DJ Premier officially Responds to Guru and Addresses the Letter Released by Solar

What a class act.. and good man.. DJ Premier did what any ‘real adult’ would do.. He showed love.. make3s me even angrier that such an ugly letter smashing him was allowed out by Solar..

http://www.djpremierblog.com/

IT WAS A SAD DAY FOR ME TO GET CONFIRMATION ON THE DEATH OF A MAN WHO I WILL CONTINUE TO CALL MY BROTHER, KEITH ELAM, BETTER KNOWN AS GURU OF THE LEGENDARY GANG STARR.

FROM 1988-2004, WE EXPERIENCED SO MUCH SUCCESS TOGETHER THAT WE WERE ABLE TO EXPAND OUR BUSINESSES INDEPENDENTLY AND GIVE EACH OTHER WHAT GURU CALLED “CREATIVE SPACE”, BEFORE PLANNING TO REUNITE FOR OUR 7TH LP WHEN THE TIME WAS RIGHT. TRAGICALLY, WE WILL NEVER REACH THAT DAY.

I’VE BEEN ASKED TO COMMENT ON A LETTER SPEAKING ILL OF ME WHICH WAS SUPPOSEDLY WRITTEN BY GURU IN HIS DYING DAYS. ALL I WILL SAY ABOUT IT IS THAT OUR TIME TOGETHER WAS BEAUTIFUL, WE BUILT A HIP HOP LEGACY TOGETHER, AND NO ONE CAN RE-WRITE HISTORY OR TAKE AWAY MY LOVE FOR HIM. ONE THING I WOULD NEVER DO IS PLAY AROUND WITH THE TRUTH ABOUT HIS LIFE.

I WILL CELEBRATE GURU’S LIFE… I WILL HONOR HIS MEMORY… I WILL GRIEVE WITH THE ELAM FAMILY OVER HIS UNTIMELY DEATH… I WILL REMEMBER THE GANG STARR FOUNDATION AND ALL OF THE ORIGINAL MEMBERS OF GANG STARR WHO CAME BEFORE ME – WE ALL KNOW EACH OTHER… MOSTLY, I WILL CHERISH EVERYTHING WE CREATED TOGETHER AS GANG STARR, FOREVER. I’M GONNA MISS HEARING HIS SIGNATURE MONOTONE VOICE WHEN HE WALKS IN THE ROOM, BUT THE SONGS WILL ALWAYS BRING IT BACK TO ME….HIS RHYME FLOWS WERE INSANE, AND I WILL NEVER REMOVE HIM FROM MY HEART AND SOUL…….REST IN PEACE TO THE MAN WHO FELT “SATISFACTION FROM THE STREET CROWD REACTION” … I LOVE YOU GOO…….DJ PREMIER

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NY Times Talks w/ Guru’s Brother About His Death-Solar Responds to Skepticism Over Letter

Thank God we got some information about Guru’s passing from his family… The NY Time’s Music writer Jon Carmanica gives us a rund own with remarks from Guru’s  brother Harry Elam Jr.. there’s no mention of any of the controversy surrounding Guru’s ‘supposed’ letter and all of his belongings and son going off to live with Solar…

In another article posted at http://www.rhymeswithsnitch.com/2010/04/gurus-family-casts-doubt-on.html

Here’s an excerpt from a longer release:

GURU died far too young but he was, and we are, proud of all his many legendary musical contributions.

The family is not aware of any foundations established by GURU.  We know and understand that countless fans want to express their condolences and love and, to that end, we are planning a memorial event in the near future that will be all-inclusive. Please look for further details from the family as they become available.

Solar on the other hand responded to the outrage over the letter to MTV..

He’s quoted as saying 

“I mean, it’s ridiculous,” he said. “Guru knew this time would come. The great artist he is, us being intelligent people, we knew there was going to have to be a statement relating to this. Unfortunately, there are those who have the wicked agenda, and just can’t accept that Guru and I have handled this thing as men and not children, and this is how men of honor handle their business. He arranged his press release. I’m the repository of Guru’s life story. I recorded his life story for book and for movies. We’re not foolish. He was diagnosed with cancer well over a year ago. It’s been operations and so forth. It would be ridiculous for him to not be prepared.”

 Guru had been sick for more than a year with multiple myeloma..

