Monthly Archives: April 2009

ON THIS DAY IN BLACK MUSIC HISTORY: APRIL 3

#1 Song 1961:   “Blue Moon,” the Marcels

 

Born:   Jimmy McGriff, 1936; Eddie Murphy, 1961

 

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1959   England’s BBC radio banned the Coasters’ “Charlie Brown” because of its inclusion of the word “spitball.”

 

1976   Billy Ocean’s single, “Love Really Hurts Without You” charted, reaching #2 in England and #22 in America. Before hitting the charts, the West Indian vocalist worked as a tailor on London’s Saville Row and later worked in a Ford Motor plant at night so he could record and write in the daytime.

 

 

1976   Diana Ross’s “Love Hangover” sprinted onto the Hot 100, eventually settling in the top spot. It was her fourth solo #1 in six years.

 

 

1991   Queen Latifah, Big Daddy Kane, and Afrika Bambaataa appeared at Rap Portraits and Lyrics of a Generation of Black Rockers in New York, adding credibility to Afrika’s (real name Kevin Donovan) reputation as a rap innovator.

 

 

1992   Prince started a tour at the Tokyo Dome, in Tokyo, Japan.

 

1996   MC Hammer (now known as  Hammer) was also now known as “broke.” He filed bankruptcy today in Oakland, CA with debts of more than $10 million even though a 1991 Forbes Magazine list had him as the nineteenth highest paid entertainer.

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HATEWATCH: VANDALS DEFACE CIVIL RIGHTS MARKER IN MISSISSIPPI

VANDALS DEFACE CIVIL RIGHTS MARKER

 

Neshoba County sign that honors three martyrs of movement painted over

 

Jerry Mitchelljmitchell@clarionledger.com • March 27, 2009

 

 

Vandals have painted over a Neshoba County highway sign that honored three martyrs of the civil rights movement.

The Mississippi 19 sign memorialized the June 21, 1964, killings of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, whose deaths helped fuel the civil rights movement in Mississippi and across the nation. The sign was painted entirely black over the weekend and was taken down Monday for repair.
 
“You can’t help but be extremely disappointed that some hateful coward would perform such a juvenile and despicable act,” said Fent DeWeese, a member of the Philadelphia Coalition. “It is disrespectful not only to the memories of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Mickey Schwerner, but to all of us who believe in equality and justice. This act does nothing to inhibit the progress we have made. In fact, it does the opposite by reminding us that there is still much to do.”
 
The Philadelphia Coalition pushed for state prosecution of the killings and also recommended the sign.
 
In 2005, a Neshoba County jury convicted Edgar Ray Killen for orchestrating the trio’s slayings. Five suspects are still alive in the case.
 
That same year, state lawmakers named a 23-mile portion of Mississippi 19 the “Chaney-Goodman-Schwerner Memorial Highway” after the three young men killed by the Klan in Neshoba County in 1964. They also named a 32-mile stretch of U.S. 49 East in memory of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old African American from Chicago who beaten and shot to death in 1955 after he allegedly whistled at a white woman in Money in Tallahatachie County.
 
Signs for the Emmett Till highway have also been vandalized.
 
Susan Glisson, director of the William Winter Institute of Racial Reconciliation, called such vandalism “a sad reminder that much work remains in addressing racial prejudice. And yet, the sign’s existence is a testament to the strong community leadership in Neshoba County, committed to improving race relations through equity and education.”
 
To comment on this story, call Jerry Mitchell at (601) 961-7064.
 
 
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“Five suspects are still alive in the case.”
 
 
And so too are hundreds of other murderers, lynchers, rapists, and destroyers still walking around unpunished  for their crimes against the humanity of so many Black Americans.
 
The pus-filled sores of racism are oozing out the hatred and virulent anger of those who live in a country trying hard to progress towards a better nation for all. But, racism refuses to die a natural death; a death that will  not come because of the viral replication of racism.  It will get worse before it gets better.
 
So much for a post-racial America.

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HATEWATCH: THERE IS NO ‘CURE’ FOR A NATION’S HATE

From acclaimed columnist, Leonard Pitts, Jr., truer words were never spoken. As long as white privilege and the worship of whiteness continues, as long as the Other is the antithesis of whiteness, America will never be a nation that lives up to its Constitution, Bill of Rights, nor the Bible nor the commandments of God. The election of President Barack Obama can not remove over 518 years of racist hatred. Like alcoholism, racist hate will never be cured. Race hatred has always shown itself in America, time and time again:  genocide against Native Americans; enslavement of Africans; racial pogroms of ethnic cleansing against Black Americans via Tulsa (Greenwood), OK; the race massacre/coup d’etat of Wilmington, North Carolina; racial restrictive covenants; Jane Crow segregation; lynchings; racist attacks on citizens who celebrated Obama’s election. Racial hatred going away? Not anytime soon, not ever. That jinn was let out of the bottle centuries ago and its perverse infection is endemic in this country.
 
