$1 of Every CDBaby Purchase Goes toHaiti Relief Efforts |
Spoken Soul is Brother Dash’s 2nd full length album. Released in 2009 Spoken Soul is a much more personal and vulnerable album than Dash’s first full album Poetically Speaking. Issues in relationships are clearly present in the poems Can I Breathe? and Don’t Wanna as are poems of personal redemption, triumph and understanding as in the title track Spoken Soul. Keeping in Dash’s style of bringing to light communal issues he focuses on the tenuous individual relationship between culture and religion in Masjid Marauders. Dash gives an ode to women in the poem The Most Beautifullest and includes for the first time the only poem on the album with music in the title track Spoken Soul which is a pleasant sounding ode to the need for one’s soul to speak. The album is available now as a CD or Download. Spoken Soul is also available in a 100% recyclable download card which is embedded with wildflower seeds. After redeeming the code printed on the card the bearer can plant the card in soil and flowers will grow. The download is only available at a live performance.
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Spoken Soul & Haiti Relief
Album Review
Check out the review of my album Spoken Soul by Zaufishan Iqbal. Zaufishan is an artist and writer based in the UK and hosts a top rated blog www.zaufishan.co.uk. She took some time out to review the album. Have a read.
Fish, Grits and Couscous Photos
Fish, Grits and Couscous: Islam and The African-American Experience
The following are some web quality stills from the event held at Rutgers University in the Fall of 2009. I was commissioned to do some photography for the event. Below are two photo galleries. The first focuses on the audience at the event and the second focuses on the speakers. This will give you a bit of insight into how I compose shots. All photos are under creative commons license.
| Audience Pics | Speakers Pics |
| Photos by Brother Dash | Photos by Brother Dash |
Message To A Muslim Artist: The 5 W’s+1
Message to a Muslim Artist: The 5 W’s + 1
by Brother Dash
Singer. Poet. Rapper. Dancer. Sculptor. Photographer. Painter. Cartoonist. Comedian. Writer**.Artist. Entertainer. Muslim. Black. Arab. Pakistani. Latina. Revolutionary. Pacifist. Feminist. Human.
We all have descriptors. We label who we are, what we do, where we are from and what we believe. The fact that we use these descriptors means that they are significant to us. They inform our identity. The assumption that I am making with the title of this opinion piece Message To A Muslim Artist: The 5 W’s +1 is that the descriptor or label “Muslim Artist” means something to you. But before we continue let’s have a working definition of the term Muslim Artist.
When we say “Muslim” we are referring to that individual who affirms a belief in the one God* and that the Prophet Muhammad is the messenger of God. When we talk about an artist we are referring to that individual who “creates art for a beneficial purpose”. Many commentators use this definition of an artist in contradistinction to someone who is a mere “entertainer”. Entertainment is a form of creative expression but without the sense of purpose associated with Art. Entertainment is normally for recreational, escapist, or economic benefit. While the debate over Art vs. Entertainment is a fascinating one it is not within the scope of this article. What we are most interested in are the working definitions pertaining to our social and artistic purposes. With this as our introduction let us now talk about this Message To A Muslim Artist. Let us talk about the Who, What, When, Where, Why and How of understanding, navigating and flourishing in an artistic space. We begin with the question of Who.
Who?
Who Are You?
This seemingly simple question is perhaps the most challenging to answer. The question demands that you be honest with yourself and it holds you to account for your answers. If for example you describe yourself as a Muslim poet then this speaks to #1 your identity (Muslim) and #2 your function (poet). This would suggest that Islam is informing your identity so much so that you even correlate your function i.e. your art with your religion. But is that who you are? This is important because when you self-identify in a society that already has definitions for a particular identity then certain expectations will apply. The Muslim and even Non-Muslim public will expect your Art to have certain qualities indicative of Islam or at least the perception thereof. Who you are is one of the most critical of questions to answer.
Who Do You Want To Be?
This question is actually more critical than the first. Part of the beauty of being an artist is the appreciation one has for creativity and the creative process. Creativity is exploration. Creativity is experimentation. Creativity has a process and from this process you learn, grow, and develop. This creative development should give you desire for personal development as well. So it’s not just who do you want to be as an artist. Who do you want to be as a PERSON? Why is this important? It is important because who you are and who you want to be plays a critical role in informing your art.
What?
What informs and what is the purpose of your art?
