****, text if you are interested, DO NOT CALL. 
$$$ will be involved if you need “encouragement”. 
Offer stands for three days.
Of course, I danced back and forth, but I had dreamed of this for years. But…I was still a little suspect.
So I told my girlfriend. I forwarded her the message. This was her response:


Lol, what do you think that means? And money too? 
Shoot, if you don’t, I’ll do it…maybe I can join? 
Seriously tho…let me know ;)



I may be living a fantasy tonight.


Now, obviously, I’m full of crap.

Ask any man who has actually had a situation like this present itself, posting it on any social network could be collectively agreed upon as Not A Good Look, regardless of its moral questionability.

But, if this were my ideal world? This may actually happen.

I would get approached by a lust-worthy starlet, it would be approved by my ladyfriend.

And there would be money in my pocket as a result.

Unfortunately, it is not. Chances are, it won’t happen.

Nor any of the standards and situations that would make this world an ideal one.
·       


  • Racism would be abolished. There would be no unspoken reinforced stereotypes, no accepted discrimination, and no more lame “You-know-how-us-black-people-are” jokes.
  • Reese’s would be the one healthy food group.
  • College debt would be forgiven after the completion of Graduate School and 5 years of employ in the respective field of study.
  • R. Kelly would be banned from making music.
  • Children under 18 would have no active interest in sexually related activities, and be completely content with Saturday Morning cartoons and hopscotch on the pavement.
  • There would be a universal musical standard, with demands like real-life application and 10-word obscenity limit per album.
  • People would leave Obama the heck alone.
  • Bill O’Reilly/Glenn Beck would shut the heck up.

Those suggestions and more would probably turn this world into a utopia for me.

But…this is not the case.

Bill O’Reilly is still running his mouth, and Conservatives and Liberals are still at odds and ends. I’ll probably be in debt until my 50s. 50 Cent has a new album out that will be hailed as another “gem” in today’s “music” scene, and Obama has the planet watching, hating and scrutinizing his every move. Forget slavery, racism is still alive and well, existing in the most violent of ways. An ideal world, this is not.

So what do we do with this?

There is a saying that states that if something isn’t malfunctioning in some way, why attempt to fix it. And in some contexts, that applies beautifully (If I got a 99% on a paper, I will not hurt myself trying to get that last 1%).

In other cases, I am inclined to wonder…why not?

Discrimination and racial tension is like a wine stain on the fabric of our existence in the country; it is here. And realistically speaking, there is nothing that can be done about it in this generation’s lifetime.

The Center for Disease Control reports that “1/3 of girls get pregnant before the age of 20…750,000 teen pregnancies annually…eight in ten of these pregnancies are unintended and 81% are to unmarried teens…

Despite being 2008’s most popular, most controversial, most recognized, most symbolic of hope and change, President Obama’s disapproval rating is at 48.3%, while his approval rating is at 47.8%, a steady drop since last January.

And the facts go on and on and on, more than anyone of us can change.

And we live with this. We operate our lives, making room and Segways around it, Kanye-shrugging through, en route to our own comfort zones.

My question is this: What about change? What rule is there that says that we have to live with these culturally accepted, but generally unpopular and questionable laws?

Why live in a racist society, coming up with reasons why it exists and jokes that further propagate the stigma?


Why provide clean needles, strong condoms and Planned Parenthood sites around the country, assisting and appeasing the problem?


I’m not suggesting that we make one man’s rant everyone’s rule. But…we are not idiots. We have a God-given mind that we have the option to use…why not use it? Why sit in a dung-heap and not find a way out?

I guess I’m just tired of hearing about how “that’s just the way it is…”. I believe that it doesn’t have to be this way.


Sure, it makes for a great Katt Williams routine, but…we are thisclose to sitting in our own filth, adjusting to the smell. There is something that we can do, something that can be done. Voting is one thing, but…are we not a community/village?


At the end of the day, I will probably never have a night full of explorative escapades with Kerry Washington. My children will still be seen skin first, Obama or not. But I am attempting to make moves, in my life, to design my life around the constant hope and Greater Good Known as Jesus the Christ to do something, act outside of “that’s just the way it is”, and to make a place where Heaven scrapes the pavement.

12.03.2009

Live Random or Die Hard...

