SOUNDTRACK: AUGUST GREENE-Tiny Desk Concert #709 (February 21, 2018).

A collective of artists is at the core of August Greene: Common (Lonnie Rashid Lynn), keyboardist Robert Glasper and drummer Karriem Riggins have known each other for a long time.
The blurb says
August Greene was born at the White House in 2016 during a special Tiny Desk concert. It was during that unprecedented performance that the then-untitled ensemble premiered the powerful “Letter to the Free,” an original song for Ava DuVernay’s Netflix documentary 13th that eventually won an Emmy for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics.
Common says they came together to be an inspirational collective who wanted to foreground women and put women in the foreground. It is unfortunate, then, that the first song features all men. But their hearts are in the right place “That’s important in hip-hop, which has long been dogged by an old-line adherence to misogyny, as it lays claim to the world’s most popular genre.”
For the trio’s first visit to NPR headquarters, they brought some special guests: vocalists Brandy, Maimouna Youssef and Andra Day. The band performed four tracks from its upcoming self-titled album (out March 9 on Amazon Music), an impromptu freestyle, and Day’s Oscar-nominated collaboration with Common, “Stand Up For Something,” from the film Marshall. Common described the theme of the Tiny Desk as “Foregrounding Women,” alluding to the attendance of Brandy, Day and Youssef, as well as the spiritual presence of Glasper’s younger cousin, Loren, who passed just a few days prior. [Common says she “transitioned” which I thought meant she was undergoing gender reassignment surgery–euphemisms are dangerous, people].
This five song Tiny Desk Concert is over half an hour and I enjoyed most of it. I really like Common and his delivery.
August Greene’s latest single, “Black Kennedy,” connotes dreams of an African-American dynasty, the kind only a royal family assumes. The stark contrasts of disenfranchisement are highlighted by every wish expressed.
Common does the rap, which is solid (Common’s voice is so good) and Samora Pinderhughes sings the chorus. I’m rather surprised by how wimpy his voice is. He sounds either nervous or like he can’t hit the notes he wants. And yet somehow I find this charming and his part of the song to be very catchy. I like the D Dummy is there scratching as well.
Up next is “Practice.” Glasper doesn;t say much during the show, but he is hilarious when he does. Common says Robert was playing these chords in the studio. Glasper: “It was the best thing he ever heard” after some laughs, Common retorts: “I was like it’s a’ight. Once we my raps, the song turned out right there.
“Practice” is how “Life takes work. You gotta work on yourself and any craft, any relationship” The song features one of the queens, Maimouna Youssef, we call her Mumu Fresh. She sings backing vocals and then does a great rap
sometimes being a woman is like being black twice
i gotta shout fire instead of rape
and you tell me to act nice
look pretty stay slim don’t talk loud
don’t think, don’t feel, don’t act proud
but if I’m at my lowest how are you 100%
god made woman and man for the balance of it
so will the real men please stand up.
While Common is talking a phone goes off. “So yo, who phone is that?” ha ha
He talks about one of their favorite songs, “Optimistic” by Sounds of Blackness. As a hip hop artist, I usually don’t do remakes, but as August Greene I can do what I want.
Common: Anything yo want to say rob?
Robert: Yes, i wrote your rhymes. Just want everyone to know that.
Common: Yea that’s why on this song my rhymes are sub par cause her wrote them
Rob said we need to get brandy. Brandy came in with that light.
With a buildup like that I wanted to like this song a lot more than I do. Even though Brandy’s voice sounds good, I don’t like her delivery. This was my least favorite song of the day.
He introduces: Burniss Travis on the bass; DJ Dummy, on the 1s and 2s; Karriem Riggins on drums
Common shows off a truly great freestyle. There’s some great rhymes referencing previous tiny desk episodes, and lines like “rob g cant rhyme like me.”
Introducing that amazing “Stand Up for Something,” he says that people worried with this administration that the world is ending. The world ain’t ending it’s just god bringing the best out of us. What’s more important than standing up for something you believe in. It is designed to inspire hope, to bring the message of Thurgood Marshall to a new generation: “it all means nothing if you don’t stand up for something.”