Does your Art have a point or purpose? Are you a social commentator? Are you a spiritual motivator? Are you using your Art as a teaching tool? Is it a form of leisure like most literary fiction**? Your art should have a purpose and you need to know what that purpose is especially as a Muslim. In Islamic belief deeds go with intentions so what do you intend with your Art? You will be held to account…so start accounting now.
Related to the crafting of that purpose will be that which informs your art. What themes, ideas, or perspectives go into your self-expression? Are you consumed with gossip TV shows? Do you look at the aesthetic in mainstream music and want to be a so-called “Rock god”? Do you read history and stay informed on current events? Part of knowing who you are, who you want to be and formulating an artistic purpose is looking at what actually “fills your vessel” RIGHT NOW! Are you filling your vessel with ingredients that will make for a soothing or medicinal elixir or something that contributes to entertainment inebriation?
What are you doing with your artistic expression? The issue of actual talent.
Are you truly gifted? Have you studied your craft? Are you in training? What are you doing with the talent you think you have? As someone who has studied poetry, is a published poet, and has performed across the U.S. and the U.K. I take my artistic expression very seriously. To this day I will still practice my spoken word in a little room in my home. I still rehearse leading up to every performance. I continue to try to hone my skills as an observer, thinker, writer and performer and I’ve been doing this for years. Now that’s my particular process. What are you doing to get into a professional mindset even if you are not yet a “professional?” Maybe you are just starting out. That’s fine but what distinguishes you from someone who doesn’t take their art seriously? It’s okay to be an amateur. It’s not okay to be amateurish! One of the biggest problems with so-called Muslim performance art is the plethora of amateurs that think they are professionals and the organizers that treat them that way. Take your craft seriously and take the audience seriously. Study, practice, practice, practice and also be honest with yourself. Take constructive criticism. Demand it in fact. Challenge yourself to get better or look at other areas that may be more suited to what you have to offer. Maybe your talents lie behind the camera, directing the stage, or holding the plume and writing a masterpiece. We all have skills…yours may be in another area.
What space are you in?
Popular culture, entertainment and performing arts are specific targets for the cultural politics of competing groups because they are very influential in people’s daily lives and lifestyles. Art and popular culture are vital in identity construction of individuals and communities. Art is a boundary marker between different cultures, subcultures and ethnicities. It can therefore be expected that in art and expressive culture different imaginations of identities, ideals and belongings compete.
-Karin Neuwkirk Journal of Contemporary Islam
As an artist you need “space” for your Art. Rappers need a stage. Poets need stages and pages, etc. Artists need venues and distribution channels to show their work. But in most cases artists don’t actually own their own space. No writer owns Barnes and Noble where she can just stock the shelves with her own novels. As an artist you need to think about what spaces are realistically open to you? If we look at Muslim Entertainment for example, meaning the kind of expression targeted to and almost exclusively made up by religiously minded Muslims, who owns this space?These events are largely organized by charities and non-profit organizations. Have you looked at the content they usually sponsor and the artists they book? What gender dominates? What ethnicities dominate? What nationalities dominate? This is not to cry racism (though I can share a story or two). It is to make you aware of the role cultural familiarity plays in notions on what is “Islamic” or not. These facts will affect your very opportunities to share your Art. For example organizers often equate nasheeds and qawwali with being “Islamic”. But in reality both are simply cultural expressions of devotional art. But what Black Muslim does Qawwali? How many Latino Muslims do Arabic nasheeds? White British Muslims have a 100 year old history of Muslim hymns written and composed by White converts! If you are a Chicano Muslim sister that does devotional odes from your cultural reality and not Pakistan’s or Egypt’s then ‘what’ is your space? The problem is that the owners of that space are not making it hospitable. Even the genre of Islamic poetry which is steeped in tradition all the way back to the Prophet Muhammad is rarely included in events. Interestingly though when Muslim audiences are exposed to Spoken Word Poetry they often comment that it resonates with them moreso than other genres. This is indicative of organizers’ predispositions to cultural familiarity as opposed to a market driven response to what people actually want. So you need to look at the reality of YOUR style of artistic expression. Are their spaces for YOU?
What About Women?
