Hip Hop On L.O.C.K. May 2013 Newsletter

BMLDI and HHOL Team up to Present “Emanon”

In the spring of 2013, Hip-Hop On L.O.C.K. teamed up with The Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh and the Black Male Development Institute (BMLDI) to create a program that would not only engage the young men from BMLDI but that would challenge them to use their creative talents to come together to create a project that would inspire others.

Over the 10-week process, the youth have been engaging in workshops that have provided them with a foundation to build music on such as Math of Music and Writing Workshop and have had a full-blown photoshoot with a professional photographer and will create a music video for one of their tracks.  The program concludes with a graduation celebration where the young men will debut their music video and perform some of their music live.

“Leadership development is a critical element in addressing the economic, educational, social and emotional needs of young African American males.  At BMLDI we strive to help black boys discover and nurture the leader inside themselves, then challenge them to commit to putting that leadership into action,” said Sabrina Saunders, Co-Director BMLDI, Urban League Greater Pittsburgh.

The group, Emanon, no name spelled backwards, developed their cd project “Supremacy” to include inspirational tracks such as Boyz II Men.

HHOL Announces Partnership with The Pgh Cultural Trust

Hip-Hop On L.O.C.K. is proud to announce that it is parterning with The Pittsburgh Cultural Trust Education and Community Engagement Department in the summer of 2013.

This partnership is a huge opportunity for youth ages 12-14 that are not currently involved with one of HHOL’s current partners to enroll in it’s intensive programming.  The program will take place downtown at The Trust’s facilities and will run daily from 11-4 pm on June 24-July5 with no class on July 4th.  For more information, or to enroll a student, visit The Pittsburgh Cultural Trust’s website.

HHOL Hosts Fab Fridays

On Friday, April 26th HHOL hosted Winchester Thurston middle school students as part of their Fab Fridays program. The students engaged with DJ Hank D to learn about Djing and then created their own group called “Ya Momz Kids” and a track called “Go So Far” that can be heard here.

Shout Outs to Propel Montour Youth

We would like to send a huge shout out to the students in grades K-8 at Propel Montour as they work on creating their own music from conception to completion. The students have learned to build their own beats and then wrote and recorded their own songs on top of those beats.

The 8th grade students will have the opportunity to create their own music video using the tracks they created during the beginning of their 12 week session.

The students at Propel Montour have been extremely dedicated to the class and have taken their creativity to a place that most students don’t. Each class each chose their own positive topic to write about incluing anti-bullying, studying and good sportmanship and created amazing tracks around these topics.

Please stay tuned to be able to view the music video that will be presented as a part of the school’s Celebration of Learning (COL) at the end of the school year.

Tune into L.O.C.K.down Radio Tuesdays at 7 p.m. You can subscribe to the HHOL mailing list by clicking here.


Krowd Kontrol Radio talks to Nicoletta

Check out this video of Krowd Kontrol Radio featuring an interview with R&B/pop artist Nicoletta, produced by TheFrzy.com.

Follow DJ Phinsse and Krowd Kontrol Radio on Facebook and on Twitter for the latest updates.


Nyansense: Favorite song

What is your favorite song? It seems like a pretty simple question. It’s that song you listen to most frequently. So for me that would mean its “We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed” by Los Campesinos! But what about that song you play in the car with the top down in the summer time and sing along to? Oh wait, I do that with “We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed,” too. How about that song that just hits you in a way that words can’t describe?  It’s that feeling that transcends words, an idea that can’t be transmuted into words. ”We are Beautiful, We Are Doomed” fits that description, too.

To be clear, while “We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed” is an amazing song, it is not my favorite. I was hoping that I could illustrate just how contradictory the criteria for choosing a “favorite” song can be… but it seems I’ve been duped. Everything points right at “We are Beautiful, We Are Doomed” — but somewhere there is a disconnect.  Because as much as I love it and as much as I listen to it and as much as I blast it on highway trips and sing along to it, “We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed” is not my favorite song. This title belongs to “Motorcycle Drive By” by Third Eye Blind.

I’ve struggled with this question for quite a while, how exactly to define what my favorite song is. I mean, I came up with perfectly good criteria and found a song that fits all of them, but for some reason there is still a gap between my theoretical favorite song and my actual favorite song.

I first heard “Motorcycle Drive By” when I was 14. I was mesmerized. I listened to it constantly and then, as I went through high school and began to truly love music, it fell out of constant rotation. It’s not that I had gotten tired of it, which happens frighteningly often when I find a song I love. Instead, my favorite song just fell aside. But the memory of elation stayed clear within my mind. I rediscovered it in March of my freshman year of college and it was like greeting a long lost friend.

My favorite song is a love song. I don’t see how anyone could honestly admit that their favorite song is not about love. My favorite song is also a pop song. If you know me, you’d know that I take pride (probably a bit too much) in having an eclectic musical taste. I constantly seek out music that’s fallen out of the public eye or has never really reached it in the first place. And more often than not, I’d rather listen to the niche music of the underground than the all-too-often cookie cutter creations of the mainstream. But while I constantly search for music that is odd, unique, and complex there is an integral aspect of music that pop capitalizes: Connection. Pop music is made for the masses. It needs to find a way to cater a message to an audience that’s heard it all without being boring. While pop will always be criticized for being inauthentic corporate drivel, it is inauthentic corporate drivel that brings people together in a way niche music cannot. That is why I am not ashamed to say that my favorite song is, indeed, a pop song.

When I was eighteen I decided that I wanted to make a mix CD that reflected my personality. It took me six months to create; 21 songs and 1:19:04 long.  With 20 songs chosen and organized in a logical (to me) fashion I had enough room for one song and I had no idea what to choose. Time passed, songs were proposed and subsequently tossed aside, and frustration built up.  And then, as if it had been the logical choice all along, I thought “Hey, what about THAT song?”  I still don’t know how I could have overlooked “Motorcycle Drive By”.  This song, which had fallen out of my life for no particular reason, had suddenly regained prominence.  It illustrates the duality of the system and surroundings, the unity of “was,” “am,” and “will be.”  It is a love song that is not about falling in love or falling out of love. Just love. The pain of isolation and rejection juxtaposed with the assuagement of community and acceptance. It was the perfect capstone.

This song, like “We Are Beautiful We Are Doomed,” fits all of my criteria: Consistently among the top 25 played through five iPod incarnations, sing-along-able, and hits me in a way I can’t quite explain. But unlike “We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed,” “Motorcycle Drive By” has long since rooted itself in my heart.  It is inextricable to my persona and I cherish every second of it. And yes, it is a poppy love song.


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