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Listening up: music production has blossomed as a way for young people to tune out of corporate radio and into their own creativity.


ON A SUNNY SPRING DAY, Abdull Dominguez, aka "Panama," sits inside a black box recording studio at BUMP Records in Oakland, California “Oakland” redirects here. For other uses, see Oakland (disambiguation).
Oakland (IPA: /ˈoʊklənd/), founded in 1852, is the eighth-largest city in the U.S.
. On his latest tracks recorded with his cousin, Rico Gilliam, Panama raps in Spanish, reflecting his identity as an Afro-Latino, while Rico raps in English. Together they're "Los Rakas," and their sound is a fusion of dancehall dance·hall  
n.
1. or dance hall A building or part of a building with facilities for dancing.

2. See ragga.


dancehall
Noun

a style of dance-oriented reggae
, reggae and hip-hop.

Panama is 18 years old, and the recording studio is at McLymonds High School. He began writing music when he was 15, a year after he moved to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  from his namesake country.

In the last five years, music production programs for young people have blossomed. In the Bay Area alone, there are more than 10 bona fide [Latin, In good faith.] Honest; genuine; actual; authentic; acting without the intention of defrauding.

A bona fide purchaser is one who purchases property for a valuable consideration that is inducement for entering into a contract and without suspicion of being
 programs, and more seem to spring up each month. At some point in the last 10 years, youth organizers and advocates realized they could address three priorities at once: reach out to urban youth who often disengaged dis·en·gage  
v. dis·en·gaged, dis·en·gag·ing, dis·en·gag·es

v.tr.
1. To release from something that holds fast, connects, or entangles. See Synonyms at extricate.

2.
 with school, bridge the digital divide and address the ongoing problems in corporate radio such as racism, misogyny misogyny /mi·sog·y·ny/ (mi-soj´i-ne) hatred of women.

mi·sog·y·ny
n.
Hatred of women.



mi·sog
 and pro-militarism.

"These programs really saved a lot of kids' lives," says Deangelo Lemmons, or "D.nok," 18, a member of Oakland-based hip-hop group the Faculty Boys. D.nok recently graduated from a continuation high school A continuation high school is an alternative to a comprehensive high school primarily for students who are considered at-risk of not graduating at the normal pace. The requirements to graduate are the same but the scheduling is more flexible to allow students to earn their credits  in Oakland. "Even if not all of them get famous, it's helped them in some way."

Music production education programs are usually recording studios where young people can bring in their lyrics and ideas and turn them into songs using digital recording and editing technology. Many are youth-run record labels organized like a collective, meaning young people decide what to do with the music and how to showcase their work.

Like Panama, D.nok doesn't own an iPod or any other MP3 player A digital music player that supports the MP3 format, which was the audio format that started a revolution in online music downloads and distribution. All portable music players, the iPod being the most popular, support MP3 along with one or more other audio formats. , nor does he have a computer at home. They don't have access to satellite radio, and only shell out cash for CDs once in a while. The assumption may be that all they're getting in terms of popular music is from urban format radio stations like KMEL or Wild 94.9 (Bay Area) or New York's HOT 97. But Panama says he limits his dose of this type of music.

"The type of music I listen to most of the time is not commercial music, just for the simple fact that they're not helping the people uplift themselves," says Panama.

So where does he hear about new music? Where does he get his inspiration?

"DJs talk about all the DJs, MCs talk about all the MCs," he explains simply. He buys some CDs by artists like Celia Cruz Celia Cruz (October 21 1925 – July 15 2003) was an Afro-Cuban-American salsa singer who spent most of her career living in New Jersey, and working in the United States and several Latin American countries. , Tego Calderon, El Roockie Iván Bladimir Banista, better known as El Roockie is a Panamanian reggaeton recording artist, currently signed to Luny Tunes' Mas Flow Inc. He is widely praised for his powerful and delivering lyrics, earning him the nickname King of Lyrics and  and Nas. His family in Panama also mails CDs to him.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

D.nok says he does listen to the radio once in a while: "We gotta listen to the radio to see what's up. We listen to hear what people are putting out."

Panama and D.nok, like a growing number of other young artists, are finding ways to create music culture despite the dominance of corporate radio.

In fact, music created by young folks like Panama and The Faculty Boys has become the soundtrack to the growing movement against corporate radio.

The movement against commercial radio is gaining momentum in places like Philadelphia, New Jersey, Chicago, New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
, and Washington, D.C., according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Brooklyn-based hip-hop organizer Rosa Clemente.

She says that though there is a growing movement, organizers are up against a huge industry. "Right now, what's winning the hearts of people is the corporate media industrial complex," says Clemente, who hosts a show on Pacifica's WBAI.

In the Bay Area alone, one urban format station, KMEL, boasts 600,000 listeners--70 percent of them young people of color Noun 1. people of color - a race with skin pigmentation different from the white race (especially Blacks)
people of colour, colour, color

race - people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock; "some biologists doubt that there are important
. Clear Channel, the largest radio/billboard media conglomerate, made $9 billion in annual revenue last year.

