Monday, December 10, 2007

Bryonn Bain: Roehl's Favorite Hip Hop Artist

My favorite Hip Hop artist is Bryonn Bain, Brooklyn's Famed Spoken Word Poet. Bain currently teaches at Columbia University and at Riker's Island Prison. The Utne Reader claims that Bryonn Bain is one of 30 visionaries under 30 who are changing your future. Bain first came into the national spotlight when he was falsely imprisoned by the NYPD during his second year at Harvard Law School. Following his false imprisonment, Bain wrote the article "Walking While Black" for The Village Voice, and that article earned him a Mike Wallace interview on 60 Minutes.

I took a class from Bryonn last year about the importance of Hip Hop to youth culture. Here are some ideas from my notebook:

  1. Many Hip Hop artists incorporate socially responsible themes into their music; however, the music industry capitalizes on stereotypes of gangs, guns, drugs, and misogyny.
  2. 70% to 80% of Hip Hop consumers are white, suburbanites.
  3. Rap is something you do. Hip Hop is something you live.
  4. The components of Hip Hop are the DJ, the graffiti artist, the B-Boy or B-Girl breakdancer, and the emcee (also known as the spoken word poet or rap artist).
  5. Bain's Hip Hop lesson ideas for schools have been greatly influenced by Paulo Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed. For an excerpt of Freire's book, click here.

Click here to watch a five-minute clip about Bryonn Bain.

View a music video of Byronn's song "Ancestor's Watching."

For more information about Bryonn, visit his website bryonnbain.com.

1 comment:

abby said...

The first quote that stuck out to me was "In China, teens spray-paint graffiti on the Great Wall." I found this quote disturbing, it is very odd to me that the spread of hip-hop was so rapid and left a negative change on society. To hear that children were doing graffiti to a world known structure kills me. My second quote was "A cry of "I am" from the youth of the world. We'd be wise, I suppose, to start paying attention." This quote just shows that in our society today hip-hop is what is known and everyone has heard some form of it. It is telling people like our parents that this is what is popular and though you may not approve and are not engaged in it now it is what the majority of people are listening to. My last quote is, "Then imagine no one bothers to examine why the men caught fire in the first place. That is the story of hip-hop." This quote shows us that though hip-hop is popular it has lost meaning that use to exist. Music use to be examined and people knew and followed the meaning of what the artist was trying to pursway and now everything is just jumbled and lacks in meaning.