Connect with us

Entertainment

DMX, Long a Voice of the Community, Was the News

The New York Times is not where you turn to get the Black experience in America. But they couldn’t ignore the passing of one of American pop culture’s leading Black voices of a generation.

Published

on

DMX performance at the BET awards, photo credits: BET.com

 

    The narrative of the Black Man in America continues with Daunte Wright, 20, gunned down by a white, female cop in a Minneapolis suburb who thought she was using a Taser. 

    Does it sound like Fruitvale Station 2009, when Oscar Grant was face down on the ground and shot by an officer who thought he was firing a Taser? And all of this just 10 miles from where another white officer is on trial for excessive force that resulted in the killing of George Floyd.

   Earl Simmons would have had a lot to rap about. But the mic has already dropped for the icon known as DMX.

    On April 9, I got a news flash at 4:11 a.m. Oakland time. Britain’s Prince Philip died. I slept through it. 

    Five hours later at 9:35 a.m. the New York Times flashed the real breaking news: “DMX, the snarling yet soulful rapper whose string of No.1 albums electrified audiences and reflected his gritty past, is dead at 50.”

     This time, I paid attention. You probably did, too. 

DMX sold more records than the Queen’s Duke. And now DMX was pronounced dead from that heart attack he suffered on April 2.

    To be honest, I didn’t know the difference between DMX and my old Reeboks.   

     I grew up with the Temptations, the Stylistics, and Tower of Power. When hip/hop and rap emerged,  I was more prone to KRS-1. 

    By the time DMX hit, I was raising kids and playing “Barney” songs.

    I missed out. But when he made Page one of the Times, I listened to all the music of Earl Simmons a/k/a DMX over the weekend.

    I got it. 

    I use the moniker “Emil Amok” when I write my columns, because “amok” described the explosion of the pent-up anger in me.  It’s my “rap” name.

     But my columns are practically the Queen’s English compared to DMX. 

    A major voice of Black America, he sang the real headlines of the community. 

     With multiple arrests for fraud, assault, weapons possession, drugs, DUI,  Simmons knew a part of  the Black experience well.  He did jail time for animal cruelty, drug possession and theft, and then again for tax evasion. It all came out in his defiant music, where he put into rhymes and a back beat what it meant to be Black in America. 

    After listening to his “Ruff Ryder’s Anthem,” his macho calling card, and his other songs like his hit “Party Up (Up in Here),” you notice he’s in the world that doesn’t use the euphemistic phrase “n-word.” 

    I live and work in a white supremacists’ world that wants to hide racism and pretend it doesn’t exist.  DMX lived in the world where the word is real and exists as a source of agony and identity. 

    He wasn’t pretending. 

    He just says the word in full.  A lot.

     No one censored DMX. His music was raw and ready for a rap battle at the drop of a hat.  In his memoir, he said he always made it personal. “Nothing was too rude or vicious for me because I didn’t care.”

    That’s what made him a winner. It’s the kind of “nothing to lose” confidence you take to a fight. But he was also known for his introspective songs, like “Damien,” where he wonders “Where’s my guardian angel? Need one, wish I had one.” In concert, he could show a commanding spiritual sense, switching from the profane to the profound, often heard preaching and praying to his audiences.

     Simmons was born on Dec. 18, 1970, and grew up in Yonkers, N.Y. He rarely saw his father and lived with a single mother who beat him. He turned to street crime and ended up in group homes or detention facilities. Or on crack. He found love in fighting dogs– ironic because he spent jail time in 2008 for animal cruelty. 

     In “A Yo’Kato,” (a dog named after a Bruce Lee character? It’s our common ground. I love dogs and Bruce), DMX sings to a favorite dog who died.  

    “I need you to save me a spot, next to you and the Lord. I don’t know when I’m coming but keep checking the door.” 

    The angel Gabriel had a dog looking out for DMX. 

    The New York Times is not where you turn to get the Black experience in America.  But they couldn’t ignore the passing of one of American pop culture’s leading Black voices of a generation. Nor can I.

    Let the world mourn the Queen’s prince. Where DMX was king, he spoke the news and told the truth.

    Emil Guillermo is an award-winning Bay Area journalist and commentator. See his vlog at www.amok.com

 

Activism

Oakland Post: Week of November 20 – 26, 2024

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of November 20 – 26, 2024

Published

on

To enlarge your view of this issue, use the slider, magnifying glass icon or full page icon in the lower right corner of the browser window.

Continue Reading

Activism

Oakland Post: Week of November 13 – 19, 2024

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of November 13 – 19, 2024

Published

on

To enlarge your view of this issue, use the slider, magnifying glass icon or full page icon in the lower right corner of the browser window.