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THERE IS NO ‘CURE’ FOR A NATION’S HATE
There are now 926 hate groups in this country.
 
Take a second and consider that number. It represents an increase of more than 50 percent since 2000. And by ”hate groups,” I don’t mean guys in their bathrobes who go online and pretend their followers are legion. No, I mean actual Klan cells, Neo-Nazi sects, gay-bashing ”churches,” cliques of black separatists, white nationalists, nativists, racist skinheads and other merchants of venom who meet, plot and recruit in all 48 contiguous states (Alaska and Hawaii have no known hate groups). Nine hundred twenty-six of them.
 
The number is a record.
 
We learn all this from the Southern Poverty Law Center (splcenter.org) in Montgomery, Ala., which has, since its founding in 1971, become a leading authority on the business of hate. According to the latest issue of Intelligence Report, the SPLC’s quarterly magazine, that business is booming.
 
And maybe you wonder how this can be. How can hate enjoy such phenomenal growth in a nation where a Jew serves as senator from Connecticut, a Muslim serves as representative from Minnesota, a Hispanic is governor of New Mexico and a black man is president?
 
The answer is that we are a nation where a Jew serves as senator from Connecticut, a Muslim serves as representative from Minnesota, a Hispanic is governor of New Mexico and a black man is president. Because if those things strike you as signs of progress, well, they are signs of apocalypse to those who believe only white, male Christians are fit to lead.
 
But that’s not the only reason for the increase. SPLC also cites the debate over illegal immigration that has dominated much of this decade. Though former President George W. Bush offered thoughtful, moderate leadership on the issue, he was drowned out by demagogic extremists competing to see which could most effectively scapegoat undocumented workers. They, too, bear responsibility here.
 
Finally, there is the economy. When things get tough, people become more receptive to the idea that their miseries are all the fault of some alien other. So the stock market, too, is implicated. Hate rises when the Dow falls.
 
I imagine the SPLC findings land like cold water in the faces of those who took Barack Obama‘s ascension to the presidency as proof that the nation was finally cured of the sickness of hate. The truth, I’m afraid, is more nuanced than that.
 
Maybe it helps to think in terms of alcoholism, a disease that can, with treatment, be contained, controlled, put into remission — but never cured. Even when you’ve got years of sobriety under your belt, the germ of it lurks in your bloodstream. Which is why alcoholics do not call themselves cured. Rather, they say they are recovering.
 
Hate is something like that, a fact some of us have never quite understood. Such folks are convinced there is a goal line out there somewhere which, once crossed, will allow the nation to declare itself cured. And once cured, we’ll never have to grapple with hatred again.
 
But it doesn’t work that way.
 
In a nation so deeply riven by culture, race and religion, there is always a temptation to hate somebody, to blame some group of others for the job you lost, the crime committed against you, the fear and uncertainty you feel. There is a simplicity and a seductiveness to it that are all too easily mistaken for righteousness.
 
So there is no ”cure” for a nation’s hate. There is only an ongoing process of getting better, not unlike the alcoholic who must daily earn his sobriety anew. This explosion of hate is a reminder of what happens when we forget that, when we are undeservedly sanguine about how enlightened we’ve become.
 
It is said that eternal vigilance is the price of freedom. Well, that’s the going rate for tolerance, too.

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SAVE THE DATE: MAGGIE L. WALKER HERITAGE DAY: APRIL 18, 2009

 

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ON THIS DAY IN BLACK MUSIC HISTORY: APRIL 2

#1 R&B Song 1965:   “Got To Get You Off My Mind,” Solomon Burke

 

Born:   Marvin Gaye (the Moonglows), 1939

 

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1961   The Shirelles began a major tour in Irving Feld’s Biggest Show of Stars, 1961, starting in Philadelphia. Other acts included the Drifters, Fats Domino, Chubby Checker, and Bo Diddley.

 

1965   Dionne Warwick performed on Britain’s Ready, Steady, Go! TV-show debut.

 

1966   Sarah Vaughn’s cover of the Toys’ hit “A Lover’s Concerto” charted, reaching #63. It was the last of her thirty-three single successes.

 

1966   The Jazz Crusaders charted with Stevie Wonder’s “Uptight (Everything is Alright),”  reaching #95 pop in their chart debut. The instrumental group formerly known as the Nighthawks would soon be known worldwide as simply the Crusaders. They would not reach the R&B charts for another six years.

 

1967   Wilson Pickett performed in Murray the K’s Easter show, Music in the Fifth Dimension, at the RKO Theater in New York.

 

1983   Michael Jackson’s “Beat It” charted R&B, reaching #1 on both the pop and R&B national singles charts. The lead guitarist on the session was Van Halen’s Eddie Van Halen. The song was inspired by the Knack’s “My Sharona.”