-Davey D-

Guru, Rapper Known for Social Themes, Dies at 47

By JON CARAMANICA

Guru, the gravel-voiced rapper who as a member of the duo Gang Starr was one of the most expressive rappers of the 1990s and a major figure in bridging hip-hop and jazz, died Monday in New York. He was 47.

He learned he had multiple myeloma last summer and was hospitalized for related respiratory problems in February, his brother, Harry Elam Jr., said. Soon afterward he slipped into a coma, from which he did not recover, his brother said.

Though Guru came to be known as one of the formative rappers of the flourishing New York hip-hop scene of the late 1980s and early ’90s, he was not a native. Born Keith Elam in the Roxbury section of Boston on July 17, 1962, he began his career in the mid-1980s as MC Keithy E, but soon switched to Guru (which he later turned into an acronym, for Gifted Unlimited Rhymes Universal).

In 1988, after an early version of Gang Starr splintered, Guru met DJ Premier — Christopher Martin, a Houston transplant to Brooklyn — forming a partnership that would lead to six influential and critically acclaimed albums, two of which, “Moment of Truth” and the hits collection “Full Clip,” were certified gold.

Together, Guru and DJ Premier made archetypal East Coast rap, sharp-edged but not aggressive, full of clear-eyed storytelling and suavely executed, dusty sample-driven production. In the early 1990s, as hip-hop was developing into a significant commercial force, Gang Starr remained committedly anti-ostentatious. As a lyricist, Guru was often a weary moralist weighed down by the tragedy surrounding him, though the group’s music was almost always life-affirming, never curmudgeonly.

From a young age, Guru had been “creative like crazy,” his sister Tricia Elam said. “Dynamic and curious, eager and ambitious.” But his artistic impulses didn’t neatly line up with his middle-class upbringing.

Guru’s father, Harry Elam, was the first black judge in the Boston municipal courts, and his mother, Barbara, was the co-director of library programs in the Boston public school system. Before beginning his rap career in earnest, Guru graduated from Morehouse College in Atlanta in 1983 and took graduate classes at the Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan. He worked briefly as a social worker.

Leaving school to pursue a rap career flummoxed his family, said Guru’s brother, Harry Jr. “I was on my way to becoming a professor, and my brother is dropping out of grad school, and I’m saying, ‘What are you doing?’ But he believed in it and followed it through.”

Besides his brother and sister, Guru is survived by his parents; another sister, Jocelyn Perron, and a son, Keith Casim.

Guru’s music bridged generations in part thanks to his career-long engagement with jazz, even after hip-hop largely ended its flirtation with it in the early 1990s. As a solo artist, Guru released four volumes of his “Jazzmatazz” series, the first of which, from 1993, was one of the most influential in the fleeting jazz-rap movement of the day. And “Jazz Thing” a Gang Starr collaboration with Branford Marsalis, was used over the closing credits of the Spike Lee film “Mo’ Better Blues.”

For all of Guru’s gifts as a storyteller — songs like “Just to Get a Rep” are among the starkest tales hip-hop has told — he benefited from an unusually forceful voice, rich and burred around the edges. It was tough to compete with, which he explained on “Mostly Tha Voice,” from Gang Starr’s fourth album, “Hard To Earn”: “A lot of rappers got flavor, and some got skills/ But if your voice ain’t dope, then you need to chill.”

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Bakari Kitwana: Hip Hop Activism & Politics The Next Steps to Take Under Obama-His Keynote Address at Mills College

This past weekend author, journalist and political commentator Bakari Kitwana swung through the Bay Area and gave a keynote speech at the Hip Hop 4 Change conference held at Mills College in Oakland.  His speech was insightful as he explained to the capacity crowd that a lot rests on their shoulders and that they will have to step their game up and be keenly aware  that they are under the gun by politicians and other outside forces who feel they are fair game to taken advantage of and be politically exploited. Bakari laid out a clear road map for people who identify with Hip Hop to follow. 

