GIL SCOTT-HERON


'Gil Scott-Heron' (born April 1 1949) is an American poet and musician known primarily for his late 1960s and early 1970s work as a spoken word performer. He is associated with African American militant activism, and is best known for his poem and song "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised". He is the son of Jamaican footballer Gil Heron, who was one of the first black professionals to play in the UK.

Contents
History/overview
Discography
Books
Films
Samples
References
See also
External links

History/overview


Gil Scott-Heron was born in Chicago, Illinois, but spent his early childhood in the home of his grandmother in Jackson, Tennessee. He began writing in fifth grade. When he was 13, his grandmother died and he moved with his mother to the Bronx, where he enrolled in DeWitt Clinton High School. He transferred to The Fieldston School after one of his teachers, a Fieldston graduate, showed one of his writings to the head of the English department there. After about two years at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, Scott-Heron took a year off to write a novel. He returned to New York City, settling in Chelsea, Manhattan, which was at the time a multiracial and multicultural neighborhood. The novel, ''The Vulture'', was published in 1970 and well received.
Scott-Heron began his recording career in 1970 with the LP ''Small Talk at 125th and Lenox''. Bob Thiele of Flying Dutchman Records produced the album and Scott-Heron was accompanied by Eddie Knowles and Charlie Saunders on conga and David Barnes on percussion and vocals. The album's 15 tracks dealt with themes such as the superficiality of television and mass consumerism, the hypocrisy of some would-be Black revolutionaries, white middle-class ignorance of the difficulties faced by inner-city residents, and fear of homosexuals. In the liner notes, Scott-Heron acknowledged as influences Richie Havens, John Coltrane, Otis Redding, Jose Feliciano, Billie Holiday, Langston Hughes, Malcolm X, Huey Newton, Nina Simone, and the pianist who would become his long-time collaborator, Brian Jackson.
Scott-Heron's 1971 album ''Pieces of a Man'' used more conventional song structures than the loose, spoken-word feel of ''Small Talk''. He was joined by Johnny Pate (conductor), Brian Jackson (piano and electric piano), Ron Carter (bass and electric bass), Bernard ''Pretty'' Purdie (drums), Burt Jones (electric guitar), and Hubert Laws (flute and saxophone), with Thiele producing again. Scott-Heron's third album, ''Free Will'', was released in 1972. Jackson, Purdie, Laws, Knowles, and Saunders all returned to play on ''Free Will'' and were joined by Jerry Jemmott (bass), David Spinozza (guitar), and Horace Ott (arranger and conductor).
1974 saw another LP collaboration with Brian Jackson, ''Winter in America'', with Bob Adams on drums and Danny Bowens on bass. He didn't reach the charts until 1975 with the song ''Johannesburg'', from the album ''From South Africa to South Carolina''. That year he and Jackson also released ''Midnight Band: The First Minute of a New Day''. A live album, ''It's Your World'', followed in 1976 and a recording of spoken poetry, ''The Mind of Gil Scott-Heron'' was released in 1979. His biggest hit came with a song called ''Angel Dust'', which he recorded as a single with producer Malcolm Cecil. ''Angel Dust'' peaked at #15 on the R&B charts in 1978.
In 1979, Scott-Heron played at the ''No Nukes'' concerts at Madison Square Garden. The concerts were organized after the Three Mile Island accident by Musicians United for Safe Energy to protest the use of nuclear energy. Scott-Heron's song ''We Almost Lost Detroit'', about a previous accident at a nuclear facility, was included in the ''No Nukes'' album of concert highlights.
During the 1980s, Scott-Heron continued recording, releasing ''Reflections'' in 1981 and ''Moving Target'' in 1982.
Scott-Heron was a frequent critic of President Ronald Reagan and his conservative policies:
:"The idea concerns the fact that this country wants nostalgia. They want to go back as far as they can -- even if it's only as far as last week. Not to face now or tomorrow, but to face backwards. And yesterday was the day of our cinema heroes riding to the rescue at the last possible moment. The day of the man in the white hat or the man on the white horse - or the man who always came to save America at the last moment -- someone always came to save America at the last moment -- especially in 'B' movies. And when America found itself having a hard time facing the future, they looked for people like John Wayne. But since John Wayne was no longer available, they settled for Ronald Reagan -- and it has placed us in a situation that we can only look at -- like a 'B' movie." (Gil Scott-Heron, "'B' Movie")
Scott-Heron was dropped by Arista Records in 1985 and quit recording, though he continued to tour. In 1993, he signed to TVT Records and released ''Spirits'', an album that included the seminal track ''Message to the Messengers''. The first track on the album was a position point poem to the rap artists of the day and included such comments as:

★ "Four-letter words or four-syllable words won't make you a poet, it will only magnify how shallow you are and let ev'rybody know it."