An example of corporate radio's content is from New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 City's HOT 97, where radio hosts sponsored a "Smackfest." Two female listeners slapped each other on air, and whoever slapped the hardest won $500. The same station also played the infamous tsunami song, a parody sung to the tune of "We Are the World."

In terms of local music, KMEL plays a very limited amount--mostly of the hyphy genre, upbeat music to dance and party to.

Bay Area hip-hop journalist Eric K. Arnold cites a few local artists who get airtime on KMEL, such as San Quinn San Quinn is a rapper from the Uptown Fillmore District of San Francisco, California. He began in the early 1990s alongside JT the Bigga Figga. He recorded for JT's Get Low Recordz label for several years until he broke away at the end of the decade. , Frontline, EA-Ski, The Federation, Ya Boy and Dem Hoodstarz Dem Hoodstarz (sometimes Tha Hoodstarz or just plainly Hoodstarz) are two bay-area rappers, from East Palo Alto, California, Band-Aide and Scoot Dogg. The group is a prime example of the Bay Area's Hyphy movement. . He names local artists who can sell out live shows but never get airtime on mainstream radio: Company of Prophets, Ise Lyfe, Paris, The Coup, Blackalicious, Hieroglyphics and Lyrics Born Lyrics Born (formerly known as Asia Born, born Tom Shimura in Tokyo, Japan in 1972), is a half-Japanese-American, half-Italian-American hip hop rapper. He is one half of the group Latyrx with Lateef the Truthspeaker. .

"What they're promoting is going dumb, and in more than one way," says Arnold, referring to the style of dance popular in the Bay Area--going stupid, going dumb, getting hyphy--as well as the mental numbing and dumbing down of hip-hop music.

Both Panama and The Faculty Boys have gotten airtime from community radio stations like San Francisco's KPOO, 89.5 and KPFA's 94.1.

Within community radio stations like KPFA, there are programs with very specific formats. Jack DeJesus co-hosts an Asian and Pacific Islander Pacific Islander
n.
1. A native or inhabitant of any of the Polynesian, Micronesian, or Melanesian islands of Oceania.

2. A person of Polynesian, Micronesian, or Melanesian descent. See Usage Note at Asian.
 hip-hop show bimonthly bi·month·ly  
adj.
1. Happening every two months.

2. Happening twice a month; semimonthly.

adv.
1. Once every two months.

2. Twice a month; semimonthly.

n. pl.
 on KPFA, called APEX Out of the Box.

"Our show really is the one place at least that you can tune in on an actual radio dial and hear Asian and Pacific Islander hip-hop artists," says DeJesus, who is known as Kiwi, the MC from hip-hop group Native Guns. "In terms of corporate radio, API hip-hop artists might get .001 percent airtime. We felt it was a good time to try to feature some of these folks."

D.nok hopes that building an audience for community radio will make corporate stations like KMEL and WILD 94.9 listen up. "The community radio thing, that's what's going to be important for the future of local artists," he says.

And though there is a class and digital divide, young people seem to be getting around it. Panama doesn't own a computer, but he and his group have three MySpace accounts. In just the six months that he's had his account, he has 1,000 comments and more than 1,300 friends, including many local artists. Panama uses technology--but doesn't rely solely on it--to build a community of conscious artists.

While The Faculty Boys have a Myspace account, D.nok prefers the old-school way of getting his music out to the people.

He lugs around a heavy, black backpack every day, selling his album for $5 on the streets in Berkeley, Oakland, San Francisco, Los Angeles or wherever he happens to be. He says he sells up to 50 CDs a day to "adults, kids, bums, old people. My music is for all."

Raising consciousness is an ongoing process for young people who've fed off of corporate radio for years. At one Youth Movement Records general meeting last fall, the group was rehearsing for a Friday show where they were to open for Planet Asia. When founder Chris Wiltsee asked how many had heard of the local artist, only one person raised his hand. The irony is that unless young people are a part of this growing community, they could know southern crunk music like the back of their hands but may have never heard of local artists like the Hieroglyphics, Zion-I or the Attik, who might live down the street from them--if their only source of music is commercial radio.

Momo Chang is a freelance writer based in Oakland, California.

* To listen to Panama and Los Rakas, visit www.myspace.com/ppanama.

* To listen to The Faculty Boys, visit www.myspace.com/dnok.

* Youth Movement Records: www.youthmovementrecords.org.

* BUMP Records: www.bumpre-cords.org.

* Visit www.industryears.com for up-to-date news on media justice matters, maintained by industry insider Paul Porter.

* Visit www.daveyd.com for inside perspective from Hard Knock radio host Davey D, former KMEL community affair programmer.

* Visit REACHip-Hop Coalition's blog: www.hiphopliveshere.com/blog

* For more information about the Community Coalition for Media Accountability and the Unplug Clear Channel Campaign, visit www.action.youthmediacouncil.org.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Color Lines Magazine
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:CULTURE
Author:Chang, Momo
Publication:Colorlines Magazine
Date:Jul 1, 2006
Words:1348
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