Archive for June, 2007

26
Jun

Teodros!

Peace,

From the heart of beacon hill comes the first in a series of music videos from Seattle’s own Gabriel Teodros. Gabriel is a good friend of mine and he is by far the most humble and giving persons I have ever met. WIth a smile on his face and a warm spirit his music shines a little bit of light on the world. Enjoy.

Watch It Now.

Gabriel Teodros
NO LABEL (ESMA REMIX)
Love Work
Massline Records

WORDS:

Gabriel Teodros is the everyday journeyman with more stories to tell than most people twice his age. Having seen both city and countryside through the eyes of a broke-ass rapper and immigrant child, Teodros spins observations and wordplay into internationalism on wax. Linking first and third world people’s struggles, he is sincere when he says “we in this together son, your beef is mine.”

From ciphers at Westlake to spending months in Vancouver and Brooklyn, Gabriel’s story is one of trial, tribulation and a search for redemption. The contrast of his onstage ferocity with his offstage humility reveals a multifaceted spirit who understands that the political is personal. Whether addressing political repression and resistance in East Africa or reflecting on the effects of patriarchy in his relationships, Teodros captures each moment soulfully with his unmistakably (north)west coast delivery.

Teodros has left a mark in the underground NW hiphop scene as one half of the duo Abyssinian Creole (with emcee Khingz Makoma), and since the late 90’s has been seen rocking microphones from classrooms to theatres, clubs, protests, prisons to street corners alongside the likes of Zap Mama, Fishbone, KRS-One, The Coup, Souls Of Mischief, Digable Planets, Aceyalone & Abstract Rude, GZA/Genius and Immortal Technique to name a few. Even before dropping his upcoming solo masterpiece, Lovework, in early 2007 on Mass Line, Teodros has already got love from a community who eagerly anticipate his next story to tell

PRESS:

Seattle Weekly
Rolling Stone

National Public Radio

URB Magazine’s Next 100

The Stranger

And of course you can always check his Myspace page and see more photos and read the blogs. If you enjoyed the video or you know someone that would please foward this email out.

Thank you,
Jelani Jackson

26
Jun

Custodio family in San Jose

What Up Everybody,

This is a summary of a city council meeting that took place in San
Jose last night. Some of you may have been following what went down
with the Custodio family in San Jose where a a mother had her head
slammed against a car three times for merely trying to protect her two
sons, both of which were being unjustly harassed, detained, and
ultimatley tased and charged with a crime. Silicon Valley De-Bug has
been part of a group called CJA (Californians for accountability and
justice.) working very closely with the family to address some of
these issues. Interestingly enough, one of the sons, Marlo Custodio
runs a Hip Hop program at Evergreen Collage in San Jose.
San Jose has had quite a history with a police accountability
issues, and over the past 4 or 5 years has evolved into quite a
multi-faceted coalition. This coalition has recently been headed
towards an apex, evidence by the recent Copwatch turnout during Cinco
De Mayo. The presence of cameras and the broad awareness and
willingness of downtown participants to use it as a means by which to
monitor police activities was a clear indication of shift in community
participation in this matter. Some cats even went so far as to
memorize license plates numbers of cops attempting to film the party
goers as the moved from club to club!
This reflection, written by Raj Jaydev, puts in perspective some
of what is taking place here, which is a subject matter that seems to
be taking place all over the country. All politics is local, but we
could learn a lot from, and find creative ways of supporting each
other in what are clearly collective struggles.
Enjoy, and don’t hesitate to hit back.

One

-Mak

Hey folks, still pretty juiced from last night’s meeting. I thought
everyone did a really good job in making the community presence felt
and heard. I think it was the first time that council, and that City
Hall space for that matter, was really challenged in a significant
way.

Reflections, Implications and Possibilities Drawn from June 21st Meeting
We are at a unique moment of possibility to build a broader movement
for accountability that can mean real change in San Jose.