We broke the 40 minute speech into 4 parts. Here in pt1 Bakari centers his remarks around premise that  Hip Hop played a key role in getting President Obama elected but have not mastered the ways to hold him accountable.  He noted that many have become discouraged and checked out of politics without fully considering that getting people to stay away and not be political engaged is a desired goal by those holding power. Here Bakari talks about the sudden emergence of the Tea Party. He explains that while there maybe folks showing up at these rallies who are legitimately concerned and angry at the government, we should realize its a media created phenomenon. Bakari goes in as he speaks on the topic of racism, media manipulation and thought control.  He also goes in on the topic of how and why we must hold President Obama accountable. He feels that many of us have not mastered this task and sadly many have not spent anytime figuring out what angles to take to push a President he feels is the consummate politician and can be pushed..  He concludes by talking about the biggest threat facing our generation which is incarceration. He explains that this is not an individual scenario but one that needs to be looked at with the understanding that its systematic for a number of reasons deeply rooted in social, political  and economic agendas by many in power.  He breaks this down..   The Hip Hop Generation and its role in Electoral Politics, The Tea Party, Racism ,Media Manipulation and Thought control,  How to Hold President Obama Accountable..Stopping the Incarceration Tide.

You can hear that part of the speech by clicking the link below..

Bakari Kitwana-pt1 Mills College Speech

 In pt 2 Bakari lays out a lot of detail about the economy. This is one of his areas of expertise  and the current topic being addressed by his Rap Sessions Town halls. He goes in on this topic and explains how the flow of wealth has changed directions and talks about the new economic centers springing up around the world in Asia, Russia and India. He notes that this generation will have to think globally if they choose to be entrepreneurs and increasingly so if they even wish to find decent employment and we must familiarize ourselves with what is going on in these places.  Many traditional jobs have left the country and will not be returning.

Bakari talks about some of the issues that comedian/social critic Bill Crosby brought up during his recent tour about personal responsibility and why much of what he said was overly simplified. He notes that while personal responsibility is indeed something we all must fully embraced, part of what that entails is fully understanding today’s social-political landscape.  Bakari spends some time laying out some unique challenges ranging from the increasing divide between the Have and Have Nots that started with colonialism, was perfected with neo-colonialism and now in full swing with globalization.  Bakari parallels some of this with the birth and evolution of Hip Hop music and culture.

He talks about the onslaught of new laws designed to contain people and the militarization of police departments which first emerged in cities like LA under former police chief Daryl Gates to suppress organizations like the Black Panthers. Those militarized police forces stayed around and grew after the Panthers were destroyed to wreak havoc in our communities  and continued to grow and be a suppressing force in our communities as they fought the war on gangs, the war on drugs and now the war on terror.  Bakari stresses that these and a host of other problems are challenges that must be tackled by today’s post civil rights and Hip Hop generation…

Bakari Kitwana-pt2 Mills College Speech

Pt3 of Bakari’s remarks  are perhaps the most eye-opening and humbling.  Here he talks ver specifically about the emergence and roles played by Hip Hop activists and Hip Hop political organizations. He talks about the beginnings of groups like the Bay Area’s Third Eye Movement stepping up to Fight prop 21 ( The 10th anniversary of that movement is being celebrated this week ) to the formation of the Hip Hop Political Convention. He talks about the emergence of groups like League of Young Voters, Hip Hop Congress and various other youth movements around the country as well as Russell Simmons Hip Hop Summit Action Network. Bakari goes in and explains how much of the work people were doing around the country was fragmented but through Hip Hop and new technology we were able to connect and become aware of each others work, triumphs and tribulations  in detail the work many of these groups did to politicize and excite the Hip Hop generation and how that laid the ground work for Barack Obama’s historic presidential campaign which many leaders within those organizations played key roles.

Bakari contends that there was a movement and momentum that was sidetracked and severely slowed down with Obama’s election because folks got caught up in his agenda which was to win an election and not OUR collective agenda which was to be long-term fixtures designed to address critical issues facing our communities Bakari goes in on those points and leaves us with a lot to think about..  

Bakari Kitwana-pt3 Mills College Speech

Here in pt 4 Bakari concludes his talk by laying out ten concrete steps the Hip Hop generations needs to take to solves some of the unique challenges facing us as well as the steps we need to take to be better equipped and aware when engaging today’s politic climate.  Bakari lays out some important solutions..

 Bakari Kitwana-pt4 Mills Collage Speech

Below is a link to the interview we did with Bakari at the conclusion of his speech. He clarifies a few points. Here’s what he has to say

Interview w/ Bakari Kitwana after Mills College Speech

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