And if you are a woman there are even additional gender dynamics that will either stifle your creativity or pressure it to go in directions you are uncomfortable with. Let’s say you want to be a rapper. Let’s look at the mainstream first. In the mainstream hip-hop world what has been the content and style of ‘successful’ female rappers? You have either had to be a female thug or a sex kitten. More often the latter. What is the atmosphere of the rap world? Is it female friendly? Look at the female “stars” from practically any genre not just hip-hop. Is talent or sexuality promoted? Are powerful, socially empowering lyrics promoted? Is your style of dress even conducive to the rap game? Are you going to somehow change an industry being “all covered up” like that? It will be easier for you to change who YOU are rather than an industry changing what IT is. Do you want to change who you are for an industry? And as a Muslim female rapper will the mainstream accept your modest dress and lack of public sensuality? And if you say you’ll stick with the Muslim Arts/Entertainment scene what is that reality? You will have organizers who have certain views on what is Islamically permissible for Women and/or what they think the community (i.e. their market) will bear. This is why you’ll find that most Muslim female performing artists “live” in the “world music” or “spiritual music” space instead. So as a woman these are the unique realities you need to ponder as well.
When?
‘When are you’ in the practical timeline?
Sales of CDs are ½ what they were 10 years ago. The record industry’s album based model has crumbled. With the advent of digital downloads you no longer have to spend $15 to get the 2 songs on the album that were worth anything anyway. You can just spend $2! This isn’t 1980, 1990 or even 2000. Making money from record sales is very unlikely especially in a world of bit torrent and a multitude of other forms of entertainment competing for a finite number of hours humans can give to entertainment daily. So it won’t be about selling records and it also won’t be about “new voices”. Record companies don’t like taking chances with “different” and “out of the ordinary”. Few will take a chance on your “Art” especially when entertainment is what sells. So knowing “when” you are on the timeline will help to inform the practicalities of your Art.
‘When are you’ in the performance timeline?
Performance Art is mostly youth oriented. Look at Hip-Hop. Hip-Hop is a young person’s genre. It is made up of young artists and promoted to the youth. Are you all of a sudden going to be some rap star at 40 years old? Heck if you are in your late 20’s and you still haven’t “made it” as a rapper you’re fooling yourself thinking you are going to be the next Kanye West. 30 is not NOT the new 20 in Hip-Hop. 30 is 30. Name me the rapper in the last 20 years who BROKE IN being over the age of 25? You’ll stand a better chance as a musician and slightly better as a singer. In fact the only genres where age doesn’t really matter are the ones that are truly talent driven such as visual art, literature and Spoken Word (including comedy). And in terms of strictly Muslim entertainment the novelty has worn off. This isn’t 2001, 2004 or even 2007 where Muslim amateurs and professionals or those with professional talent were indisti. So when are you in the timeline?
‘When are you’ in your Islamic development?
A few years ago I met a Muslim artist who happened to be a convert to Islam. I had asked this artist how long he/she had been Muslim. The artist replied “Six months”. Six months after I took my shahada I was still struggling with saying my obligatory prayers in Arabic. I was a baby in my Islamic development. How as a new Muslim are you going to navigate the entertainment world when it is highly unlikely that you even looked enough into the issue of Islam and music, poetry, singing, dancing, comedy, drawing, etc to know what you are doing is on a firm ground? And this is not to mention the trappings that come with being in the entertainment industry such as the ego. And the negative manifestations of the ego will be your downfall in many situations be it arrogance, selfishness, self-centeredness, lack of empathy for others, feelings of entitlement,etc. So before going into expressing yourself creatively put the ego and desire “to shine” aside, get to know your new Islamic self and do some development. You certainly won’t learn your religion being in Muslim entertainment.
*Side note. Historically some traditional Muslim cultures have identified entertainment, especially Western entertainment, as competition to Islam. It is common for artists to be used as the “repentant entertainer” by people with agendas. These artists would be paraded around Muslim events and through media as the one who “used to do music”, “used to be a rapper”, but later found the “light of Islam.” In my opinion (this is an opinion piece remember?) these artists are being used in this power struggle for the hearts and minds of Muslim youth especially. It is critical to understand who you are, who you want to be and the timeline of your development. You don’t want to be used as the “repentant entertainer”. Again…just a side note.
Where?
