Def Poetry Jam - Biblioteka.sk

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Def Poetry Jam
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Def Poetry Jam
Presented byMos Def
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducerRussell Simmons
Original release
NetworkHBO
Release2002 (2002) –
2007 (2007)

Russell Simmons presents Def Poetry, better known as simply Def Poetry Jam or Def Poetry, is a spoken word poetry television series hosted by Mos Def and airing on HBO between 2002 and 2007. The series features performances by established and up-and-coming spoken word poets. Performances also include special appearances by well-known actors and musicians, as well as occasional performances by Mos Def himself. Co-created by Bruce George, Danny Simmons, Deborah Pointer, Stan Lathan, and Russell Simmons, the show is a spin-off of the popular Def Comedy Jam which began airing on HBO in the 1990s. As with Def Comedy, Simmons appears at the end of every episode to thank the audience.

The series included historical legendary poets such as The Last Poets, Nikki Giovanni, Amiri Baraka, and Sonia Sanchez. It also featured poets, Saul Williams, J. Ivy, Jessica Care Moore and Lemon. Though technically not a poetry slam, Def Poetry has become heavily associated with the poetry slam movement, and utilizes many of poetry slam's best-known poets, including National Poetry Slam champions such as Beau Sia, Taylor Mali, Big Poppa E, Mayda del Valle, Mike Mcgee, Alix Olson and Rives, among others. Even poets who are critical of the poetry slam, such as John S. Hall, have acknowledged slam's influence on the show. In a 2005 interview, Hall was quoted as saying:

It's true that I was on Def Poetry even though I've never slammed. I'm probably the only person to be on there who hasn't slammed. And I think most people on Def Poetry have won slams or done well in slams. And, all of them, except the special guest stars, the celebrities, are writing slam poems and performing slam poems on Def Poetry, so to me, Def Poetry is still extremely slam-informed, and I think it will probably always be. What they say about Def Poetry is that it wants to bring an urban feel. And to me, they don't mean black or Latino, or non-white. What they really mean is, a rhythm of poetry that comes out of the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, that came out of the slams.[1]

In a 2005 interview, Bob Holman, who founded the Nuyorican Poets Cafe's poetry slam and appeared on Season 4 of the show, applauded Def Poetry, noting:

I'm real happy poetry is on television. My hat is off to Russell Simmons, who has found a way to get poems on HBO in a way that feeds his own business. It gives him the back credentials for his hip-hop label, and at the same time he's magnanimous towards the art of poetry, giving us a place like that. It's a great, great moment, just as Def Poetry Jam on Broadway was a great moment, too. Not since Ntozake Shange's For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf has a poem like that been on the stage.[2]

However, Marc Smith, the founder of the Poetry Slam movement, is more critical of the program. Smith decries the intense commercialization of the poetry slam, and refers to Def Poetry as "an exploitive entertainment diminished the value and aesthetic of performance poetry."[3]

In November 2002, a live stage production, Russell Simmons Def Poetry Jam, opened on Broadway. Directed by Stan Lathan, the show featured poets Beau Sia, Suheir Hammad, Staceyann Chin, Lemon, Mayda del Valle, Georgia Me, Black Ice, Poetri Smith, and Steve Coleman. The show ran on Broadway until May 2003, and won a 2003 Tony Award for Best Special Theatrical Event.[4] The show subsequently toured both nationally and internationally.

Def Poetry premiered on HBO in 2002 and the latest season to air (Season 6) premiered in February 2007. As of summer 2008, there has been no word about the possibility of a Season 7. Starting in 2008, producers of Def Poetry (including Simmons, Stan Lathan, and Kamilah Forbes) developed and broadcast the HBO poetry show Brave New Voices, which is stylistically similar to Def Poetry, with teenage poets competing and backstage scenes.[5]

Episode index

Season 1 (2002)

Episode 1

  • Steve Colman – I Wanna Hear a Poem
  • Georgia Me – Full Figure Potential
  • Vanessa Hidary - Culture Bandit
  • Lemon – Shine
  • Nikki Giovanni – Talk to Me Poem, I Think I've Got the Blues
  • Black Ice – Bigger Than Mine?
  • Suheir Hammad – First Writing Since

Episode 2

  • Taylor Mali – What Teachers Make
  • Yellow Rage – Listen Asshole
  • Jewel – Poem Song
  • Flow Mentalz – They Call Me Drama
  • Sonia Sanchez – Poem to Some Women
  • Shihan – This Type Love
  • Dawn Saylor – When I Was 14
  • Kayo – Who Am I?

Episode 3

Episode 4

  • Mayda del Valle – Descendancy
  • Poetri – Money
  • Jessica Care Moore – Warriors Walk Alone
  • Dave Chappelle – The Corner Store
  • Amiri Baraka – from Why is We Americans?
  • Liza Jessie Peterson – Ice Cream Fiend
  • Kevin Coval – Family Feud

Season 2 (2003)

Episode 1

  • Beau Sia – Asian Invasion
  • Jason Carney – Southern Heritage
  • Thea Monyee – Woman to Woman
  • Sekou Sundiata – Come on and Bring on the Reparations
  • Marty McConnell – Give Me One Good Reason to Die
  • Twin Poets – Dreams are Illegal in the Ghetto
  • Jamie Foxx – Off the Hizzle for Shizzle

Episode 2

Episode 3

  • Lemon – Where I'm From and A Toast
  • Bassey Ikpi – Sometimes silence is the loudest kind of noise
  • Taylor Mali – Totally like whatever, you know?
  • Regie Cabico – What kind of guys are attracted to me
  • Haki R. Madhubuti – The B Network
  • Rat Sack – I'm Losing You
  • Talib Kweli –

