This So-Called Post-Post-Racial Life

June 30, 2009

This New Racism Ain’t for Everybody

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — pprscribe @ 1:16 pm

As I alluded to here, I do not Twitter. But I am thinking of adopting this social networking technology after this ish a few nights ago:

As one would expect many people watched the tribute [to Michael Jackson, on the BET awards show] and were tweeting their experiences…. [W]ith the number of people watching and tweeting, it quickly became a trending topic.

Twitter became a bridge for people to come together to share their impressions on the ever controversial BET.  This interactive format gave many people of color an outlet for our frustrations, rather than the usual snarky commentary from a couch that goes nowhere.  Twitter provided a platform for the voices of people of color.

"treason." Josh Parrish, http://www.flickr.com/photos/keylime/13646826/

"treason." Josh Parrish, http://www.flickr.com/photos/keylime/13646826/

But not everyone was pleased with the prevalence of these topics of twittering. Some of the comments were along these lines, for instance:

Did anyone see the new trending topics? I dont think this is a very good neighborhood. Lock the car doors kids.

Well.

It has been said that on the Internet no one need know  you are a dog.

But apparently racism still comes through loudly and clearly.

June 28, 2009

Shining Light to Stop the Silence

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — pprscribe @ 12:29 pm

My proudest legislative achievement in the Senate was passing the Violence Against Women Act. We’ve made great strides since its passage – shining a light on an all too silent issue and reducing violence against women in significant numbers. But we have to do more. That’s why we’re here today – to do more. It’s an honor to announce the first ever White House Advisor on Violence Against Women, Lynn Rosenthal. Lynn is passionate about these issues and knows them backwards and forwards. And as a former director of a shelter, she’s also seen the human face of this tragic problem. She will be a leader in this White House in stopping the violence and sexual assault of women and will be an integral part of this Administration.

~Vice President Joseph Biden

June 26, 2009

Gary on My Mind

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — pprscribe @ 11:30 am

Michael Jackson has died. Michael Jackson, originally from Gary, Indiana…part of”The Region” where many of the Scribe clan still resides. Where me and my family and extended kin will be traveling in a couple days to attend a funeral. My heart is broken at the loss of an aunt who was more like a big sister. She was also a Jackson, and her first born was even a Michael. To my knowledge, no relation to the famous Jacksons also of Gary.

This is not something I can talk about right now. It is easier to talk about how bizarre it is for the King of Pop to have died this same week. It is easier to talk about how hard it is for me to go back to Gary. The Gary of today is not how I remembered it as a child. As the suburban kid with the long braids, who “talked like a White girl.” Gary and East Chicago meant freedom. Freedom to roam the streets to buy “Now’r Laters” and purple pop from the corner store and to build forts in the parking lot. To learn cheers and jump rope rhymes and new dances from the cousins and the neighborhood kids.

Gary was alive.

Now to see Gary is to see a case study of a politician’s or academic’s lament about what happens when work and brain power and youth and stability leaves a community. It is hard to go back to Gary after long stretches away because of the image of the old Gary still in my mind. It is better to hold onto the fantasy than to get on with the work of grieving and moving forward.

Cities, unlike the physical bodies of people, can come back to life after death or near death. Right now, even as I write these words of Gary’s lifelessness, there are people and organizations working to improve The Region. Hopefully I will see proof of this Monday as I ride through the streets on my way to the church or the cemetery.

I can still hear my aunt’s laugh, and the last stories that she told echo in my head. I had thought about taking pictures the last time she was here at my house, just days before her death. But I was having too much fun just relaxing and laughing and listening to the tall tales and relating my own. I figured, now that we all lived in the same city, there would be other opportunities to take pictures.

I was wrong.

Yet, I am glad that I spent the time just being together. I took pictures and videos with my mind, and they will never be lost.

Michael Jackson has died. An important part of my childhood. My aunt has gone, and we will take her home to Gary. She will never truly be gone.