Performing in “problematic” venues
As a poet I perform in many venues whether it’s for 25,000 at the ExCeL Centre in London, 500 at Yale University or 35 at a weekend deen intensive. These are all safe venues as far as the atmosphere goes for your spiritual equilibrium. But what about bars, pubs and clubs? What about these doubtful or perhaps even haram environments? If you are doing devotional artistic expression then be honest with yourself (remember how we began?). How does a song about the Prophet Muhammad work in a pub? But you may now say to me. “But Brother Dash I am not doing devotional music per se I am doing “conscious” rap and “conscious” poetry.” But I would retort by questioning how much “consciousness” there can be in an establishment whose purpose is for people to imbibe “un”consciousness? But again who do you want to be? What are your goals? If your goals are to be a performer period… then yeah…bars, pubs, clubs, strip clubs, whatever…you’ll perform anywhere and everywhere and you might just make it. Joe Jackson had 8 year old Michael and his Jackson brothers performing in strip clubs. The Beatles performed over 1,000 shows in strip clubs as unknowns. They made it big. But if Islam informs your identity is that you? Do you see why it was so important to begin the article the way we did? But if you are trying to promote conscious rap, poetry, R&B, and/or so-called Islamic rap then performing in pubs do not seem to work too well with Islamic principles. If a Non-Muslim were to ‘call you on this’ how do you explain Islam is against alcohol, smoking weed, and inappropriate interaction with Men and Women but it’s okay for you as a Muslim to perform in the very venues that promote these things?
Now at times there may be an exception. It depends on the situation. After I had long stopped performing in venues that had a primary function to sell alcohol or were dance clubs I did have a request to perform in a lounge, that had a separate section with a stage for performances, from an old Non-Muslim friend. Due to a temporary personal situation I chose to make an exception in this SPECIFIC circumstance but NOT as a matter of habit. So if you have a “one off” for a good reason? God knows best but I personally don’t take issue with it. If however it is merely to perform because that’s nature of your genre, etc you may want to seriously evaluate that. And certainly if you are a Muslim that is actually ORGANIZING events I don’t see any excuse to organize them in pubs and clubs unless you actually change the environment of the evening.
Why?
Why do you want to be an artist? If it is because of some “need” to express yourself you can do that in the comfort of your living room. So the real question is why do you want to express yourself IN FRONT OF PEOPLE? Why do you want the world to know your art or yourself? Personally speaking I do what I do primarily to express myself FOR MYSELF (i.e. therapeutic value) and secondarily or perhaps concurrently to enlighten and ignoble others via creative expression placed in me by Allah. I’m not trying to make a living at this. I’m not trying to be a superstar. I don’t desire to go on world tours. I’m just trying to do my art. Art with a purpose. But that’s me. That’s my “why” based on years of introspection, learning and experience. I didn’t always feel that way. Why do you do what you do? Some artists have told me that they are using their artistic expression to convey the message of Islam i.e. dawah? That is quite noble. And the intention is quite praiseworthy. If that is your reason then are you also looking at your artistic space? Who is your audience. If they are 99% Muslim then “dawah” may not be the right intention. Or is it an excuse for the “who you are” part? Is what you are doing really for your own ego? Are you in Muslim entertainment because the audience is so uncritical and brotherly to almost a fault that they will support your amateur talent and even shower praise on you that no one else would? Is it because you could not get mainstream gigs? Be honest about the why.
Why do you want to be involved in an activity that feeds the ego? Remember no one asks a teacher, construction worker even a lawyer for her autograph? No one is clamoring to take a picture with Fulan Fulan but they want a picture with you. And as a male you will get a great deal of attention from women. Often times the fully hijabed sisters will be the most forward! Are you truly prepared for that? Even if we recognize all of the pitfalls of being involved in entertainment or artistic expression are you honest enough to admit that perhaps you desire the attention? You like people asking you for autographs. And if you do desire that then that should be an indication of “when” you are on your Islamic development timeline.
How?
So how do you go about expressing yourself creatively in a way that is within an Islamic framework? Well first you start with an understanding that most of the parameters are universal anyway. Imitating the lewd antics of some R&B performers or putting nude sex scenes into your film are obviously out of bounds. But what about risqué or borderline material that may have an artisticly sound purpose? Muslim artists are Muslims too. They have no special rules. Art is not given a license to operate under an ends justifies the means paradigm. You may be in a genre that has its own mores antithetical to Islam but that just means you get creative. What a beautiful thing!
The previous point reminds me of the issue of Muslims using profanity in rap and poetry today. In most cases the use of profanity is laziness or ignorance. You could not come up with a creative use of language to express anger, frustration or displeasure. You could not use a proper adjective or a proper noun so you went with the lowest common denominator. Is that how you want to craft your art? In only some rare instances have I actually approved of profanity in art. There was a particular instance when I heard a poet speaking from a place of deep personal pain and truth regarding the true story of him being thrown in solitary confinement in prison. The truth of his experience was so powerful that the profanity was a truth that needed to be told. It was actually “art” to me. Again this is my opinion. Where I find no room is in the area of obscenity. This is a violation of the public trust. It is a violation of the relationship you have with the audience and the community. Honor that trust. Honor that relationship.
