Posts Tagged ‘ScottHeron’

Gil Scott-Heron dies aged 62 – NME.com

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

May 28, 2011 10:10

Public Enemy’s Chuck D leads tributes to ‘Godfather Of Hip-Hop’

Photo: PA Photos

Gil Scott-Heron has died at the age of 62 . The cause of his death is still unclear.

The influential musician and poet – often given a ‘Godfather Of Hip-Hop’ nickname he rejected – passed away in New York’s St Luke’s Hospital yesterday (May 27), reports BBC News.

It is believed that Scott-Heron fell ill after returning from a trip to Europe.

After starting his recording career in 1970, his output spanned soul, jazz, blues and the spoken word.

His work had a strong political element. ‘The Revolution Will Not Be Televised’, perhaps his best-known work, critiqued the mass media of the 1970s.

He was one of the first artists to use his music to speak out about the apartheid in South Africa, some time before the issue became the focus of a popular global campaign.

Scott-Heron went on to influence generations of musicians, both inside and outside hip-hop.

Kanye West heavily sampled Scott-Heron’s spoken word pieces on last year’s ‘My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy’ album.

Scott-Heron’s final album was last year’s ‘I’m New Here’, his first studio LP in 16 years.

The album was reworked with The xx’s Jamie xx into a remix album, ‘We’re New Here’, which was released last February.

Public Enemy’s Chuck D has been among those paying tribute to Scott-Heron, taking to his Twitter account Twitter.com/mrchuckd to say: “RIP GSH..and we do what we do and how we do because of you. And to those that don’t know tip your hat with a hand over your heart & recognize.”

He added that he had planned to collaborate with Scott-Heron on his next album, tweeting: “Quite stunned at the fact I just wrote and recorded guest vocals on one of his next albums.This makes one realize that time is precious, damn.”

New York rapper Talib Kweli also had his say, tweeting from Twitter.com/realtalibkweli: “Wow. The rest of my night I’m gonna listen to Gil Scott-Heron. We love you brother. We will miss you. RIP.”

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Gil Scott-Heron dies; influential poet/musician helped inspire rap

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

Getprev Gil Scott-Heron, whose late 1960s and early ’70s poetry set to rhythmic jazz music, especially “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised,” was one of the most important and obvious inspirations for rap music, has died, according to his British publisher.

The poet and musician, who had long struggled with drug addiction, had in the past two years returned into the public eye with an acclaimed solo recording, “I’m New Here,” and a follow-up remix album done by Jamie xx of the British group the XX. Scott-Heron was 62.

Last year the New Yorker published a reverent but heartbreaking profile of Scott-Heron by Alec Wilkinson.  Written after Scott-Heron had recorded “I’m New Here” but after he had relapsed and was smoking crack openly in front of the reporter, the story traced his rise, his fall and his influence.

In an interview for the feature, bassist Ron Carter, who played on “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised,” described Scott-Heron’s allure: “He wasn’t a great singer, but with that voice, if he had whispered it would have been dynamic. It was a voice like you would have for Shakespeare.”

In the same story, which is behind a paywall here, rapper Chuck D. discusses the role Scott-Heron played in the birth of rap: “You can go into the beat poets and [Allen] Ginsberg and [Bob] Dylan, but Gil Scott-Heron is the manifestation of the modern world. He and the Last Poets set the stage for everyone else. In what way necessary? Well, if you try and make pancakes and you ain’t got the water, the milk or the eggs, you’re trying to do something you can’t. In combining music with the word, from the voice on down, you follow the template he laid out. His rapping is rhythmic. Some of it’s songs. It’s punchy, and all those qualities are still used today.”

Pop & Hiss will have more on Gil Scott-Heron’s legacy, and The Times will have a full obituary in Sunday’s paper.

RELATED:

Live review: Gil Scott-Heron at the El Rey

A first listen to Gil Scott-Heron’s “I’m New Here”

Album review: Gil Scott-Heron and Jamie xx’s “We’re New Here”

– Randall Roberts

 

 

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