Odeo

Breakdown FM: Tribute to Professor X of X-Clan

Published on Mar 17, 2006 in none

Breakdown FM w/ Davey D

Breakdown FM w/ Davey D

Listing 91-120 of 364 episodes

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Breakdown FM: The Bishop Speaks-An Interview w/ writer Adisa Banjoko pt 1

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March 19, 2006

Breakdown FM: Tribute to Professor X of X-Clan

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March 08, 2006

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March 08, 2006

Breakdown FM: Paris MegaMix by Davey D

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March 07, 2006

Breakdown FM: interview w/ Paris on PE pt 2

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March 07, 2006

Breakdown FM; Interview w/ Paris on the Making of PE's 'Rebirth of a Nation'

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March 07, 2006

Breakdown FM: Finally Vindicated-MC Hammer Interview pt 3

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March 02, 2006

Breakdown FM: Finally Vindicated-MC Hammer Interview pt 2

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March 02, 2006

Breakdown FM; Finally Vindicated-It's Hammer Time Once Again pt1

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March 02, 2006

Breakdown FM-Ice Cube Returns to Spark Beef in all the Right Places

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March 01, 2006

Breakdown FM:Blackalicious Studying their Craft pt 2

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March 01, 2006

Breakdown FM: Blackalicious-Studying Their Craft & Running the Game pt 1

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March 01, 2006

Breakdown FM: Malkia Cyril Speaks Out About Clear Channel at Oakland Townhall

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February 24, 2006

Breakdown FM: Afrika Bambaata, Rosa Clemente, Declaring War on Commercial Radio

Breakdown FM: Afrika Bambaata, R...

February 22, 2006

Breakdown FM; Mobb Deep Interview

Breakdown FM; Mobb Deep Interview

February 16, 2006

Breakdown FM: E-40 Tells Us When to 'Get Hyphy' and 'Go Dumb'

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February 13, 2006

Breakdown FM: Mista FAB Explains Thizzing & the Yellow Bus Movement

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February 13, 2006

Breakdown FM: Update on New Orlean's Juvenile's Reality Check

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February 13, 2006

Breakdown FM: Adissa Banjoko -Why Was Hip Hop Not Present at Coretta's Funeral

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February 10, 2006

Breakdown FM: A  S&I  Interview w/ Dave Mays About the Source Magazine Drama pt 1

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February 06, 2006

Breakdown FM-Interview w/ Dres of Black Sheep pt1

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February 01, 2006

Breakdown FM: Ed Lover Interview pt 2 w/ StreetandIndustry.com

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January 31, 2006

Breakdown FM: Jay-Z I'm a Biter Not a Writer

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January 27, 2006

Breakdown FM: A trip Through the Underground #1

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January 26, 2006

Breakdown FM: Ed Lover Lets the Truth be Told w/ Cedrick Muhammed..

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January 23, 2006

Breakdown FM: An Interview with Hip Hop Legend Slick Rick-Hip Hop's Greatest Storyteller

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January 23, 2006

Breakdown FM: Music From MV Bill of Brazil who is  Rap's Biggest Star

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January 20, 2006

Breakdown FM; Native American Community Speaks Out About Clarence Ray Allen

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January 16, 2006

Breakdown FM: Dr King Had More to Say Than 'I Have A Dream'

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January 16, 2006

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Here’s a special tribute mix to the legendary Professor X… Thanks to Paradise the Architect for providing insightful heartfelt commentary as to who... More

