Greg Tate  

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-"One of the things that's interesting about ''[[The Rite of Spring]]'' in particular, it seems to be the most treasured piece of the the European canon by jazz musicians, it seems to have always been that way since Ellington, it has basslines, it has this staggering percussion going on." --Greg Tate, Wire Magazine, Feb 2004+“[[Black culture]] doesn’t lack for modernist and postmoder­nist artists, just their critical equivalents. And now that, like Spielberg’s ''[[Poltergeist]]'', they’re here, might as well face up to the fact that there’s no avoiding the [[recondite]] little suckers”--"[[Yo! Hermeneutics!]]" (1985) by Greg Tate
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-'''Greg Tate''' (October 15, 1957 – December 2021) was an [[American writer]], musician, and [[Music production|producer]]. A long-time critic for ''[[The Village Voice]]'', Tate focused particularly on [[African-American music]] and [[African-American culture|culture]]. ''Flyboy in the Buttermilk: Essays on Contemporary America'' (1992) collected 40 of his works for the ''Voice.'' He published a sequel, ''Flyboy 2'', in 2016. Also a musician himself, he was a founding member of the [[Black Rock Coalition]] and the leader of [[Burnt Sugar]].+'''Greg Tate''' (October 15, 1957 – December 2021) was an [[American writer]], musician, and [[Music production|producer]].
-==See also==+A long-time critic for ''[[The Village Voice]]'', Tate focused particularly on [[African-American music]] and [[African-American culture|culture]].
-*[[Flyboy In The Buttermilk]] (Simon and Schuster, 1992) +
-*[[Midnight Lightning: Jimi Hendrix and the Black Experience]] (Acapella, 2003) +
-*[[Everything But The Burden: What White People Are Taking From Black Culture]] (Broadway, Random House, 2003)+
-Black rock [...]+Also a musician himself, he was a founding member of the [[Black Rock Coalition]] and the leader of [[Burnt Sugar]].
-Blacks have composed, played, and performed rock music since its emergence in the 1950s, but the term “black rock” came to be recognized around 1985. At that time, guitarist Vernon Reid and music journalist Greg Tate joined with a small group of black musicians and music industry professionals in New York City to found the Black Rock Coalition (BRC).+ 
-Vernon Reid+He is known for such pieces as "[[Yo! Hermeneutics!]]" (1985) and "[[Cult-Nats Meet Freaky-Deke]]" (1986).
-Reid was a young but accomplished musician whose work with avant-garde jazz artists such as Ronald Shannon Jackson had drawn critical attention. More significantly, he had recently formed the ground-breaking rock band, Living Colour, an all-black heavy rock band that would eventually score a string of minor hits on rock radio. BRC co-founder Greg Tate was beginning to establish himself as a journalist through his writing on black music in the Village Voice and to build a reputation as one of the major theoretical voices of the burgeoning hip-hop movement. Reid and Tate rightly recognized that the structure of the American popular music industry limited the growth of many black artists’ musical intentions, since throughout the era of rock ’n’ roll, the American music industry engaged in a kind of commercial segregation, placing black performers in tightly regulated categories designed to appeal to perceived demographics of the music audience, and it was rare to find a black musician given official sanction to perform the same with white rock.+ 
-Black Science Fiction [...]+He was interviewed by Mark Dery in "[[Black to the Future]]" (1994).
-In his book More Brilliant than the Sun Kodwo Eshun gives a concise summary of Afro-Futurism's history:+==See also==
-"AfroFuturism comes from Mark Dery's '93 book [Flame Wars], but the trajectory starts with Mark Sinker. In 1992, Sinker starts writing on Black Science Fiction; that's because he's just been to the States and Greg Tate's been writing a lot about the interface between science fiction and Black Music. Tate wrote this review called 'Yo Hermeneutics' which was a review of David Toop's Rap Attack plus a Houston Baker book, and it was one of the first pieces to lay out this science fiction of black technological music right there. And so anyway Mark went over, spoke to Greg, came back, started writing on Black Science Fiction. He wrote a big piece in The Wire, a really early piece on Black Science Fiction in which he posed this question, asks "What does it mean to be human?" In other words, Mark made the correlation between Blade Runner and slavery, between the idea of alien abduction and the real events of slavery." -- Kodwo Eshun+*[[Cultural critic]]
-Midnight Lightning: Jimi Hendrix and the Black Experience (2003) Greg Tate+*[[Rogue scholar]]
 +*[[Flyboy In The Buttermilk]] (1992)
 +*[[Midnight Lightning: Jimi Hendrix and the Black Experience]] (2003)
 +*[[Everything But The Burden: What White People Are Taking From Black Culture]] (2003)
 +*[[Black Rock Coalition]] (BRC).
 +*[[Black Science Fiction]]
 +*"[[Yo Hermeneutics]]" (1985)
 +*[[Black science fiction]]
 +==Pages linking in as of Dec 2021==
 +[["Moist" Paula Henderson]], [[2001 (Dr. Dre album)]], [[2021 in music]], [[A New Chapter of Dub]], [[A Tribe Called Quest]], [[Afrofuturism]], [[Agharta (album)]], [[Air Above Mountains]], [[Aisha Cousins]], [[All Eyez on Me]], [[Alva Rogers]], [[André Juste]], [[Avant-garde music]], [[Avram Fefer]], [[Bevis M. Griffin]], [[Black Rock Coalition]], [[Burnt Sugar]], [[Californication (album)]], [[Chimurenga (magazine)]], [[Cultural appropriation]], [[Cultural impact of Michael Jackson]], [[Curtis (50 Cent album)]], [[Dawoud Bey]], [[De La Soul]], [[Deaths in 2021]], [[Denise Huxtable]], [[Done by the Forces of Nature]], [[Donovan Drayton]], [[Doo-Bop]], [[Eddie Hazel]], [[Embrya]], [[Everything's Beautiful]], [[Fade (Kanye West song)]], [[Germaul Barnes]], [[Get Up with It]], [[Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai]], [[Graduation (album)]], [[Highlights (song)]], [[Hip hop]], [[Illmatic]], [[Janet Henry]], [[Jean-Michel Basquiat]], [[John Akomfrah]], [[José Parlá]], [[Kerry James Marshall]], [[King of Rock]], [[Larry Smith (producer)]], [[Lemonade (Beyoncé album)]], [[Leroy Jenkins (musician)]], [[Linda Goode Bryant]], [[Lisa Teasley]], [[List of critics]], [[List of writers on popular music]], [[Maggot Brain (instrumental)]], [[Maggot Brain]], [[Mark Dery]], [[Me Against the World]], [[Michaela Angela Davis]], [[Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux]], [[Moogfest]], [[Mr. Soul!]], [[Nigga Please]], [[No More Parties in LA]], [[Pan-Africanism]], [[P-Funk mythology]], [[Plantation Lullabies]], [[Progressive music]], [[Progressive rap]], [[Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah]], [[Rage Against the Machine (album)]], [[Raising Hell (album)]], [[Renee Cox]], [[Rodeo Caldonia]], [[Run-D.M.C. (album)]], [[Seven Songs for Malcolm X]], [[Tear the Roof Off 1974–1980]], [[The Battle of Los Angeles (album)]], [[The Last Angel of History]], [[The Life of Pablo]], [[The Massacre]], [[To Pimp a Butterfly]], [[Vernon Reid]], [[Voodoo (D'Angelo album)]], [[Will Friedwald]]
-Midnight Lightning: Jimi Hendrix and the Black Experience (2003) Greg Tate [Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK] 
-Village Voice staffer Tate says this is a "book bent on making philosophical judgment calls regarding [rock guitarist Jimi Hendrix's] race, his romance, his tools"; a book "obsessed about the Blackness of Hendrix." So Tate and his informants munch on the "social meaning," "sexual mystery," and "scientific inquiries of Jimi Hendrix" to produce a "Jimi Hendrix Primer for Blackfolk." Whitefolk needn't feel left out, though, for Hendrix's adoration by whites is at the center of much of the discussion. Tate's own spiel runs out in 70-odd pages, after which he yields to various "witnesses" offering their insights and memories. Record producer Craig Street demonstrates forthrightness by remarking of Hendrix-influenced Led Zeppelin, "none of them are particularly strong on their own, but here are four guys who . . . form something powerful": straight talk, indeed, to Jimmy Page's and John Bonham's head-banging devotees. Though a little slapdash in places, this is thinking persons' rock criticism, commendably committed to understanding Hendrix's ongoing hold on his audience, and it should enliven any collection. Mike Tribby, via Booklist 
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Black culture doesn’t lack for modernist and postmoder­nist artists, just their critical equivalents. And now that, like Spielberg’s Poltergeist, they’re here, might as well face up to the fact that there’s no avoiding the recondite little suckers”--"Yo! Hermeneutics!" (1985) by Greg Tate

