Riffs&Revolutions: Michael Gonzales Interviews Simone

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Simone can remember the exact moment when she first shared the stage with her jazz superstar mother Nina. “Most people in the audience probably didn’t even know that Nina Simone had a daughter,” she laughs over the telephone from her home in Pennsylvania. “I had been watching mom from the wings since I was a kid, but when she agreed to accompany me on piano as I sang ‘Music for Lovers,’ it was a magical moment.”

Recorded that same night in Ireland, Simone has used the track as the opening song on her debut disc Simone on Simone, a loving tribute to her late mother. “We performed together twice afterwards, in Chicago and Los Angeles, but none of those times eclipsed that first time.” Though Simone’s given name is Lisa Celeste Stroud, she choose the stage name as a salute to her mom.

Known for her rough exterior, gruff voice and musical genius, Nina Simone’s material like “Feeling Good” and “Sinnerman” are still vibrant today. Used in various films and television shows including Point of No Return and Six Feet Under, her haunting music has proved itself eternal.

Exiled from America and living in France, she died in 2003 from breast cancer at the age of 70.

“My mother’s spirit is always with me, and that was especially true when I was working on this project,” Simone says. A stage actress and performer who in 2001 played the lead role in the touring company of Aida, the last thing Simone planned on doing was recording covers of her mother’s music.

“I had my own material that I wanted to get to, but when I started going through mom’s sheet music, I reconsidered. I realized these were some of my favorite songs.” Yet, anyone expecting Simone to be an aural Xerox of her mother will be greatly disappointed. Recording with a nineteen-piece big band, Simone’s voice has a honeyed, theatrical tone.

“I’ve never wanted to be a replica of my mom,” Simone explains. “I knew if I wanted to be accepted as a true artist, I would have to sing my own way.” Somewhere in jazz heaven, Nina Simone is smiling.

Off the Bus: Marc Cooper on What President Obama Means

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Las Vegas, Nevada - My good friend Micah Sifry framed this historic day perfectly right about noontime. “The hands that picked the cotton are the hands that are picking the next President of the United States.”

Barack Obama’s election tonight is laden with so much significance it seems an impossible task to even attempt any systematic unpacking. But this much is for certain: the full impact of the Oval Office being occupied by a black man has yet to hit home. This single fact alone overshadows every other facet of his campaign and of this election.

Call it a cliché, but it is something I thought I would never see in my lifetime. Some of my friends, as recently as midnight last night, still didn’t believe it possible. But here we are at a moment of national redemption. And it’s a victory that conservatives and liberals, right and left, should claim and celebrate with equal pride.

This is no longer the America of forty or even of twenty-five or as few as ten years ago. Things do change and, sometimes, for the better. Racism, ignorance, bias and prejudice have neither evaporated nor been abolished. But anyone who believes our boiler-plate political discourse emerges intact from this stunning moment needs to be dispatched to the same pasture where John McCain will listlessly spend the rest of political eternity. No longer can it be said that a black child cannot dream of becoming President. No longer can it be said that Americans are but some TV-doped sheeple, easily managed and manipulated by some sort of right-wing media conspiracy. You thought that nothing would ever be the same after 9/11? Well, how about after a black man, his black wife and two black children move into the White House?

It’s unimaginable to yet measure what impact a President Obama will have on the way America is seen around the globe. It will be as confounding for others to think about us the same way they did a year ago as we did about ourselves. And, if I might say, just in the nick of time.

Perhaps History itself demanded that we pass through the pain and humiliation of the Bush era in order to merit the relief granted by this election. We have been forced to suffer through the most vile of administrations, one that has shown total disdain for the constitution, for the rule of law, for basic humanity. And this is the second most important takeaway from the election. After nearly three decades in which the power structure pandered to, exploited, refined and capitalized on all the worst of our collective base instincts, along comes a candidate who speaks only to our most humane and compassionate side. That says something striking about Barack Obama. And says it even more about the American people. One more victory we shouldn’t hesitate to claim.

Third, this is a generational change that makes not only good headlines and easy reporting narratives, but which also serves as a great gift to our children and theirs. The election of Barack Obama liberates a new generation from the now-dreary debates of a self-obsessed Boomer generation – be they wilting flower children or graying warriors of the right. I might be quick in saying so, but Obama’s landslide also effectively buries the most vicious of American political gargoyles – the culture war. If not to Siberia, well then to the wilds of Alaska, have been exiled those who have so cynically divided and polarized us on the bogus issues of Gays, Guns and God. Good riddance.