I snatched this one from Don's post...



saying no to:
taking life too seriously
staying in the same place for too long
another year with AT&T's wack service.


saying yes to:
Christ's Saving Grace
continously learning more about cooking
loving and living more and more
the next (final?) best thing in hip-hop/music.


giddy about:
LIFE
starting my own family
never stopping pushing this pen
((????))

deeply inspired by:
non-profit and grassroots organizations
Real Christians who live their lives as Real Christians
Authentic Artists

obsessed with:
My family
chewy LemonHeads
Seinfeld&The Wire
Michael Jackson


in love with:
"Pomegranate-Lipped Nile Queen"
GOOD POETRY/MUSIC
My God, My God, My God....


haunted by:
spoiled milk from last night
various lies to my parents
my arrest in 2007




saved by:
God's unbelievable, inhuman, amazing, beautiful grace and love.

11.30.2009

Wants/Needs-Christmas List 2009


  • A Brand Spankin' New GPS for my Not-So Brand Spankin' New Car
  • A cool bandwagon to jump on...
  • Dead Presidents, but I'm partial to Jackson and Franklin...
  • My First Pair of Jordans
  • A New "Little Brother" Mixtape/Album
  • A 4-Disc Country-wide Hip-Hop Collaboration Album
    • NorthEast Disc
      • No Diss Tracks
      • The Following artists are banned: Cam'ron, all of Dipset
    • MidWest Disc
      • The Following artists are banned: Bow Wow
    • Dirty South Disc
      • The Following artists are banned: All of Slip-N-Slide Records, Interscope Records
      • Only one Lil' Wayne track
    • WestSide Disc
  • A Decent, Well-Done, Respectful Michael Jackson Tribute Album (not just a collection of "My Fave MJ Tracks" or some random iTunes playlist)
  • A Pimp Suit
  • For the news to leave Obama alone and start reporting real news
  • My College Loans, paid off
  • More Opportunities
  • 300 copies of my book, sold
  • A great singing voice
  • For Christians to start acting like Christians

11.16.2009

Dyna-Mite! Dyna-mite!

As far as classic Black movies go, it's a common joke in my circle that I am really behind the ball. I have apparently missed out on a huge elemental part of my development by missing some cult classics like "Coffy" or "Do The Right Thing". Heck, I only just saw "Purple Rain" a week ago. (I wasn't disappointed...but I wasn't impressed. However, Appolonia got some tig ole' bitties.)

I'm aware that the blaxpoitation genre of movie-making was huge back in the day. In an era that is widely understood as "not-a-good-look" for the Blacks of America, there was that call for something strictly for us. As time went on, and the filmmakers in America started to see the market value in being all inclusive across the production spectrum, blacks started popping up in more movies, getting more play time, more accolades, and better roles. Being militant and explicitly pro-black/revolutionary started to become unnecessary and obsolete, and we started to GET OURS. From Eddie Murphy in "Coming to America" to Eddie Murphy in "The Nutty Professor", things slowly changed.

This is not to say that White America-friendly roles didn't exist in the 1960-1970s. But I do feel that there has been a decline in your typical Pam Grier role.

Enter Black Dynamite. That man that's gonna "shake the tree from the roots, rake up the fruits, rip it up out the ground to find out what's goin down."

I really thought that this movie was a joke, a lame joke at that. Who wants to watch a movie that is such a throwback? Do we really need another "Undercover Brother" in these racially sensitive times? And who the heck is Black Dynamite anyways? How much of a spoof will this be? Never one to lie, I was definitely quite suspect.

That was before I saw the film.

Daggone.

Now, I wasn't around for the 70s. I was barely cognizant for the 80s. I was only exposed to a world of Bill Cosby and Reading Rainbow: happy Black people. I wasn't aware of "The Struggle". And any reference to it in the idiot box was pretty much parodied.

But I have to give much kudos to writers, the producers, actors, all involved with the film, because it must have been a HUGE task to do what this film did for me. Don't think that this is the next Spike Lee joint or some life changing movie, because it's not. You won't hate Whitey, you won't paint the White House black, you won't start fighting with nunchucks. But I feel that you may appreciate how far we've come.

Because it's been a while since a movie thoroughly entertained and excited me. Watching it, I was rooting for the good guy, who was also a B.A.. Not Sam Jackson's Shaft. Not Will Smith's Ali (that was a different inspiration, so calm down). I just...I felt like I was transported to a time where being Black was an actual struggle, a clearly defined one at that. In this country, being anything but White will always resemble an uphill battle, but the heat was UP at that time. While this up and coming generation will be more-or-less fighting to make sense and be relevant without sounding like a track on repeat, a generation before mine, they were still fighting to be HEARD and RESPECTED.