Old School MJ

Filed under: Old School Friday — Tags: , , — pprscribe @ 10:45 am

play-ville-de-lumiere-by-goldPlaylist:

  • It’s Too Late to Change the Time
  • Whatever You Got, I Want
  • Darling Dear
  • Happy (Love Theme from “Lady Sings the Blues”)
  • Mama’s Pearl
  • Gone Too Soon
  • I Wanna Be Where You Are
  • You Can’t Win
  • My Girl
  • A Fool for You
Dave Malkoff, http://www.flickr.com/photos/malkoff/3661882717/

Dave Malkoff, http://www.flickr.com/photos/malkoff/3661882717/

June 22, 2009

Imagining Black Fathers

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — pprscribe @ 1:39 pm
"Got You Daddy." CG2_SoulArtist, http://www.flickr.com/photos/cg2photoart/2328336068/

"Got You Daddy." CG2_SoulArtist, http://www.flickr.com/photos/cg2photoart/2328336068/

This blog post is about a movie I saw recently with my 9 year old daughters, starring Eddie Murphy as a father who learns to love his young daughter—and in the process, rediscover his own humanity—via imaginary princesses in an imaginary world.

Or—

This blog post is about a young father I used to see at a bus stop in St. Paul, MN, standing with his toddler daughter in all kinds of weather, her pink and lavender Dora the Explorer backpack slung around his shoulder and his jeans hanging below his hips.

Or, this blog post is about the way that the MSM cannot get Black fathers right.

Well, all that is a mighty tall order. Let’s start with the movie and maybe I can work in some of the other points. This will be somewhat of a random ramble but I’ll see what I can do.

Imagine That…

If I told you it was a Nickelodeon film…if I told you it came on the heels of another movie about an adult male (starring another, this time White, comedian/actor) prospering at work due to the imagination of a child…if I told you it was yet another movie about divorced adults behaving badly and the children who must bring them to their senses…if I told you the female “lead” (and I use the term loosely as in this movie, like many starring men, the women do not have a whole lot to do) looked an awful lot like Mr. Murphy’s own ex… If I told you all that you might imagine that “Imagine That,” starring Eddie Murphy, would not be a movie you should go see.

I myself only saw it because the grandparents wanted to take the daughters and invited me to go along. I expected to get a few winks in the comfy theater chairs and wake up in time to agree with my girls what a good movie it was.

Instead, I found I couldn’t take my eyes off of the movie. I had been thinking a lot about Black fatherhood, see. And in this movie Murphy’s character is struggling with being a Dad. Struggling in a real way, I thought. He doesn’t “get” his daughter. She touches things and bothers things and piddles around when it’s time to go and doesn’t seem to listen to him. And she has a blankie that she refuses to give up, because it is her means to talk to her imaginary friends. All this is getting in the way of him being a superstar financial investment professional, in line to become the new boss—if only he can outperform a rival with a sexier ethnic heritage (American Indian) with unorthodox methods who the White higher-ups, colleague, and clients seem taken with.

That’s enough of a set-up.

BMW (Black Men Working)

The first thing that struck me while watching the Murphy movie was how infrequently in films we get depictions of upwardly mobile, well educated, high income Black folks who are just people. In some movies (cough***tylerperry***cough) upper income people are bad guys or sell out buffoons or symbolic of all that has gone wrong with The Black Community. In other movies they are merely the best friends or sidekicks to the main White character.

Remember when Eddie Murphy’s movie “Boomerang” came out? I remember reading a couple of reviews by White critics that lambasted the film for its lack of realism in depicting a virtually all-Black high income professional world. (I doubt that these same critics fault any of Woody Allen’s movies for depicting an all-White NYC, but that’s another story.) As if movies have anything to do with what is “real.” As if it is so hard to imagine Black folks with high profile jobs working with other Black folks.

I have been talking a lot about Black women in workplaces. I know that Black men have similar, but also different challenges with dealing with competing masculinities—White, other Black, and other non-Black men of color—at work. By now we have all heard of the research about “baby-faced,” non-threatening-looking Black men doing better as CEOs than other Black men.

I knew a Black man once who was a top executive at his university. Everyone knew him, as he had become kind of a public “face” of the institution. He once mentioned to me that when he is walking around campus after working out at the gym, dressed in t-shirt and sweat pants, the same White people who would readily say hi to him were he dressed in a suit or walking astride the president, did not even recognize him. In fact, they averted their eyes when they caught a glimpse of his big, tall, dark chocolate body coming towards them. He laughed off his comment. I did not know him well enough to be able to tell if there was anger or sadness or anything else behind the laugh.