All the Ingredients of a Movement is Here:
We met a lot of folks yesterday that we had not seen at previous
meetings or rallies. They made their own signs, brought their
families, and have been charged with determination from their personal
run-ins with SJPD. Without any real planning or previous discussions,
we all seemed to present a unified call for more accountability. This
larger group has the numbers to push for larger, community-initiated,
structural changes. What would happen if the families, activist
organizations, civil rights organizations were able to put forward a
collective vision for police accountability?

Let’s Set the Menu:
The tremendous amount of energy that coalesced at City Hall revolved
around recommendations brought on by the IPA. The public was, in a
way, attending another person’s party. What if we threw our own?
Imagine then the force and numbers that could come if we had
community-initiated demands. There is a saying by Desmond Tutu, that
we don’t just want a seat at the table, we want to set the menu.

Last Night was also a Community Brainstorming:
During the public comment period, dozens of people gave their
positions of what is needed, and what they would fight for. The fact
that people would give up their evening, and speak at a meeting where
most decisions already appeared to be made, is evidence enough. The
council may or may not have been listening, but the community was
listening to each other. The value of last night, is that it may just
have been the community’s first meeting to plan what we are going to
do. I heard one clear statement constantly repeated through the
evening that actually had no relationship to the IPA report at all –
“Ban Tasers.” The fact that it was not simply a validation of an IPA
recommendation, means that it is a genuine and independent call to
action from the public, based on their own analysis of the current
condition of San Jose. Given the Steve Salinas tragedy, the call is
not only morally imperative, but completely reasonable, and even
financially needed for the city, given the explosion of civil suits by
victims against SJPD.

Outside of Demands to Council, We Need to Create our Own
Accountability Mechanisms:
The recommendations on the table last night were minimal steps
towards needed police accountability, but even if they were all
approved would not automatically fix the problem. Last night was an
indication that we cannot rely on the city council to solve our crisis
of accountability, nor can we wait for their timelines. The
initiatives that are not about asking the council for anything, could
prove to be the most important mechanisms for the accountability we
are looking for.

We have to make sure the initiatives such as hood patrol, copwatch,
and community complaint centers not get sidelined as the conversation
around city council policies dominate the media. We have the capacity
to leverage these activities into an entire police accountability
infrastructure that could really be a model for other cities across
the country.

Peace-raj


Shamako Noble aka The Sword of the West
President and Executive Director-Hip Hop Congress
CEO-Rondavoux Records
hiphopcongress.com
http://www.myspace.com/rondavouxrecords
myspace.com/shamakodnoble
shamako@hiphopcongress.com
408-509-2833

26
Jun

DivaTV

DivaTV

26
Jun

New Quanstar Music

We just wanted to let you all know that there are two new songs from Quanstar’s third release, “The People’s Champ” Myspace.

The first is the head banger, “In The City”, produced by Atlanta’s own GM.

The second is entitled “Drunkenman’s Prayer” featuring, the jazz diva herself, Chanel Moseley (Don’t ask me how we got her to do a song with, because we’re not sure ourselves) produced by the freestyle battle king Cypher Linguistics of Dropbombz.

So go to the www.myspace.com/quanstar to hear them now.

Also, dont forget to come check us out @ The Vans Warped Tour @ Hi Fi Buys Amphitheatre on July 18th, and “The Bring Your ‘A’ Game Tour: Back To Basics ‘07″ begins in September 2007.

Peace, love, and coffee. – Quan

26
Jun

United States Social Forum and BLOC

BLOC (Building Leadership Organizing Communities) is a national
network of young organizers and activists working in communities of
color as alliance builders. At the US Social Forum we are officially
launching myBLOC.net – taking movement building to the next level of
technological advancement. myBLOC.net is a tool for young leaders to
connect and build a society free from all forms of oppression by using
the internet as a tool to network with other sector organizers locally
and around the country.

The week of USSF, myBLOC.net will become a public site. Login and
create a profile for yourself or your organization to stay connected
during and after USSF, by visiting www.myBLOC.net, password: BLOC
2006, or by visiting a technology station at any one of our Launch
Parties, where we make movement, music, and art that matters.

The official Launch of myBLOC.NET at the US Social Forum!