Now, there are tons morally wrong, if not questionable with this movie. Not all black heroes were dang-a-lang swanging, pre-hip-hop rhyming, kung-fu fighting militants. Luckily, I'm in my 20s and not as impressionable. But like I said...it made me feel something solid.

So I urge ya'll to check this movie out. When I say thorough, this flick was thorough. And funny as crap. Can you dig?



Phonte's Movie In A Minute

11.13.2009

Honest Scrap Award.


Well, I've been ever so graciously awarded with an Honest Scrap by I.Am.Spoken.Word.

According to the rules, I have to ante up, so ante I shall.

The protocol is to be encouraging and inspiring.

This won't be hard.

Here are the rules.

The honest scrap award rules:
1. Present the award to seven bloggers whose blogs you find brilliant in content and/or design or who have encouraged you.
2. Tell those seven people that you have given them the Honest Scrap Award.
3. Share ten honest things about yourself.

The Nominees for (R)Evolution's Honest Scrap Awards 2009 are:
  1. Deutlich's "Speak On It"
  2. "Art Star"
  3. Don's "Minus The Bars"
  4. Spoken.Word's "Be Still"
  5. Muze's "She's So Flyy"
  6. B.Yung's "The Mirrors In My Eyes"
  7. Folk's "Black Folks Don't Swim!"
Ten Honest Things
  1. I am growing to hate politics more and more each day. More than that, I am hating how religious folk USE politics to instigate their own agenda instead of God's.
  2. There is no telling what I would do to perform on stage with some of my favorite artists.
  3. I feel that at this point in my life, I have the same amount of regrets as successes.
  4. I wouldn't mind being famous for something positive and inspiring.
  5. I feel that my life's purpose is to work with children.
  6. I know that God is in control, regardless of how it may look to me.
  7. ...but I just wish I had a clue.
  8. Finally, I am accepting the fact that I know nothing about Love. Absolutely NOTHING.
  9. In another life, I may have been a gigolo. Feel free to ask why.
  10. My life is heading somewhere great, and I can't wait until I get there.

11.12.2009

Wants/Needs: November



Wants:
  • To travel around the country, performing my poetry.
  • Publish a nationally-acclaimed book of poetry
  • Hug and hold Jessica Biel
  • Cook a complete meal for my phone family
  • Pray with/for Lauryn Hill
  • Record an album, strictly for my family
  • Skydive/Base Jump
Needs:
  • A firm financial foundation
  • Strong academic discipline
  • Mature relationship with my dad

Where the Spirit Is...

(encouraged by Don's post)

It was an early part of the Summer, one of those days when the heat starts to show up.

Granted, it wasn't unbearably hot. It wasn't hot enough to feel restless, but like I said...it was coming.

I was in Missouri, working at Kids Across America, a Christian Sports camp for inner city youth. Before the kids arrive at the camp, the counselors are there for a little over a week to prepare the camp for the kids' arrival. This Staff Training Week encompasses everything from camp upkeep and protocol to bible studies and fellowship.

Drawing closer to the end of the Staff Training Week, we began to relax on the upkeep duties and prepare ourselves spiritually for the task that lay ahead of us, both in and out of camp's gates. Some of us were staying for one term, which is three eight-day sessions, others were staying for two terms. A few were dedicating their entire summers to camp, a full 9 sessions.

For one of our final camp-wide fellowship meetings, we met in the gym at one of the camps. Now picture this: possibly hundreds of college aged students gathered in a cramped gym, during the dawn of the summer, in the middle of the country (read: the boonies), with absolutely NO air-conditioning or air-freshener. Never mind to that whole "groups-of-black-people-naturally-give-off-heat" thing. Body heat is body heat, and there was much of body heat that night. My glasses were fogging up, I was bumping into folk I didn't know, my deodorant had worn off long since that morning...it should have been a mess.

The dj running the sound system started playing music. The speaker hadn't come up yet, so we were all anticipating the message. Each song played was choice and lively, probably all in an attempt to keep us focused.

Then he played "Melodies from Heaven", from Kirk Franklin's "Whatcha Lookin' For?" album. Any fan of Gospel music knows this song in and out. No, not just black people.

