Patricia Smith Breaks Down “Hip-Hop Ghazal”

In a beautiful convergence of hip-hop and poetry, teacher, poet, and overall “word woman” extraordinaire, Patricia Smith, has shed light on her “Hip-Hop Ghazal” on Rap Genius. What’s a ghazal, you ask? Read the annotations to find out!

Gotta love us brown girls, munching on fat, swinging blue hips,
decked out in shells and splashes, Lawdie, bringing them woo hips.

Smith moves masterfully through the musical couplets, cheekily evoking the joy and pride of “brown girls” swinging their “blue hips” while the jukebox plays. In keeping with ghazal tradition, she even makes playful reference to herself:

Crying ’bout getting old—Patricia, you need to get up off
what God gave you. Say a prayer and start slinging. Cue hips.

Smith is the author of numerous books including Shoulda Been Jimi Savannah (Coffee House Press, 2012); Blood Dazzler (2008); Teahouse of the Almighty (2006), a 2005 National Poetry Series selection; and Big Talk (1992), which won the Carl Sandburg Literary Award. She’s also been a four-time individual National Poetry Slam champion and a featured poet on HBO’s Def Poetry Jam. One of the most acclaimed living spoken word artists, she has performed her work around the world.

Minnesota Senator Reads “Let America Be America” in Plea for Marriage Equality

This week, Minnesota became the twelfth state in the U.S., and the the first state in the Midwest, to legalize marriage between same-sex couples. The unions will be acknowledged as legitimate starting August 1, 2013.

Just minutes before the Senate vote on Monday, openly gay State Senator Scott Dibble (DFL-Minneapolis) read three stanzas from the yearnful Langston Hughes’ poem, “Let America Be America,” in a plea for marriage equality.

“Let America be America again

Let it be the dream it used to be

Let it be the pioneer on the plain

Seeking a home where he himself is free

(America never was America to me.)”

However, in the Senator’s rendition he omits the parenthetical lines, explaining, “…I left those out on purpose. Because this is not a day about being alienated and disaffected from the state and the country we all love.” The choice prompts the question: by excising a layer of irony from the poem, did Dibble rob it of part of its force?

Check out the poem that inspired the heartfelt appeal for equality, all up and annotated on Rap Genius.

“The Waste Land” AND “Notes on the Waste Land” Annotated on Rap Genius

Maybe you caught our annotated Waste Land a while back; it got some very kind attention from some pretty cool places. Today we’re pleased to announce that Rap Genius not only features a crowdsourced breakdown of T. S. Eliot’s masterpiece, but also a crowdsourced breakdown of T. S. Eliot’s notes on T. S. Eliot’s masterpiece. Eliot originally tacked on his “Notes on ‘The Waste Land’” to pad out the poem to book length, but they contain some genuine insights into the dense thicket of cultural references…as well as some clever bullshit (a word Eliot loved) to keep you on your toes.

Check out The Waste Land here and the Notes here. And for good measure, check out our analysis of young Barack Obama’s analysis of the poem.

Luke Goebel Breaks Down His Epic Rap Genius Tribute

Last month, fiction writer Luke Goebel published an article about Rap Genius/Poetry Genius in HTMLGIANT. Well, “article” is putting it mildly. This wasn’t your standard 2,000-word writeup with checked facts and tidy blockquotes. This was a tone poem in prose, an autobiography in fragments, a face-melting gonzo freakout of epic dimensions.

It was called “Rap Genius: A First Look.” It moved swiftly from an account of Goebel’s first experience with Rap Genius to a story about sex on top of a car surrounded by meth-hunting state troopers. And back again.

Today Luke’s experiment continues. “Rap Genius: A First Look” is now on Rap Genius, with verified author annotations. The annotations are a further descent into madness, or clarity. They contain Beastie Boys lyrics, Barry Hannah anecdotes, science-class diagrams. Our favorite is the annotation for “drugs.”

What is Luke Goebel on?

He’s on Rap Genius. Check it out.

New Verified Poet: Rosanna Oh

We know that his robes are as dark as the black waters,
we know that the clouds are white,
full and beyond the reach of the monk…

Caspar David Friedrich’s 1810 masterpiece, The Monk by the Sea, will blow your horizons wide open. Rosanna Oh’s “Landscape With Monk and Sea,” a poetic tribute to the painting, will take you deeper inside the roaring immensity of the monk’s seascape. And Oh’s annotations, as our latest Verified Poet on Rap Genius, will help you situate both painting and poem within the world of art history.