I make no predictions as to where this tectonic shift will lead us. As McCain himself said recently, “Nothing in American is written.” The future, thankfully, is finally in the hands of a new generation. And at the very moment I write this sentence, I see thousands of young people around me in this ballroom explode in ecstasy as NBC officially projects Obama as the 44th President of the United States. What a moment! I, too, am overcome by emotion as it all seems at once so unreal and yet so well-earned by all of us. I can only compare this to the sensation I felt exactly twenty years ago at 3 am once October morning when Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet lost his own self-engineered plebiscite and was voted out of power. Throngs poured into the street and strangers embraced and cried and danced just as they are here, this very moment, in the Brasilia ballroom of the Rio Hotel.

Just like that night Santiago , no one knew what loomed in the future. It was enough to know, in fact, that once again a future was impossible.

Tonight we know that a black man whose middle name is Hussein has been elected president. The ghosts of Jim Crow and Bull Connors have been exorcised from the most tenebrous shadows of American life.

We know that we have witnessed the collapse of entire political era based on the narrowest and greediest principles of social Darwinism.

We know that Americans resisted and rejected a puerile campaign of fear commenced, at first, by Hillary Clinton and shamelessly escalated by a doddering John McCain.

We know that Americans are capable of repudiating those who would impose upon us a politically illiterate huckster as a vice-presidential candidate.

We know that Americans can no longer tolerate the exercise of torture in the name of freedom.

We know that Americans will soon demand the shut down of Guantanamo.

We know we will no longer suffer the indignity of watching a President unable to speak in public and incapable of understanding and – uninterested in–the world around him.

We know we will have a new President who demonstrates an intelligence, a thoughtfulness and a seriousness that has long been a stranger to the White House.

We know that when asked if we could do it, we answered with a throaty Yes We Can.

And we did.

Cheap Thrills: Celebrating Obama’s Blackness

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Newsflash: Obama is the first (half) African-American president of the United States of America. He’s Black! Yay!

I recently attended Essence Magazine’s Woman Who Are Shaping the World Leadership Summit—an event attended nearly exclusively by African-Americans. And in this company, we as a group enjoyed what I like to call “first Black president glee”… and we enjoyed it with pride and vigor.

But conversely, I’ve found that in mixed race or predominantly White company (where I usually dwell), I feel an urgency to either dampen or gloss over said excitement. To subtly sneak it in between praise of Obama’s healthcare and tax plans. Perhaps I assume that mentioning my joy, as a single-standing issue, will prompt eye-rolls.  Anger. Or worse, fear. And, judging from comments made by McCain supporter Leah Moreland on NPR’s October 24th episode of All Things Considered, perhaps I’m right.PH2008110102403

But maybe not. Because just this weekend, I’ve read numerous stories from major news outlets  discussing the historic nature of Obama’s presidential bid as it pertains to race. One piece in particular really got me: the Washington Post profiled 3 African-American voters, all of whom are over 90 years old. Here’s a clip from the article:

Arthur Greene, 91, uses a wheelchair and rarely leaves his Arlington County home except for church on Sundays and doctor’s appointments. But he wasn’t going to miss this chance to vote.

About a month ago, when Meals on Wheels brought Greene his meal, they also dropped off an absentee ballot. Greene remembers growing up in Jim Crow Virginia, looking for restaurants that didn’t display “white only” signs in Rosslyn or Baileys Crossroads, or being forced to ride in the back of the trolleys between Arlington and the District.

“I never thought it would happen in my lifetime,” he said of Obama’s campaign. “I think if I can see this and if it happens, I’ll thank my lucky stars and my God for letting me live so long to be able to see the advancements of my people.”

Greene spent most of his life working as an exterminator, traveling to large houses in the white, affluent Virginia suburbs such as Vienna and Falls Church. At times, some of the homeowners wouldn’t allow him inside.

“I was trying to make a living the best I knew how,” he recalled.

(P.S. That’s not Arthur Greene pictured above. That’s Ruth Worthy, 91, who has been canvassing for Obama once or twice a week in Washington, D.C.)

I know I support Obama for the whole package and not just the packaging. But, for better or worse, the packaging still makes a difference in this country. And these testimonies… wow. They hit me on such a deep level. A level no economic policy speech can reach.

And I know I’m not alone in this. Black people feel the pride, but I’m guessing people of other races do too. So let’s all try just being OPEN with our “first Black president glee”. We can all embrace it, because we all made it happen. Together.

Related: NYT – Obama-Inspired Black Voters Warm to Politics

Amuse Bouche: This Dreamy Day in History

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Renee Descartes also had a dream. But it had nothing to do with civil rights and equality and all the lofty goals we’ve come to associate with “having dreams” and discussing them in writing or speeches.