I know another professional Black man. At first he was only the second “of color” person of any gender at his job. The first was a Black African man. Then a man from India was hired. An admin assistant said, “Have you all met? Now there are enough of you to have a minority association here!” Regarding the first-hired guy, this man was frequently called by his name. No matter that the first spoke with a Nigerian accent and the other, a midwestern pattern, or that the one was very dark skinned while the other was brown-skinned, one was very tall and the other medium height, one had worked there for years while the other only a few months. Oh, but they were both bald, so…

I suppose Barack Obama has a “baby face.” I have written here before how I believe he bends over backwards to be self-deprecating to put people (especially White people) at ease. That’s a lot of time wasted, IMO, that he could be doing other things with his personal energies. But he is well aware of what he has to do. People have a hard time imagining a Black man as a top advertising executive, or financial investor—let alone POTUS.

“Will you be my Daddy?”

I do not know what it is about male stars turning to family/children’s movies at critical points in their careers. But I must say, I am all for it. (Remember, this is coming from someone with two kids.) We’ve seen it with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, with Adam Sandler, with Eddie Murphy, even with Ice Cube. In these movies these men are fathers, or otherwise are caretakers to children. They must overcome former tendencies—with selfishness, with workaholism, with womanizing, with partying—in order to “grow up” and “be a man.” The pathway to this personal growth is children. (Again, the women in these movies are largely absent or at least non consequential.) I have not seen anyone hailing these movies as tackling important issues of gender, or Black fatherhood, or anything else. But I think that is a mistake. I think these movies are trying to tell us something about how some men may be feeling about their roles at a certain point in their lives.

There is a song out that I absolutely despise. It’s by, I think, Twista—the cat that rapid fire raps—and features hook vocals by a  female vocalist. She sings, “I need a Daddy. Can you be my Daddy? …Come and make it rain down on me…” I am pretty sure that she is singing to a potential romantic partner and not a potential actual father figure. The song irks me for too many reasons to go into here. But I do think it points out a twisted (pun intended) view of fatherhood as a symbol. Only recently has a wider spread conversation started about the effect of fatherlessness on Black girls—after much public agreement from all quarters about its effect on Black boys.

Are grown women looking for “fathers” in their beds? Are grown men looking to be “fathers” to grown women who they are having sexual relationships with? From the song I gather that part of the role played by the potential Daddy is mainly that of protector, pleasure giver, and financial security blanket. So with at least two out of the three, we’re back to the upwardly mobile professional Black men. Our music is full of images of Black men providing protection and financial security through rapping and gray/black market entrepreneurship. No critics say that is unrealistic. We can easily imagine that. We do not have as many models for Black men being social fathers to little girls, providing that same protection and financial security. That is, I guess, harder for us to imagine.

As I mentioned in the intro, when I lived in St. Paul, Minnesota, I used to pass by a certain bus stop early each morning as I drove my daughters to school. At this bus stop every morning, no matter how cold or how much snow was on the ground, was this young brother with a toddler-aged little girl. I thought about them and especially him every time I passed by. He was, as I said, young and Black. He was always dressed in the latest “urban” fashion: bubble jackets and sagging jeans and expensive looking sneakers, and baseball caps for every day of the year. If I saw him on the street without the toddler I would probably make all sorts of assumptions about him.

But there he was every single morning. Along with his fly gear, he also frequently sported the little girl’s backpack over his shoulder. At the stop light I’d watch him, backpack over his shoulder, holding the little girl’s hand. I would watch him and wonder why it is so hard for me to imagine someone like him. I do not know, actually, if he was the girl’s father, or older brother or uncle or whatever. I do not know where he went or what he did after he dropped the little girl to the day care center or child care providers or his mother’s house or her mother’s house. But for, probably, an hour or so each morning—whether it was 82 degrees or 20 below—he was this child’s protector and provider.

I try to superimpose the image of that young brother on other young brothers I see on the street, dressed in urban fashions and looking very un-baby faced even as I know they are practically babies.

Imagining Black Fathers

By the end of Eddie Murphy’s new movie, he has gained the love and respect of his (formerly) estranged little daughter. I have noticed that in movies with female leads about career and family, the women often have to give up one to have the other. But in movies about male leads seeking this balance, the one actually leads to the other. Eddie’s character has a new relationship with his daughter and becomes the big boss—despite acting in a way that is considered highly unprofessional (= not putting work first) in his workplace. I do not know how real this is for men. Maybe male work-family fantasies have not reached the same conclusion as women’s have—that “balance” is not incredibly realistic, or even desirable, or it at least involves a redefinition of the word.

