Christian Niedan: What role did San Francisco play in your early years of rap and poetry performances?
Malik Crumpler: In ‘99-2000, I started going to jam sessions & improvisation workshops at La Pena in Oakland, ran by jazz musicians Josh Jones & Mike Auberg. Before that, we always performed in the streets to sell our tapes and chapbooks. Then some college friends at SFSU & I started Bayonics (world music, funk hiphop band), and we gigged all over S.F. constantly until I moved to New York in 2004. We usually gigged at college parties, house parties, artists lofts until 2002, when we started getting the better gigs at Brunos, Elbo Room, Minna’s, Club 6, Milk Bar, little gallery pop ups, parades, fraternities, festivals at least twice a week, every week. By myself as a rapper and poet, I did featured gigs and solo gigs to promote my albums at the time, Drapetomania, Sanctified, Enchantment leads to… and a couple songs from Nothing Better To do at places like CAL, SFSU, SFU, Sugar Lounge, Great American Music Hall, Buddha Lounge, Slim’s, a bunch of spots in Oakland and Berkeley too. I did too many gigs to count or remember exactly where, but I was always jamming with hip hop and jazz musicians like Lorin Benedict, David Michel Ruddy, O-Maya, Street Scholars, Attik, Otayo Dubb, Black Dot, Black Box, Co-Deez, Howard Wiley, Geechi Taylor, Valentino Pellizzer did a couple jam sessions at the Jazz School with Ambrose Akinmusire, Howard Wiley and all those cats 2000-2004. I also performed at a lot of protest, Anti- Police Brutality, Anti- Bush, Anti- War rallies, festivals too for different organizations like La Raza, Black Students Union, Green Party all that. There were so many places to perform back then, with so many different genres, so often that it was the best diverse learning ground possible. In terms of specific locations in San Francisco back then, we gigged in North Beach, Haight district and the Mission the most, but I can’t remember the names of all those clubs and art lofts.
CN: Was there a relationship between Oakland and San Francisco’s rap communities that you observed during the period covered in the book?
MC: I organize Poets Live, which is currently in limbo as we’re looking for a new location. The other performances spaces I frequent most are Spoken Word Paris, Paris Lit Up, French Fried Comedy, which all have a open mics. Then there’s AWOL writing workshop, B’AM and several different pop up salons. Each is unique in its format and audience, but they’re all the same in that their readers are always from every continent on the globe, so you get an entree of the planet by being at their readings. Also, the caliber from master to beginner is in full effect until you go to Berkeley Books Of Paris features music and writers and artists of all genres, their unpredictable and always great readings, exhibitions, and performances. Ivy Writers is where you find only the professional poets, who publish widely, teach in university, have well known publishers and celebrated books available. At all of these venues you’ll find internationally respected poets, both in academia, street culture and often times in pop culture. Then there’s Poets Live, which I host, we feature poets from everywhere on earth who have books published or are finishing them, and also performance artists. We don’t do music, we don’t do open mics. Then there’s Angora which is a selection of professional poets only, that read in the open mic format. So between all those venues, you can learn and be inspired by the entire world of poetry.