The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #121227   Message #2645626
Posted By: Azizi
01-Jun-09 - 11:53 AM
Thread Name: BS: Blogs About People of Color & Culture
Subject: RE: BS: Blogs About People of Color & Culture
Not all blogs that are "about people of color & culture" are launched and hosted by People of Color.

Yesterday I came across this jazz blog that provides information about various musicians, including some who are PoC:

http://www.jazzmusicblog.net/ Jazz Music Blog

Here's that Blog's "About Us" statement:

"ABOUT JAZZ MUSIC BLOG
Our research department goes to great lengths to discover bloggers who possess creative, informative and entertaining qualities and to then present these bloggers to you, with their respective links, on the 1800blogger platform. We encourage our readers to click on these links to learn more about the blogger and their writings."

-snip-

To give you a sense of the writing on that blog, here's an excerpt from an article about Rashaan Roland Kirk:

Captain Kirk
BY ADMIN | MAY 28, 2009
Submitted by Jazz Note SDP

"Theodore "Rashaan" Roland Kirk, that is. For some strange reason, I have a connection in my mind between Roland Kirk, Pharaoh Sanders, and Sun Ra. I always think of the other two when thinking of the one. I can kinda guess the connection between the latter two. Sanders' Karma, with its remarkable epic 'The Creator has a Master Plan,' reminds me of the cosmic mythology that Sun Ra wove around himself. But why Roland Kirk?

Well, both T.R. Kirk and Sun "Herman Poole Blount" Ra had health problems. But surely that ain't it. Anyway, Rashaan Roland Kirk is a good story. He lost his sight by the age of two, and learned to push his soul into music at the Ohio State School for the Blind. That the latter offered music training is a sobering note for us conservatives who are always complaining about public spending. One Roland Kirk is worth a few months of life for General Motors, in my book.

Kirk stretched the envelope quite a bit. He became famous for playing up to three horns at the same time, and for a circular breathing technique that allowed him to continue notes beyond the brief time that mother nature allots. But none of that is really to the point. I have only digested a couple (well, three actually) of Rashaan Roland Kirk's works: Kirk's Works, and the two in one combination Rip, Rig, and Panic and Please Don't You Cry Dear Edith. They are both very good, but Rip, Rig, Please. … is a masterpiece on the highest shelf.

Listening to this recording, one can only wonder if there was anything this man couldn't do besides see, or anything he didn't know. The range of instruments over which he has command is awesome, and the depth of texture and sound on each instrument is the kind of thing that can make a merely brilliant player throw his horn off the second street bridge."..