(Or maybe we women are being led to believe that only we need to give up notions of balance all together and get back to being subservient to men. But that’s another blog post.)

Maybe in the next Eddie Murphy family flick he can explore both sides—Black men embracing fatherhood in their workplaces and Black women embracing motherhood in their workplaces. Or, even more worth the price of admission, maybe Eddie can co-star with Arsenio Hall or Adam Sandler as romantic partners balancing fatherhood and work roles—along with their roles as ex-husbands to women…and sons to mothers and fathers…all in the context of navigating their relatiopnship with each other.

Wow. Imagine that!

June 20, 2009

Must Be the Season for Apologies

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — pprscribe @ 11:16 pm

The Senate resolution apologizing for slavery (S. Con. Res. 26; pdf)  is only 5 pages long. Please read the whole thing:

…Whereas an apology for centuries of brutal dehumanization
and injustices cannot erase the past, but confession of
the wrongs committed and a formal apology to African-
Americans
will help bind the wounds of the Nation that
are rooted in slavery and can speed racial healing and
reconciliation and help the people of the United States
understand the past and honor the history of all people
of the United States…

June 19, 2009

OSF: Play Another Slow Jam

Filed under: Old School Friday, Uncategorized — Tags: , — pprscribe @ 2:21 pm
"The Top of the Wedding Cake," Mendhak, http://www.flickr.com/photos/mendhak/2973667235/

"The Top of the Wedding Cake," Mendhak, http://www.flickr.com/photos/mendhak/2973667235/

Old School Friday is here. And not a moment too soon. The theme this week is Dance for Me. It has been a pretty hectic week here so the only dancing I want to do today is nice and slow.

I am partial to slow jams with a little umph to them…something to encourage a little bump and grind and not just holding tight and swaying. So, for this playlist I have some pretty funky slow jams: “Sparkle” by Cameo , “Love’s Train” by Con Funk Shun and “Don;t Say Goodnight” by The Isley Brothers.

play-ville-de-lumiere-by-goldI also have Prince (of course!) and “Adore,” and both Luther (“If This World Were Mine”) and Marvin (“Distant Lover”) are represented.

I nod to my teeniebopper youth and first forays into slow dancing with “A Dream” by DeBarge and to my first dance at my wedding with Nat King Cole and “Unforgettable.”

Thanks to everybody who dropped by the blog this week. I am very proud to have been BlogHer‘s “BlogHer of the Week” and am glad to have made new blog acquaintances because of this exposure. Happy Old School Friday, everyone! Have a relaxing weekend.

**********

As always, a big thank you to OSF hostesses, Marvalus at Conversations with Marva

and MrsGrapevine.

Please check out the rules for joining and list of other OSF participants here.

June 18, 2009

Gimme Some Dap!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — pprscribe @ 11:00 am

Seems I missed National Fist Bump Day June 3rd:

…Nearly a year later, a group of like-minded people have gotten together to commemorate Obama’s grand gesture, but also to take the fist bump to a higher level, one above partisan politics and social divides. For one day we are calling for Americans, and perhaps even all global citizens, to put aside their differences — be they class, race, religion or values — and show their respect with a little bump.

Sometimes all the world needs is a little human touch, a little flesh on flesh action, and a little understanding. [Source]

That I missed celebrating this new holiday is all the more troubling since I was there when the Obamas initiated the bump heard round the world. Well, to make up for my lapse, I am re-posting the photo essay that I posted on my old blog after seeing then-candidate Barack Obama in downtown St. Paul. BTW, I am in the process of migrating my entire former blog here to WordPress. I do not think at this point that I will post anything new on that old blog—it’ll probably mainly just be an archive blog. So anyway, without further ado…


Obama Time: 6/3/08, St. Paul, MN

Wait in line: 1 hour 20 minutes…

Obama rally line.jpg
(Image credit: H-Dub)

I know that some folks were in line for eight hours or more. But I did not think I could handle more than an hour or so–let alone two little girls. At first my daughters were a little nervous. They said they had never seen so many people at one time. But soon they relaxed and got caught up in the carnival-like atmosphere. While in line one of the t-shirt vendors, singing an impromptu song to attract attention to his wares, even pointed out one of my girls and worked her into his lyric: “Vote for Obama when you’ve had enough/Like that pretty little girl with the afro puff.” “Mommy! He’s talking about me!” While in line I read one of the final chapters of the fourth installment of Harry Potter aloud. It not only entertained my daughters, but several other children and their parents in the line around us.