 

File:Michael Jackson - Beat It cover.jpg

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COLORLINES: FACING RACE IN OAKLAND AFTER TRAGEDY: (ONGOING COVERAGE)

 

ARC


 

 

Facing Race in Oakland After Tragedy
RaceWire has ongoing coverage of Oakland’s recent police shootings tragedy including the following top posts:
Facing Race in Oakland after Tragedy, community leaders describe the state of affairs. Oakland’s Young People Respond, Oakland’s young people shares their thoughts regarding the recent tragedy that rocked a community. Oakland Police Memorial Shrouds Roots of Tragedy, Julianne Hing attended the funeral of four slain police officers and describes the scene.

Compact for Racial Justice Forum Call – Race & Civil Rights [AUDIO]
If you missed this week’s Compact for Racial Justice Forum Call, visit
RaceWIre to listen to a recording of the Race & Civil Rights call. Additional resources are available at arc.org/compact

Time to Play Fair
As the global recession plows deep into developing economies, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke uttered some bold words when he announced that the Obama administration would be focusing on promoting “fair trade.”


Colorlines Cover
The ColorLines March/April
issue is available now.

On ColorLines.com

Rapping Whiteness
Juba Kalamka interviews AntiRacist 15, a hip-hop group that uses community organizing as a model for music that inspires.

 

Rants and Raves          
Julianne Hing reads between the recent headlines and presents it back with humor.

 

 


RSVP for the Tuesday, April 14h, Race and Resession Call
What does the protection and expansion of civil rights during the Obama era look like? RSVP for the Compact For Racial Justice Forum call and find out next Tuesday 1PM PST, 4PM EST.


Applied Research Center/ColorLines is Subleasing Office Space in New York
The NY office located at
32 Broadway, Suite 1801, New York, NY 10004, is subleasing office space. There are four offices available ranging from $1,000 to $ 2,000 a month, price is negotiable. To view the space or to find out more information, please contact Donna Hernandez at 646-502-8841 or
dhernandez@arc.org

 

 

 

 

 

April 2, 2009 ColorLines Direct. News and commentary from ColorLines magazine and RaceWire blog.

 


 :: ColorLines Magazine Online :: The Applied Research Center

ColorLines Magazine
900 Alice Street, Suite 400 :: Oakland, CA 94607
Phone: 510-653-3415 :: Fax: 510-986-1062
Subscription Orders: 1-888-287-3126

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INTERNATIONAL CHILDREN’S BOOK DAY: APRIL 2, 2009

 

IBBY Logo IBBY Address
     
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
International Children’s Book Day  


   

Since 1967, on or around Hans Christian Andersen‘s birthday, 2 April, International Children’s Book Day (ICBD) is celebrated to inspire a love of reading and to call attention to children’s books.
 
Each year a different National Section of IBBY has the opportunity to be the international sponsor of ICBD. It decides upon a theme and invites a prominent author from the host country to write a message to the children of the world and a well-known illustrator to design a poster. These materials are used in different ways to promote books and reading. Many IBBY Sections promote ICBD through the media and organize activities in schools and public libraries. Often ICBD is linked to celebrations around children’s books and other special events that may include encounters with authors and illustrators, writing competitions or announcements of book awards.
 
A catalogue of posters and messages that have appeared between 1967 and 2002 is available from the Secretariat; the price for bulk orders is available upon request.
 

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ON THIS DAY IN BLACK MUSIC HISTORY: APRIL 1

#1 R&B Song 1956:   “Drown In My Own Tears,” Ray Charles & His Band

 

Born:   Alberta Hunter, 1895; Amos Milburn, 1927; Rudolph Isley (the Isley Brothers), 1939

 

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1960   In a great mix of the old and the new, Louis Jordan, Lenny Welch and the Four Tops performed at the Apollo Theater. The Tops were still four years away from their first big hit and doing mostly jazz.

 

1972   B.B. King performed at the Mar Y Sol Festival in Puerto Rico with Emerson, Lake & Palmer, and the Allman Brothers.

 

1984   After a violent dispute, Marvin Gaye was shot to death by his ranting reverend father, Marvin Gaye, Sr., in their Los Angeles home. Marvin Jr. would have been forty-five the next day.

 

1989   B.B. King with U2 charted pop with “When Love Comes To Town,” reaching #68 and becoming his last of thirty-six pop Top 100 entries.

 

 

1992   Boyz II Men and Hammer began the “Too Legit To Quit” tour in Hampton, VA.

 

1994   The O’Jays, the Whispers, and Levert performed at the Westbury Music Fair in Westbury, Long Island, NY.

 

1995   The Cameo funk era ended when their thirty-eighth chart single, “You Are My Love,” barely scraped the R&B 100 (#99).

 

1996   Isaac Hayes—-recording artist, musician, writer, producer, and actor—-put on another hat when he became the new WRKS-FM disc jockey in their 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. slot.

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