Throwback Thursday LIVE at Visiones 1992

Throwback Thursday Memory: Today I pay homage to some of the great artists musicians I’ve been privileged to know as friends and work with as compatriots along the journey in jazz. Drummer Chip White made his transition during the Covid pandemic but not before seeing a string of his recordings rise to respectable positions on… Continue Reading

East Chicago’s Black Churches

This Easter season, in today’s national conversation around religion, Christian nationalism, Critical Race Theory, and the intersection of race and politics, here is an article that I contributed to The Times of Northwest Indiana in the late 1980s. Churches in American life then, as today, have been central to the political dynamics that affect our… Continue Reading

A Great Night in Harlem: Music & Tributes to the Best of the Best

Tonight’s “Great Night in Harlem” fundraiser remains one of the City’s premier music galas of Spring. The event, sponsored by the Jazz Foundation of America (JFA), is the organization’s largest annual fundraiser. Held at the Apollo Theater in the heart of Harlem, this year’s program and star-studded post-concert celebration should once again live up to its… Continue Reading

Remembering Paul Kwami

Today I join in celebrating my friend Dr. Paul Kwami, who made his transition two years ago. Paul Kwami was former Director of the Fisk Jubilee Singers for 27 years. Although I’m not present in Nashville to honor him today, I reflect on our shared triumphs by introducing new audiences to experience concerts held by… Continue Reading

HBCU Marching Bands – An African American Hallowed Tradition

Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) football culture and marching bands remain legendary within the nation’s African American community. Not only are historic conference and regional rivalries prime arenas for showcasing some of our nation’s finest grid ironers, grooming athletes as potential Heisman trophy prospects and future NFL Hall-of-Famers, HBCU football games are also unique… Continue Reading

Francis N’gannou: Odd Odyssey Heavyweight Contender

Like millions of others, I’ve watched Francis N’gannou’s incredible story unfold. The soft-spoken strong man from Cameroon, now risen from among the poorest of villages to the heights of sports celebrity is a compelling example of success. Burdened yet emboldened by back-breaking hard labor and low wages eked from Africa’s dehumanizing mine fields, N’gannou’s fierce… Continue Reading

African Diasporan History: Fisk & Schomburg

I’ve long hoped that some form of scholarly and cultural collaboration would evolve between Fisk University, my alma mater, and Harlem’s historic Schomburg Center for the Study of Black History and Culture. The prospect of an ongoing scholastic and cultural bond between these two storied institutions has intrigued me, and now it has come to pass.… Continue Reading

Remembering My Dad

Childhood images and memories of my father cascade like a kaleidoscope of colors, sounds, and designs. Years serve as a prism and now at my age, like a child peering into the kaleidoscope, a momentary fusion of abstractions, streams of brilliance, opaqueness, symmetry, and distortion are glimpsed through the lens of time. Images changing within… Continue Reading