Here’s a special tribute mix to the legendary Professor X… Thanks to Paradise the Architect for providing insightful heartfelt commentary as to who Professor X was and what he has and should mean to us… Enjoy the mix and try to live up to the greatness professor X hoped from all of us..He is now at the Crossroads.. Davey D THE NAME OF AMEN RA THE 5TH ELEMENT OF HIP HOP KNOWLEDGE, CULTURE, OVERSTANDING To All the Activist and Fighters for Hip Hop Culture, I am sorry to say that A Great King and Warrior has just pass on today to be with our Ancestors and among the Gods and Goddesses of the Supreme Force One God who is called by many names. May Amun Ra/ Allah be with our brothers Soul any May his Father Sony Carson received him to be with The Ancestors of The Indigenous People of the Planet so called Earth. We ask that all who love Hip Hop Music to call all these so called Hip Hop Radio stations and Video shows requesting to hear X-Clan Songs on the airwaves as well as to see X-Clan videos all over the world on TV. Peace and Blessing To All Brother Afrika Bambaataa The Amen Ra of Universal Hip Hop Culture… Professor X Was Vanglorious by Wendy Day Check out this Breakdown FM Professor X Tribute Mix odeo.com/audio/904888/view I received an email from Afrika Bambaataa and Yoda today saying that Professor X had passed. I rushed over to allhiphop.com to see what happened to him. They confirmed Lumumba Carson passed from Meningitis. I am devastated. In 1992, I started Rap Coalition out of pure disgust after seeing how my favorite rappers were treated—specifically, Eric B and Rakim, and X-Clan. In the late 80s and early 90s, these were my favorite rappers. Lamumba Carson was great because he stood for something. He had something to say and he said it. He was the son of New York based (now deceased) activist Sonny Carson (how difficult it must be to be the son of someone so driven, focused, and important to humanity). Lumumba always rose to the occasion. I always avoided meeting Professor X and Brother J (who, together, comprised X-Clan and heavily promoted the organization Black Watch), out of fear that they may not be what their image portrayed. At that point, I had met so many of my rap heroes and been disappointed in the past because of the diachotomy between image and reality (a painful lesson for someone devoting a career and life to helping her heroes for free). I found that J and Lumumba were serious about what they were accomplishing. And while I found Professor X to be human with all the human frailties (thank God!), over the years I have found both of them to be exactly who they portrayed themselves to be—strong Black men, loving and caring for a race of people often too tired to fight for themselves. They were not hypocrites like soooo many others. Like most rappers, and certainly like the majority of rappers from their generation, they did not make much money from their art form. In fact, they had the further degradation of watching others become wealthy on what they built, and on their art form (a BIG @#%$ you to Lou Maglia and 4th and Broadway). I just spoke with Lumumba for the first time last year. I had received an email that was making fun of him because he listed himself on eBay, and was auctioning off “a day with Professor X” to the highest bidder. How he must be struggling financially to do something like that, I thought to myself. I became the highest bidder. The fact that I could barely afford to pay my rent at the time did not enter my mind. I was determined to buy a day with Professor X. He ended the auction before the final deadline (doesn’t matter, I would have won regardless) because of the hateful emails circulating on the web about him putting himself up for auction. I was disgusted by the reaction. It was a f*cking lunch date with Professor X. Had it been Justin Timberlake for a charity, no one would have said @#%$. But a hungry man was not supposed to eat this way, I guess. Somehow others who have made a career from (read: pimped) Hip Hop had the right to say what was acceptable or not for one of the Legends. All of a sudden, people making money critiquing what others create had the power to say what was the proper way for Professor X to make income. It pissed me off beyond words. I received disrespectful, opinionated emails from self-appointed authorities asking me why I supported such a gimmick. I got emails from fake-ass Hip Hop “journalists” spewing negativity and condescention without having all of the facts. I was disgusted with our community for not supporting Professor X and everyone else like him who needed our support and got jeers instead. Lumumba called me. He knew who I was. He was excited that I had been bidding on his post. I had the opportunity to tell him what he meant to me. I told him how he influenced me to go down the path I am on without ever having met me. Now THAT’S power. He shared with me some of his industry expereinces and his hopes and dreams. The price for Lumumba was high on eBay. Not high financially, but high in negative reaction, high in lack of support, and high in the realization that this unforgiving industry has no love for those who have come before when the @#%$ VH-1 cameras aren’t running. I think my last bid was under $100. I would have bid $1,000. We quietly disrespect our artists for not being Billionaires, and then we disrespect them if we perceive them to “sell out” (read: earn a living). They can’t win. We bemoan artists today for selling misogyny, crime, violence, and materialism, but we didn’t support the ones who had a positive message once they were no longer perceived to be “hot!” And God forbid they try to earn a buck on eBay selling the opportunity to spend time with them before they pass. I wanted to spend a day with Lumumba. He would not take my money. We spoke at length about the industry and Afrocentricity. We discussed his father and his legacy. We discussed a lot. It was the first, and last, time we spoke. I never got my day with Professor X. But what I did get was far more priceless. I got the real Professor X, and he is and was what he always said he was. He was REAL. And he loved people. Especially Black people. He will sorely be missed! Please understand if the next time you see me I am stomping in my big black boots. wendyday.com Less

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