Black History In MusicRhino Records
     
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Images Of The Harlem Renaissance

  • Cab Calloway
  • The Cotton Club
  • Duke Ellington
  • Ethel Waters
  • Fats Waller
  • Louis Armstrong
  • Tiny Bradshaw

    Hear

    "These sounds are a reminder that the diversity and breadth of creativity that once ran wild through the streets of Harlem still exists in every corner of Black America nearly 100 years later." -- Shawn Amos, compilation producer of Rhapsodies In Black: Music And Words From The Harlem Renaissance

    THE MUSIC

  • Gladys Bentley "Worried Blues"
  • Duke Ellington "Cotton Club Stomp"
  • Louis Armstrong "I'm In The Mood For Love"
  • Ethel Waters "Stormy Weather"
  • Cab Calloway "Minnie The Moocher"

    THE POETRY

  • The Negro Speaks Of Rivers
    read by Quincy Jones
  • No Images
    read by Lou Rawls
  • If We Must Die
    read by Ice-T
  • I Want To Die While You (excerpt)
    read by Alfre Woodard
  • Sensemaya (edit)
    read by Eartha Kitt
  • Read

    CASTAWAY CUTZ
    By Gary Jackson
    A totally unoriginal thought struck me as I watched Castaway, starring Tom Hanks. Which ten albums would be an absolute necessity for me to have if I were a castaway -- provided I had the electricity and equipment to hear the stuff!MORE

    INTERVIEW WITH QUINCY JONES
    On AOL
      If you were to remove the work of Quincy Jones from the history books, contemporary music would not be the same. MORE

    Q&A WITH BOOTSY COLLINS
    By John Hagelston
      We picked Bootsy's brain recently with the following queries...MORE

    Q&A WITH GEORGE BENSON
    By John Hagleston
      George played L.A.'s Greek Theater, and we had the opportunity to pose a few questions to himMORE

    MAKE ME WANNA HOLLER!
    By Reggie Collins
      To most people, Black History Month evokes thoughts of past African-American struggles, from slavery to the civil rights movement. But there is another side to this fascinating tale...MORE

    MY SEARCH FOR HARLEM
    By Shawn Amos
      The Harlem Renaissance of the early 20th century was one of the greatest experiments American culture has ever seen (with the '60s counter-culture movement running a close second) "Black" in 1920's Harlem was an attitude, not a color. MORE

    DOO WOP 51
    By Bill Dahl
      More than a half century after blossoming under the soft glow of street corner lamps (and within the echo-drenched confines of countless subway stations and high school washrooms), doo wop maintains an intensely loyal following. MORE

    RICHARD PRYOR: AN APPRECIATION
    By Reggie Collins
      Richard Pryor made his first impact on me in 1974, when I was in the seventh grade. My best friend, Randy Ades, turned me on to a newly-released album his older sister had that we weren't supposed to be listening to called That Nigger's Crazy.MORE

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