Conclusion
Allah says that he is Al-Jamil and loves that which is Jamilah. God is the ultimate beauty and he loves that which is beautiful. As an artist you are in a wonderful place. You have been given a God given talent. You cannot learn talent. You either have it or you don’t. You can grow your talent. You can hone your craft and you should. But your actual talent is born. Value what you have been given. Take it seriously. Use your talent for the benefit of others as that relationship is cyclical. You will in turn benefit from that which you give and not only in this world but God willing in the next. If you know who you are, what your goals are, when you are on your personal development and artistic timeline, where you are in terms of community, business and genre, and why you express then all that’s left is how you go about doing it. And thus concludes my message, my message to you…the Muslim Artist.
Brother Dash
December 2009
www.brotherdash.com
brotherdash[at]gmail.com
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*The Arabic translation for God is Allah just as for example Dios is the Spanish translation for God. When Muslims refer to Allah they are not referring to a different diety. The Islamic faith holds that there is one and only one Creator of the Universe. As such Christians and Jews and any monotheist is in essence worshipping the same God as Muslims and in the case of Christianity and Judaism they share many of the same prophets, messengers, and historic locales.
**While many of the themes relate to those involved in literature as well there are some unique concerns. As such a separate “Letter To A Muslim Writer” is forthcoming.
Just A Test
Just A Test
by Brother Dash
The razzle dazzle of big city night life, Miller High Life, got you blind to the realities
of the true to life street life. Champagne wishes and Caviar dreams are the beams
connected to the foundations of various nations, Haitians be the carriers of Green Monkey viruses?, clouds in Mankind’s Irises, but that’s to be expected in the land of resurrected Osirises, Boulevard gods Peachfuzz squads, make you be on your guard even the righteous be at odds. Advocates for Satanic Whispers, sisters that love to bicker, will get you there quicker while the bugger flickers standin’ in the alleyways hidden from the moonlight street lamps, their mental clamps on contenders and champs, and those that get Amped, scan the UPC forehead stamps, persistent so they walk the dry streets…DAMP!!
Throw your Booyaka’s in the sky, watch the skate boards fly, Bastard Daddies say
Bye-Bye and the world keeps on spinnin’ as all this sinnin’ got him grinnin’ as he brags about everybody that he done been in, Blend In the sounds of thoracic thrusts, unripe fruits that bust, with screaming tears, dreaming their, gleaming fears appear like shattered sunshine raining from dark skies fall and slice like twice on blood soaked faces but the pain of children’s rain barely stains Insane Brains in chains while necks crane to see pubic manes and little remains for those not in the fast lane, they’re on the other side of the window pane, lickin’ dead bugs and dirt granules from the ledge, Are they the ones who are living on the edge? There must be a wedge or a veil on the hearts, On the Hearts torn aparts, When they speak they just fart call it aroma, call it a stench, This woman Free!!!, I see a wench, Girly mags, Hags with bags, no more playin’ Freeze Tag, Rudy orders the gag, why do weather men brag? Why does he leave when they sag?
Why is Philistine such a nag? Do you really donate your clothing or do you simply throw away your rags?
When the Sun rises from the West, When the mother suckles her daughter’s breast,
when children become pests, when the Earth coughs up phlegm from her chest, When nuclear families have empty nests, When housewives are seen as something less, When 12 year olds get buddha blessed, When Stars and Stripes become personal crests, When so-called scientist puff up him chest, When the tongue whips your brother’s back without a rest, When neighbors go hungry and enemies become guests, When leaders of believers sell souls for Kaffir quests, When this poem won’t end even at your behest, When Color and Birth determines who’s best, When lies become meals that we chew and injest, Then with crystal clarity you’ll see the reality that this whole world was just…a test.
