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Poets, Rappers & Raconteurs: The Spoken Word - Links |
Barker, Les
"Poet" may be too strong a word for this British master of puns, rhymes
and doggerel verse. More accurately described as "Steven Wright meets Monty
Python." Lots of topical material.
Disposable
Heroes of Hiphoprisy
"Among rap's foremost proponents of multiculturalism and liberalism; pointedly
attacking hip-hop tenets like homophobia, misogyny and racism" (-UBL).
Musically complex, very listenable.
Heron,
Gil Scott
The best site for this seminal proto-rap artist. His fierce wake up call, "The
Revolution Will Not Be Televised," is a classic and ground zero for all
later political rap. His early work remains powerful and prophetic.
Kerouac,
Jack
There are a lot of sites dedicated to the seminal Beat novelist/poet, but a
search for Jack at Rhino's site returns info on his spoken word recordings.
They feature Kerouac reading over and between jazz/blues that ranges from tenor
sax to Steve Allen on piano.
Last
Poets
Proto-rappers, proto-slammers, the Last Poets put angry, hip, radical poetry
to acoustic African percussion. More edge and content than any of today's rappers
except Public Enemy. iMusic Site offers excellent bio, soundclips, store.
Lord
Buckley
Richard "Lord" Buckley (1906-1960): vaudeville comedian, storyteller, visionary
performance artist. His surrealistic rap drew from Harlem Renaissance, early
drug counterculture, and the expanding universe. Site has transcriptions and
discography. Recordings can be got here.
Massengill,
David
Though known mainly as a songwriter, Massengill has always been a great storyteller
in the grand old southern tradition, and storytelling is becoming more and more
a part of his performance art.
Phillips,
Bruce U. Utah
Labor organizer and folksinger and raconteur, Phillips is a walking, talking
history of the labor movement and its songs. Ani DiFranco has set his stories
to a hiphop backdrop, putting the nostalgic Wobblie past back in your face.
Public Enemy
This rap group of harsh, electronic prophets in paramilitary gear goes on a
historical rampage, intent on a social/political revolution. You may not like
it, but you'd better listen. Since one member left due to anti-Semitic remarks,
their aim is truer.
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