On cue, folk starting singing. And it started out playful, because we had actually tried this a few days prior, a Capella. That attempt failed like Sisqo's career, but with the accompaniment of the track behind us, we all had a new sense of confidence. With each line, the group's tone grew more triumphant.

Chorus
Melodies from Heaven
Rain down on me (2x)
2x

Take me in Your arms and hold me close
Rain down on me (2x)
Fill me with your precious Holy Ghost
Rain down on me (2x)

Repeat from Chorus

Tenors: Rain(1st)
Sopranos: Rain down on me(2nd)
Altos: Let let let let let it fall on me(2nd)
4x

Melodies from Heaven (4x)

Rain down on me (repeat till end)


Something amazing happened in that room that night. I have head countless scripture about how the heavens sing out and how there is such joy in heaven. I've had classes point out which angels sing and why. But that night in Missouri, almost 200 college students put everything on pause for one unified purpose.

Family issues? Pause.
Relationship troubles? Pause.
Financial woes? Pause.
Political affiliation? Pause.
Public scrutiny? Pause.
Religious denomination? Pause.

God. That was is. Just him.

I have never been a part of such a beautiful event, before or since. I've been in church before, and I've been on choirs and choruses. But never have I been more at peace than when in a random assortment of blacks, whites, men, women, Pacific Islanders, unemployed, drop-outs, students, Trinidadians, Jamaicans, football players, band geeks, cheerleaders, Democrats, Republicans, suburbanites, hood aficionados, sanctified sinners, all gathered to wholeheartedly sing OUT LOUD, with arms stretched HIGH, some crying out, without a care to anything else but to simply PRAISE HIM.

Just to praise Him.

I believe that night, I caught a glimpse of an idea of what heaven is like.

10.26.2009

Foreign Exchange in DC!

>My feet hurt.


I have never been the type of guy to ever consider having a pedicure, but as of right now, I’m thinking that it may be a good idea.


I’ve been on my feet, using my feet, almost non-stop, for the past 24 hours. Doing what?


Attending The Foreign Exchange concert at the Black Cat in DC!


First off, let me state that this is my first secular concert. I attend one of America’s premier Christian university, and it being a college, there are a maelstrom of Contemporary Christian concerts. I’ve seen TobyMac, Switchfoot, Thousand Foot Krutch, Family Force 5, Flame, Lecrae, Tedashii, Rush of Fools, KJ-52 and more, all live. And these were pretty good concerts. As a fan of the previous mentioned artists, I’m an advocate for loud music. Especially when talent is involved (whoda thunk that TobyMac can *kinda* breakdance?).


But this past Sunday was particularly special for me. For a number of reasons.

A. In Lynchburg, the nightlife is seriously lacking. I’m from the Northeast sector of the country, so I’m rather accustomed to a more active PM lifestyle. And I’m not even a real huge party hopper; I’m just not used to a citywide unofficial 10pm curfew.

B. The parties that I’ve been going to lately have SUCKED. Maybe that’s how folk get down in the Burg. Maybe that’s how college folk compensate for the severe deficit of dusk-themed activities. But I have learned that I am not a house party kinda dude. At least not these house parties. (Wack Music+Lame Dancing+Beer Pong as Prime Entertainment <>

C. I am personally trying to get more comfortable as a 20something. I’m not a teenager any more, and I feel that I’ve got to pursue more on my weekends than the issues in Bullet A & B.

D. A few months ago, I bid farewell to one of my favorite Hip-Hop groups, 4th Avenue Jones. I needed something to balance out that missing weight.


Come heaven or Afghanistan, I was going to that concert.


As we arrived in the Black Cat, my excitement level was humming at an 8. Then Big Pooh got on stage.


I will say this. Pooh catches a lot of heat, oft getting called the weakest link in the duo of Little Brother. I don’t necessarily agree, but I think that he was on point last night. Him being on his own grind, I feel, has given him the space to dig deeper into his craft.


I was hoping that there would’ve been a bit more LB tracks, but like I said, the man is on HIS grind, getting his name out there.


The DJ spun for a little bit, attempting to prep the crowd for what was about to go down. At times, he was lacking, but he eventually got it right. I personally would’ve preferred more Michael Jackson cuts. But I’m biased.


Then Nicolay stepped out. (That ‘bama is tall.)



