Archive for the ‘The Guest Room’ Category

SEPARATED AT BIRTH: CRYPT WALKERS

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

papa joe

PAPA JOE JACKSON: Oldest jig hooch pitchman. Evar.


*S.A.B. credits: DP Dot Com Aussie correspondent EMBRY

Ol’ Man River by MAXINE

Monday, December 31st, 2007

ol man river

Editor’s note: MAXINE sums up learning, loving and life

Dere’s an ol’ man called de Mississippi,
Dat’s de ol’ man dat I’d like to be, (Ol Man River-Showboat 1927)

Like a moth to a flame burned by the fire, the things that can kill us are what turn us on the most. So bad but so good at the same time. It’s like listening to a Michael Jackson song while awaiting the verdict in his 2005 child molestation case. If he’s ‘guilty’, oh the drama that would ensue! If he’s ‘not guilty’ even more drama would ensue! See, like the Mississippi River, we just keep rolling along, propelled by something akin to desire and ecstasy. ‘Butterflies’ plays in the background…

“I caress you, let you taste us, just so blissful listen
I would give you anything baby, just make my dreams come true
Oh baby you give me butterflies inside”

In that moment, that 1:45 seconds, his falsetto takes me so high, higher than any allegations, rumors, or opinions from others, to a place meant for the indulgence of love, truth and passion. The song ends, the glassy-eyed sentiment is over, and I think to myself, “did an alleged child molester just tell my story better than it’s ever been told?”

He mus’ know sumpin’,
But don’ say nothin’;

Whenever I’m in Brooklyn, I hit up one particular store for apples. The problem is that this supermarket has shitty produce stock. The apples always taste like there’s a waxy Carmex film. No amount of washing can ever dissolve all of the strange wax, a simple solution is to a)not buy apples from this particular store or b)not eat the apples. No no no. Attraction is a powerful thing. I guarantee the one day I decide not to purchase apples from this store’s shitty produce stock is the one day the waxy film
disappears, and then what?! All those days of waxy red apple tasting will be for naught? Those who know won’t tell and those who’ll tell don’t know.

What does he care if de world’s got troubles?
What does he care if de land ain’t free?

Keep on movin, keep on movin, don’t stop no. Remember that old Soul 2 Soul song? That ‘s what we do, we keep going, no matter the troubles, not matter the slavery, the price of the land that is ours to begin with. We keep going. The mental slavery is one from which there is no emancipation. As the years pass us by, we reflect on things we’ve loved, lost and learned from, but where is the change? Our world is only as wide as we allow it to be. I see you nodding your head to the newest Weezy F track. I saw you clapping your hands to that “Ay Bay Bay” joint. Throw on some of that old R.Kelly and see how many pairs of panties you can catch. None but ourselves can free our minds. Desire and ecstasy.

You an’ me, we sweat an’ strain,
Body all achin’ and racked with pain.

We try though. Yes we do try. We like the process of trying. We like to create more fuel for the addiction. The rush. The panic at failing. The fear of flying, being, wanting. The Chilli Peppers aren’t the only cats who like pleasure spiked with pain. What’s your aeroplane? We push, pull and plead for the change. The change to what? How do we change something we
don’t understand? But we like to try. The trying shows that we are aware, the blood, sweat and tears show the pain, and the pain is the proof. The proof that this isn’t all there is, there is more than us. More than we are. But who are we? We have been conditioned to be programmed by fear, the fear of changing or being better. The fear fuels the addiction, the pain is the proof in trying. We eliminate that which slows us down. How can we eliminate ourselves?

Git a little drunk,
An’ you lands in jail!

Lisa Fischer once asked, “How can I ease the pain?” At some points in the song she almost whispers the words, other times her vocals are so scintillating and powerful that I find myself straining to answer her question. How? Those things that can kill us are what turn us on the most. Ease the pain, not make it go away, ease it. Make it more necessary. See, we like things that hurt, just enough for us to feel them. A little mixed with a lot is a deadly combination. All of a sudden there is no stopping, the inertia of the mind takes over, our desires and ecstasy wait for us at the bottom and we run toward it, full force.

Ah’m tired o’ livin’,
And skeered o’ dyin’

We are never tired. Never tired of the struggle, the hustle. Addiction needs fuel, and we are addicted…to the life. Addicted to the love, to the truth, to the understanding. We tire from the process but oh, how we love it! Nothing more than to be martyr of ourselves. Who wouldn’t sacrifice themselves for themselves? A better being. Dying is part of the process but not really. People who jump out of planes always wear parachutes. We just want to get taken to the brink, the brink of no return, only to save ourselves by pulling the cord. It can be like sex. Daring, reckless, dangerous, warm, beautiful, necessary. Fuck that suede headboard, silk scarves, and strawberries and shit. Pure, unadulturated, sweaty, grimy sex. Ah, the things that turn us on the most right? Then he wakes up in the morning and goes home to his wife.

But Ol’ Man River,
He jes’ keeps rollin’ along!