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Greg Tate (October 15, 1957 – December 2021) was an American writer, musician, and producer.

A long-time critic for The Village Voice, Tate focused particularly on African-American music and culture.

Also a musician himself, he was a founding member of the Black Rock Coalition and the leader of Burnt Sugar.

He is known for such pieces as "Yo! Hermeneutics!" (1985) and "Cult-Nats Meet Freaky-Deke" (1986).

He was interviewed by Mark Dery in "Black to the Future" (1994).

See also

Pages linking in as of Dec 2021

"Moist" Paula Henderson, 2001 (Dr. Dre album), 2021 in music, A New Chapter of Dub, A Tribe Called Quest, Afrofuturism, Agharta (album), Air Above Mountains, Aisha Cousins, All Eyez on Me, Alva Rogers, André Juste, Avant-garde music, Avram Fefer, Bevis M. Griffin, Black Rock Coalition, Burnt Sugar, Californication (album), Chimurenga (magazine), Cultural appropriation, Cultural impact of Michael Jackson, Curtis (50 Cent album), Dawoud Bey, De La Soul, Deaths in 2021, Denise Huxtable, Done by the Forces of Nature, Donovan Drayton, Doo-Bop, Eddie Hazel, Embrya, Everything's Beautiful, Fade (Kanye West song), Germaul Barnes, Get Up with It, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Graduation (album), Highlights (song), Hip hop, Illmatic, Janet Henry, Jean-Michel Basquiat, John Akomfrah, José Parlá, Kerry James Marshall, King of Rock, Larry Smith (producer), Lemonade (Beyoncé album), Leroy Jenkins (musician), Linda Goode Bryant, Lisa Teasley, List of critics, List of writers on popular music, Maggot Brain (instrumental), Maggot Brain, Mark Dery, Me Against the World, Michaela Angela Davis, Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux, Moogfest, Mr. Soul!, Nigga Please, No More Parties in LA, Pan-Africanism, P-Funk mythology, Plantation Lullabies, Progressive music, Progressive rap, Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah, Rage Against the Machine (album), Raising Hell (album), Renee Cox, Rodeo Caldonia, Run-D.M.C. (album), Seven Songs for Malcolm X, Tear the Roof Off 1974–1980, The Battle of Los Angeles (album), The Last Angel of History, The Life of Pablo, The Massacre, To Pimp a Butterfly, Vernon Reid, Voodoo (D'Angelo album), Will Friedwald





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