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Author and illustrator Ashley Bryan was recently in town and was the honored guest at the 40th Anniversary Celebration of the Coretta Scott King Awards at Oakland University. He is one of our favorite artists and we were very pleased when the director of Oakland University’s children’s literature program, Linda Pavonetti and her husband James brought Ashley to the Book Beat. We are lucky to now have available signed copies of his latest autobiography, Ashley Bryan: Words to My Life’s Song and several of his backlist books. If you are interested, please call the store or stop in soon.
“Ashley Bryan was born in a rough section of New York City in 1923, one of six children born to West Indian immigrants from Antigua. His early love of drawing, painting, and creating handmade books was encouraged by family, friends, and school teachers.” A more complete biography is available at the Children’s Library at the University of Southern Mississippi
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Posted in: African-American History, Author signings, Book Beat / Shop history, Children's Books | No Comments » |
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Love it or hate it – Aretha Franklin’s big-bowed BEDAZZLED hat was THE sensation at the inauguration. Now the question is – where was everyone else’s hat? Man, it was cold-as-hell out there, below freezing – so what’s the big deal about wearing hats? Aretha did it right – the girl’s got class, she’s a Goddess from Detroit, Queen of Soul, a big-time act with a big-bowed hat – let freedom ring! let it ring!
“Aretha Franklin’s now-famous bow-tied, gift-wrapped, jewel-studded, $179 inaugural hat was designed, produced and sold to the Queen of Soul by Mr. Song Millinery, a family-owned business on Woodward Avenue just south of W. Grand Boulevard, a couple of blocks from the Fisher Building.
Starting minutes after Franklin finished her distinctive rendition of “My Country Tis of Thee” Tuesday, the store’s phones started ringing.
By this afternoon, they had sold hundreds of hats. A store they work with in Dallas had sold 500 more, and the material was running out.
“People are calling from England, asking for the hat,” said Luke Song, who designed Franklin’s chapeau. I’m shocked. I had no idea. We did not expect this. Source: Bill McGraw,The Detroit Free Press
And that soulful whisper-shout rendition of “My Country ‘Tis of Thee” was an amazing piece of work – up there with Jimi Hendrix’s “Star Spangled Banner” – a moment suspended in time – she rocked the world!
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Posted in: African-American History, Barack Obama, Fashion, Music | No Comments » |
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The poet Elizabeth Alexander has been chosen to write and read a new poem to be presented at the Presidential Inauguration of Barack Obama on January 20th, 2009 in Washington D.C.. This will be only the fourth time in history that an American poet has been chosen to make an address at a Presidential Inauguration. At 46, Ms Alexander is a prize-winning poet (nominated for a Pulitzer Prize) and professor of African American studies at Yale University.
“I am obviously profoundly honored and thrilled,” she said. “Not only to have a chance to have some small part of this extraordinary moment in American history. . . . This incoming president of ours has shown in every act that words matter, that words carry meaning, that words carry power, that words are the medium with which we communicate across difference and that words have tremendous possibilities, and those possibilities are not empty.”full article: The Washington Post
Listen to the Poetry Foundation interview with Elizabeth Alexander on how the Derek Walcott-toting, June Jordan-quoting president will affect poets and poetry – podcast at: Obamapoetics at the National Poetry Foundation.
“Words matter. Language matters. We live in and express ourselves with language, and that is how we communicate and move through the world in community.
President-elect Obama has shown us at all turns his respect for the power of language. The care with which he has always used language along with his evident understanding that language and words bear power and tell us who we are across differences, have been hallmarks of his political career. My joy at being selected to compose and deliver a poem on the occasion of Obama’s Presidential inaugural emanates from my deep respect for him as a person of meaningful, powerful words that move us forward. And as his campaign was a movement much larger than the man himself, I understand that as a country we stand poised to make tremendous choices about our collective future. The distillation of language in poetry, its precision, can help us see sharply in the midst of many conundrums.
This is a powerful moment in our history. The joy I feel is sober and profound because so much struggle and sacrifice have brought us to this day. And there is so much work to be done ahead of us. Poetry is not meant to cheer; rather, poetry challenges, and moves us towards transformation. Language distilled and artfully arranged shifts our experience of the words – and the worldviews – we live in.