On November 10, 1619, the Frenchman, confined—due to chronic gout—to a dressing gown, had dreams that were to change modern philosophy forever.

What those dreams actually consisted of is no longer clear, but what they led to has been studied in libraries and universities, discussed in coffee shops and bedrooms and mused over while walking or driving since the 17th century.

Descartes’ dreams forced him to wonder whether waking life was not, perhaps a dream as well (anybody who’s seen The Matrix…sound familiar?). Those nocturnal journeys spawned his Meditations on First Philosophy, a work in six parts or “meditations” exploring questions behind our existences, that of God, our cognizance, perfection, the difference between the real and the perceived and the relationship between the mind and body (to Descartes, two separate entities).

Perhaps the most famous, if not most important, point to come from those meditations (and thus those dreams), was the phrase known as the “cogito” for Descartes’ “cogito ergo sum.” Realizing that much of his sensory reactions could lead him to false beliefs (e.g. the thought that a branch was bent because it appeared so in water) encouraged him to realize he must exist.

That is, possessing the ability to doubt made him a thinking being and thus a being (because, after all, something that questions cannot not be, right?): cogito ergo sum, “I think, therefore I am.”

There’s no way to know whether someone else would have come to these conclusions or not. Perhaps eventually that theoretical he or she would have. People have been plagued with existential doubts and questions and crises since they’ve been around (I guess that’s the whole point…), but no one could possibly have experienced the same thought process and the same dreams as Descartes did…not in the same exact manner and at the same time or day, November 10, 1619.

Obama: Now He’s Really A Celebrity

Monday, November 10th, 2008
Michelle and Barack Obama out for dinner on Saturday night.

Michelle and Barack Obama out for dinner on Saturday night.

The McCain camp scored one of its few victories over the course of the campaign when it labeled Barack Obama a celebrity in advertising spots that ran in August. The criticism stuck because in many ways it was true: Obama was drawing thousands of adoring fans to every campaign rally he held.

But now that Obama is President-elect, Americans can obsess about their new, handsome Commander-in-Chief and his beautiful family without fear of being labeled star hounds. On Friday, the Obama camp posted election-night photos of the family waiting for Barack to be declared the winner on Flickr, and the page wouldn’t display for a while as visitors eager to see the new first family overloaded the site.

The Obamas are getting the real celebrity treatment: There are now grainy photographs chronicling their every move. The Huffington Post breathlessly declared Sunday, “Obamas Eat Out For First Time Since Win.”

Barack and Michelle Obama are meeting with George and Laura Bush Monday afternoon for their first official tour of the White House, and Washington insiders are predicting awkwardness as Obama meets with someone he has spent the last months criticizing on the campaign trail. But while Obama meets with the exiting president, continues to assemble his cabinet, and weighs what policy initiatives to take on first, us lowly citizens are tackling the real issue the first family needs to address, asking “what kind of dog should Malia and Sasha get?” [Ed note—presidential celebrities are just like you and me!]

Obama addressed this concern at his first press conference as president-elect on Friday.

With respect to the dog, this is a major issue. I think it’s generated more interest on our Web site than just about anything. We have—we have two criteria that have to be reconciled. One is that Malia is allergic, so it has to be hypo-allergenic. There are a number of breeds that are hypo-allergenic. On the other hand, our preference would be to get a shelter dog. But obviously, a lot of shelter dogs are mutts, like me. So the—so, whether we’re going to be able to balance those two things, I think, is a pressing issue on the Obama household.

Obama has been praised for running a brilliant campaign, but clearly he knows the real way to get into Americans’ hearts: talk about pets. Just Google “Obama family dog” and there will be thousands of stories and hundreds of breed suggestions for the Obamas to consider.

Even Bill Kristol is concerned a dog-friendly Obama will be an unbeatable president. Writing about Obama’s press conference, the conservative New York Times columnist said, “Here, in a few sentences, Obama did the following: He deepened his bond with every dog lover in America. He identified with every household that’s tried to figure out what kind of dog to get. He touched every parent with a kid allergic to pets. He showed compassion by preferring a dog from a shelter. And he demonstrated a dry and slightly politically incorrect wit by commenting that ‘a lot of shelter dogs are mutts like me.’”

A common refrain during the campaign from McCain and others was that Obama was an unknown. Now that he will be the next president, there is a demonstrated hunger from Americans to learn more about Obama and his family. What new styles will Michelle introduce? Where will the girls go to school? Will Barack follow through on his pledge to install a basketball court in the White House?

We’ll all be able to follow along as the Obamas make their new home in Washington. Some celebrities complain about the lack of privacy in their lives. But that doesn’t apply when it’s the president, right?