Monthly Archives: January 2015

The Apollo Honored the Legacy of Japanese American Civil Rights Activist Yuri Kochiyama

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日本語

On the third Monday of January, Martin Luther King Jr. Day is observed. This year was extra special because it’s been 50 years since Voting Rights Act, a landmark federal law that prohibit the racial discrimination in voting.

If you are a Japanese living in Japan, it might feel like someone else’s problem. But it’s not.
This event gave me the strong sense of connection between the civil rights movement and us, Japanese.

Hear Our Voices, Count Our Voteswas an event co-presented by WNYC and Apollo Theater. It took place Sunday afternoon, a day before MLK day. Despite the pouring rain, the theater was packed with diverse and enthusiastic audience members.

WNYC’s Brian Lehrer and MSNBC’s Melissa Harris-Perry were hosting the discussions featuring the guests including Congressman Charles Rangel.

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The conversations extended to how communities across America continue to struggle with voter disenfranchisement, suppression, strained police-community relations, discrimination and other challenges to full equality.

You can listen to the excerpt here.
http://www.wnyc.org/story/hear-our-voices-count-our-votes/

The event also honored the legacies of the great civil rights activists who have passed away this past year: Maya Angelou, Ruby Dee, and Yuri Kochiyama.

Akemi Kochiyama, took the stage and talked about her grandmother to the audience.

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Yuri Kochiyama was a California born Japanese American who was sent to the internment camp in Arkansas during WWII. This searing experience also exposed her to the racism of the Jim Crow South. After the war she moved to Harlem and became a civil rights activist, when she formed an unlikely friendship with Malcolm X. Later she cradled his head in her hands as he lay dying from gunshot wounds in 1965.

Eventually she got involved in campaigns for Puerto Rican independence, nuclear disarmament and reparations for Japanese American internees.

“I didn’t wake up and decide to become an activist,” she told the Dallas Morning News in 2004. “But you couldn’t help notice the inequities, the injustices. It was all around you.”

It’s been 70 years since WWII was over and 50 years since Voting Rights Act. However, our world is still suffering from never ending racial struggles. You still can learn much more from the civil rights movement.

 

Whitney Biopic Directed by Angela Bassett on Lifetime Tonight

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日本語

Angela Bassett has taken a brief pause in her acting career steps behind the camera to direct biopic ‘Whitney’ a movie that airs Saturday (Jan. 17) at 8 p.m. on Lifetime.

Cissy Houston, Whitney’s mother publicly spoke out the film was being made against the family’s objections. “No one connected with this movie knew Whitney or anything about her relationship with Bobby,” she said. “We are exhausted by the continuing misinformation and comments offered by people who did not know her. Please please let her rest.”

whitney-houston-bobby-brown-at-vh1-divas-duets-post-concert-party-in-2003“We all know how it ends,” Bassett says. “And we all make mistakes. Most of us get to make them in private. Whitney and Bobby had to make them in public.”

“We’re looking at a five-year moment in time,” Bassett says — the late ’80s and early ’90s, before things spun way out of control.

Houston and Brown finally divorced in 2006 and Houston died Feb. 11, 2012, at the age of 48.

Even as Houston was achieving professional success no one can imagine, even when the country saw her as America’s Sweetheart, a golden voice inside a calm, beautiful, poised and elegant woman, there was trouble in paradise.

There were drugs. Lots of drugs, Houston later admitted. In the film, she’s having fun with cocaine back when Bobby was still saying no.

Their relationship eventually slid into mistrust and physical abuse, on both sides. Houston’s short run on Bobby’s reality TV show at times portrayed her as snappish and impatient, with a mouth like a sailor.

It was those small personal moments — some surprising and many charming — with which Bassett says she tried to fill out the picture.

Whiteney“Whitney” isn’t based on any one source, and it wasn’t made with the cooperation of any key people in Houston’s life. Nor does it use Houston’s own voice, though it features four of her songs: “The Greatest Love of All,” “I’m Your Baby Tonight,” “I’m Every Woman” and “I Will Always Love You.”

While Houston is played by Yaya DaCosta, the songs are sung by Deborah Cox. Cox also sings bits of a few other songs, mostly gospel.

Bassett says her goal with the movie was to “play it down the middle, just try to tell the story as factually as we could.”

Bassett says she also drew extensively on the autobiography of Clive Davis, the music mogul who signed Houston and set much of her musical direction.

Bassett is well known herself for playing Tina Turner, another internationally famous singer who had serious issues in her marriage.