This is only the fourth time in our history that a President has featured a poet at his inaugural. I hope that this portends well for the future of the arts in our everyday and civic life.â€
Elizabeth Alexander
December 2008
Past Poet’s who have Read at a Presidential Inauguration:
In addition, James Dickey read ”The Strength of Fields” at Jimmy Carter’s January 19, 1977 inaugural gala at the Kennedy Center.
Source: Library of Congress, FAQ
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Posted in: African-American History, Author/artist interviews and lectures, Poetry, Politics | No Comments » |
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Some incredible interstellar material has been popping up, with reviews, seminars, photos, artwork and especially MP3s (with scarce sound material) by the maestro of the Omniverse, Sun Ra. The following are some choice sites in the Sun Ra digital realm:
MAGIC OF JUJU A cool blog site on out-jazz, world music, mystic, trance and ecstatic sounds… well worth bookmarking. Scroll to the bottom and check out several rare Saturn LPs ready for free download. Paradise. Don’t forget your passport. Also check out THE SATURN WEB “home of Sun Ra and his protean Arkestra,” with lots of links and things Saturnian.
The recent book PATHWAYS TO THE UNKNOWN: SUN RA, EL-SATURN & CHICAGO’S AFRO-FUTURIST UNDERGROUND contains ephemera, drawings and artwork from Sun Ra’s private notebooks. Also the infamous WFMU “Beware of the Blog” website has some MP3s of that rare Batman children’s LP of 1966 (traying to cash in on the Adam West TV series) featuring our true heroes: SUN RA & THE BLUES PROJECT DOES BATMAN & ROBIN
You Tube has many performance clips of Sun Ra worth viewing. This clip is of artist Kerry James Marshall lecturing on the art and music of Sun Ra taken from the recent Hyde Park, Chicago seminars on the life Sun Ra:
Sun Ra was born on the planet Saturn, ages ago, and spent some time on Earth using the power of music to demonstrate the virtues of discipline and harmony to members of this planet. Or, if you prefer a more straightforward approach to your musical biographies, Sun Ra was born Herman P. Blount in Birmingham, Alabama in 1914. Whichever way you choose to look at matters, some things are not in doubt : Sun Ra arrived on this planet via Birmingham on May 22, 1914, left this planet on May 30, 1993, and spent the majority of his time here working with groups of musicians to leave behind an amazingly large, diverse, diffuse, and beautiful catalogue of recordings and live performances the likes of which has never been seen before. — Scott McFarland from Furious.com
1981, Chicago performance with Mr. Mystery:
More links lifted from the gang at the Sun Ra listserve:
http://www.thestranger.com/lineout/2007/02/astral_traveling
> http://brownswood.5.forumer.com/index.php?showtopic=8988
i d/l-ed that mp3 file
http://www.otherworldsrecords.net//Downloads//SunRaMixPt1.mp3 and gave it a listen last night… not too bad! sort of a ‘love – the beatles’ thing happening with sun ra? an interesting selection of songs! personally, i like the first half, which seems to flow nicely,where as the second half seems to move from form to form, almost like they got bored or couldn’t figure out quite which song to use or
something? i know that doing an hour of mix is not easy! but that is just me.
btw, that is also at http://www.otherworldsrecords.net//downloads.html
with cover art and a link to d/l or stream.