Continue Reading

Activism

LIVE! — TOWN HALL ON RACISM AND ITS IMPACT — THURS. 11.14.24 5PM PST

Join us for a LIVE Virtual Town Hall on the Impact of Racism hosted by Post News Group Journalist Carla Thomas and featuring Oakland, CA NAACP President Cynthia Adams & other Special Guests.
Thursday, November 14, 2024, 5 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. PST

Published

on

video
play-rounded-fill

Join us for a LIVE Virtual Town Hall on the Impact of Racism hosted by Post News Group Journalist Carla Thomas and featuring Oakland, CA NAACP President Cynthia Adams & other Special Guests.
Thursday, November 14, 2024
5 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. PST

Discussion Topics:
• Since the pandemic, what battles have the NAACP fought nationally, and how have they impacted us locally?
• What trends are you seeing concerning Racism? Is it more covert or overt?
• What are the top 5 issues resulting from racism in our communities?
• How do racial and other types of discrimination impact local communities?
• What are the most effective ways our community can combat racism and hate?

Your questions and comments will be shared LIVE with the moderators and viewers during the broadcast.

STREAMED LIVE!
FACEBOOK: facebook.com/PostNewsGroup
YOUTUBE: youtube.com/blackpressusatv
X: twitter.com/blackpressusa

Continue Reading

Subscribe to receive news and updates from the Oakland Post

* indicates required

CHECK OUT THE LATEST ISSUE OF THE OAKLAND POST

ADVERTISEMENT

WORK FROM HOME

Home-based business with potential monthly income of $10K+ per month. A proven training system and website provided to maximize business effectiveness. Perfect job to earn side and primary income. Contact Lynne for more details: Lynne4npusa@gmail.com 800-334-0540

Facebook

iStock.
Alameda County4 weeks ago

Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price Announces $7.5 Million Settlement Agreement with Walmart

Exclusive interview with County D.A. Price days before recall election. Photo by Ken Epstein.
Activism3 weeks ago

‘Jim Crow Was and Remains Real in Alameda County (and) It Is What We Are Challenging and Trying to Fix Every Day,’ Says D.A. Pamela Price

Oakland City Councilmember at-large Rebecca Kaplan. File photo.
Activism1 month ago

OP-ED: Hydrogen’s Promise a Path to Cleaner Air and Jobs for Oakland

Members of Oaklanders Defending Democracy political action committee with Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao, center. Courtesy photo.
Bay Area4 weeks ago

In the City Attorney Race, Ryan Richardson Is Better for Oakland

Activism3 weeks ago

Oakland Post: Week of October 30 – November 5, 2024

Alameda County courthouse. Courtesy photo.
Alameda County3 weeks ago

D.A. Price Charges Coliseum Flea Market Vendors in Organized Retail Theft Case

(From Left:) U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee. File photo. Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson. File photo.: Former Assemblymember Sandré Swanson. Courtesy photo. California State Senator Nancy Skinner. Courtesy photo.
Activism1 month ago

Barbara Lee, Other Leaders, Urge Voters to Say ‘No’ to Recalls of D.A. Pamela Price, Mayor Sheng Thao

Walter Riley. Courtesy photo.
Activism1 month ago

COMMENTARY: DA Price Has Done Nothing Wrong; Oppose Her Recall

U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris said the loans would be in amounts up to $20,000. Official photo.
Business1 month ago

Harris Promises 1 Million Forgivable Loans for Black Businesses

Activism1 month ago

Oakland Post: Week of October 9 – 15, 2024

Oakland Unified School District 3 candidates VanCendric Williams and Dwayne Aikens Jr.
Bay Area1 month ago

2024 Local Elections: Q&A for Oakland Unified School Candidates, District 3

“People have no idea what the vision is for the next district attorney, or where the office will go if I am, in fact, recalled, she continued. “I'm just running against a billionaire,” who does not show his face in public, she said. Courtesy photo.
Activism3 weeks ago

‘Criminal Justice Reform Is the Signature Civil Rights Issue of Our Time,’ says D.A. Pamela Price

Activism2 weeks ago

LIVE! — TOWN HALL ON RACISM AND ITS IMPACT — THURS. 11.14.24 5PM PST

Keyanna Ortiz-Cedeño at her graduation from UC Berkeley after receiving her master’s degree in City Regional Planning. Alongside her, are her parents holding a Puerto Rican flag. Courtesy photo.
Activism4 weeks ago

“Two things can be true at once.” An Afro-Latina Voter Weighs in on Identity and Politics

Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao,
Bay Area3 weeks ago

Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao’s Open Letter to Philip Dreyfuss, Recall Election’s Primary Funder

Trending

Copyright ©2021 Post News Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.