Showing posts with label K'naan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label K'naan. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Check it ... The Messengers: Episode 3, Bob Dylan


J. Period and K'naan have been going in with their Messengers project, a remix tribute to Fela Kuti, Bob Marley and Bob Dylan. Episode #3 celebrates America’s reluctant Civil Rights song leader and poetic voice, Bob Dylan. The entire project is dope!



Check the full Episodes of The Messengers

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

J. Period + Knaan "The Messengers" Preview


Check out three-song preview of The Messengers from J. Period and K'Naan. The Messengers is a genre-blending remix project that pays tribute to three musical icons: Fela Kuti, Bob Marley and Bob Dylan. The preview is RIDICULOUS! Check it (Click to Download The Messengers)



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Monday, June 01, 2009

Check It ... K'naan "Dayless Nite"

Never heard of dude? Well, you should. He's amazing. We've featured him a few times on the blog. He also keeps it political and have discussed the Somali pirate situation several times too. The dude is dope! Check out this remix of Cudi's Day 'N Nite ... Dayless Nite (click to download)

K'naan response to South Park episode on Somali Pirates
K'naan talks about Somali Pirates



[Leak via @iamknaan and @wale via twitter]




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Sunday, April 26, 2009

THE BRIEFING: K'naan Response

K'naan responded to the recent South Park episode via Twitter. Pretty dope response to what's going on, so we felt the need to repost here. We featured his point of view on the site before (A Different Point of View)

If you're on Twitter follow K'naan at twitter.com/Iamknaan. Here's what K'naan had to say.

Just a few days ago, I was cracking up, laughing about the hilarious episode South Park did on Kanye. I often hold the creators of this show with a certain regard, for I believe, good comedy will from time to time, hold a mirror up to society's collective face. So that we may look at ourselves and burst out in laughter, even if the frowns of self examination follow. I gotta say though, Kanye handled it well. The homie and I have some mutual friends and I don't remember ever making a remark to anyone about his personal choices. Even when his presentation of his own ego swallowed him whole, I always found the honesty in his music more of an appealing focus. Now, what I wanted to write about isn't really Fishsticks, but honestly, who would have thought South Park would be the first major American TV program to do a real piece on the Somali piracy crisis?


First of all, they used real Somali voices, which is always a point of charm for the Somali people. We DON'T LIKE NOBODY PLAYIN ON OUR LANGUAGE!! Black Hawk Down was unbearable in that, it was like being told you were watching a true portrayal of the Bronx's early days of Hip Hop, except Cool Herc and em spoke with a German accent. 

The F*&#!! 


Secondly, they touched on the supreme lawlessness, poverty and humanitarian crisis facing the country. Cartman says "In Somalia, people have no laws, they have no rules and they never grow old" The response? The golden truth of the Somali tragedy: "They never grown old because they die before they're 30!"


They talked about the toxic waste issue which I have been quite vocal about. "Even the fish here are radio active" says Kyle. Could 60 Minutes, Anderson Cooper or any of the supposably serious outlets not have looked into this issue? Should it take a witty jewish cartoon boy to make this statement? Well, I think the answer is: When fear grips the rest, comedy is where the truth is left. It happens everywhere. In Somalia, when political theatre was being suppressed, and serious poetry could not be composed to criticize oppression and inequality, the poets would use comedians to get the word out. 


So while we all find relief in laughter, I would argue that there is more to the chuckles than meets the ear. Because even pain is funny, so long as we're not laughing at it, but about it. 


South Park is not without its imperfections though. It seems the clever creators can also be guilty of the African stereotypes. If you look at the emotional moment of the episode, presenting the young Somali pirate's puzzlement over the American's fascination with lawlessness and piracy, he explains "my mother is dying of AIDS". Now while the disease is a major issue in some African countries, it's about the same of an issue in Somalia as it is in Greece. The reason for the comparison is that the two countries, Greece and Somalia, are roughly around the same in their population. The HIV prevalence rate for Greece is 0.2, while in Somalia it's at 0.5. Unicef estimates that in 2007, the number of people in Somalia living with HIV is 24, 000, Out of an estimated 11 and a half million people.

 

It's a relatively low number considering most of the new cases stem from high border crossing and mass internal movement. For greece, it's at 19, 000 out of its 11 million population. 


So Clearly the problem of AIDS in Somalia, isn't comparable to say that of Botswana, with its heart aching 23.9 prevalence rate for its meager population 

of 1.8 million. And while it's important to say something about the HIV problem in Africa, Somalia is the wrong country to profile it through. I suppose it would strike us all as odd, if some American sitcom, (during the warm and fuzzy parts where we all get our life lessons) made a remark about Greece's "AIDS problem". So is it acceptable to do so about Somalia because it's in Africa?


All in all, while a part of me wants to resist being vocal  about Everything Somalia, I can't help but speak on what I am most passionate about. One blogger said it best, "FatBeard is to K'naan like Fishsticks is to Kanye". 


We can all complain about the imperfections of major media outlets, but I wanna take a moment, to thank God for Jon Stewart, thank God for Dave Chappelle and thank God for South Park. 


Peace.

K'naan



Click to watch the full episode

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

THE BRIEFING: Business as Usual

Just two days after US Naval forces saved a captured American captain, Pirates continue to seize ships on their coast. On Monday Somali pirates vowed to retaliate for the deaths of three of the four pirates who were holding the American captain.

"Every country will be treated the way it treats us," said one of the pirates to the Associated Press. "In the future, America will be the one mourning and crying. We will retaliate for the killings of our men."

From CNN.com

(CNN) -- Pirates off the coast of Somalia hijacked a second freighter Tuesday, a NATO spokesman said.

Pirates on four skiffs seized the 5,000-ton MV Sea Horse, a Lebanese-owned and Togo-flagged vessel, Cmdr. Chris Davies said from NATO's Maritime Component Command Headquarters in Northwood, England.

Earlier Tuesday, pirates hijacked the MV Irene EM, a 35,000-ton, Greek-owned bulk carrier in the Gulf of Aden, Davies and the European Union's Maritime Security Center said.

The crew of the Greek carrier was thought to be unhurt, and ships have been warned to stay clear of the area for fear of further attack, the security center said.

NATO has an ongoing anti-piracy mission off Somalia called Operation Allied Protector. The mission involves four ships covering more than 1 million square miles, Davies said.

A U.S.-led international naval task force, Combined Task Force-151, also is patrolling in the region.


For a different perspective, check K'naan speaking out.

THE BRIEFING: A Different Point of View

Musician K'naan, who is a Somalia native, provided a different perspective to the Somalian Pirate issue (click to view interview). I thought the interview was very interesting and provided another side to the story. And as he mentions in the interview, a side often not covered by national media. Check it out.

Monday, April 13, 2009

What I'm Listening to Right Now... K'naan


Why don't you own Troubadour? K'naan, a Somalia native, is a true poet and artist. Check out Waving Flag live (click to view video).