We go on, we continue, we move, we love, we grow, we…are. Everything we want to be, and more. We take from ourselves, from the world, from each other, and we flow. Like honey, slowly and sweetly. When things get sticky, well, we enjoy it and use the setback as a lubricant for things not so easily achievable. Because the harder things always come. We like it, we find our strength in the understanding of the unknown. Like a moth to a flame burned by the fire, my love is blind can’t you see my desire?

Gunned Down In An Islamabad Bucktown…

Thursday, December 27th, 2007

bhutto

Pakistani government opposition leader BENAZHIR BHUTTO learns the hard way that fucking with the C.I.A. is worse for your health than fucking with Mother Nature. The world now has one less female presidential candidate.

From the New York Times: Bhutto Assassinated in Attack on Rally

For some insight on why BHUTTO was a target , take a look at MAXINE’s drop here at DP Dot Com, BENAZIR BHUTTO’s Gangster Bitch Chronicles

The stock market tumbles because someone merc’ked a Pakistani presidential candidate!?! WTF!?!? Are we a third world country now? Let me know now so I can go get my malaria shots.

The only folks in America that I thought were directly affected by this lady’s death would be the Hindudes that run all the newsstands and the Qwik-E-Marts. Apparently I was wrong…

Stocks open lower following Bhutto assassination

ERNIE PANICCIOLI On Hip-Hop History, Photography and the Law…

Friday, December 21st, 2007

zulu

Editor’s note: ERNEST PANICCIOLI is an award winning photo-journalist and community activist. ‘The Other Side Of Hip-Hop’ is the film biopic of his life and the lessons he has learned through the artistic movement called Hip-Hop. This film won the Best Documentary award at the 2007 Big Apple Film Festival.

In Rock, there were a couple of photographers who caught images of a young Elvis, Jimi Hendrix, Joni Mitchell, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Bob Dylan, the early Beatles and The Stones.

In Hip-Hop there were a small handful of us who caught Bam, (Grand Wizard) Theodore, Lee (Quinones), Vulcan, graf kids and B-boys, as well as Public Enemy, KRS1, Rakim, Crash Crew, Cold Crush, Slick Rick, Tribe Called Quest, Latifah De La Soul, Zulu, Tony Tone, DJ Kool Herc, Grandmaster(s) Flash and Caz.

tony tone

Unlike Rock photographers, those of us who caught the early Hip-Hop magic have not really profited financially. Most of us have done a book or two, and with the exception of Henry Chalfant’s ‘Subway Art’, those books have sold in fairly small numbers, to a very small audience.

Most of the money we’ve earned has come from sales to magazines or the occasional sale to a media outlet like a Vh1 or MTV. Once or twice I’ve received a call to supply images for a retro album cover or I’v completed the sale for a few hundred dollars of a photo in a gallery show. Any fame or celebrity status we’ve acquired is in reality among our peers and a very small circle of Hip-Hop’s true fans.

Now that Hip-Hop is 33 years old or sopmewhere in that range(no BeYonce fake Hollywood age) we would like to be able to relax and to say we were there, that we documented the early phase of this artistic movement, and we did it honestly, quietly and well. Perhaps get a few paychecks for doing a lecture or for licensing our photos to a sneaker company/clothing line, and maybe go to Vegas in a nice hotel for a 4 day package get away, but now a ugly Grinch has reared his head with threats, accusations and warnings of lawsuits. The Grinch in question is not one of the t.I.’s that typically use their lawyers like Michael Vick uses his pitbulls but none other than the alleged “Godfather of Hip-Hop”, the one, the only DJ Kool Herc.

herc

As a DJ perhaps he should rethink his verbal assaults and ask himself if he has paid royalties to every artist, record label, singer, rapper or management group for the records he spins at parties and functions. He should also ask himself what if we as the original historians of this culture decide to write him out of the history (rightly, or wrongly) of Hip-Hop?

If in films, documentaries, magazine articles, speeches, interviews on radio and TV and DVD’s we decide showing images of him or even mentioning his name is too much of a hassle and headache, an outright waste of time?

As far as the law goes we are 100% within our rights to use our images of him in any way, shape or form we see fit (with the exception of using his image on clothing or merchandise), especially since none of our images were shot secretly or without his knowledge or consent and were of a PUBLIC FIGURE in A PUBLIC Setting.

Instead of DJ Kool Herc growing old gracefully and utilizing his fame, his unique position in a historic culture and notoriety as a vehicle to get paid properly by global entertainment vehicles such as radio, television and even the internet as Fab 5 Freddy does or doing DJ gigs that he could command top dollar for, or even getting his own radio show, he has decided to attack, threaten, abuse, hassle and harangue those of us who helped push his face, fame, name and reputation to the world long before the anyone knew or even cared about Hip-Hop.

