Off the Walls: Bronx Hip-Hop Art Bursts from Cultural Battlefront

4 May

Full Circle dance with Rockafella and Kwik Step will perform next Saturday at Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance next Saturday, May 12.

By Bill Aguado

We often think of artists as those whose work hangs on museum walls, or who perform on the major stages, and so on. Today’s generation of Bronx hip-hop artists explodes with hybrid genres, such as music with spoken word and digital art combined. We experience the hip-hop artists with Latin Jazz or Western African and R&B or any combination of rhythms.  You can find these performing or performance artists in alternative venues, throughout the Bronx, El Barrio and Upper Manhattan, representing voices from the cultural battlefront, striving to be heard and recognized. These artists visually reflect the values, struggles and challenges that artists of color experience. Many use their communities as their creative base and sources of inspiration. But all are hard working, constantly rehearsing, rewriting and refining. They share a tremendous pride in their works and recognize the efforts of their peers.

Collectives like Rebel Diaz (www.rebeldiaz.com) reflect a strong community empowerment and vision, primarily among communities of color. Full Circle under the direction of Rockafella and Kwikstep, have inspired so many young dancers and have redefined break dancing as an interdisciplinary art form. La Bruja, a poet, composer, musician and playwright, has combined these art forms to promote her Puerto Rican culture as a creative force. And Circa 95 has adapted the pop-up gallery concept to empower young women entrepreneurs while promoting their original digital hip-hop music. There are certainly hundreds, even thousands, more who use their creative forces to define and redefine contemporary culture with their unique voices and perspectives. Each of these voices is centered on their heritage and chronicles their ethnic-specific cultural experience. These Bronx hip-hop artists are the “town criers” keeping their peers, neighborhoods and social networks informed and alerted to the many challenges their communities face. These artists are models for community engagement and cultural empowerment.

Bill Aguado, an exhibition organizer and cultural activist, is the former long-time executive director of the Bronx Council on the Arts. 

No Pork for Embattled Seabrook

4 May

Council Member Larry Seabrook

Council Member Larry Seabrook, the Wakefield lawmaker who is scheduled for a second corruption trialfollowing a hung jury in the first one last fall, won’t be getting his hands on the usual discretionary dough that local legislators dole out to nonprofits of their choice.

The New York Post reports that, in light of the charges that Seabrook funneled $1 million to nonprofits he controlled and siphoned some of it for himself and family members, he and Council Speaker Christine Quinn came to an agreement that she and the Bronx delegation delegation chair Annabel Palma would decide which nonprofits in Seabrook’s district to allocate the money to.

‘Best’ Living Wage Law Is in San Jose

30 Apr

The long debated and delayed living wage legislation, emanating from an epic land use battle at the Kingsbridge Armory, is coming to a vote today.

A press release drafted by the retail workers union and the Living Wage NYC Coalition, which we received from Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr.’s office yesterday, states: “Culminating an historic two-year campaign that created a citywide living wage movement that sets the standards for nationwide policies, the final Living Wage Bill will be voted on by the New York City Council at the stated meeting this coming Monday.”

The ” sets-the-standards” language is consistent with Diaz and his staff repeatedly reffering to the legislation as the “best” in the country.

The Council legislation here initially affected retailers in developments receiving taxpayer subsidies. But it was eventually gutted to only include employees of the developer and then further whittled down by Council Speaker Christine Quinn exempting workers at a massive development on the west side of Manhattan. Estimates now indicate that about 400 workers will benefit from the NYC legislation and only if the Council can override the mayor’s vowed veto.

As far as we know, only Riverdale Press reporter Adam Wisnieski  has bothered to check out the claim that this bill is the “best” in the land. He found that through a 1998 law in San Jose, more workers receive higher pay  in a city about an eighth the size of NYC.

Approximately 600 workers were affected in San Jose, a city with less than 1 million people when a living wage law was passed in 1998, according to a study on living wage by the University of Washington. The subsidy threshold is lower than what will be required to trigger the law New York. The definition of “living wage” also changes with the cost of living.

Right now, any developer receiving $100,000 or more in taxpayer subsides in San Jose is required to pay $13.59 per hour with health benefits or $14.84 per hour without benefits, according to the city’s website.

Compare that to New York’s $1 million subsidy threshold and requirement to pay $10 per hour with benefits and $11.50 without, and San Jose has a stronger living wage bill than New York.

And, arguably, a measure in Los Angeles bests the bill here as well, Wisnieski reports.

Hunts Point Express: BP Should Not Add Rapper Fat Joe to Bronx Walk of Fame

26 Apr

Bernard Stein, editor of the Hunts Point Express, has published an editorial taking Borough President Ruben Diaz, Jr. to task for planning to induct the Bronx-born rapper Fat Joe into the borough Walk of Fame next month.