…Decision-making regarding button purchase: 15 minutes…

Obama gear.jpg
(Image credit: Chad Davis)

Both my daughters finally decided to spend their $5 on a button featuring Sen. Obama as Harry Potter, complete with round-framed glasses, robe, and wand. (Though not, as one of my girls pointed out, with the lightening scar on his forehead.) The caption promised that Barack Obama would “bring wizardry to the White House.” I am not sure what wizardry that would be, but if it has anything to do with such things as a better economy, improved education, and peace and stability at home and abroad, I am all for such magic.

…Dap from your boo before the big speech: Approx 7 seconds…

Obamas dap2.jpg
(Image credit: Texas Revolutionary)

“Look at her dress, Mommy! She’s beautiful!” “Where are his kids, Mommy? Aren’t they gonna come, too?” “Can we go down there on the floor to see them?” …No, we did not make it to the floor of the Excel Energy Center. But at least we made it inside. From high in the rafters, the Obamas were but dots far below. But that was compensated for by the sight of them on the big screen of the Jumbotron where we–and the world–were treated to the sight of their (now famous) dap. (Or “fist pound,” if you prefer.)

…Seeing your daughters witness history: Timeless.

027_27_2.JPG
(Image credit: Me!)

June 16, 2009

…One more “apology” for good measure:

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — pprscribe @ 10:07 am

When I asked her if she understood the controversial nature of the photo, Goforth would only say she felt very bad about accidentally sending it to the wrong list. When I gave her a second chance to address the controversial nature of the email, she again repeated that she only felt bad about sending it to the wrong list of people.

“I went on the wrong email and I inadvertently hit the wrong button,” Goforth told NIT. “I’m very sick about it, and it’s one of those things I can’t change or take back.” [Source]

June 15, 2009

A Tale of Two Apologies

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — pprscribe @ 2:38 pm

“I am as sorry as I can be if I offended anyone. The comment was clearly in jest.”

~Rusty DePass, SC GOP activist and former state Senate candidate

Dear First Lady:

I want to apologize for the comment that was made this past Friday by a person from my City.   The comment was both hateful and inappropriate.  The comment has been condemned by numerous fair minded people of all races and political parties.  I want to personally express my deep disappointment that such a terrible statement would be associated with Columbia, South Carolina.

Columbia is a City of the New South.  We have a history of working across all racial and ethnic lines to seek common ground and purpose.  We take pride that our City has been held up by the noted author Richard Florida as an open and accepting City that is part of the global economy.  We have a track record of building a diverse community. In the 1960′s, leaders came together to create the Greater Columbia Community Relations Council to guide us through integration.  In the 1990′s, we filed a lawsuit to remove the Confederate flag from the Statehouse grounds.

We know that you, President Obama, and your family have been to South Carolina and Columbia many times.  Please know that we welcome you back anytime.  I apologize on behalf of Columbia for the comment that was made.  While the comment was made by one individual, we know that in this internet and twenty-four hour media cycle, impressions can be made quickly.  I wanted to state firmly and emphatically that we reject such a hateful and insensitive comment that does not reflect our City.

Very truly yours,
Mayor Bob Coble

June 14, 2009

Working With Black Women, Epilogue: The Next Generation

***Part 1 here; Part 2 here***

So, as the blog says: What about our daughters?

Will they be destined to travel our same paths, stumble over the same exposed roots and boulders we did? Will they be able to be all their selves with each other? Will they decide to identify as feminists, womanists, multi-ists, or nary-ists? Will they be more than their hair, their skin tone, their names? Can they be yoked romantically to men, other women—to no one in particular—without being defined solely in terms of these connections or lack of them?

…The Family Reunion is an ideal natural environment to gain insight into these questions. The aluminum foil is peeled back from the homemade mac and cheese and the pork ribs. The card decks and dominoes are slapping table tops. Frankie Beverly and Maze is echoing across the green grass of the public park, and the living is easy.

"We all gonna get a chance to stir", PPR_Scribe

"We all gonna get a chance to stir", PPR_Scribe

Hugs and greetings of long-losts have been exchanged and now the sub-groupings have been formed. Loosely based on age and gender, but not completely.

