Drop-D Magazine - Interview by Kevin Templeton
Taken from Drop-D Magazine (May 30, 1997)
Head Like a Soul
by Kevin Templeton
Photography by Rodney Gitzel
"Rock rock y'all Spearheads comes alive
on the eve of two triple O
eleven forty five
no jive we be survivin'
singin' praises to jah
every time we throw down and every time we puff La
Haaaaa!!!, well you can roll my way
on the chocolate supa highway!!!"
- from "Chocolate Supa Highway"
Making his way through Vancouver this
past February on his Smokin' Word Tour -- an evening of "poetry, humour,
and music"-- was one Michael Franti, the musical and spiritual leader behind San
Francisco's Spearhead and former partaker in much heralded projects the Beatnigs
and the Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy. Now, I'm sure many of you may be
familiar with some of Franti's records both past and present (take your pick --
they're all decent), but you might not have been one of the lucky ones invited
to catch this man's incredible performance at the Purple Onion. Pity, that, as
those in attendance were witness to a joyous and provocative celebration of
music and culture... the kind of self-promotion that the western world needs
more of.
Sitting opposite the 6'6" Franti in his classy, albeit tiny, suite in the
Waterfront Centre Hotel (a room with a view!) the next day, I began questioning
him on his intentions with the solo Halifax-Montreal-Toronto-Vancouver spoken
word tour. "I started off doing a capella stuff [way back when]," he
states. "My first times performing words that I had written was during, like,
anti-apartheid rallies in the mid 80's. This trip I'm on now is something I
wanted to do because when you say the words without the music, you really get
the meaning of the words more. Make them come to life in a different
way."
As for his tour taking place during
Black History Month (February), Franti offers that he's taken a different
approach to the month this year. "It used to be a time to look at heroic events
that have taken place with black people, but it's the shortest month of the year
-- that seems like a dis to us, y' know." He pauses, then continues: "I look at
the time as African liberation. This is a time to say, 'Yo, where are we going
in the future?' The reason we recognize Black History Month is to use it as
inspiration -- to be inspired by the leaders that came before us, to
empower us. [In turn], I'm trying to inspire, also."
After I admit to missing the second half of his intimate show due to work
commitments, Franti instinctively brings up a Bob Marley song about working the
night shift. Not since Ben Harper's
Marley-esque stance (or seat, actually) has an artist seemed so enamoured
with the late Marley father as Franti is, and with Franti having recorded a song
called "Rebel Music" with Stephen Marley... well, how'd that go?
"It was an honour, because in our studio [Blak Militia in San Francisco] we have
a lot of pictures on the walls of Bob Marley for inspiration. And to have his
seed [Stephen] walkin' in and turn on the riddims... his voice is so close to
Bob's, the emotion. It was like Bob was in there with us."
"The single is gonna come out on Tuff
Gong [Bob's record label]. I recently got the artwork for it and saw the little
label on the inside of the record with 'Spearhead and Stephen Marley' on it and
I just went, 'Man, this is one of the biggest thrills of my career' -- to see my
name on the Tuff Gong label."
While Spearhead's stellar Home album from 1994 was a jazzy, soulful
rap experience, Chocolate Supa Highway, released in March of this year,
takes aim and connects with more of a musical club-groove, à la the Fugees. "I
produced the record, created a lot of the music," he explains. "We've always
been in search of the groove, y' know. We're trying to find the grooves that
move you and hold your attention while investing as much emotion into the lyrics
as possible."
"Our studio's a cool spot... a lot of people just come by after work, hang
out, smoke herb, listen to the tracks. We can see whether they're groovin' to it
-- or not groovin' to it."
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