NYU Black Renaissance Noire Spring 2011 | Page 14

Jazz once identified the sound of you “ was be surprised byasanything goingsurprise andinifBlack want to on today American culture, I would tell you to go to the museum and galleries because that’s where the hard questions about modern Black consciousness and identity are being posed, performed, brokered and illuminated. ” 004-greg-tate.indd 13 A people who used the exclusions of their visual humanity and denial and displacement of the same as a ferocious incentive to occupy the realm of sound with all the human presence and complexity they knew was simply not represented elsewhere. What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun or does it explode like Nina singing ‘Mississippi Goddamn’ and ‘The Pirate Jenny’? Or does it just git low? The music tradition accomplished the creation of an expanded universe for dark energies with such ferocity, in fact, that one might as well ask, Why hasn’t Hollywood achieved what Black musicians have achieved in the dark? Because Hollywood was never big enough for Nina Simone or Miles Davis or ParliamentFunkadelic or the culture that produced them. Neither one, of course, is the viral and vial media landscape of Black popular culture today, youtube notwithstanding or Erykah Badu when she decided to meet the Isis and Lady Gaga challenge with her ‘Window Seat’ video. The kulcha we call black is always a self-perpetuating occasion for celebration, introspection and extrospection as well. Black performance is therefore its own talking cure — a self-medication of action and improvised acting out, always moving towards a reharmonizing of the most complex dimensions of one’s inner life with a group ethos and eros. BLACK RENAISSANCE NOIRE Yet, Black popular music, (certainly that with the darkest energy quotient), suffers from such a level of success today that it exists in a more rarefied atmosphere than even the art world. It is therefore subject to more entropic evisceration at the moment of conception. Not to mention jail time. At the point at which bling and prison become the definition of soulfulness in your culture, you may come to expect a certain spiritual deficit to emerge in the sonics of the thing. Jazz was once identified as the sound of surprise and if you want to be surprised by anything going on today in Black American culture, I would tell you to go to the museum and galleries because that’s where the hard questions about modern Black consciousness and identity are being posed, performed, brokered and illuminated. There is also the proposition that the history of Black music is a history of a people rendered invisible or subliminal in America by Hollywood. 13 For this reason there is not much church or juke joint ambiance going on in most Black visual art — Ernie Barnes and Romare Bearden are exceptions. The work of Romare Bearden, Thornton Dial, David Hammons or Jean Michel Basquiat also aspired to be the voice(s) of those multitudes, spirits known, unknown, dead, alive, barely human and even non-human. Like August Wilson, they took up the task of giving all those invisible jets of dark energy zooming around outside their studios a permanent residence in their art. There are many younger Black artists who, to my mind, are striving to do the same thing — Wangechi Mutu, Mickalene Thomas, Kehinde Wiley, Sanford Biggers, Noah Davis, Chanel Abney and our warrior woman of the hour, Torkwase Dyson. If you were to ask me where all the intellectual and critical action is in Black culture today, I would say that the Visual Artists ironically have the floor more so than the musicians. That’s ironic because who would ever think the most fertile hotbed of black artistic energy would occur invisibly among the wine and cheese set? 3/27/11 11:22 AM