Crowd recognizes him and goes nuts. He is followed by Carlitta Durand (who is a fine looking woman, by the way. If she is reading this, CAWL ME.) who starts off the set with “Lose Your Way” off of Nicolay’s “City Lights 2” album. Beautiful song.



Then the rest of the band comes out.




Yazarah, with her fine self, Darien Brockington and Phonte Coleman.

I’m not going to go on and on about how magnificent this night was. The web has enough of FE concert reviews. Instead, I’ll just make a few points.

· D –Brock can sang. That boy went to CHUCH. No, not church. CHUCH.


· Yazarah is like a modern day Tina Turner.


· Phonte is HIGH-larious. And a very talented individual.


· It says volumes about what you do as a performer when the audience can tell that you love what you do.


· The world needs another FE/LB album.


· “Good beats. Dope rhymes. This Hip-Hop thing isn’t really that hard.”


· LB stands strong, with or without 9th Wonder.


· Eff Bad Boy. We need more HOJ.


· …we need to support good music, not just Hip-Hop.



Ya’ll need some FE in your life. Find your way to a show ASAP. Rob somebody, stab somebody, just do eet.









**Oh, if someone knows what the song “Purple Flip” or “Something About You” is, lemme know? I’m trying to make a playlist on my iTunes, and I have no clue where those songs came from.


9.10.2009

Behind Every Great Man...

I was bored the other night, so I looked for a movie to watch, one from my own personal collection. Classes were about to begin for the semester, so I wanted to take a chance to enjoy myself before the rush of the new semester started to bumrush my senses.

Didn’t feel like dealing with romance or drama, so “Save the Last Dance” wasn’t an option.

And I didn’t particularly want to watch anything too violent without some friends to enjoy the mayhem with me, so “Live Free or Die Hard” was out of the running as well.


I wanted something simple, but not idiotic. Humorous, but not too offensive.

So I opted for “Undercover Brother”.


Most of us are familiar with this quasi-blaxpoitation spoof film, starring Eddie Griffin, Chris Kattan and Denise Richards. Carrying one of Dave Chappelle’s best film roles in tow, I
thoroughly enjoyed myself throughout this movie.

However, one of the funniest lines in this movie did something to me this time around…


Undercover Brother: You know what they say, behind every great black man...
Conspiracy Brother: is the police.
Undercover Brother: No.
Smart Brother: A bunch of slow white athletes?
Undercover Brother: No!
White She-Devil: A cute butt.
Undercover Brother: NO!
Lance: Probable cause.

Eventually, our hero is able to throw out that age-old cliché line that behind every great black man is a great black woman.


Now, I’ve always been able to over look this line and chalk it up to what I just said: cliché. Everyone one, from pastors to reflective college professors, has sprouted out this line at some point or another. However, for some reason, I started to sit and ponder on it.

Allow me to say this. By no means am I great yet. I mean, my ‘fro is growing to be a force to be reckoned with, but that’s about it.


All the same…were I great man, who would be behind me? Does that over-played adage apply to me?


And automatically, the answer came rushing to me, without challenge or second guessing.


I won’t lie; this woman can sometimes come across as naïve or fragile. When looking at her, “invulnerability” or “physicaly supremecy” are hardly the first things that come to mind. But to leave at the first impression would be your folly, because I have seen first-hand the strength that resides within this woman.


As a Christian, the Bible ends up being my resource and the main backdrop for my beliefs and standards. In this instance, I shall do the same. Enter the famed Proverbs 31 Comparison.


Proverbs 31: 13-15a – “She selects wool and flax and works with eager hands. She is like the merchant ships, bringing her food from afar. She gets up while it is still dark; she provides food for her family…”


This passage describes a part of this woman to the T. Even when her body is screaming for her to stop or slow down, I have a cavalcade of memories of her constantly working hard. Almost as if working with some unknown secret X factor, she operates dutifully, taking care of business, handling her handle.


She has shown me how important it is to work hard. Honestly spea
king, I am a hardcore creature of comfort. I may not necessarily go for mani/pedi combos or take the escalator versus the stairs, but if I can, I’ll definitely take an opportunity to nap my behind off. In watching her, I’m aware of how important a good, consistant work ethic is.

Proverbs 31:18,20 – “She sees that her trading is profitable, and her lamp does not go out at night…she opens her arms to the poor and extends her hands to the needy.”