If he decides to hire some sorry, inept, cut rate sheister to file papers against all of us, or even ONE of us photographers I suggest we unite and fight him with a fury. Not just to protect ourselves in this instance, but to allow us to freely practice our chosen craft that we have used to give so much to so many for so long and for so little.

In unity,
Ernie Paniccioli

born in the bronx

40 DIESEL: Of Mice, Men And MARBURY…

Friday, December 21st, 2007

starbury

Editor’s note: Holding down the post at DP Dot Com. 40 DIESEL drops knowledge about New York City sports legends… Word to JACK ROOSEVELT ROBINSON.

Let me start by saying I’ve had some tragic losses in my life, but I’ve never lost a parent. I can’t even imagine the loss one feels when the person that created and shaped you is no longer with you. I mean I never saw my father cry in my 30+ years until my dear grandmother passed last year at the age of 95. I will never forget the moment where I stood there in front of my entire family having to stop my own tears to help my old man deal with his own. That seminal moment made was a passing of the torch some what, but more importantly it taught me that my father prepared me well enough to stand as a man to the point where the student has to help the teacher carry on. I reflect on this moment and share it with you the reader in regards to the current state of my beloved sports franchise the New York Knickerbockers and their petulant “star”.

Brooklyn arguably lost its greatest basketball patriarch when Don Marbury Sr. died a few weeks back. Anyone who knows anything about NYC sports knows that Mr. Marbury consistently knocked out some of the greatest basketball talent Kings County has ever seen, and the name Marbury has been in the NYC sports pages since the mid-80’s. It was tragic to hear that one minute he’s enjoying watching his progeny in the world’s most famous arena to breathing his last breaths in the physical. So tragic that they kept it from Steph until the end of the game. Understandably the news devastated our mercurial point guard and Stephon took the time to mourn the huge loss. But after a few weeks I began to wonder if he was ever gonna come back or even worse – Is he milking this?

starbury

With out rehashing all the off court hi-jinks of 2007, you had to wonder where the owner of the Knicks, the president/GM/coach/HNIC/closet ghey Isiah Thomas, and our $100M homeboy all stood. Between the fights at 30,000 feet, random “suspensions”, and other mularkey, Knick fans have had to sit back, watch and wonder what the fuck was going on with this team. Considering their shitty record, the Knicks were like cRap music – the drama outside of the game was far better than the actual product. We fans had all become cynical of the clusterfuck and were waiting for someone to go all “NO MAS!” with us. Well I’m wondering if this has finally happened with Starbury losing his old man.

The parental deaths of sports figures have translated into some of the single greatest individual performances I’ve seen in the last few years. We all watched Jordan in 1993 giving his all after the tragic murder of his father James and just breaking down hugging the O’Brien Trophy exhausted on all planes. When Brett Farve’s dad died he went out on Monday Night Football and had a game for the ages (I was living outta state and made a verklepmt call to my old man to tell him I love and appreciate him after that game.) Who can forget Tiger winning his first major after Earl Woods passed and even the normally icy El Tigre couldn’t hold back the tears. I bring up all these moments to prove that even in the face of great tragedy these men found away to use their pain as a motivation and find a way to honor the men that made them. I don’t know if I can say that about Starbury. Whether it’s him “not being ready” or suffering “flu-like symptoms”, I don’t see that kind of gumption coming out of a kid who prides himself in being a hardscrabble kid from Coney Island.

starbury

So what you may ask is the problem? I think Steph was never really taught how to be A MAN. Stephon has always been a coddled basketball wunderkind who had the insulation of his brothers and basketball to protect him from all the ills of the world. Well in the pursuit of protecting the “family investment” no one took the time to foster the innate sense of manhood into the brother. Not manhood in the sense that he’s the financial cash cow for the next 4 generations of Marburys, but in the sense that he knows when to put the bullshit aside to be that hunter-gatherer that keeps everything in motion. Whether its reading about a 12 year old Marbury as a bratty Big Mac demanding kid in Darcy Frey’s “The Last Shot”, bitching his way out of KG’s Minnesota, the Jersey, and Phoenix pitstops, or pulling away in his $400,000 Rolls guffawing after admitting to his own indiscretions as well as his role in the cesspool that is the Knicks front office – Steph has never grown the fuck up.

For that I have to blame those around him that empowered him to carry on with such behavior and never said “NO!”. Steph may never be a champ because he doesn’t have that manhood in him that Jordan, Farve, & Tiger had in them. That greatness that lets them know that “He’s gone now, and it’s totally up to me to honor the legacy and his last name. To make everything he taught me until his last breath ring true for the world. THAT HE RAISED A MAN.” I don’t see that in Marbury, I see a scared kid who now can’t find his way in the world because he was never taught how to. And until I see something different I’ll look at him as such. But who knows, the Association’s season is still young and the East is wide open for those other 4-5 playoff spots, so maybe after some time and some Tussin, he can beat his blues and his flu.

However, if he’s not built for this grown man shit, then he should do us all a favor and take his remaining $40M and step the fuck off in those $15 kicks…

Word.

starbury