Bomani Armah, not a rapper but a poet with a hip-hop style, is hitting the big time

(Photo credit: By Bill O'leary -- The Washington Post)

Bomani Armah is a Busboys and Poets regular. For the Busboys family, he often leads Open Mic Night while inspiring his fellow poets, poetesses and audience members alike.

We were thrilled to crack open this morning's Washington Post and see that they had featured Bomani on the cover of the Arts & Living Section (C01). The article's title is aptly written: His Punch Line Smarts: Hip-Hop Parodist Bomani Armah Juggles Sense of Humor and Identity, and the contents of the article are even better.

A few of our favorite passages on his provocative and now infamous song "Read a Book" (for the full article from today's paper, please click here)

[Its] rise to [the] consciousness:

He's fixated... on what has happened to him over the past four months, how he somehow became a symbol of the coarsening culture. All because he wrote a crunk song, "Read a Book," that traveled the Internet, that was discovered by Black Entertainment Television, that was made into a video, that ignited a controversy, that turned Bomani Armah into a person he didn't recognize, someone accused of "setting my people back 100 years." Between the irate blog posts and the snippy interviews by the likes of CNN's Tony Harris, Armah discovered that he had suddenly become somebody.

Bomani's follow-up thoughts [below the surface] of "Read a Book":

" 'Read a Book' was a joke from the beginning," he says. "It was more about parodying the state of hip-hop." And now it has become the thing that defines him. He thought about that for a moment. "Damn, do this many people not get me?"
[...]

"I feel like I'm a sergeant out here in the field, showing how ridiculous the culture is," Armah says. He began performing his song around the Washington area and it caught on. He made it available for free download on his MySpace page, and the buzz grew. At some point the "Read a Book" MP3 reached the inbox of Reginald Hudlin, president of entertainment for BET, who passed it on to the network's animation division, which loved it and wanted to create an animated video off the track. Which is where Tyree Dillihay, a Los Angeles-based animation director, comes in.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Presenting Loren...

Loren doesn't just serve customers dinner at Busboy and Poets, he offers his poetry and a little bit of a soul. Great waiter. Great poet.

Love may leave you heartbroken and hopeless.
Tears may fall, but life must move on.

"Never had I heard such beautiful lies spoken. I tried to dry my eyes from time to time..."


Labels: , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Presenting Derrick...

OMN 11/13: Exclusive Interview - Erwin Catlin

OMN 11/13: Presenting Erwin Catlin...

OMN 11/13: Presenting Katrina...

OMN 11/13: Presenting Doug McCulloch...

OMN 11/13: Presenting 2 deep...

OMN 11/13: Presenting Marcus...

OMN: 11/13: Presenting Neil Not Neyo...

OMN 11/13: Presenting Jenny...

Words by Langston Hughes

Numbers are only shapes meant to deceive us into believing that anything, anything, at all is certain 'cause it never is and we never had control.

Labels: , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Presenting Sheryl...

Reading "Inspiration," dedicated to her brother:

"We are very different, you and me..."

Labels: , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Featuring Nathan...

But you can be my target market!
Welcome to my target market!
Congratulations, you're my target market!
You hit the bullseye in my target market!
My target market!

Labels: , , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Presenting Vanessa...

"It's entrapment I say, to keep your soul locked in a cage."

Labels: , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Presenting Ephrata...

Words by Ephrata

it's for a happy home even if you live alone the emotions will muscle you like al capone crippled cracked paralyzed ... bob marley's revolution keep biblical connection

(Transcriber's note: We're about 80% sure that this is at least 20% wrong.)

Labels: , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Presenting Kuku...

Kuku
on
vocals
and
strings:

"I was so I was so I was so... I was so I was so ... I had to go..."

Labels: , , , ,

OMN 11/13: Presenting Alao...

A Wooing
Langston Hughes
As performed by Alao

I will bring you big things:
Colors of dawn-morning,
Beauty of rose leaves,
And a flaming love.
But you say
Those are not big things,
That only money counts.
Well,
Then I will bring you money.
But do not ask me
For the beauty of rose leaves,
Nor the colors of dawn-morning,
Nor a flaming love.

Labels: , , , ,

Open Mic Night 11/13: MC Bomani Armah and "The Rules of the Stage"

Bomani got things started Tuesday night... check it:

Time & cleverness: "You get two pieces or five minutes, whatever happens first, all right? If you're clever enough to do haikus, you're clever enough to know when to stop."

Pay respect to Langston Hughes: "The other thing is we ask that you read a piece by Langston Hughes. So just pick it up, randomly open it. The shorter poems are in the front. Read whatever. Randomly open it, and read whatever poem you open to. Make sure to give Langston Hughes some credit for paving the way for so many poets."



Labels: , , , , ,