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Tag Archives: Gil Scott-Heron

Black Ice

Hip-hop poet Dark Ice began growing his terms of revolution back 1993 when he was referred to as Lamar Manson. A fascinating performer having a pro-family, anti-establishment message, Dark Ice worked well Philadelphia’s coffeehouse and poetry slam circuit hard, making himself a faithful local following on the way. It wouldn’t …

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Prince Charles

Joined up with by his City Defeat Bandand playing a distinctive wind synthesizer known as the Lyricon, Charles “Prince Charles” Alexander released a small number of wild synth-funk albums — 1981’s Gang Battle, 1982’s Rock Killers, and 1984’s Battle Zone — that attained more recognition in the U.K. than in …

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Four Below Zero

Four Below No, a fresh York-based quartet comprising Dornell Chavous, Moses McNeil, Cleveland Dickerson, and Harry Watson, had grandiose dreams of stardom that went unfulfilled. Equipped with music, they caught the eye of Patrick Adams and authorized with the maker/article writer/arranger’s P&P label in 1974; the music, “Inform Me Why …

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Ursula Rucker

Ursula Rucker is not a funky diva — she’s her own diva. Having collaborated with a few of music’s most advanced — the Silent Poets, Ruler Britt, Josh Wink, the Origins — Rucker offers honed her seductive spoken wordplay inside Philly spirit, hip-hop, and fresh jazz. She combines interpersonal consciousness …

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Watts Prophets

The West Coast’s response to the final Poets, Watts Prophets didn’t get quite the same recognition for his or her contributions to raising black consciousness and laying the foundations for rap. The group was shaped at the W Writer’s Workshop, a business began by screenwriter Budd Schulberg made to provide …

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Gil Scott-Heron

Probably one of the most important progenitors of rap music, Gil Scott-Heron’s aggressive, no-nonsense road poetry inspired a legion of intelligent rappers even though his engaging songwriting abilities placed him square within the R&B graphs later on in his profession, backed by increasingly modern production thanks to Malcolm Cecil and …

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Brian Jackson

Maker, composer, and musician Brian Jackson collaborated with Gil Scott-Heron on several influential and popular ’70s produces. The two fulfilled at Lincoln College or university, and later on teamed on such tracks as “The Container,” “H20 Gate Blues,” and “Johannesburg,” that was their most effective commercial solitary. Jackson later do …

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Charles “Prince Charles” Alexander

Joined up with by his City Defeat Bandand playing a distinctive wind synthesizer known as the Lyricon, Charles “Prince Charles” Alexander released a small number of wild synth-funk albums — 1981’s Gang Battle, 1982’s Rock Killers, and 1984’s Overcome Zone — that attained more recognition within the U.K. than in …

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Quincy Troupe

Quincy Troupe can be an writer and college teacher of literature in UCSD. Five series of his poetry have already been released, including Avalanche Espresso Home Press. Troupe also caused Mls Davis and co-authored the acclaimed Mls: The Autobiography. He provides received a Peabody Prize and two American Reserve Honours. …

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Saul Williams

First establishing himself mainly because an influential poet, and mainly because an award-winning screenwriter/actor, Saul Williams continued to determine himself mainly because an MC. His strategy wasn’t exactly good traditional college of hip-hop. His rhymes weren’t actually rhymes but instead his poetry shipped inside a frenzied spoken term manner which …

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