Hip-Hop Fridays: BlackElectorate.com's "The Streets Are Political" Named The Source Magazine's MixCd of The Month
This month we have the honor of the first two volumes of our "The Streets Are Political" MixCd series being listed as the top mixtape in The Source Magazine's "Tale Of The Tape" section. The BlackElectorate.com two volume compilation beat out DJ Kool Kid, and even the incredible Tapekingz 15th anniversary tape which features tracks spun by Kay Slay, Dirty Harry, DJ Envy, Doo Wop, Dirty Harry, Pudgee P and Who Kid.
The Source says of the series, "Discover true Hip-Hop from a political standpoint with this two-part series detailing the message in the music from some of your favorite artists like Nas, Wyclef, Tupac and others. Includes exclusive interviews based on the real social conditions of our people."
We hope you will agree.
You can check the "Tale Of The Tape" section out in the August issue of The Source magazine, with Nas on the cover.
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Here is how we described "The Streets Are Political" Series and its first two volumes in a June 25, 2004 Hip-Hop Fridays:
Hip-Hop Fridays: "The Streets Are Political" Volume I & II
Last week, in Newark, New Jersey, at the National Hip-Hop Political Convention we had the honor and privilege of distributing, free-of-charge, hundreds of copies of the first two volumes of the BlackElectorate.com mixtape series, “The Streets Are Political”. The reaction has been overwhelmingly positive to the combined 51-tracks of music, intros and interludes that weave together rap songs, commentaries, interviews, speeches, and snippets.
The first two volumes are called the RapCOINTELPRO edition as the content is designed to raise awareness of the unique surveillance of Hip-Hop artists, in light of the history of the FBI’s infamous Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO). In addition, the volumes roll out an arbitrary 13 elements of politics, which show the political nature of the streets and everyday life, as well as the political essence of Hip-Hop. Those elements are:
1) Policy 2) Militancy 3) Tragedy 4) Honesty 5) Economy 6) Spirituality 7) History 8) Rivalry 9) Commentary 10) Identity 11) Responsibility 12) Family 13) Loyalty
The songs and snippets introduce and illustrate these elements. A June 7, 2004 interview published at BlackElectorate.com goes into further details.
In addition to distributing the MixCds on the street and at special events, BlackElectorate.com is offering Volume I and II free-of-charge, with a purchase of The COINTELPRO Papers by Ward Churchill and Jim Vander Wall in the BlackElectorate.com Bookstore. The COINTELPRO Papers is a definitive book which meticulously researches and documents the FBI’s war, strategy, and tactics against progressive, nationalist, and politically conscious organizations in the 1960s and 70s, in particular. But the book is not a pure historical document, the authors make a compelling case that COINTELPRO is still in effect and that U.S. law enforcement has been militarized, at every level.
* The book is loaded with interesting nuggets of information, analysis and insight. One particularly striking aspect of the book is its argument regarding how the word “terrorist” was deliberately used by the FBI to define Black activism and dissent in order to inspire fear among the American public, as part of the U.S. government’s supposed effort to protect the country from the possible rise of urban guerrilla warfare. The FBI’s efforts in this regard are documented as revolving around the Black Panther Party in particular, and specifically the decision of Director L. Patrick Gray to apply the term “terrorist” to groups previously referred to as “activists”, “radicals”, “agitators”, and “political extremists”.
A key motivation of “The Streets Are Political” MixCd series is to make clear that Hip-Hop culture, is seen by many – for good and bad - as the inheritor of the legacy of those leaders and organizations which were historically targeted by the State. And regardless to the level of consciousness displayed by rap artists, Hip-Hop music is the definitive mass communication media which ex-FBI head J. Edgar Hoover sought to deny nationalists, progressives, civil rights leaders, Pan-Africanists and any who express political dissent.
Learn more about the relationship between history and current events by ordering your copy of The COINTELPRO Papers, and receiving your complimentary copy of the RapCOINTELPRO edition of “The Streets are Political” MixCD series.
Friday, August 20, 2004 To discuss this article further enter The Deeper Look Dialogue Room
The views and opinions expressed herein by the author do not necessarily represent the opinions or position of BlackElectorate.com or Black Electorate Communications.
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