PhotobucketVegan Edge Hip Hop

for every mc who opens cages

Friday, October 30, 2009

DED Interview!

DED in one sentence:

Hip-Hop for all, with extra reppin for the X’s and V’s!

Where are you based?

Fresno ( the just say NO town), California, USA

Your proudest moment as an artist:

Hearing my little brother (who’s 12) quote my lyrics.

Your top 5 political hip hop artists: (in no particular order):

P.E., Mos Def, Immortal Tech, Dead Prez (does that count as 2?) and for real good measure, XEdge With The DreadsX

Top 5 Straight Edge bands:

…OOOOOO!..hmm.. xThrowdownx (back in ‘01..first band that made me feel good about my decisions, my friends at the time didn’t.), CHAMPION, UNTIL THE END, XBRING IT DOWNX, PATH OF RESISTANCE!!!!!!

(more…)

posted by Peter at 3:39 am  

Monday, October 26, 2009

“Vegan Straight Edge”-raided mink farm raided again

A single night of action is worth more than a million angry HC band lyrics.

The fur farm raided by “The Vegan Straight Edge” in 2008 has been raided again. 300 mink were released from the Ylipelto Fur Farm the night of October 4th in Astoria, Oregon. At 1:23 AM, the farmer reported to police that someone was “releasing her mink”, indicating the liberators were spotted in the act, but escaped unarrested. The release comes just weeks before pelting season, when every mink on every farm in the country is killed and skinned. The Animal Liberation Front (or other group) has not claimed responsibility for the recent raid.

The Astoria area, on the Northwestern Oregon coast, is a fur farm hotbed. In the small town of Svensen, there are three known fur farms (a fourth was recently confirmed to be closed – see upcoming issue of Bite Back Magazine). And in Astoria proper, another mink farm / feed supplier operates from a waterfront property. Nearby in Seaside, another newly discovered farm may also be in operation almost directly on Highway 101.

The raid comes near the end of one of the slowest years in recent history for direct action, with only a small handful of significant actions having been carried out in 2009.

The raid highlights that farmers are defenseless against hit-and-run animal releases and that even when liberators are “caught”, rarely are they truly caught.

posted by Peter at 5:20 pm  

Monday, October 19, 2009

Foekus is Back

Last night, the Vegan Straight Edge Hip Hop Movement steering committee dispatched a field operative to an event of great significance: the first Foekus (aka Foeknowledge aka Naj One) show in 3 years.

Below is the report he sent us:

The show took place in a bar at a strip mall in South Salt Lake City on October 18th, 2009 at 9pm. The opening band (an alt-country band featuring two members or Iceburn) took way too long while real vegan straight edge hip hop heads, a demographic solely represented by myself, stood around waiting for Foekus to jump things off. Little had been heard from Foekus in many years.

I entered the bar silently and alone, beginning this info-gathering mission by heading straight towards a table occupied by numerous straight edge kids (guy with the Beyond shirt: you’re lucky I was working undercover, otherwise that thing would have been mine. Whut.) and Foekus himself. I took up my position against the wall nearby. Foekus could be heard saying loudly to the table that 1) “I don’t have any beats” 2) “I don’t know if I’m performing” and 3) “I forgot most of my lyrics”. It seemed the show itself was in peril. “Find me a drummer” he announced. I watched people take to their phones to get a drummer down there to give this man some beats. Mostly I just stood around turning off all the TVs with my universal remote. I hate bars.

Notables in attendance were former A.L.F. prisoner Jacob Kenison, half of Cherem, and a guy who once thought he had scammed a free hotel room when someone who actually paid checked in and got assigned to that very same room while he was laying on the bed; so he had to jump out the second story window and RUN. Ok that was me.

Foekus got on the mic. A drummer took to the drums. It was clear at that point how many kids in the bar were there to see Foekus.

“I’m-a get on this mic for about 10 minutes. Maybe 15. I forgot most of my lyrics, so let’s see how this goes…”

The only way to capture what happened next is through soundbites. Suffice to say, Foekus can rhyme. Foekus has stage presence. And Foekus SPIT TRUTH. Truth.

Begin quotes:

“….with an X on my hand…(stopping mid-song) wait, I sold that shit out.” (he’s straight again)

“I used to think I was the Earth Crisis of hip hop or some shit”.