I think this goes hand-in-hand with the previous passage: she is aware of what her work is worth. We all know that the generous (pun intended) hand of the Millenium Recession has been slapping people up, left and right; she is not immune to the damage. In the same breath, she is fully conscious of the value of her hard work. Because if it were up to me…I’d probably give up and move to Canada or something.


She is also generous and open-hearted. One area that I’ve seen very evident in her is her willingness to serve, almost regardless of an individual’s situation…or her ability to give. In today’s world, it is advisable to don a hat of caution at all times. This woman has a nature to her that contests that ideology.

I wouldn’t call myself stingy, but if I’m at my last swig of Dr. Pepper…you’re probably not going to get it, unless I really like you. She encourages me, without speaking about it explicitly, to have a generous heart. 2 Corinthians 9:11 mentions being blessed (or rich, as the NIV translation states) so that “you can be generous on every occasion…”.


Proverbs 31:30 – “Charm is deceptive, and beauty is fleeting; but a woman who fears the LORD is to be praised.”


I personally think that this woman is truly beautiful, but I don’t personally know of any other woman who fears and respect the name of God with such…adoration. I have heard this woman described as a prayer warrior, and I cannot think of any other way to describe her. I briefly mentioned her calm, almost passive demeanor earlier; don’t let that distract you from the strength that she possess. A believer in Christ, rarely would she offer any advice and admonition without bringing it
back to God.

So, here I shall repeat myself. Were I to be called a ‘great man’, who would be behind me?


I am blessed with a crew of friends who love me dearly and have supported me for years, and I have a family behind me that is as real as it gets. But I believe that standing behind me, never moving or wavering in the position God granted her 22 years ago, is my mother, Margaret George.


Along with my father, she has been with me, behind me, supporting me since the day of my birth, doing what we all hear, but is usually the hardest put into practice.


Love me.


I am still but a seedling in the face of the man God wants me to be, but I know that without the die-hard persistence and dedication of both my parents, I would be nothing now.

8.21.2009

My Life According to Little Brother


Seeing as how I'm coming back to the blogging circuit, I figured that I'd give myself a little filler post. And, I've really been feeling "Little Brother" this past year. As far as hip-hop goes, I've just learned about them, and I've been snatching everything up by them. So, after snatching this blurb up from Muze, I decided to follow up with this artist. Enjoy this little bit 'o insight, cop it if you want it!


Using only song names from ONE ARTIST, cleverly answer these questions. Pass it on to 12 people you like and include me. You can't use the band I used. Try not to repeat a song title. It's a lot harder than you think! Repost as "My Life According to (BAND NAME)"

Pick Your Artist:
Little Brother

Are you a male or female?
Diary of A Mad Black Daddy (skit)

Describe yourself:
So Fabolous

How do you feel:
The Get-Up

Describe where you currently live:
Welcome To The Minstrel Show

If you could go anywhere, where would you go:
Hiding Place

Your favorite form of transportation:
Speed/Slow It Down (kinda contradictory, eh?)

Your best friend is:
Shorty On The Lookout

Your favorite color is:
Two-Step Blues

What's the weather like:
Make Me Hot

Favorite time of the day:
Nighttime Maneuvers

If your life was a tv show, what would it be called:
We Got Now

What is life to you:
ExtraHard/Lovin' It

Your relationships:
Step It Up/Slow It Down

Your fear:
That Ain't Love

What is the best advice you have to give:
All For You

If you could change your name, you would change it to:
Roy Lee, Producer Extraordinaire

Thought for the Day:
Love Joint Revisited

How I would like to die:
Home

My soul's present condition:
The Listening

My Motto:
Dreams/We Got Now/ExtraHard/When Everything Is New

8.20.2009

The Thriller


I was sleeping.

While working at camp, I did a brief stint as a night watchman. My hours were from 8:30pm to 5:00am, so as soon as the minute hand made its 60th checkpoint at the hour mark, I was on my way back down to my cabin, in which I quickly went to sleep. During the day, I had no obligation to anything, so this particular realm of sleep was beyond delightful.

Around 6:30pm, on June 25th, I got a three consecutive texts from some friends.
• Text 1: “Nick! Did u hear about michael jackson?”
• Text 2: “Michael Jackson Is dead! Like, really…”
• Text 3: “Michael Jackson died today.”

…And I honestly froze, in motion and in thought.

I was not ready to hear this.

Allow me to back up a bit.