Tuesday, June 26 10 pm – 2am

Kick-off Party at the World Famous Mic Club at Apache Cafe, 64 3rd St.
NW. Hosted by D.R.E.S. Tha Beatnik with Dj’s Edward Scissorhands +
Razah. Featuring Rebel Diaz (Chicago/Bronx), Viva Fidel (Milwaukee),
and Readnex Poetry Squad (New York), Atlanta’s finest welcomes USSF.
Presented by myBLOC.net and 4 Kings Productions. 18 +, $10

Wednesday, June 27, Opening march and ceremony of the US Social Forum,

1 pm in Hurt Park, 2 pm march to 5 Point Marta station, with
myBLOC.net and Hip Hop Media Lab hosting MC’s and DJ’s.

Thursday, June 28, 10 pm Ruckus Society myBLOC.net present ATL-United

At django, 495 Peachtree St – a place for social justice to grind up
against movement – with DJ’s Karl Injex (ATL), Willie Maze (Oakland),
Oja (NY), and Hot 8 Brass Band, showing that the movement that plays
together stays together. 21+, $2

Friday, June 29, 1 pm – 8 pm Little 5 Point BLOC Party!

Featuring music by Rebel Diaz, Dj’s Oja + Chela, live mural by Mike
360 (New Mexico) and Art in Action (Bay Area), Skate park and demos
with Skate Like a Girl, Capoeria roda and demo, Custom sneaker art
with Female Sneaker Fiend, and networking space for youth organizers,
don’t miss it! All ages, free, at the Little 5 Point Community Center

Saturday, June 30 2 pm – 5 pm Solar Powered Hip Hop Concert in
Renaissance Park(across from the Atlanta Civic Center)

myBLOC.net, Hip Hop Media Lab, and the People’s Family Reunion present
an inspiring gathering of those of us who have been on the inside,
have loved ones behind bars, and our allies. With a solar powered hip
hop concert to highlight green jobs and development by Hip Hop
Sustains, featuring: MC’s Rebel Diaz, Ishues, Grime, Jibbs, Ludacris,
Khalil, Readnex, Highlander Freedom Songs, and DJ’s Oja + Chela. All
ages, free.

United States Social Forum
June 27 – July 1, all over Atlanta
The US Social Forum is more than a conference, more than a networking
bonanza, more than a reaction to war and repression. The USSF will
provide space to build relationships, learn from each other’s
experiences, share our analysis of the problems our communities face,
and bring renewed insight and inspiration. We must declare what we
want our world to look like and begin planning the path to get there.
A global movement is rising. Hip Hop Sustains and BLOC Network are
among hundreds of organizations and thousands of individuals
participating in the first-ever U.S. Social Forum. For a full schedule
of events and locations, please visit the USSF website at
USSF2007.org/

Another world is possible. Another U.S. is necessary.

Sponsored by:
BLOC Network / myBLOC.net, DeBug Magazine, Youth United for Community
Action, Hip Hop Media Lab, Hip Hop Sustains, Hip Hop Congress, 4 kings
Production,
National Hip Hop Political Convention, Ruckus Society, Future 5000.

19
Jun

Why music is too loud

Why music really is getting louder
Adam Sherwin, Media Correspondent

Dad was right all along – rock music really is getting louder and now
recording experts have warned that the sound of chart-topping albums is
making listeners feel sick.

That distortion effect running through your Oasis album is not entirely the
Gallagher brothers’ invention. Record companies are using digital technology
to turn the volume on CDs up to “11″.

Artists and record bosses believe that the best album is the loudest one.
Sound levels are being artificially enhanced so that the music punches
through when it competes against background noise in pubs or cars.

For Rest Of Article

19
Jun

DLabrie would like you to know the following

DLabrie – Wus Ya Name (CLEAN) fea. Kaz Kyzah of “The TEAM”- 1st Single off
upcoming album MR. NETW3RK COMING SUMMER 2007 fea. MR. FAB, Zioni, Jacka,
Traxamillion, Shamako and MORE!!

If you want a copy for Radio or Mixtapes, Please let me know 510-798-9610

www.myspace.com/dlabriemusic





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