i took a look at the setlist they provided on their website, and came up with a track timing. i think i have most of them correct. the times are plus or minus a second or two, as there is quite a bit of cross fading…
1. Sun Thoughts (excerpt) 0:19
2. Moon Dance 1:41
3. Midnight In Rome 1:42
4. Made A Mistake 3:46
5. Media Dream (excerpt) 0:23
6. Sleeping Beauty 2:25
7. Dreaming 3:15
8. On Jupiter 3:47
9. Interstellar Low Ways 1:28
10. Astro Black 0:23
11. Lanquidity 8:32
12. Somebody Else’s World 3:05
13. Tiny Pyramids 3:26
14. Neptune 2:03
15. Nuclear War 2:50
16. When There Is No Sun 2:18
17. The Design – Cosmos II (excerpt) 0:24
18. Celestial Road 1:44
19. I’ll Wait For You 2:50
20. Say 1:47
21. John Cage meets Sun Ra (excerpt) 0:22
22. UFO 3:05
23. The Perfect Man 2:23
24. Pink Elephants 3:17
25. Destination Unknown 2:50
[ 60:01 ]
> some great photos in the last link too. As well as this link:
> http://www.andyw.com/sunra/elsaturn.htm
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Posted in: African-American History, Art, Cool links, Film & Video, Music | No Comments » |
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Pat Flowers (1917-2000) was a friend and weekly customer at the Book Beat for almost 20 years. He was a sweet and kindly man, looking many years younger then his age. He had an enormous passion for reading and was obsessed with health and diet. On weekends we’d sometimes share a big salad and drank fruit smoothies at the local Pita Cafe. His reputation as a great stride pianist was established in the 40s and 50s. Pat was the principle student and musical heir to Fats Waller. His recordings were long out-of-print but remained alive as actively traded bootlegs that circulated around the world, easier found in Japan than in the USA. He never earned a dime from them. Listen to this beautiful MP3 of the Pat Flowers trio from a Decca recording in 1941: AFTER THE SUN GOES DOWN
Pat was a mainstay at the early Baker’s Keyboard lounge (established in 1934). “The main attraction up until 1954 was local pianist Pat Flowers, who was so popular that Clarence Baker no longer served food as the principal means of support, he provided entertainment nightly. Pat had Clarence change the name to Baker’s Keyboard Lounge. By the fifties Baker was booking jazz trios and quartets such as Fats Waller, Meade Lux, Errol Garner, Art Tatum, Tommy Flanagan and George Shearing.”
Baker’s Keyboard Lounge is still active as a landmark Detroit jazz showplace, it is acclaimed as “the world’s oldest jazz club” and during its 73 year history has had “almost every jazz musician of national importance” performing on its bandstand.
The following Pat Flowers article appeard in the Metro Times as “Jazzman Extraordinaire” by Kim Heron:
For decades he was a lost man of Detroit jazz, and when he passed away Oct. 6, (2000) at age 83, the word spread slowly. We might not have noticed here but for an inquiry to the Metro Times by a diligent librarian on behalf of a curious patron. Pat Flowers? His name rang a bell faintly as having been the pianist who had played at Baker’s Keyboard Lounge when the keyboard was the key to the club, back when, we were told, the club at Eight Mile and Livernois had cornfields for neighbors.
Calls to Jim Gallert and Lars Bjorn, authors of a forthcoming history of Detroit jazz, filled in details, as did a short piece that appeared in the newsletter of the Southeast Michigan Jazz Alliance. It outlined a career that might have been much more.
A conservatory-trained Cass Tech grad, Flowers was appearing at local clubs before he was out of his teens and became “an almost permanent fixture at Baker’s Keyboard Lounge … from about 1939 to the mid-1950s.†In the mid-1940s, Flowers recorded in New York with several of Fats Wallers’ former sidemen. His repertoire, according to the newsletter, ranged from Chopin to Waller to titles such as “Eight Mile Boogie.â€
He had, in fact, been a Waller protégé, said Gallert. A Coda magazine article quotes Waller introducing Flowers around, saying, “This young man will carry on when I leave off.†When Waller died in 1943, Flowers was billed as his successor, performing and recording with former Waller sidemen.
And if he didn’t have the Waller charisma, he certainly had the sound. “You knew you were in the presence of greatness,†Gallert said. But after Flowers’ career faltered in New York, he returned to Detroit and drifted off the main axis of the jazz community. Just what went wrong is hard to pin down. “He was one of the most private people,†said Gallert. And despite prodding, Flowers rebuffed Gallert’s attempts to interview him. He was working at the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club at the end. “He was a genius living in our midst,†said Gallert.Â
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Posted in: African-American History, Book Beat / Shop history, Music, Obituary | No Comments » |
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