RBG| Red Black and Green, Roy Ayers, w HISTORYMAKERS Bio and link out…

Jazz composer and vibraphonist Roy Ayers was born on September 10, 1940 in Los Angeles, California to Ruby Ayers and Roy Ayers, Sr. Ayers’ mother, a schoolteacher and piano instructor, began teaching him music when he was only a toddler. Growing up near Central Avenue, the heart of the West Coast jazz scene, Ayers was exposed to local luminaries from an early age. At five years old, Ayers was given his first set of vibraphone mallets by bandleader Lionel Hampton. Ayers attended Thomas Jefferson High School, where many of his classmates also went on to become famous jazz and R&B artists.

Ayers first played steel guitar and piano and did not study the vibraphone until meeting vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson at age seventeen. At twenty-two, Ayers began his prolific recording career as a sideman for jazz saxophonist Curtis Amy. In 1963, Ayers released his first album, West Coast Vibes, and went on to record with the Jack Wilson Quartet, Chico Hamilton, and the Gerald Wilson Orchestra in the 1960s, before joining up with jazz flutist Herbie Mann at The Lighthouse club in Hermosa Beach, California. Mann produced three of Ayers’ albums for Atlantic Records, and Ayers was a principal soloist on Mann’s hit album Memphis Underground. In 1970, Ayers moved to Manhattan and formed Roy Ayers Ubiquity, marking his move into jazz fusion. Ubiquity released a number of records on Polydor Records, including hits like ‘We Live in Brooklyn’ and ‘Everybody Loves the Sunshine.’ As the decade closed, Ayers went solo with songs like Let’s Do It. In 1980, Ayers began collaborating with Nigerian musician Fela Kuti and formed Uno Melodic Records. Ayers considered In The Dark, released on Columbia Records in 1984, as one of his best recordings.

He continued releasing yearly albums through the 1990s. At the same time, Ayers’ work was remixed, covered, and sampled by the emerging hip hop generation that included such artists as Mos Def, Puff Daddy, and Mary J. Blige. In 1993, Ayers appeared on Gang Starr rapper Guru’s Jazzmatazz, Vol. 1, one of the first albums to combine a live jazz band with hip hop production. Singer Erykah Badu has dubbed Ayers the Godfather of Neo-Soul.

Roy Ayers was interviewed by The HistoryMakers on September 19, 2016.

The National Question

 
 

African Socialist International Chairman Omali Yeshitela – On February 18-21, 2012 the African People’s Socialist Party USA (APSP USA) held its National Plenary in St. Petersburg, Florida to define the work of the Party in this period and mark the 40th anniversary of the Party’s founding. The National Plenary is a tool often used by the APSP USA between its congresses, the place where the entire organization comes together to establish policy and elect leaders. At the plenary, the Party examines its work since the last congress and assesses the world situation, making any necessary adjustments to its work to meet its objectives.

Uhuru Movement announces legal actions against Pinellas County Sheriff’s Dept.

uhuru10

Streamed live 10 hours ago

On Thursday, November 10th at 10am, Attorney Aaron O’Neal will talk to the press about the Uhuru Movement’s plans for local and federal legal action against the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office (PCSO) for a pattern of deputy deadly shootings and unlawful pursuit of black teenagers.
“The PCSO uses lies and misinformation in an attempt to justify these murders and vilify the African community of South Pinellas County,” charges O’Neal. The Uhuru Movement’s attorney will reveal extensive evidence previously covered up by the PCSO, showing discriminatory use of excessive and deadly force as well as routine practices that violate black residents’ 4th Amendment rights.

At the press conference, O’Neal will be joined by Omali Yeshitela, Chairman of the African People’s Socialist Party, and Kunde Mwamvita, mother of 16-year-old Dominique Battle, who along with her two best friends was drowned by the PCSO on March 31, 2016.

For more information, contact the International People’s Democratic Uhuru Movement at 727-914-3618.