Thereโs a dude in the corner of the room playing the piano. And doing it well. Heโs putting down some soft and beautiful tinkling, like maybe he has a few Bill Evans or George Shearing records at home. Itโs late in the afternoon and heโs making the place feel more like cocktail time at the Rainbow Room than happy hour at Kingstonโs Keegan Ales, which is what it is, actually. Probably not what youโd expect from a mike-rocking hip-hop MC.
โI can fake it okay, I guess,โ says a grinning Jarabe Del Sol, who, with his co-MCs Decora, Freeflowin, and Latin Translator and turntablist DJ H20, makes up Hudson Valley words-and-music crew ReadNex Poetry Squad. Further confounding expectations, perhaps, is the fact that Del Sol is actually a multi-instrumentalist: โI play guitar, too, but Iโm more of a drummer,โ adds the rapper known as Cuttz El Colombiano on the groupโs early releases. โI was playing the drums before I could speak English.โ For ReadNex, however, defying the general publicโs perception of what it means to be a hip-hop bandโand what hip-hop itself meansโis par for the course. Heroically so.
Right from the groupโs 2001 inception, when the members met as students at Middletownโs Orange County Community College during a campus open-mike night, ReadNex has been as much about effecting positive social change as it has been about music. The band is an out-and-out activist machine, for whose members art and progressive work are simply inseparable. Besides releasing three albums on the bandโs own DeBefore label; playing on HBO Latino and at hallowed venues the Apollo Theater and the Nuyorican Poets Cafe; touring the US, Canada, Europe, and Brazil; and performing regionally as a group and as individuals at spoken-word gigs, ReadNex maintains a packed itinerary of educational and public advocacy efforts. Along with steady appearances at benefit and awareness-raising eventsโthe group was en route to a climate-control-themed affair at the time of its Chronogram interview, after having played a state education conference in Hew Hampshire the night beforeโexamples of the outreach actions the outfit regularly organizes include food and clothing drives, inner-city farmersโ markets, youth-mentoring programs, and student-empowerment workshops. But because the media only likes to occasionally play up the odd cause-boosting but less-than-sincere photo op by splashy money men like P. Diddy or his swaggering gangsta peers, for many ReadNexโs steady regimen of altruistic endeavors will likely be another expectation-shattering revelation.
โMahatma Ghandi said, โBe the change you want to see in the world,โโ quotes Decora, who, like his band mates, is a perpetual font of wisdom-bearing axioms. โThere are four elements that make up hip-hop culture: rapping, DJing, breakdancing, and graffiti writing. Weโve added a fifth, ambiguous element, which is more personal and can be anything you want it to be. Not that you canโt do more than one thing, but for some people that extra element might be spoken word or poetry; for others it could be comedy. And for some it might be the kind of social change activities that we do.โ
But with all this talk about ReadNexโs extracurricular doings, thereโs the danger of taking the focus off its musicโdo so at your own risk, however. At a Kingston performance shortly after the release of the groupโs second album, Social IssUes (DeBefore Records; reviewed in the December 2006 issue of Chronogram), the group was devastating, the four MCs stalking the stage and discharging their words with angry abandon while DJ H2O threw up a dense storm of sounds and beats behind them. Integral to the bandโs studio sound has been its behind-the-scenes sixth member, producer Charlie โFoxโ Graham, whoโs been on board almost since the beginning. โI would see them play at the open mikes back in 2001 and their energy was just amazing,โ Graham recalls. โWe ended up doing a demo and then the first album [2004โs F.O.S.S.L., also DeBefore], and things just kept going. As far as I know theyโre one of the first groups to apply such eclectic styles to the music. Especially on [new album] Day before Sound (DeBefore), which has rock, Latin, reggae, folk, and world music, along with hip-hop, house, and spoken word.โ
With its alchemical, psychedelic blend, Day before Sound holds such provocative tracks as Del Solโs eerily prescientโin light of the Gulf oil spillโecology commentary โDeaf Ears Canโt Be Environmentally Soundโ and Freeflowinโs flamenco guitar-laced lover letter to the music that freed her mind and allowed everything else to follow, โWhen Life Gives You Capital-ism Choose Hip-Hop.โ But itโs with the recordโs power-packed closer, โBe DifโRent,โ that the band has waxed a new anthem for young outsiders, one that aims to let them know theyโre not alone and that itโs okay to be, yes, different. Over a loud and relentlessly throbbing electro-pulse, the MCs trade rhymes sure to resonate with any disaffected or inner-city kid who hears them: โThis is for the Chinese-Dominican with the cinnamon-colored hair / This is for the Puerto Rican on the weekend lookinโ to express his poetry through guitar / This is for the black kid in the moshpit with the Mohawk / the white kid in the rhyme circle with the โfrohawk / This is for the IED-ADDโs / on the way to GED / Low test scores and didnโt take your SAT / Yellow, purple, black, or brown / growinโ up with no cops around / Gun clappinโ was the sound / that put you to sleep.โ The group recently completed a video for the song, to be released this month.