★ "Tell all them gun-totin' young brothers that the 'man' is glad to see us out there killin' one another! We raised too much hell, when they was shootin' us down."

★ "Young rappers, one more suggestion, before I get outta your way. I appreciate the respect you give to me and what you've got to say."
Scott-Heron is known in many circles as "the godfather of rap"[1][2] and is widely considered to be one of the genre's founding fathers. Given the political consciousness that lies at the foundation of his work, he can also be called a founder of political rap. ''Message to the Messengers'' was a plea for the new generation of rappers to speak for change rather than perpetuate the current social situation, and to be more articulate and artistic:
: "There's a big difference between putting words over some music, and blending those same words into the music. There's not a lot of humour. They use a lot of slang and colloquialisms, and you don't really see inside the person. Instead, you just get a lot of posturing."
In 2001, Gil Scott-Heron was sentenced to one to three years' imprisonment in New York State for cocaine possession. While out of jail in 2002, he appeared on the ''Blazing Arrow'' album by Blackalicious. He was released on parole in 2003.
On July 5, 2006, Scott-Heron was sentenced to two to four years in a New York State prison for violating a plea deal on a drug-possession charge by leaving a treatment center. Scott-Heron said he is HIV-positive and claimed the in-patient rehabilitation center stopped giving him his medication. The prosecution countered that Scott-Heron had once skipped out for an appearance with singer Alicia Keys.[3] Scott-Heron's sentence was to run until July 13, 2009. He was paroled on May 23, 2007.[4]
Scott-Heron's father, Giles "Gil" Heron (nicknamed "The Black Arrow") was a Jamaican football player who played for Glasgow's Celtic Football Club in the 1950s. In fact, when he came to Scotland from the United States to join Celtic in 1951 he became the team's first black player. At the time, Celtic F.C. was the team of Scotland's Irish immigrants.
Mark T. Watson, a student of Scott-Heron's work, dedicated a collection of poetry to Gil entitled ''Ordinary Guy'' which also contained a foreword by Jalal Mansur Nuriddin of The Last Poets. The book was published in the UK in 2004 by Fore-Word Press Ltd.

Discography


YearAlbumLabel
1970''Small Talk at 125th & Lennox''Flying Dutchman Records
1971''Pieces of a Man''Flying Dutchman Records
1972''Free Will''Flying Dutchman Records
1974''Winter in America''Strata-East Records
1974''The Revolution Will Not Be Televised''Flying Dutchman Records
1975''The First Minute of a New Day (Midnight Band)''Arista Records
1975''From South Africa to South Carolina''Arista Records
1976''It's Your World (Live)''Arista Records
1977''Bridges''Arista Records
1978''Secrets''Arista Records
1979''The Mind of Gil Scott-Heron''Arista Records
1980''1980''Arista Records
1980''Real Eyes''Arista Records
1981''Reflections''Arista Records
1982''Moving Target''Arista Records
1984''The Best of Gil Scott-Heron''Arista Records
1990''Tales of Gil Scott-Heron and His Amnesia Express''Arista Records
1990''Glory: The Gil Scott-Heron Collection''Arista Records
1994''Minister of Information''Peak Top Records
1994''Spirits''TVT Records
1998''TVT Records
1998''Ghetto Style''Camden Records
1999''RCA Records
2005''Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson - Messages (Anthology)''Soul Brother Records

Books


YearTitleISBN
1970''The Vulture''0862415284
1970''Small Talk at 125th and Lenox''
1972''The Nigger Factory''0862415276
1990''So Far, So Good''0883781336
2001''Now and Then: The Poems of Gil Scott-Heron''086241900X

Films



★ ''Black Wax'' (1982). Directed by Robert Mugge.

Samples



★ from ''home is where the hatred is''

References


1. http://growthmadness.org/2007/02/05/economic-his-story-a-la-gil-scott-heron/
2. http://home.clara.net/giaco/gil/bio2.htm
3. http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/radical_music_man_gets_jail_regionalnews_ikimulisa_livingston.htm
4. http://nysdocslookup.docs.state.ny.us/GCA00P00/WIQ2/WINQ120

See also



Langston Hughes

The Last Poets

The Watts Prophets

Jazz poetry

Mark T. Watson

External links



Gil Scott-Heron french website

BBC biography of Gil Scott-Heron

Malcolm X, Gil Scott-Heron and Stevie Wonder (speeches, discographies and lyrics)

Gil Scott-Heron: Portrait of a Jazz Man

Text of "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised"

Audio of "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised"

Fore-Word Press Ltd.

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