Portland Outlaws Hip-Hop

LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
edited April 2014 in Strut Central
The Portland Police Bureau has decided that rap=gangs.
Along with the fire bureau they have been stopping shows and harassing venues.
There have been no incidents at shows, except those caused by the police.

How are things where you live?

An Open Letter to Portland's Music Community from Casey Jarman
Party Damage Records' co-founder and former Willamette Week Music Editor on the city's treatment of hip-hop culture.
He currently lives in San Francisco, where he is the managing editor of The Believer.

Dear Portland,

In the last month, your police department and fire marshal's office have united to target and preemptively silence artists???primarily minority artists???in your city. This isn???t conspiracy theory or second-hand gossip: this is repeated and overt action, paid for by your tax dollars, on behalf of the city of Portland. Shows at small, struggling venues like Blue Monk and Kelly???s Olympian have had their capacities drastically reduced in the days or even hours before local hip-hop shows, and officers have stood watch both inside and outside the venues to intimidate artists and show-goers.

These actions have not come in response to violent incidents or code violations at shows???there have been no accusations, that we???re aware of, leveled at these venues or artists???and they are not part of a larger campaign to police Portland nightlife. They are part of a systematic attempt to silence local hip-hop artists.

Hip-hop is easy to target, in Portland, because hip-hop is isolated. The extent to which this can be blamed on ignorant or racist institutions is a debate that has raged within the local hip-hop community for years???it???s a debate that???s just now being taken seriously by many of us outside that bubble. But it???s clear that there are other factors at play here, as well: reluctance from local venues to host hip-hop shows, the steady dispersal of Portland's black community to the fringes of the city, and perhaps most damningly, disinterest from local music enthusiasts who may question the authenticity of hip-hop made in their own back yard.

But Portland, the truth is that your hip-hop has never been as vital, as urgent, and indeed as authentic as it is in this moment. Against a backdrop of rampant gentrification and an increasingly myopic, whitewashed civic self-image, a new generation of young artists are challenging notions of what this city looks like, sounds like, and what it believes in. This is art. And the city is beginning to listen. We suspect that this is precisely why these crackdowns are happening now.

So we???re asking a few favors of you, Portland.

Venues and bookers: We ask you to diversify your bills. Recognize that the local music scene extends beyond the pale confines of genre, and that when you refuse entire modes of expression, you refuse diversity???and we will refuse to support you for those oversights. Mix genres. Mix communities. Be brave. We are ready, and we are watching.

Members of the press: What???s happening to local musicians???largely musicians of color who often speak on topics this city???s police force would rather not confront???is real, and it is the most significant culture story in Portland today. We ask you to be vigilant, and to stay on this story. We need you to ask hard questions. This isn???t just about music. We ask you to reject the convenient narrative that being the whitest city in America excuses Portland???s media outlets from talking about race.

Portland music fans: We know your tastes are bigger than marketing campaigns full of ukuleles and beards would make them out to be. We know you are adventurous. We know you have some Kanye in your playlists. We only ask you to approach your local scene with the same open-mindedness and excitement that you approach the national scene. You???ll be amazed by you find here.

Everyone: Censorship and bullying of local artists should not be tolerated. Below you will find non-emergency contact information and links to contact local police, the police review board, fire and rescue, and city representatives. We strongly encourage you to let them know that you stand with Portland hip-hop, and that targeting of specific local music venues and artists is unacceptable in a city that prides itself on its community of artists.

When a segment of this city's music world is unfairly targeted and censored, the larger community needs to rally. We believe that this is a time for serious and immediate coalition-building, and we're taking small steps to facilitate a new unity among local musicians from diverse backgrounds. On Wednesday, April 23, at Holocene, Party Damage will host an experimental evening of genre-agnostic music. The pop world???represented by Seattle???s Cataldo and Portland???s St. Even???will be properly introduced to Portland hip-hop???via The Resistance and Serge Severe. It won???t be Portland???s first experiment in intentionally jarring sound-mashing, but given the context, we very much hope it will facilitate new conversations between music fans of all stripes. The ACLU of Oregon will be on hand to answer questions and distribute literature. Blank, postage-paid stationery will be provided to members of the audience who wish to contact city officials and media outlets. Concert-goers are encouraged to arrive early for unmediated, free-form conversation and community building. And, you know, drinks.

Don???t worry, there won???t be any lectures. This is a party, first and foremost. You can trust us. We are Party Damage.

Sincerely,

Casey Jarman and Party Damage Records

  Comments


  • SaracenusSaracenus 671 Posts
    What the hell?

  • tripledoubletripledouble 7,636 Posts
    i learned last month that Oregon banned blacks from entering the state for a good long while of the 20th century

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    tripledouble said:
    i learned last month that Oregon banned blacks from entering the state for a good long while of the 20th century

    That's right T. When the state was forming, new Western territories had to take sides. Free or slave. Oregon decide to be cute and wrote into their constitution that no Africans were allowed in the state. The language stayed in the state Constitution until fairly recently.

  • YNOTYNOT in a studio apt mixing tuna with the ramen 417 Posts
    I spent over a decade in Portland from 92' on.... Remember moving there feeling very disconnected to the "real hiphop".. This was pre internet and the only way to get my fix was via Yo MTV raps. As I got older stumbled apon a really nice local hiphop scene, do they still do the Po Hop? No clue what is happening out there these days... Sounds like the cops are putting the squeeze on things. Call me crazy but I thought hiphop keeps kids out of trouble. Always seemed like a great outlet imo. Whatever the case seems like all Portland needs is a new Lifesavas LP.

  • SaracenusSaracenus 671 Posts
    Oregon has a pretty shameful past/present/but hopefully not the future when it comes to its relationship with minority populations... On the subject of the African-American experience in the beaver state, this documentary is a good primer. It was done by local reporter Jon Tuttle shortly before he passed away (I grew up with his son and he was a stand up guy, R.I.P.).


  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    ^^^Why after spending a few months living in Eugene that my (now ex-) wife and I ixnayed our plan to buy a house in the area (or in Portland).

    Oregon is faaaaaar too vanilla.

  • RockadelicRockadelic Out Digging 13,993 Posts
    I'm assuming this is a bad April Fools joke

    b/w

    If not Portland is more "progressive" than I ever realized.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    I remember the cops cracking down heavily on rap shows in Portland the year I lived out there, 2002-03. You'd walk out of a venue and there would be a goon squad waiting for any excuse to start cracking skulls.

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    HarveyCanal said:
    I remember the cops cracking down heavily on rap shows in Portland the year I lived out there, 2002-03. You'd walk out of a venue and there would be a goon squad waiting for any excuse to start cracking skulls.

    This is exactly what happened at the Blue Monk recently.
    Instead of waiting until after the show, they entered as the show was starting.
    Blocked off SE Belmont, filled the venue with cops.
    The pretext was a fire inspection, trying to count heads to see if the show was over sold.

  • volumenvolumen 2,532 Posts
    Fear Mongering!

    Just kidding. Seattle went through this 15 or so years ago when the Seattle Hip Hop scene was growing. There are just as many drunks and fights at country and rock bars. The reality is that even in 2014 the police are scared of more than 3 black people being in the same public space at once.

  • twoplytwoply Only Built 4 Manzanita Links 2,915 Posts
    HarveyCanal said:
    I remember the cops cracking down heavily on rap shows in Portland the year I lived out there, 2002-03. You'd walk out of a venue and there would be a goon squad waiting for any excuse to start cracking skulls.

    Exactly. This is nothing new in Portland, it's just the same tricks for a new generation.
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