Day before Sound features guest artists from the underground hip-hop worldโRed Clayโs Baron and R&B duo Indigo Brownโbut thereโs another, likely unexpected contributor, a musician whose family lineage links ReadNex straight to a protest music legend: Tao Rodriguez-Seeger, who appears on the intriguingly titled โAmerica Bolivariana: The Reflection of Self-Revolution.โ โThe ReadNex [members] are totally fearless when it comes to music,โ says Rodriguez-Seeger, the grandson of Pete Seeger. โThey sat in with my band at the Clearwater Festival once, and Decora and Jarabe rhymed in English and Spanish over the music. Iโd never done anything like that before, and it was really incredible. We definitely did the most exciting version of โThis Land Is Your Landโ Iโve ever played.โ
Bringing the noiseโand the messageโfrom sea to shining sea has opened not only the ears, eyes, and minds of their audiences, but also those of the MCs and DJ themselves. In 2008 the unit embarked on its Frontlines Tour, a mammoth, self-funded expedition (another anachronism for a genre whose mainstream stars wonโt hit the road unless itโs in a corporate-sponsored sleeper bus) that took the group to 40 cities and towns across the US. โWe visited these tiny places like Whitesburg, Kentucky [pop. 1500], where they really hadnโt had hip-hop before. And they were crazy for it. After the show we ended up jamming at someoneโs house. H20 was spinning while people were playing mandolins and fiddlesโsome were even drinking moonshine,โ says Latin Translator, today sipping ginger ale, like his bandmates. โWherever we go on tour, besides doing the performance we try to also hold one of our workshops and also talk to the people to learn about the issues theyโre facing locally,โ explains Decora. โSo in places like Kentucky and Virginia we got to know more about the lives of the coal miners and their families, about how black lung is still a huge problem. And about oxycoton addiction in rural areas, how mountaintop-removal mining has been destroying the environment there. We try to take what we discover and pass it along at the next places we go to: โLearn, Educate, Repeatโ is one of our main mantras.โ
To that end, the groupโs self-devised, interactive โNext to Be Readโ and โHip-Hop and Poetry Saved My Lifeโ school workshops have been major hits with students and educators. Both are customizable symposiums that, according to the groupโs website, include such activities as โlyrical adaptation of school work; hip-hop-oriented phonetic and kinesthetic learning; using poetic devices for writing English essays; and using hip-hop and poetry as a platform to understand academic subjects and convey sensitive topics in schools.โ โHip-Hop and Poetry Saved My Lifeโ is the more immersive program, with students spending 10 days with members of ReadNex. โ[The latter workshop] is more than us doing musical and spoken-word performances and leading the students through activities,โ says Freeflowin. โIt encompasses a lot of personal stories in which we talk about how hip-hop and poetry impacted each of us specifically, and about how we use them in our daily lives.โ
With all of the bandโs thankless self-sacrificing and constant toiling in the good fight, however, how long does she think the group can keep going? โForever,โ she says. โThis is what we do. Weโre married to each other.โ
But, still, if there ever did come a day when the members of ReadNex Poetry Squad decided to go their separate ways, what would each of them do?
Decora answers without hesitation: โThe right thing.โ And what else would you expect?
Day before Sound is out now on DeBefore Records. www.debeforerecords.com.

This article appears in September 2010.









