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Invincible: Opportunity in Crisis
By Jamilah King, WireTap
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| Invincible's ShapeShifters (Emergence) |
| It's easy to name-drop when discussing Invincible. Talib Kweli has called her one of the most talented emcees he's ever heard. Jean Grae echoes that sentiment. A quick peek at her first solo LP's liner notes reads like a who's who of Detroit hip-hop: Production by Black Milk and Bling 47's Waajeed, vocals by Detroit-affiliate Tiombe Lockhart and moving interludes by political icons like Grace Lee Boggs. While Invincible modestly refuses to play up the album's heavy-hitting guests, her personal ethos is clear: Build community, by any beats necessary. The 14-track LP shows that it's impossible to separate an artist from her politics. In her own words, she "doesn't write rhymes/[I] write ransom notes." And she does so with a calculated and life-hardened swagger. Whether it's describing her childhood in Ann Arbor, MI, a liberal college town where resident communities face school tracking (separating students based on perceived academic ability), or denouncing racist violence in the Palestinian West Bank, her statements ring loud and clear. Her goal is simple, and etched on the track "Looongawaited" where she spits, "I'm striving to be/one of the best/period/not just the best/with breasts/and a period." |
There's such a strong musical history in Detroit -- from Motown to J Dilla -- and your album is produced by some of Detroit's finest: Black Milk and Waajeed. How do those legacies impact your music?
Invincible: In so many ways. For starters, there's a strong musical legacy in Detroit, but there are also so many strong movement legacies here, too. On the music end, there's always been so much talent here, and I feel like especially after Dilla and [D12 member] Proof's passing, folks have started to come together more, and realize how important it is to represent for Detroit.
What are some of those movement legacies?
Invincible: There's Grace Lee Boggs, who's one of my mentors. She's 93 years old and has been active in the city for 50 years. She came up with her late husband, Jimmy Boggs. They were involved in many things, like helping to organize to bring Malcolm here for the Grassroots Leadership Conference where he gave his "Message to the Grassroots" speech. They were also some of the founders of Detroit Summer.
If you go to downtown Detroit, there are three monuments that pay homage to movement history. One of them is the Joe Louis fist, another is a monument to union organizing, and the whole monument is covered in radical movement-based quotes. Not far from there is a monument to the underground railroad. A lot of underground railroad activity went through Detroit since we're close to the Canadian border. What other city can you go to where all of the downtown monuments are movement-based?
We're surrounded by all this history, and not just history in a nostalgic way. Many of the people who were actually involved in those things -- DRUM, the Black Panthers, Ruth Ellis -- are still around. The legacies are still being built upon in very dynamic ways. It's not static.
There's a song on your album called "Locusts" that talks about gentrification in Detroit. Why is that song important to you?
Invincible: That song was years in the making. Finale and I took a lot of time to write that song. He rode around Detroit with his grandfather and really talked about how the community had changed. I talked to a lot of mentors and elders through my organizing work and I just talked with people who I met in the community. It's important for us -- as artists, people who are from the city and who love the city -- to preserve the legacy of our communities. The people who are moving to Detroit now in the name of so-called "development" don't know these legacies, and definitely aren't trying to preserve them. It's up to us to keep the history alive.
Your work with Detroit Summer has taken you a lot of places. You recently did an organizing project with youth in Detroit and in Palestine's West Bank. Can you describe that work and why it was so important for you?
Invincible: The focus of the work is local. There were two youth delegations from the U.S. that went last summer: One from Detroit Summer, and another from The Palestine/Israel Education Project based in Brooklyn. They do workshops at Bushwick Community High School where they use popular education and media including excerpts from the documentary on Palestinian hip-hop called Slingshot Hip-Hop. We're both part of the U.S.-Palestine Youth Solidarity Network, whose focus is doing local work in our communities using a global lens that connects similar struggles -- like education, or occupation in relation to police brutality.
In Detroit Summer, we have the Live Arts Media Project (LAMP) and the focus is on youth creating media and hip-hop to document and organize around the situation in the schools. They actually created a CD that we call an audio hip-hop documentary -- Rising Up From the Ashes: Chronicles of a Drop-Out. The CD was created in 2006, and since then the youth have created their own curriculum, facilitated popular education workshops and performed throughout the Midwest. They have also conducted a survey and thrown all-ages hip-hop shows called D-Tension.
I went on the Youth Solidarity Network delegation last August to do a shorter version of LAMP with Palestinian West Bank youth. We were out there for ten days, and together we had workshops on everything from website design to rhyming. It was incredible to see kids who had never really heard hip-hip get on stage at the end and perform. It was also really powerful to have all that happen despite the language barrier. We used youth interpreters the entire time who translated everything we said into Arabic.
Actually, at this year's Allied Media Conference we had a workshop organized by the Palestine Education Project where several U.S.-based organizations including Detroit Summer had a live, online video-conference with the youth we worked with last summer in the West Bank. The youth were able to perform for each other and also speak about current local organizing work and struggles.
For me personally, the trip was so powerful. I hadn't been back since I left when I was seven. So to go back, and especially to go back with hip-hop -- making connections to Detroit and our local struggles, sharing experiences, and building true solidarity -- brought everything full circle.
For more, visit Invincible on MySpace and learn more about her label, Emergence Music.
Jamilah King is the associate editor of WireTap.