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6 Essen al Essays by Groundbreaking Cultural Cri c Greg Tate

6 Essential Essays by Groundbreaking Cultural Critic Greg Tate

By Duncan Harrison

YESTERDAY (7 DECEMBER), the news broke that acclaimed journalist Greg Tate had died. He was 64.

Tate was a long-time critic for The Village Voice in New York City, and his essays often explored the emergent infl uence of hip-hop culture on the arts in America. His fi rst book, Flyboy in the Buttermilk: Essays on Contemporary America, collected 40 of these essays.

Tate was also a founder of the Black Rock Coalition, an organisation launched in 1985 with “the purpose of creating an atmosphere conducive to the maximum development, exposure and acceptance of Black alternative music.” He was a Visiting Professor at Columbia University’s Center for Jazz Studies and lectured at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles.

Throughout his life and work, Tate believed in connecting the dots between art and the realities which surrounded it. In exploring this, he became a vital critical voice in contextualising Black music within its wider creative histories. His worldview will be sorely missed by artists, critics and fans around the world.

In the wake of his passing, we’re revisiting some of Tate’s fi nest works. If you haven’t read these, here are six pieces which should serve as an introduction to the man The Source magazine called “the Godfather of hip-hop journalism”. the Buttermilk.

03: Afropessimism and Its Discontents

The Nation

Tate’s last published piece, from September. “A guide for the perplexed, the puzzled, and the politically confused” refl ecting on Afropessimism by Frank B. Wilderson III.

04: Azealia Banks, Fantasea (SelfReleased Mixtape)

SPIN

For SPIN, Tate’s review of Azealia Banks’ selfreleased debut mixtape.

05 Jean-Michel Basquiat, Flyboy in the Buttermilk

The Village Voice

Another piece archived in Flyboy: Tate examines the complicated career and impact of Jean-Michel Basquiat.

06 Bad Brains: Hardcore of Darkness

01: To Pimp a Butterfl y

Rolling Stone

Tate’s review of Kendrick Lamar’s historic 2015 album To Pimp a Butterfl y, for Rolling Stone.

02: Cult-Nats Meet Freaky-Deke

The Village Voice

A 1986 essay on “the coming age of the postnationalist black aesthetic,” featured in Flyboy in The Village Voice

A 1982 piece for The Village Voice on the “baddest hardcore band in the land, living or dead”. https://crackmagazine.net/article/lists/6-essays-gregtate-kendrick-lamar-basquiat-azealia-banks-badbrains/ Image credit: Greg Tate at BRC Orchestra

Blaxploitation Songbook, Schomburg Center NYC, 2010

Image credit: clipartkid.com, clipart-library.com

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