Episode 4

  • Ishle Yi Park – All I have ever done is write you love poems
  • Shihan – Say What?
  • Suheir Hammad – Not Your Erotic, Not Your Exotic
  • Big Poppa E – Wussy Boy
  • La Bruja – WTC
  • Anthony Morales – Story Avenue Stuck
  • Amalia Ortiz – Some Days
  • Oscar Brown Jr. – I Apologize

Episode 5

  • Felipe Luciano – Jibaro, My Pretty Nigger
  • MuMs – Ploylessness
  • Amanda Diva – Hot Shit
  • Malik Yusef – I Spit
  • Asha Bandele – Morning Was My Mentor
  • Malcolm Jamal Warner – I Love My Woman

Episode 6

  • Sekou the Misfit – I'm a Rapper
  • Steve Connell – Why Not Wine Coolers
  • Georgia Me – NigGods
  • Louis Reyes Rivera – Bullet Cry
  • Jessica Care Moore – I'm a Hip Hop Cheerleader
  • Keith Murray – Man Child.

Episode 7

  • Denizen Kane – Lost and Found
  • Staceyann Chin – If Only Out of Vanity
  • Big Rube – Alphabet Acrobat
  • Wood Harris – Night Song
  • Goldie – No title
  • Regie Gibson – For James Marshall Hendrix
  • Joy Harjo – A Poem to Get Rid of Fear
  • Linton Kwesi Johnson – If I Was a Top-notch Poet

Season 3 (2004)

Episode 1

  • Black Ice – Lone Soldier
  • Rives – Sign Language
  • Helena D. Lewis – Stank Breath
  • Poem-cees – Power
  • Mutabaruka – Dis Poem
  • Daniel Beaty – Duality Duel
  • Rupert Estanislao – Empress
  • Jill Scott – Nothing is for Nothing
  • Suheir Hammad – We Spent the 4th of July in Bed

Episode 2

  • Mayda del Valle and Lemon – Tito Puente
  • Flaco Navaja – Kids Don't Play
  • Gemineye – Poetic Bloodline
  • Ursula Rucker – Get Ready
  • Michael Ellison – Light Skin-did
  • Ishle Park – Pussy
  • Ras Baraka – American Poem
  • Dana Gilmore – Wife, Woman, Friend
  • Common – God is Freedom

Episode 3

  • Poetri – Krispy Kreme
  • Emanuel Xavier – Tradiciones
  • Marc Bamuthi Joseph – For Pop
  • Richard Montoya – Miami
  • Vanessa Hidary – The Hebrew Mamita
  • Danny Hoch – PSA
  • Bassey Ikpi – Homeward
  • Lemon – Gangsta MCs
  • Steve Colman – Terrorist Threat

Episode 4

  • Black Ice & Staceyann Chin – Jammin
  • Rock Baby – Titty Man
  • Alix Olson – Women Before
  • Mike 360 – Twilight Zone
  • Cheryl James – We Follow Your Lead
  • Shappy – I Am That Nerd
  • Jonzi D – 3000 Casualties of War
  • Amalia Ortiz – Cat Calls
  • Jimmy Santiago Baca – from Healing Earthquakes ("Twelve")

Episode 5

  • Roger Bonair-Agard – For Trent Lott
  • Frenchie – Fucking Ain't Conscious
  • Geoff Trenchard – Of Copper Chipped Teeth
  • Chinaka Hodge – Barely Audible
  • Quincy Troupe – Forty One Seconds in June, in Salt Lake City, Utah (for Michael Jordan)
  • Dufflyn – Single Life
  • MuMs – Brooklyn Queen
  • Kevin Coval – Jam Master J
  • Beau Sia – Love

Episode 6

  • Shihan – Sick and Tired
  • Jason Carney – Out Here
  • Gina Loring – Somewhere There Is a Poem
  • Kanye WestSelf Conscious
  • Jamie DeWolf (formerly Jamie Kennedy) – Grim Fairy Tale
  • Bao Phi – You Bring Out the Vietnamese in Me
  • Roscoe P. Coldchain – Trouble
  • Mayda del Valle – Mami's Makin' Mambo
  • Buju Banton – How Long

Episode 7

  • Maggie Estep – Happy
  • Malak Salaam – Warrior's Love
  • Joel Chmara – Sweet Tooth Tollbooth School Year
  • Flowmentalz – The Payphone
  • Saul Williams – Coded Language
  • Georgia Me – Hit Like a Man
  • Deb Young – Children of a Lesser God
  • Smokey Robinson – A Black American

Season 4 (2005)edit

Episode 1edit

  • Daniel Beaty – Knock, Knock
  • Rives – Kite
  • Nafessa Monroe – White
  • Mark Gonzales – As with Most Men
  • Zena Edwards – Laugh
  • Oscar Brown Jr. – Children of Children
  • Amalia Ortiz – Women of Juarez
  • Black Ice – Or Die
  • MC Lyte – I Was Born

Episode 2edit

Episode 3edit

Episode 4edit

  • Poetri – Dating Myself
  • Julian Curry – Nigger, Niggas, Niggaz
  • Ishle Park – Open Letter to Soldier
  • Taylor Mali – Like Lily Like Wilson
  • Adele Givens – That Shit Ain't Funny
  • Kevin Coval – My g-dself Loose
  • Yolanda Kae Wilkinson – Circa Valentine's Day
  • Amir Sulaiman – Danger
  • Floetry – Everybody Heard
Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Def_Poetry_Jam
Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok. Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.






Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.

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