“What you need to remember about Whitney is that no one had the success she did. We make that point right at the beginning. In four years she had seven straight No. 1 hits and sold 30 million albums. That’s more than the Beatles or the Rolling Stones. In four years. And she was 23 years old. How do you deal with that? How does anyone deal with that?

“I hope we’ve shown that we need to have compassion for the journey she and Bobby were on — and the choices they made.”

“ホィットニー”伝記映画今夜8時テレビ放映!

 

Whitney Biopic Directed by Angele Bassett on Lifetime Tonight

 whitney17f-2-webRead in English

大物女優、アンジェラ・バセットの初監督映画、「ホィットニー」が今夜テレビ放映されます。

アンジェラとホィットニーは「Waiting To Exhale」で共演した仲。撮影中に当時の夫だったボビー・ブラウンがセットに訪れたり、いちおうお付き合いはあったようです。今回のホィットニーの伝記映画製作については、家族、特に母親のシッシー・ヒューストンから強い反対があったといいます。

whitney-houston-bobby-brown-at-vh1-divas-duets-post-concert-party-in-2003アンジェラは、「できるだけ彼女の人柄がそのまま伝わるよう、全神経を集中しました。彼女の音楽、功績に焦点をあてています。」とコメントしていますが、どうもホィットニーとボビー・ブラウンとの出会い、結婚、離婚、ドラッグ問題など、どちらかというとスキャンダルが中心のようです。

アリーヤの伝記物語もそうでしたが、家族の承諾をとれず、音楽は吹き替えを使っています。ホィットニーの歌を歌っているのは、なんとカナダ出身の元レーベル・メイトのデボラ・コックスです。ゴスペル曲も披露してくれてしるとか……。もともとが偉大なアーティストなので再現するのは不可能に近いのですが、アンジェラ・バセットが監督としてどこまでその力量を発揮してくれるのか楽しみです。

Whiteneyホィットニーを演じるのはヤ―ヤー・デコスタ(Yaya DaCosta)、ボビー役にはアーレン・エスカーペタ(Arlen Escarpeta)、いずれも音楽ファンにはあまり馴染みがなく華やかさにちょっと欠けます。ホィットニー役候補にキキ・パーマー、ホィットニーの実の娘ボビなどの名前もあったとか……。

放映は今夜8時、「ライフタイム」にて。

 

DJ June New York Club Chart – January 13, 2015

Знаменитый японский женщин-ди-джеем в Нью-Йорке

1. Only One – Kanye West f/ Paul McCartney

Kanyeがあのポールマッカートニーと一緒に作った話題の曲!クラブ用じゃない、キーボード伴奏のみのほとんどアカペラの素敵な曲です。亡くなったお母さんと、1歳になった愛娘に捧げるバラードらしく、ジーンと胸を打つものがあります。

Kanye collaborated with Sir Paul McCartney and came up with this song featuring almost acappella over simple keyboard. The song is a tribute to West’s daughter, North, and is sung from the perspective of his late mother, Dr. Donda West that touches my heart!

2.  Come Get Her – Rae Sremmurd

いやー、今大人気のRae Sremmurd。アルバムも出て、かなり評価高いです。ラップ&歌も独特の物を持ってて、若い兄弟なのにとても才能があるビッグアーティストです。この曲の他にも色々良い曲つまってます。

The brother-duo Rae Sremmurd is on top of the game. Just dropped the young and gifted duo’s first album “SremmLife” is packed with great songs.

3. The Body – Wale feat. Jeremih

Waleはお兄ちゃん達から凄く人気あります。Lyricが共感出来るから、らしいです。もっと人気あるのが、Meek Millかなぁ、Hoodなお兄ちゃん達からかなりの支持ありです。曲は R.Kellyの名曲 “You Remind Me Something”の歌詞使ってて、覚えやすいです。Kellyももう一回ヒット作って欲しいです。

Wale is definitely getting love from hip-hop heads for his convincing lyrics but I guess Meek Mill has more hype among guys in the ‘hood. I like the fact that R&B crooner Jeremih is singing the song’s hook, which is lifted from R. Kelly’s classic slow jam, “You Remind Me of Something.” We are missing Kelly!. Please give us another smooth R&B hit.

 DJ June – This Week’s Event

Tue., 1/13        @Toca Tuesdays @ Santos Party House (96 Lafayette Street) w/ Tony Touch 11pm~

Thu., 1/15        @ b.O.b. (235 Eldridge Street) 10pm~

Fri., 1/16          @ Providence AC in the Tropicana Hotel 10pm~

Sat, 1/17         @ Providence AC in the Tropicana Hotel 11pm~