Dahlak Brathwaite
Dahlak Brathwaite (born 1986) is a hip-hop-rooted performance artist,[1] spoken word poet, actor, musician, and writer.[2][3][4] He has toured the United States with his one-man show, Spiritrials, since 2015.[5][6] He first gained prominence when appearing twice on HBO's Def Poetry Jam.[7] As a CalArts artist-in-residence[8] he has further developed Spiritrials with director Roberta Uno and choreographer Toran Moore[9] to create the project Try/Step/Trip which he has performed at venues such as Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art,[10][11] San Francisco's CalArts Center for New Performance,[8] and the American Conservatory Theater.[12] Since 2004,[13] Brathwaite has toured over 200 colleges[14] throughout the United States and Europe with the ill-Literacy artists collective[15][16] and been a featured performer at the Los Angeles Get Down Festival.[17][5] He has toured nationally and internationally with the hip-hop theater production of Word Becomes Flesh and Scourge, both under the direction of Marc Bamuthi Joseph.[18] Additional collaborations include a track with acclaimed Bay Area rapper George Watsky and performances with Princess Cut.[19][20] Brathwaite is a presenter through the CalArts initiative ArtChangeUS: Arts in a Changing America[21] and a U.S. State Department International Exchange Fellowship's OneBeat Fellow, through which he has performed for the State Department's hip-hop diplomacy program, Next Level.[22][20] The role, which placed him on Team Uzbekistan, has taken him to Guatemala, Israel, Nigeria, the Philippines, Turkey, and the Dominican Republic.[20]
Early life
[edit]Brathwaite is a Sacramento native and currently resides in Long Beach, California.[23]
Religion
[edit]Brathwaite was raised Catholic which segued into what he describes as "a traditional Black church where folks, you know, catch the Holy Ghost and run up to the altar and speak in tongues."[24] This experience caused him to "contextualize Christianity in the historical sense," testing, and ultimately losing, his belief in the faith.[24] It was with his encounter with the law, having been racially profiled and brought to court, that solidified his agnosticism, and that he was no longer Christian; the experience reignited his troubled sensibility over rituals that are never explained.[24] Brathwaite has cited Judaism as a religion that he believes does a better job at linking historical and biblical events to religious practice.[24] In an April 2019 Medium article, Brathwaite describes his current spiritual practice:[24]
"On every good day, on every day that I'm not rushed, I get on my floor and I meditate for 15 to 20 minutes, sometimes longer. Then get on my knees and stretch, and then pray. And sometimes when I do it so much, that that's when the ritual has to be made new again.
"I started those rituals when I started this play and that was my way of sampling. Because meditation was an Eastern practice, and the way that I stretch probably looks like Islamic prayer to some people, and then I pray sometimes just in that Catholic form. Lately, even though my prayers are structured and I have a thing that I usually say all the time, I’ve been trying to invoke kind of that Pastor spirit, that spirit that I’ve learned from the black church, in terms of a crazy desperate plea for more faith."
"Art is a type of spirituality for me. As I'm trying to discover what art does again, that is that prayer that I'm asking for: more faith, to believe in more, to believe in what I don't see and what I can't plan out."
Education
[edit]Brathwaite attended the University of California, Davis, earning his Bachelor's degrees in English and Dramatic Art in 2008.[6] While a student, he and Adriel Luis, Nico Cary, Ruby Veridiano-Ching, and others formed the spoken word group ill-Literacy.[25] As of 2019, Brathwaite and the group still tour.[26] Also while a UCD student, Brathwaite appeared twice on HBO's Russell Simmons presents Def Poetry Jam, on which he shared a bill with Talib Kweli, Lauryn Hill, Lyfe Jennings, Dave Chappelle, and others. During this time, Brathwaite performed in UC Davis Department of Theatre & Dance productions such as The Island, directed by Professor Peter Lichtenfels,[27] and participated in projects like a Youth Radio series helmed by reporter Anyi Howell.[28][29]
Career
[edit]Brathwaite's works reflect the modern age's struggle with the intersection of race, religion, law enforcement, and mass incarceration.[30] Fresh out of college in 2008,[31][6] Brathwaite was pulled over by a police officer while driving[32] in a case of racial profiling.[23] The officer found four stems[31] of hallucinogenic mushrooms in Brathwaite's vehicle and arrested him;[32][6] Brathwaite was subsequently made out to be an addict in court, even though he was not,[18][6] and was placed in a court-mandated drug rehabilitation program,[31] with the threat of a felony hanging over him if he did not comply.[31] This provided the impetus for his 70-minute[31] one-man show and LP by the same name, Spiritrials, which he developed in 2010[31] and proceeded to tour across the United States. As of May 2019, he had performed the show in 35 U.S. states. Venues have included Los Angeles's REDCAT Theatre; Sonoma State University's Persons Theater; Arizona's Mesa Arts Center; Price Center at the University of California, San Diego;[3][33] Georgia Tech;[34] Florida's Asolo Repertory Theatre;[35] the Greenway Court Theatre;[5] Connecticut's University of Saint Joseph;[18] and Montana's Myrna Loy Theatre.[6] Also by May 2019, Brathwaite had brought the show to Brazil and South Africa.