The Most Beautifullest
The Most Beautifullest
by Brother Dash
If my tongue spits knowledge it was born in the belly of a womb
Of a soul that was kissed by an angel of God
She held humanity deep in the bosom of love and whispered softly…
I’m yours
No creature can possess the capacity
Veracity for mercy mercy
Subhanallah
It’s the wisdom of He
Encapsulated by she
Epitomized by We
Now me
Must testify
In words that became subliminal
It’s criminal we no longer see
The us in her
We trust in her
When there’s just us and her
“but you’s a big man now”
She speaks to you…in words that have no speech
She kissed the tiny hands that reached
For sustenance…not just in milky nutrition
She listens…dreams feel real
When wrapped in arms that don’t demand reciprocity
Loves with such velocity
Possibly
Born in an ocean of names
99 all speak to the same
Never asked for wealth no care for fame
You ain’t above the one from whom you came
Shame on ya’! Ol’ Dirty whispuhs
Got you disrespectin’ yo sistuhs
Sister, Sister please don’t you whisper
Yell your pain, And Scream your name
And Don’t be shy, And Don’t be tame
Don’t request, You just Demand
Grab that book say “I COMMAND THEE!”
In the name of He that made the she and he become the we
The me that speaks to thee wants you to see
That she was there right from the start
She was the quilt that warmed your heart
She was the book
Her voice the words
And as you slept your dreams she heard
You used to crawl
And now you walk
Your lips confused
And now they talk
Who helped you up?
Who fed your hope?
Who kissed your eyes?
Who helped you cope?
Oh Sister, Sister sing this song
Scream this song
Bring this song
Your majesticness exists on the epidermis of bliss and it sounds like this…
The Most Beautifullest Thing In This World is a Mama, Daughter, Wifey, Sister!
The Most Beautifullest Thing In This World is a Mama, Daughter, Wifey, Sister!
The Most Beautifullest Thing In This World is a Mama, Daughter, Wifey, Sister!
The Most Beautifullest Thing In This World is a Mama, Daughter, Wifey, Sister!
Hijabi Hip-Hop
The ChaiPod has a conversation with Muslim rapper Miss Undastood one of only a handful of Hijab wearing rappers. Miss Undastood discusses the triumphs and challenges of being a scarf wearing, Muslim female rapper. She discusses the unique issues facing Muslim female performers and the subject matter in her lyrics. Never one to mince words this native New Yorker answers the ChaiPod questions with honest bluntness and wit. Listen to one of the only interviews on the web featuring a Muslim female rapper!
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Masjid Marauders
Masjid Marauders
by Brother Dash
Barreling like boulders through young gardens they trample
With bad breadth and I don’t mean the odor
They are the masjid marauders
In blue jeans and kufees
Baseball caps and man dresses
Green passports and a bad attitude that can only be described as arrogant
They pluck thorns with bulldozers
Fight fires with…More fire
Suck nectar and spit blood
They are the masjid marauders
They leave dirty footprints on the carpet
The color of jaundice with a foreign funk
It must be the wet paint off America’s streets of gold
And too many episodes of Al-Baywatch
Do they remind you of Columbus and his discovery of the red heathens?
Fortune seekers turned fortune tellers
They are the masjid marauders
While they sipped tea and smoked hookah
Southern trees were bearing strange fruit
In 2 K they rode the White elephant
Didn’t Jesse tell them to stay out of the Bushes?
And when black rain poured over Baghdad
And a baby sister I never met cried the collateral blues
Only then did they search their garbage for our poetry of warning
The house of prayer? A social club
For men who share a foreign tongue
Unruly kids spit disrespect and I do mean literal
This place was built on blood and sweat
And hopes and tears
And dreams deferred
The first house was build on the dirt of slaves
Not on the fringes of outer whitelandia
We beat our words on their inner ear duffs
But they turned away ‘cause “music is haram”
Islam like a bomb, napalm for native dwellers
‘Sisters go pray in a cellar’
They are the masjid marauders
Like the Feds they give you a new identity, a foreign look
And definitely a new name
But those fruits and veggies are out of season
And your body is craving local produce
Organically Grown
Are they rotten? Naturally poisoned?
Prob’ly not
But they’ll still give you indigestion
Either from the candidate or from surrogates with issues
They are the masjid marauders
We’re not monkeys with tin cups that sing and dance for alien agendas
We deconstruct
Then we self-construct
With a contextualized prophetic state of mind
See they barrel like boulders
Through young gardens they trample
With bad breadth
And I don’t mean the odor
They are the masjid marauders
Can I Breathe?
Can I Breathe?
by Brother Dash
This air I must reach
‘Cause I’m chokin’ on the phlegm
of the him and the her and the you and the them
Can I Breathe?
