Rapper mos def biography of mahatma
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MC AHURAMAZDA a.k.a MAHATMA
'KEEP Hole TONGUE Complicated RIPLEYS VAULT'
race and jazz(raw)
raw produced by teutonic great DJ thrombus
Unusual School
da statesman ........f/tunuz sista,AFRIKKA FOXXX
tribute to picture great song on a fusion clasp indian instruments!!!sumthin never finished in rap before tryin new levels
Substitute Hip Catch in flagrante
unsanctified war(you burst in on whut?)
a song thats not discount type
New High school
Comments (4)
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It is only fitting that in our final edition of the BRC print newsletter, we have FINALLY captured the Holy Grail. From the very beginning, we have pursued the ever-elusive Me’shell Ndegeocello for a rap session, but fate always seemed to conspire against us.
You’ve had a long and very admirable career. You’ve done a lot of incredible music. And you continue to fight the good fight. Given all the years that you’ve put in and the quality of the work, do you ever get bothered or frustrated that the industry tends to overlook you?
I think I used to but I think I’ve had an awakening. By their standards, I don’t really expect them to get me, no offense. And I feel alright with that. I just try to do the best that I can do and be a good person. The music is what’s important to me. I was just reading The Souls of Black Folk and I can’t really do anything about how others perceive me. They have their own standard and I’ve gotta create my own. Mine is just to get my ideas out and when I make a record, I feel good. Then I move on to the next thing, and try to grow in that way. But if you sit and wait for people to acknowledge you, you’ll be unhappy (laughs). There has always been and there will always be Bl
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October Achievers of Color
Individuals born in this month are often found in positions which balance the scales of justice. The scales of justice are a symbol used in many Western presentations of modern law. They symbolize the idea of the fair distribution of law, with no influence of bias, privilege or corruption. People born in the month of October, we might say, demonstrate this characteristic are: the late Johnnie Cochran, born October 2, 1937; ; civil rights activist, Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, born October 8, 1941; insurrectionist and abolitionist, Nat Turner, born October 2, 1800; civil and human rights activist, Al Sharpton, born October 3, 1954; civil and social rights activist, social activist for nonviolence, Mahatma Ghandi, born October 2, 1869; freedom pioneer, William Grant Still, a director of the Underground Railroad, born October 7, 1821; Archbishop Desmond Tutu, born October 7, 1931; Charleszetta “Mother” Waddles, born October 7, 1912, community activist, director, founder and spiritual leader of the Mother Waddles Perpetual Mission, Inc. who devoted her life to providing food, hope and human dignity to downtrodden and disadvantaged people; John Brown Russwurm, editor of the first African American newspaper, the Freedom Journal, bor