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DONNA'S CAFE NEWSLETTER                               vol.1
TAKE FIVE WITH DONNA
IN THIS ISSUE
The Joy of Music
Featured Artist
The Last Poets
UPCOMING EVENTS
March 22nd - Karaoke 6-8pm
March 24th - & every Friday 6-9pm The Randy Ford Trio playing Jazz
April 5th - Real Talk In Jeans...It Ain't Fancy But It's Real 5-8pm Real relationship conversations
April 21st - Open Mic/Spoken Word 6-8pm
 
Welcome reader,
Pull up a chair, relax and let's get started!


 
The Joy of Music
Music is a universal language, even if we don't understand the words we can "feel" the feeling. Music can be heard in many different forms, the sound of a voice, the song of a bird, even the sound of the wheels on a passing train.
Music can affect moods, think of how House music makes you want to dance and Jazz makes you want to chill!
 Anonymous- "Music is what feelings sound like"
Dexter Gordon
Photo courtesy of Dexter Gordon Collection
Featured Artist
Dexter Gordon
To find out about this fascinating artist step right over here More about Dexter Gordon 

The Last Poets

The Last Poets are a group of poets and musicians, rising from the late 1960s African American civil rights movement. Jalaludin M. Nuriddin, an Army paratrooper who chose to go to jail instead of fight in the Vietnam War, founded the group in prison after converting to Islam and learning to spiel, an earlier form of hip-hop emceeing.
 
With Umar Bin Hassan and Abiodun Oyewole, Nuriddin was released from prison, joined the East Wind workshop in Harlem, and began performing their spiels, along with music, on the street. The group adopted the name the Last Poets in 1969 from a South African writer named Little Willie Copaseely, who believed he was in the last era of poetry before guns would take over. They released an LP in 1970, The Last Poets, which reached the Top Ten album charts. Oyewole was arrested for robbery before a tour could begin, and he was replaced by Nilajah and featured "Whitey on The Moon," a classic protest anthem depicting social and racial divisions. 
 
The follow-up, This is Madness, featured more radical and politically charged poems, which resulted in the group being listed as part of the counter-intelligence program founded by then-President Richard Nixon. Following that album, Hassan joined a southern-based religious sect and was replaced by Suliaman El-Hadi in time for Chastisement (1972). The album introduced a sound the group called jazzoetry, a mix of jazz and funk with poetry. At Last (1974), was a free-jazz album. The popularity of the group declined during the remainder of the 1970s, and Nilajah left. 
 
In the 1980s, however, the group became popular with the rise of hip-hop, collaborating with Bristol-based British post punk band the Pop Group and others. It returned to recording in its own right in 1984 with Oh, My People and its follow-up, Freedom Express (1988). Hassan and Jalal worked on several solo projects until 1995, when two groups using the name formed. Jalal and El Hadi released Scatterrap while Oyewole and Hassan released Holy Terror. The group's founding members reunited for 1997's Time Has Come, its only release to date on a major label. Recently, the Last Poets collaborated with Common on the song "The Corner." 
The Last Poets stands as the true originator of hip-hop emceeing. With withering attacks on everything from racists to the American government to the bourgeoisie, their spoken-word albums preceded politically laced R&B projects such as Marvin Gaye's What's Going On and foreshadowed the work of hard-hitting hip-hop groups such as Public Enemy.

 
Information courtesy of Discogs  
 
Featured Recipe
As the weather warms my thoughts turn to a lighter fare. One of my favorites is a smoothie made from fresh fruit and honey. In my blender I mix blueberries, peaches and strawberries with vanilla yogurt and honey, then add ice. Mix everything in the blender first before you add the ice, or the honey will not mix well! You can even add protein for that extra bit of healthy! Enjoy!
Keep on being Jazzy but remember to Take Five!

Sincerely,
Donna 

 


Donna Adams 
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