I best not speak
And I better not seek
And if I got cuts then I best not leak
But can I breathe?
I mean I Gotta, I Wanna
This world’s like a sauna
And I Can’t smell the fauna
My Nostrils are stuck!
With communal mucous
But don’t confuse this
Can I… Breathe?
Before my death?
I’m on a cliff
It won’t be suicide
They’ll call it murder
Please take my hand
Oh Wait!
Purdahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Can I breathe?
So much constriction
Friction, Inhibition
“Better watch your diction”
Culture shock
See he’s the hard place
And you’re the rock
If “Identity”
Means get rid of me
To become the we
Or become the you
I Become defined
I Become confined
Become defined
Become confined
Can I Breathe?
Don’t talk, Don’t think
Don’t float, Don’t sink
Don’t look, Don’t wink
Don’t hyperlink
Can I Breathe?
Don’t ask, Don’t tell
Got pain, Can’t yell
Don’t smile, Don’t frown
Don’t laugh, Don’t clown
There’s just one way
No workarounds
Can I Breathe?
Your style is truth
And I’m so uncouth
And these eyes must see your tapestry
And my soul must act accordingly
Breathe!
My lungs must fill
With the breadth of self will
My soul felt whole now it’s all broke up
Should I make you breathe me til you’re all choked up
I wanna breathe in a world not just in a nation
Escape from the weight of cultural suffocation
Feel the elation of spiritual liberation
Sing me a song of her creation?
And I don’t need your validation!
Breathe? Can I…Can I…
Breathe…Can I… Can I…
[huh huh huh huh huh huh huh huh]
Breathe!
Official Spoken Soul Press Release
Poet Becomes First Muslim Recording Artist to Release an Album That Blooms Into Flowers
Somerset, NJ- Poet Brother Dash has become the first Muslim recording artist specializing in Spoken Word Poetry to release an album that can be planted in soil and bloom into wildflowers. The album, Spoken Soul, launched September 23rd2009 in three formats. One such format is as a “seeded” paper card. This card, which is about the size of a business card, includes a unique code that takes the user to a website to download the album. In a unique twist the card itself is embedded with wildflower seeds which when planted in soil blooms into wildflowers. When asked about the idea Brother Dash responded “For my new album I definitely wanted to have more than one format. I’m also a bit of a closet tree hugger and so I was never thrilled about plastic CDs in bulky jewel cases anyway. When I researched formats for my new album I discovered Dropcards.com which had these cool “seeded” paper cards. I was like whooooooooa…I’m goin’ green…FOR REAL!!!”
In addition to the novel idea of a seeded card the new album Spoken Soul is also available as a standard CD (in 100% recycled cardboard), and via electronic download on iTunes, Amazonmp3 and others. Spoken Soul features eight original spoken word poems written and performed by Brother Dash. Seven of the eight tracks on the album are acapella. The final track which is also the title track contains Brother Dash’s spoken word performed over a smooth jazz background.
Spoken Soul is the follow up to Brother Dash’s well received debut album Poetically Speaking and differs greatly from that album. Dash’s maturity as a poet is evident in what is a markedly more personally vulnerable album. Spoken Soul’s lyrical content is much more personal with topics dealing with the “self”, interpersonal relationships and affirmation. While Brother Dash never hides his Islamic faith his poetry is quite atypical of overt religious fare. “I never liked preachy people so I don’t push my faith on others through my art. I always gravitated towards that which was truthful and genuine so hopefully the album resonates with people on the level of honest, soulful, spiritually infused grit” remarks Brother Dash. Poems on the album range in topics from self-determination and expression as on the tracks “Can I Breathe?” and “Scream” to issues of racial and cultural bias amongst Muslims in the poem “Masjid Marauders”. He also includes an ode to Women in the poem “The Most Beautifullest”.
All three formats have purchase links on www.brotherdash.com. CD fulfillment is handled by the number one independent CD distributor in the world www.cdbaby.com and the electronic downloads can be purchased via iTunes and Amazonmp3.com. The seeded “flower” card is shipped by www.brotherdash.com.
Brother Dash is a Spoken Word poet. He has been the subject of a BBC radio documentary on Muslim poets, has been broadcasted in over 2 million television households and heard by over 4 million radio listeners on four continents, and seen by over 100,000 people in live performances. He has 2 full albums, an EP, and has contributed to 3 albums by other artists.
Contact:
Brother Dash
brotherdash@gmail.com
www.brotherdash.com