It was the Florida-based rapper’s lyrics drew Stein’s attention. He included a few of them from Fat Joe’s song “Porn Star”:

I never seen an ass like that
no I never seen seen an ass so fat (tat, tat, tat)
I’mma beat it til tomorrow
And all I keep telling her is “shut up bitch, swallow”
Your legs is shaking
I won’t hurt you
Now you can be the star of that new commercial

Calling the rapper “an outstanding citizen and role model to countless Bronxites,” Diaz issued a press release announcing the impending induction earlier this week. Stein’s piece was reprinted in The Riverdale Press this week.

We asked the borough president’s office if they’d like to comment on the issues raised in the Express piece but we haven’t heard back yet.

—Jordan Moss

Tom Robbins & Jordan Moss Discuss City Limits ‘Phantom Landlord’ Investigation on BronxTalk

25 Apr

Investigative reporter Tom Robbins and I were on BronxTalk with Gary Axelbank on Monday to discuss the “Phantom Landlord” investigation we did with Tom’s students at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism in City Limits. Click here to watch.

The show is also re-broadcast throughout the week on Cablevision channel 67 and Verizon FIOS 33 at 9 p.m.

—Jordan Moss

Creating a Bronx Economy: A Forum Tomorrow at Fordham

23 Apr

I thought this might interest Bronx Matters readers …

The Dorothy Day Center for Service and Justice at Fordham University, the Mary Mitchell Family and Youth Center, and University Neighborhood Housing Program invite you to a forum tomorrow morning…

Creating a Bronx Economy:

Banking Options and Alternative Solutions

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Fordham University – McGinley Center, Faculty Lounge

Breakfast @ 8:30 AM / Forum @ 9:00 – 11:30 AM

Much of the economic decline in the Bronx in the 1960s and 1970s was due to redlining and disinvestment by the financial industry and the government. Community organizing led to new laws and a new climate encouraging reinvestment by both the private and public sectors that led to the rebirth of the Bronx. Despite the many success stories of our borough in the last 35 years, redlining has left a lasting legacy in the proliferation of high-cost fringe and sub-prime financial services and the lowest concentration of bank branches of any county in the nation.  Meanwhile, as the gap between the very wealthy and everyone else grows nationally, lower income communities are struggling to survive in an economy that does not work in their own interest.

Continue reading

Housing Code Forum Today (4/23) at 4 p.m.; Issues Also to be Discussed on BronxTalk Tonight

23 Apr

Reposting this today. See update below on my appearance with Tom Robbins on BronxTalk tonight at 9 p.m. -Jordan Moss

How do particularly irresponsible landlords get away with so much neglect for so long?

A panel of housing experts will discuss potential solutions at Manhattan College today, April 23 at 4 p.m. in a forum  called Safe at Home: Putting Teeth in Code Enforcement and Holding Landlords Accountable. The event is free and all are welcome.

The participants will be as follows:

  • Tom Robbins, Investigative Journalist in Residence, CUNY Graduate School of Journalism
  • Harold Shultz, Senior Fellow, Citizens Housing and Planning Council
  • Gregory Lobo Jost, Deputy Director, University Neighborhood Housing Program
  • Kerri White, Organizer, Urban Homesteading Assistance Board (UHAB)
  • Sandra Erickson, Bronx Property Owner
  • Ivan Pichardo, Tenant Leader, Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition

City Limits editor Jarrett Murphy will moderate the panel discussion which stems from a recent investigation in the magazine about landlord Frank Palazzolo by Robbins, his class at CUNY; and Jordan Moss, former editor of the Norwood News, who will also participate in the forum.

The event, sponsored by the Manhattan College Urban Affairs and Government Departments, City Limits and BronxMatters.com, will take place in Scala Auditorium on the first floor of the Leo Engineering Building, 3825 Corlear Avenue (a block west of Broadway, between E. 238th and E. 240th streets).

Email jordanmoss.bx@gmail.com or margaret.groarke@manhattan.edu with any questions.

UPDATE: Following the event, Robbins and Moss will appear on BronxTalk, the TV talk show hosted by Gary Axelbank on Cablevision channle 67 and Verizon FIOS channel 33.  The show airs live at 9 p.m. and is re-broadcast at the same time through Friday. 

Confirming Correct Time of ‘Safe at Home’ Forum

22 Apr

Today’s listing on the Daily News Bronx page about tomorrow’s ‘Safe at Home’ housing forum that Bronx Matters is co-sponsoring is incorrect. The event is at 4 p.m. (not 6 p.m. as listed in the News). Hope to see you there. Just email bronxmatters@gmail.com if you have any other questions. Thanks.