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Anonymous
Posted January 8, 2006
I am a 34 year old man from New Orleans. Raised uptown, I knew many of the people mentioned in this book. As I read the pages I was deeply offended by some of the adjec tives used by the writer. The way he made my city sound,its as if we were the walking dead. I was sometimes pissed at the assumption that we are okay with the progress in our city.After the recent events of my city it is important that we all take an interest in what happens to our city. The inner beauty that captivated this writer is still there. It took me so time to realize that the writer didnt fall out of love with my city, he realized how to embrace all of her.The narrative on Che Muse were insightful,but I didnt think he gave Jubilee his just due. Aint no town like Uptown.
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Overview
Acclaimed music writer Nik Cohn’s love of hip-hop goes back to its beginnings, and his love of New Orleans even further, to when he passed through the Big Easy on tour with The Who and discovered a place with a magic that never failed to seize him. On the surface he’s the least likely candidate for a rap impresario. But with his signature charm and passion, he plunges headfirst into the wards, clubs, and projects of New Orleans, opening up a world closed to most outsiders: a journey into the heart of the hip-hop dream, and into larger question of racial identity in America. Written before Hurricane Katrina struck (and published here with an afterword that chronicles how Katrina altered the lives of those he met) Triksta