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Spandana is a multi-arts museum-quality publication with contributions from artists and writers internationally.
This incomparable anthology collects articles, interviews, fiction, and poetry from the Original Chicago Blues Annual, one of music history's most significant periodical blues publications. Founded and operated from 1989 to 1995 by African American musician and entrepreneur Lincoln T. Beauchamp Jr., OCBA gave voice to the blues community and often frankly addressed contentious issues within the blues such as race, identity, prejudice, wealth, gender, and inequity. OCBA often expressed an explicitly black perspective, but its contributors were a mix of black and white, American and international. Likewise, although OCBA's roots and main focus were in Chicago, Beauchamp's vision for the public...
Spandana is a multi arts / multicultural response situations, from personal to global.
A multi-arts/multi-cultural journal founded and edited by Lincoln T. Beauchamp
Memoir of Bluesman, Writer, Adventurer, and Chicago Blues Experience Museum Co-founder, Lincoln T Beauchamp, Jr., known musically as Chicago Beau. www.chicagobeau.net
Memoir/narrative of Bluesman, Lincoln T. Beauchamp, Jr., a/k/a Chicago Beau
"This anthology collects articles, interviews, fiction, and poetry from the Original Chicago Blues Annual, one of music history's most significant periodical blues publications. Founded and operated from 1989 to 1995 by African American musician and entrepreneur Lincoln T. Beauchamp Jr., OCBA gave voice to the blues community and often frankly addressed contentious issues within the blues such as race, identity, prejudice, wealth, gender, and inequity." "BluesSpeak includes key selections from OCBA's seven issues and features candid interviews with many artists. Also featured are heartfelt memorials to bygone blues artists, insightful observations on the state of the blues in Chicago and beyond, and dozens of photographs of performers, promoters, and other participants in the worldwide blues scene." --Book Jacket.
UnConveniencen NoMO is the sequel and continuation of Too Much UnConvenience
The weekly source of African American political and entertainment news.