We had to bring in a revolutionary to sing it so we got the sister Andra Day here. She jokes “I usually like to underpromise and overdeliver.” But she nails it. She sounds amazing. It is by far the best song of the day and a great song in general with a great old-school soul sound.
Common ends with this great rhyme
a president that trolls with hate
he don’t control our fate because god is great
when they go low when we stay in the heights
I stand for peace, love and women’s rights
Later, in “Let Go,” vocalist and August Greene collaborator Samora Pinderhughes sings of overcoming darkness within yourself and finding hope at the bottom of Pandora’s box. It’s about releasing the demons so the hands can hold the blessings.
Common says they first called it “Nirvana” because it reminded them of Nirvana “the group from the 90s who we all love.” (I love that he had to qualify that).
Pinderhughes, sings “I need to let go.” It’s such a nice sentiment with a groovy opening bass line and pretty keys at the end.
I love the idea of hip-hop rising to this terrible moment in our history and working together to make things better.
[READ: December 4, 2017] Pelé: The King of Soccer
When I was a kid, Pelé was the be all and end all of soccer. He was the man like nobody else was. So I have been surprised in the previous two decades or so to find that he is barely mentioned among the greats. And I have a theory about that.
Most of the people who care about soccer are not from the States (this is changing a little). And most of the people I know who support soccer are from Europe. Pelé is Brazilian and, more importantly, he defeated a lot of Europeans. Plus, and this is probably the real crux, Pelé was instrumental in introducing soccer to the U.S.–right when I was impressionable enough to fall for it. My then close friend’s family was really into soccer and we went to a New York Cosmos game (I wonder when that was. Did I see Pelé play? I must have).
Anyhow, Pelé was a pretty amazing player, and I’m glad to have this book confirm that for me. What’s interesting about this book, though, is that it also talks about his personal life. He was amazing for the kids of Brazil, but a little less amazing for his family (I was surprised to see his terrible personal life in there, primarily because this is a kids book. But it’s important not to gloss over that kind of thing, too).
I also realized that I knew absolutely nothing about Pelé. Like, nothing at all. So this was a great book to fill me in.
His name is Edson Arantes do Nascimento. His father played soccer until an injury sidelined him.
In 1950 the World Cup came to Brazil for the first time. Obviously, the Brazilians were thrilled. Even more so when Brazil qualified. They looked really solid, until Uruguay defeated them in the all important final match. Young Edson promised his weeping father that one day he would win a World Cup for him.
The origins of Pelé’s lifelong nickname (his original nickname was Dico) seems to have come form a little kid cheering him on when Pelé himself was little). Pelé was spectacular at all positions on the pitch and one day while playing goalie a little kid said he was like Bilé, a local goalkeeper. But the kid couldn’t say the name correctly and said Pelé, which Pelé heard and thought would be a great nickname.
At 15 he was invited to play on a junior national team and soon enough he joined the team professionally. He scored a goal in his first match.
he is on the team with Vasco Vasconcelos, #10, a legendary player. But Vasco broke his leg and was out so Pelé replaced him as number 10. And he stayed #10 all of his career from then on.
Pelé has a hard time coping with the attention that his staggering skill and success brings him. He even gets a fan pregnant (he refused to acknowledge the child, which is dreadful).
But despite the scrutiny his succeeds immeasurably, especially on the field. When the Brazilian team made it to the World Cup, dedicated it to his father and even scored a goal.
Pelé eventually gets involved in the politics of soccer–the Brazilian national team treated its players poorly and FIFA seemed to sanction bad behavior in some earlier games .
Then on Nov 19, 1969, Pele scored his 1000th professional goal!
In 1970 Pelé and his team get revenge against Uruguay.
At the top of his game, Pelé retired with a professional record that looks hard to beat. Then he discovered that he was out of money–somehow the bank was asking him to pay the debt of a company he owned stock in…that seems rather illegal.
But that was the impetus for him to go to New York to sign with the Cosmos for a considerable sum. The team was terrible, and Pelé couldn’t support them all, so he brought in other international players. Is it possible that I saw Franz Beckenbauer play as well?
When he ended his three-year term with the Cosmos (the Cosmos folded one year after that), he went to work for the Special Olympics .
He also got involved in politics back home in Brazil (a thankless task).
His career summary: 20 years, 1284 goals, 3 world cups. Not bad.

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