Rosanna Oh’s work has appeared previously in such journals as The Hopkins Review, Linebreak, and The Common. “Landscape with Monk and Sea” first appeared in The Connecticut River Review. It’s a lovely piece of writing and a great use of the RG annotation platform: enjoy.

Verified Poets Megan Burns, Gina Myers, and Geoff Munsterman Break Down “30 Days of Weezy”

Screenshot 2013-05-10 at 4.38.29 PM - Edited

For National Poetry Month last April, New Orleans writer Megan Burns set out on a mission to write 30 poems in 30 days, all about Lil Wayne. Mission accomplished! In a truly Rap Genius-esque collaborative effort, Burns partnered with fellow authors Gina Myers and Geoff Munsterman to complete 30 Days of Weezy—and now all 30 poems are on the site with killer Verified annotations from all three poets!

Burns kicks off Day 1 of the series with an “epistolary response” to a Lil Wayne quote about how some women have “deep and dark” reasons for not being able to love.

“Dear Lil Wayne:

Once upon a time there was a dormouse, the deepest and the dark reasons of which clouds description. Once upon a time there was a trilling…”

She and Myers then come full circle on Day 30 with another epistolary poem that mirrors the first.

“Dear Weezy:

outlined this blue, a world of debt accrued

turning every day into something worthy

& new, blacklisted I bite down on

a slipping beat.”

In between are poems rich in references ranging from Alice in Wonderland to Bob Dylan to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks. Not sure what a prose poem is? Burns will fill you in. Wonder how many bridges are in NOLA? She’s got you! (Hint: it’s a number between 87 and 89.)

Our latest Verified Poets are determined to annotate every single ode to Weezy, so hop in and help out!

Megan Burns lives in New Orleans, where she co-hosts the 17 Poets! Literary and Performance Series. She writes and edits for the literary magazine & blog Solid Quarter, where 30 Days of Weezy first appeared. She enjoys her steaks “super raw.”

Gina Myers is an Atlanta-based poet and editor.  Her collections include A Model Year and False Spring.

Geoff Munsterman was born in New Orleans and is the author of the chapbook Tunnel (2006).

Happy Mother’s Day!

Well, it’s that time of year again! Sure, you could just invest in the same old same old—bouquet of assorted flowers, kitschy card—or you could bring your beloved mother a delicious brunch in bed, courtesy of Rap Genius. (Let her sleep in a bit first.)

If you choose to do the latter, we have an annotated recipe for a palate-pleasing omelet, served with goat’s milk yogurt and optional cucumber-dill relish. Food is poetry in your mouth!

“If food is poetry, is not poetry also food?” –Joyce Carol Oates

Good point, JCO. If cooking’s not really your thing, or you’re just not on the best of terms with your own mom, check out Maya Angelou’s poem “Momma Welfare Roll.”

“Searches her dreams for the

Lucky sign and walks bare-handed

Into a den of bureaucrats for

Her portion.”

“Rat Beast” on Rap Genius!

It was the size of a dog. It had black, wiry sprouts of fur and an open, panting mouth and hairless pink hands shaped like an ape’s or a man’s. One hand held a black pen and wrote methodically in a spiral notebook.

Short Story Month is in full swing! Today we’re pleased to present an original story by Nick Antosca, along with a terrific set of verified author annotations. It’s the opener of his new collection, The Girlfriend Game. Check out “Rat Beast” here.

Daudi Abe Breaks Down the History of West Coast Hip-Hop

Our latest verified author, Daudi Abe, has broken down five (count ‘em, five) chapters of 6 ‘N the Morning, his new history of West Coast hip-hop.

Subtitled West Coast Hip-Hop Music 1987-1992 and the Transformation of Mainstream Culture, the book traces the influence of Dre, 2Pac, Ice Cube, and the other groundbreaking stars of the late ’80s and early ’90s California scene. Abe’s annotations are as uncompromising, funny, and informative as the text itself. Check out all five chapters here.

For over 20 years Daudi Abe has taught all levels from preschool to grad school Seattle, Washington. For the last 10 years he has taught Hip-Hop Theory & Culture at Seattle Central Community College. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Economics, a Master’s Degree in Human Development and a PhD in Education in the area of Curriculum & Instruction. He lives in Seattle with his son Dana and daughter Leila.

Sheryl Sandberg Breaks Down “Lean In” On Rap Genius

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead is the most talked-about book of 2013. The New York Times called it a “landmark manifesto” and credited it with reigniting feminist debate for a new generation. This week the author breaks down the first chapter on Rap Genius!

In her Verified Author commentary, Sandberg shares personal anecdotes, book recommendations, provocative statistics on women in the workplace, and much more. Check out the chapter and her annotations here.

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