A group of Girl Cousins, from 3 to 10 years old, has coalesced around a shared love of babies and homemade ice cream and a cooler full of juice in pouches. At some point I take them across the field to the portable potty. In-depth discussion: toilet paper and hand sanitizer, who is doing number one versus number two, the merits of High School Musical underpants versus plain white or pink, the odd looking “cookie” in the urinal (“where men go pee-pee; see, their penises fit inside there”) beside the toilet. After all this—and of helping with lining the dirty seat with paper and fastening snaps and belt buckles and buttons—I am ready to head back to the picnic site.

But the Girl Cousins are not.

They have found a sewer drain, full of water from three straight days of rain. The sewer drain is actually a pot of stew, and a discarded stick has become a wooden spoon. Beans are required from amongst the pebbles of the adjacent baseball diamond. Leafy greens are needed from the dandelion plants and grass. Seasoning in the form of sand from the pitcher’s mound gives it extra flavoring.

"We need more beans for the stew", PPR_Scribe

"We need more beans for the stew", PPR_Scribe

Braids and twists and puffs top the heads. Inside the heads minds work to create a state-of-the-art kitchen. The conversation is focused and intense. No, that’s a little too much salt. Yeah, great idea—Get the brown beans up under the lighter ones. Please let her add her greens next. Look at what I found—we can use it for a measuring cup! OK, OK, we all gonna get a chance to stir! Mmm, it’s almost done; Y’all wanna taste?

The Girl Cousins are from the inner city and the suburbs. They participate in vacation bible school and swim practice and drill team. They sing all the words to Kidz Bop and Beyonce and Keke Palmer and Alicia Keys and Hanna Montanna. Their parents are married, never married…their siblings are theirs by biology and social agreement.

"No, it needs to cook a bit longer" PPR_Scribe

"No, it needs to cook a bit longer" PPR_Scribe

They are a diverse bunch.

After the stew is made, the oldest calls for everyone to join hands and bow heads for a prayer. Her words give thanks for this food and the hands, Lord, who has prepared it. She asks for the continued safety of our family, Lord, and the love that we share for each other today and all days. The other Girl Cousins nod, their eyes tightly closed in reverence.

At the end of the prayer they all say amen and begin to eat their meal.

Eventually we head back to the picnic area. The Girl Cousins run ahead, leaving me to snap a few more photographs.

I pray that if there is a God, she or he listens to and answers the prayers of little children over make believe stew.

"And now may we please bow our heads", PPR_Scribe

"And now may we please bow our heads", PPR_Scribe

June 12, 2009

OSF: Keep It Coltrane

Filed under: Old School Friday, Uncategorized — Tags: , , — pprscribe @ 1:18 pm

This week’s Old School Friday theme is Keep It in the Family. I’m going to focus on one extremely talented family, The Coltranes. No, this is not a musical group, but different songs by three different Coltranes.

play-ville-de-lumiere-by-gold Of course legendary John Coltrane anchors this playlist. In here is his version of “My Favorite Things” and him playing with Miles Davis on “Round Midnight” (probably one of my top 10 all-time favorite songs of any musical genre). Then there is wife Alice Coltrane and her version of “My Favorite Things,” and son Ravi Coltrane and his versions of “Round Midnight” and “Epistrophy.”

I have mentioned here before how I am fascinated by different versions of the same song. Well, different versions of the same song by family members is an even more interesting twist. And all this in the context of jazz—an art form already with improvisation and putting a new spin on things—ups the interest ante even more.

With John’s version of “My Favorite Things,” note his use of the soprano saxophone instead of his signature tenor. Alice Coltrane’s spin on this tune reflects her religious expression within her music—as did most of her more well-known songs including other of her versions of her husband’s songs. The original version of Thelonious Monk’s “Epistrophy” is another one of my all-time favorite jazz songs. On this one listen to John’s sax solo and contrast it with Ravi’s more hyper, fast paced sax.

There were so many other songs I could have chosen comparing and contrasting the versions of these three. I’m telling you, I could do this all day! And maybe I will—it is, after all, Old School Friday! Hope you have a good one and a great weekend.

**********

As always, a big thank you to OSF hostesses, Marvalus at Conversations with Marva

and MrsGrapevine.

Please check out the rules for joining and list of other OSF participants here.

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