BROTHER ALI(May 2012) | Interview By:
Mark Jorgensen
The term ‘conscious rapper’ is one that can get banded about a
little too often and thus begins to lose its meaning. Any emcee who can idly
spout any form of contrived social commentary can be dubbed (often by
themselves) a conscious rapper.
On the other hand, there are musicians who, devoid of the necessity for a
catchy tagline , can truly invoke thoughts and emotions through the content
and soul behind their music. Brother Ali has been - and still remains - as
prominent an example of the latter as there is likely to be in the world of
hip hop.
Fresh off the back of an EP release, and with fourth album the
evocatively-titled Mourning in America and Dreaming in Color set to drop
August this year, Brother Ali has been on a European Tour with fellow
Rhymesayers label-mates Grieves and Budo to promote the release.
If you haven’t already seen Brother Ali’s live set, it’s got to be on the
‘must see’ list for any hip hop fan. Following the UK, Ali has dates set in
Netherlands, France, Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden and Norway before
returning to the States to host Rhymesayers 5th annual Soundset Festival on
27th May in Minneapolis.
We caught up with Ali before his sell-out gig in Manchester, England to find
out more about the new album, Rhymesayers as a label and his thoughts on
some of the controversy he has faced for his music.
Check out the interview and footage of the show below.
Read on and enjoy. As always feel free to hit upmark@dubcnn.comwith
questions or comments.
Dubcnn: You're here on your European tour, and it's brought you to this dingy
little backstreet in Manchester, England. Tell us about the tour.
Brother Ali: Well, we're promoting the new album. I really wanted to get
back here after we did a Rhymesayers Europe tour. I did the UK as well a few
months ago so we were anxious to come back. You know, I feel like we haven't
been as present over here as we need to be. I mean, we've always wanted to
be more present here so when we did that tour, it was kind of our way of
making a commitment. I always love playing the UK, the people are always
very excited, energetic and, just, all the right things you want in a crowd.
Dubcnn: You mentioned Rhymesayers just now. For people who may not know too much
about you, your an independent label but with top artists. What makes
Rhymesayers different than your average label?
Brother Ali: Well, it's really unique because it started out as a
friendship and a crew, and it really united people from a number of
different aspects of hip hop culture. Basically, we love and respect hip hop
as an art form. And as a culture. So we appreciate every branch that comes
off that tree, because we love what it is, you know what I mean? We see the
common thread of truth in all of it, and work with people based on the
person that they are. Obviously they've got to make good art too, but based
on the human being they are, and their integrity and personality, their
character and all that stuff, it's really relationship based.
We promote each other, everybody, when you get on the label, Atmosphere is
the biggest group so you go on tour with Atmosphere, until you build and you
get a chance to perform for that audience, until you build your own
audience. Then when you headline your tour, you take somebody else on tour
with you. So I started touring with Atmosphere, and then once I was able to
headline, I brought Psalm One, Toki Wright, Evidence...
Dubcnn: So you all help each other out, like a big family?
Brother Ali: Yea, exactly like that.
Dubcnn: You've had a couple of releases recently. You had an EP
release around Valentines Day and a couple of other projects ongoing, so
tell us about the new album.
Brother Ali: The album is called Mourning in America and Dreaming
in Color, mourning like, to mourn, and the idea is that, it's specifically
talking about my country and my society, but its true of all societies
around the world. Two truths, the first is that, in our lifetime I believe
we are in some of the most dire circumstances that we've ever seen, and I
think its evident around the world that there's a lot of human suffering,
there's a lot of despair, a lot of poverty, a lot of misery, and grief,
death and hunger and a lot of people aren't living to the complete,
dignified standard that human beings are qualified for. This is being done
intentionally by the people at the top, the very few elite people.
We're being divided in every way possible, you know? We've always been
thoroughly trained to see each other as the enemy, and what's happened
recently in the last year or so is that it's got so bad, that people who
used to see themselves as different, now are together in that pain, and in
that struggle.
Dubcnn: And how is that reflected on the album?
Brother Ali: I think those barriers that used to feel effective to
privileged people, or to people with a sense of entitlement, those old kind
of barriers, and that old kind of strata isn't serving people the way it
used to, because we're all hungry together, we're all starving together,
we're all angry together, and I think that is creating the Dreaming in Color
part of my album.
Dubcnn: You've courted a little bit of controversy in the past, most
notably for Uncle Sam Goddam. What's your thoughts about that? Are you
expecting a similar response to the new album?
Brother Ali: I didn't think about it too much when I did that song,
and I'm not thinking about it too much now, because it just is what it is.
I'm an emcee because of Chuck D, because of KRS One and because of Ice Cube;
because of people who made bold statements. That's what took me from being a
b-boy thinking hip hop was fun, to dedicating my life to rhyming.
Dubcnn: And is that a central theme of the album?
Brother Ali: Reality is, human beings have a deep innate sense that we're
supposed to live with a certain level of dignity. The more space you put
between a person and dignified human life, the more frustration and tension
you create. That tension has to go somewhere and, you know, this is my take
and my read, my commentary and my invitation for people to come together
while we still have the choice.
You know, if I look at Nina Simone, Chuck D and I look at these people that
I look up to..James Baldwin, Bob Dylan, I look up to people and think that I
would like to live up to their legacy. I would like to carry that
forward...Malcolm X. I live it as much as I choose to. Me doing this right
now, it's on my heart to do it. I couldn't have made a different album. This
is the album I had to make. So I can't worry about anything else.