“What should I rap about? I’ve been eating vegan again now for one month, maybe two, so I can rap about animal rights again”.

And it continued. The performance was mostly freestyle, as it seemed he was prevented from performing most of his recorded lyrics due to what we might call a “revision of belief”.

The evening closed with the only full song performed that night: “My Story”. He warned the crowd: “Don’t ask me to do this one unless you want to see me cry. I’m serioius”. He asked the drummer to stop so he could do the song accapella. And indeed, it seemed he did get misty-eyed.

Foekus is back. I saw him!

- Anonymous.

posted by Don at 11:30 pm  

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Bringing Down the House: Live xVx Hip Hop

Big news: Among history’s only vegan straight edge hip hop artists not on the comp, Foeknowledge (aka Foekus) is making an appearance this Sunday in Salt Lake  City. Foekus vanished from god’s green earth years ago,  and we at veganstraightedge.org are anticipating a report from this show. This show will be of interest to anyone checking this site. No doubt.

The show is this sunday, 9pm, 21+. At some bar.  Oh and one more thing:  FREE BEER.  We’ll know who is down when we see who is willing to brave this mess to see Foekus.

Second show: DED and Edge with the Dreads (both from the comp) plus two additional artists. November 1st, Long Beach.

Foeknowledge Flier

DED / xEdgex Flier

posted by Peter at 9:53 pm  

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Interview With Vegan Edge Hip Hop in French

New interview up on the French earth and animal liberation site Terra de l’abord:

http://laterredabord.fr/?p=1686

Below is the interview in English:

1. Vegan straight edge culture was originally linked to hardcore music. Now it is not the case anymore: hardcore divided into a lot of styles, and others fields of music were touched. That’s the case with hip hop. Can you tell us about what you’re doing, and why you’re doing it?

Vegan straightedge as a culture has produced more record collections and Myspace pages than fur farm liberations or closed vivisection labs, so maybe it’s time to stop worrying about keeping this subculture alive. In the last few years academics have started writing studies about the straightedge subculture, which speaks more to its weakness than its strength. That it can be studied means that it is dead.

We put out Vegan Edge Hip Hop Vol. 2 to give voice to a new wave of vegan straightedge that isn’t interested in reliving the 90’s over and over again. The CD is a benefit for earth and animal liberation prisoners or those facing prison. We’re raising funds for people like Marie Mason, a long-time vegan who is serving 20+ years for destroying genetically modified crops and logging equipment with fire.

2.Hip hop, as a popular culture, put forward a certain number of values and the will of changing things. And to be vegan straight edge is certainly a political thing. Unfortunately, often people that are vegan lack of confidence and are rather pessimist. Is vegan straight edge hip hop there, in a way, to bring back the will of changing all the society, moving away for the hardcore kind of elitist attitude?

Putting out this compilation proved to me that putting out a record is very easy. It’s a question of energy and initiative. This is true for a lot of things that might seem out of reach from a distance. If one jumps in head first, they become less daunting. The project of animal liberation is daunting from a distance as well, but there are immediate tasks and actions that can be achieved by nearly anyone.

The difficult and unresolved question for those seeking animal liberation is how to communicate the idea that animals exist for themselves, not for human use or consumption. How can we effectively communicate this idea to the billions of people around us? How can any idea be communicated? I think it’s past time we became more creative and moved out of the pamphlet/video box the animal liberation milieu has been stuck in for some time. A complete break from animal welfarism would be a good start!

I can’t honestly say that we do not have an elitist attitude

3. Is Dead Prez in a way a “model” for hip hop artists that are vegan straight edge?

No. Dead Prez are not drug free, and from what I understand they are no longer vegan. Their brand of nationalism is a dead-end for those seeking a more liberatory path, and at the end of the day their music is not very good. If we want models, I think we ought to look outside the confines of music scenes and musicians and seek inspiration instead from people opening cages or refusing to talk to grand juries.

4.Can you tell us more about vegan straight edge hip hop artists today, and how they see their work?

I am hesitant to speak for any artists because I think the vegan straightedge hip hop movement contains a multitude of voices and perspectives. The one thing that unifies the movement, beyond a common way of life, is the desire to raise the bar of political hip hop. We hate the cops, but we know hating the cops isn’t enough. Just hating the cops was never enough. Let’s dig deeper and hit harder.

Who dares wins, right?

posted by Don at 11:10 am  

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