May 23, 2013
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Posts tagged: Brooklyn

Run Tune: Exclusive interview with DJ Child

Words by DJ Theory

Oakland's DJ Child

DJ Child is the hardest-working man in the reggae biz that you’ve never heard of–if you rely on mainstream channels for your music discovery, that is. As the mind behind Oakland-based Project Groundation, he is a pioneer on several levels; of a new mixtape format that condenses two or three LPs worth of original material into a coherent product with a central theme, of a particular musical vision that combines rasta-inflected reggae (think Sizzla) and fight the power gangster rap (think Dead Prez), and a post-digital DIY indie approach to music that encompasses everything from designing your own graphics to growing your own food. Appropriately, when Child and LARGE UP correspondent and music dude DJ Theory sat down to chop it up, they covered everything from dwarf banana trees to prison documentaries and the reggae scene in Mali.

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Haitian V Makes A Doritos Commercial

Words by Jesse Serwer and J-RockaZ

Central Brooklyn, and Flatbush in particular, is probably the only place in the world where at any given moment you can find people from every Caribbean island— Haitians, Jamaicans, Trinidadians, Vincentians, Bajans, and even Puerto Ricans and Dominicans—all standing on the same block at the same time. It’s an environment that breeds funny situations and people, so it was only a matter of time before an enterprising entertainer represented this culture clash comedically. In his “Haitian V” web skits, sometime stand-up comic Vladimir Barthelemow Thelonious Rasputin Slocumb Calixte the 3rd plays a fish-out-of-water, middle-aged Haitian man (Calixte is in his 20s but based Haitian V on his 40-something uncle) attempting various hustles in New York City. While the fedora-capped V clashes with a colorful cast of characters that includes a subway candy hustler, NBA baller Rajon Rondo and an online predator with the screen name “Mr. Boomshackalack,” his most frequent foil is Ignorant Trevor, his Jamaican arch nemesis. Recently, Calixte played a “Haitian V-like character” in this spec Doritos commercial, submitted to “Crash the Superbowl,” a contest offering Super Bowl airtime and a potential million dollar payday to the amateur commercial with the most votes. Watch the video and vote here, and see below for more of Haitian V in action.

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Grind Mode: Marley Coffee x DeScribe

Words by Eddie STATS Houghton

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Rohan Marley and DeScribe (right) at a recent "Harmony Conference"

In the past few months we have blogged about the emergence of Marley Organic Coffee and the distinctive mix of Rasta and Hasidic Jewish culture that gives Crown Heights (hell, Brooklyn) its unique flavor. Well now those two stories have become one story. Apparently Shneur “DeScribe” Hasofer–an observant Lubavitcher Hasid and rapper who has made his name with songs promoting racial unity–randomly struck up a convo with Rohan Marley on Broadway one day and bonded–possibly impressing him with his Irish-sounding impression of patois.

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Corner Stones: New Meta and The Cornerstones Video

Words by DJ Gravy, photo by Abby Ross

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So you may have seen our last post on the Senegalese reggae singer Meta Dia when we showcased his music video, “Somewhere In Africa.” This time he’s back with another great tune and a very impressive video, shot in Brooklyn and directed by Toni Comas. The video tells a story of a hustler with the cops on his tail and if you’ve spent any significant amount of time in New York you will most likely recognize Kofi–dread who plays the undercover cop–since his book stand on 4th and Broadway was a landmark for years and he seems to be everywhere most of the time!

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Labor Day Rice and Peas Party Sell Off!

Words by DJ Gravy:::Photos by Tono Radvany

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Monday, September 6th was the West Indian Day Parade on Brooklyn’s Eastern Parkway, and although it was a long weekend of festivities, there’s always room for some Rice and Peas! New York’s most diverse dancehall affair goes down every first Monday of the month at Sway in Tribeca and there was a lot of star power inna di building.

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Only in Brooklyn: Kosher Jerk Chicken

Words by Eddie STATS Houghton, via The Daily News

DIGIPIX

The particular mix of Rastas and Hassidic Jews that defines the cultural mix of the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn is well-known to longtime New Yorkers but even they do a double-take when the identities Jewish and Jamaican reside within a single body. That is clearly the case, though, for Sarah Attias–a Sephardic Jew of Spanish extraction who also happens to be a born and bred Jamaican. She and husband Zev put their “Jew-maican” pride on display at Monday’s West Indian Day parade, offering free comedy with every purchase of their kosher jerk chicken.

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