Since 2013, he has been touring nationally and internationally with a production of Word Becomes Flesh, playing venues including the University of Massachusetts, Amherst's Bowker Auditorium; Northeastern University;[36] the Theater Alliance of Washington, D.C.'s Anacostia Playhouse,[37][38] the University of Chicago;[39] Virginia's Middlebury University;[40] Philadelphia's Painted Bride Art Center;[41] Intermedia Arts in Minneapolis,[42] and other venues.
Awards and honors
[edit]- Nominee for 2019 United States Artists Fellowship[22]
- Winner of the Brave New Voices International Poetry Slam 2018[9][18]
- U.S. State Department International Exchange Fellowship's OneBeat Fellow 2014–2018[14][43][5][44]
Discography
[edit]- Spiritrials (2012)
- Of No Consequence (2012)
- Live From The Boondocks: Commencement (2008)
- Dual Consciousness (2007)
References
[edit]- ^ "The Presidential Suite: A Look Back at Obama's Musical Milestones". Pitchfork. 13 October 2016.
- ^ Chang, Jeff (December 2, 2006). Total Chaos: The Art and Aesthetics of Hip-Hop. Basic Books. ISBN 9780465009091 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b "Hip-hop artist Dahlak Brathwaite to perform one-man show at UCSD -". May 8, 2019.
- ^ [1][dead link ]
- ^ a b c d "Greenway Court Theatre | Spiritrials – Night One of the Get Down".
- ^ a b c d e f Record, Marga Lincoln for the Independent (22 March 2018). "Show that shares a young black man's experiences with police plays the Myrna Loy". Helena Independent Record.
- ^ "Dahlak Brathwaite". New York Live Arts.
- ^ a b "CNP Artists in Residence Roberta Uno and Dahlak Brathwaite". CalArts School of Art.
- ^ a b BWW News Desk. "MCA Chicago to Spotlight Black Creativity This August". BroadwayWorld.com.
- ^ [2][dead link ]
- ^ "Dahlak Brathwaite, Try/Step/Trip". MCA.
- ^ "ArtShare Performances 2018–19". act-sf.org.
- ^ "iLL-Literacy & Theophilus London". brownpapertickets.com.
- ^ a b "Dahlak Brathwaite".
- ^ "iLL-Literacy " Solo Projects".
- ^ "iLL-Literacy". Claiming Williams.
- ^ BWW News Desk. "2nd Annual LA Get Down Festival Celebrating Hip-Hop & Spoken Word". BroadwayWorld.com.
- ^ a b c d "Data" (PDF). wpengine.netdna-ssl.com. 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 28, 2019. Retrieved December 10, 2019.
- ^ "Fight! Fight! Fight! (feat. Dahlak Brathwaite)" – via YouTube.
- ^ a b c "Dahlak Brathwaite To Participate in US State Department's 'Next Level' Diplomacy Initiative". August 10, 2018.
- ^ "Artists and Cultural Organizers".
- ^ a b "Dahlak". Next Level.
- ^ a b Nollen, Diana. "'Spiritrials' L.A. area artist bringing performances, workshops to spark dialogues of cultural awareness, change". The Gazette.
- ^ a b c d e Harlan-Ferlo, Elizabeth (April 7, 2019). "Dahlak Braithwaite: Remix as an Act of Faith". Medium.
- ^ "Matt's Writing: Interview with hip hop artist Dahlak Brathwaite on Apple Podcasts". Apple Podcasts.
- ^ "iLL-Literacy".
- ^ Hardwick, Professor Emeritus of Classical Studies Lorna; Hardwick, Lorna; Gillespie, Carol (October 11, 2007). Classics in Post-Colonial Worlds. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780199296101 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Berkeley's Youth Radio receives award". East Bay Times. October 18, 2005.
- ^ Soep, Elisabeth; Soep, Lissa; Chavez, Vivian; Chávez, Vivian (December 2, 2010). Drop that Knowledge: Youth Radio Stories. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520250215 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Spiritrials Reveals the Reach of the War on Drugs". Portland Mercury.
- ^ a b c d e f "Hip-hop artist Dahlak Brathwaite performs one-man show at UCSD" – via YouTube.
- ^ a b Brady, Shaun (March 14, 2016). "Dahlak Brathwaite embraces the poetry of life's hard knocks". Metro US.
- ^ "Dahlak Brathwaite at ArtPower at UC San Diego". San Diego CityBeat. May 1, 2019.
- ^ "Dahlak Brathwaite: Spiritrials | ARTS@TECH". arts.gatech.edu.
- ^ "Dahlak Brathwaite: Spiritrials". The Ringling.
- ^ "Word Becomes Flesh".
- ^ Normandin, Evann. "BWW Review: WORD BECOMES FLESH Captivates at Theater Alliance". BroadwayWorld.com.
- ^ "Theater Alliance Brings Back Word Becomes Flesh and It's Still Really Damn Good". Washington City Paper. 15 September 2017.
- ^ "Search results: UChicago Arts". ticketsweb.uchicago.edu.
- ^ ""Word Becomes Flesh" Brings Urban Hip-Hop Theater to Middlebury Sept. 20 and 21". Middlebury. September 6, 2013.
- ^ "Living Words: Marc Bamuthi Joseph's Word Becomes Flesh". FringeArts. June 3, 2011.
- ^ "'Word Becomes Flesh' takes a Minneapolis bow". Star Tribune.
- ^ "Montalvo Arts Center | Dahlak Braithwaite". montalvoarts.org.
- ^ Team, Meridian International Center. "Next Level: Uzbekistan | Meridian International Center". meridian.org.