Way back when, in the wonder years of my youth, I was raised around a rather firm cul-de-sac of musical standards. Raised in a Caribbean household, my mom was a huge CeCe Winans fan. My dad was a devout listener to a popular jazz radio station, only alternating between that and the local Christian music station.

In the early nineties, hip-hop and rap music was picking up attention. Lest I remind you, with names like Tupac and 2 Live Crew running the scene, it wasn’t exactly inviting to youthful ears, especially under watchful eyes like my parents. The list of allowed artists was short.

Around this same time, some guy named Michael Jackson released an album called “Dangerous”. The first song off of this album that I had heard was entitled “Black or White”. And I can’t remember exactly how or the circumstances surrounding it, but I found myself in possession of this particular cassette.

Believe me when I say, I have never. Ever. Ever. Ever replayed or listened to one solitary album as much (before or since) Michael’s “Dangerous” album. More than 4th Avenue Jones “No Plan B pt. 2”. More than Mars Ill “ProPain”. More than J Period’s “The Best of Lauryn Hill” Mixtape. On cassette, my sister ruined it (she was at that playful stage where destruction is amusing). Once I got it on disc, I played it so much, the disc went bad. The second disc broke. Third is currently is heavy rotation in my car, and it’s starting to go bad now, only from a long life of overplay.
I’m not even going to speak about the first time I saw Michael dance. Everyone can echo emphatic adoration about The Moonwalk. We’ve seen Usher do/attempt it countless times.

But. I want to focus on a facet of Michael’s performing style that truly impacted me.

His energy.

I have never seen someone sing or dance or perform with such raw…energy. The first MJ music video I had ever seen was “Jam”, and I was blown away. It wasn’t even his best or my favorite. But in watching him move…you know how the story goes.

I had to try it.

And believe me when I say, I began to mimic what I saw. I had the moonwalk down pat in minutes. His patented side-step? I still do it. That complicated foot shuffle? It’s a part of my club scene repertoire. But that’s not really saying much. Aside from that, I can’t dance for crap, in my opinion. And I am but one in a legion of MJ aficionados who clamor for the “Beat It” dance number.

The main thing that stuck with me throughout the years? The energy.

It’s one thing to kick up your foot and squeal “Hee hee!”.

But I feel that a huge part of what made Michael so magical was how he almost existed on stage as a musical exclamation point. The simplest movements were sharp and on point. He felt it. He felt it, in every blood vessel, every sensory nerve, every bone in his body.

And he made me believe it.

When speaking about music, I frown whenever I hear someone say that it’s “just music.” I believe that that is one of the most sadly misinformed and ignorant statements someone can make. In the same vein, I can not listen to a good song and not…feel it.

I do more than bob my head. Many a time, I have gotten awkward stare and concerned glances from random passer-bys. Maybe they thought I had Turrets’ or something. Whatever. Doesn’t matter to me. Never has.

I can’t shake my borderline obsession with (good) music. And when I feel it, I can’t silence it or mute it. My iPod volume level stays on high. I would break out into a sad imitation of a breakdance if a particular Busta Rhymes track comes on. If Lecrae is spitting some hard truth, best believe I’m mouthing the words out, as if I was on stage with him. Timbo’s on the beat? Nick is on the street, frantically trying to match that…energy. (Don’t stop ‘til you get enough, I guess…)

And it all started with Michael.

The passion that I have for music, live instrumentals and raw delight was birthed with the first cassette tape I have ever owned.

And I know that this was a bit late. The world is moving on. People have already flooded Wal-Mart to cop Michael’s “Number Ones” album. Underground DJ’s have released tribute mixes, and have moved on to anticipate upcoming releases. The media will continue to feast on his stature. The world will continue to spin.

As will I. I’m looking forward to The Blueprint 3. Grad school classes start in less than four days. My siblings will continue to need my help more than they will ever know or admit. My parents will forever watch over me, as if I were still the baby boy they birthed 22 years ago. My friends and I will continue to ride out our growth.

But…that passion is a part of me. And God willing, I shall use it as he sees fit.

In saying that, I write this in urgency. To all who are reading this (my fellow Christians in particular), I implore you to grip onto something firmly and GO HARD BODY. Not for Michael Jackson. Not for your pastor. But for the Glory of Jesus, our Christ. While my introduction to this emotion came from a largely secular source, it would be amiss of me to not apply it in accordance to His Will.

Peace.

U KNOW.