Gabriel Teodros (born 1981) is a hip hop artist and a member of the groups Abyssinian Creole and CopperWire. He was raised on Beacon Hill, Seattle, Washington. Teodros' music often features socially conscious themes, and he was a catalyst in the surge of dynamic underground rap acts from the Pacific Northwest during the first decade of the 2000s.[1]

Gabriel Teodros
Background information
Born1981 (age 42–43)
OriginBeacon Hill, Seattle, Washington
GenresHip hop, Northwest hip hop
OccupationRapper
Years active1999–present
LabelsIndependent, Fresh Chopped Beats, MADK, MassLine, Porto Franco Records
Websitehttp://www.gabrielteodros.com

Early life

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Teodros was born and raised in Seattle, Washington, to an Ethiopian mother and a father of Scottish, Irish and Native American descent.[2] His parents met through anti-war organizing in the 1970s, and they split up around the time Gabriel was born. He stayed with his mother, and met grandparents, uncles, aunts, and cousins as they first emigrated to the United States and all stayed in the same house.[3]

Teodros's relationship with hip hop culture began at a young age within the South Seattle neighborhood of Beacon Hill. "A lot of kids in my neighborhood were affected by gang culture. And I kind of had a death wish. I felt like, at an early age, that I wasn’t going to live to 21," he said in an interview with Sheeko Magazine. He spent his high school years in Las Vegas, Nevada where as one out of approximately 30 students of color in a predominantly white school, something within him changed. "It was the first time I understood that there was a system in place that wanted kids like me to want to die. And understanding that in high school made me want to live," he said in the same interview. The former breakdancer, graffiti writer and closet-emcee finally began to take his career path seriously at age 16, using hip hop to both understand and explain his world.[4]

Music career

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1999–2005: Beginnings and Abyssinian Creole

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Teodros began his musical career around 1999, when he returned to Seattle and began working with a live band called 500 Years. That same year, he met an MC named Khalil Crisis (better known as Khingz), from the group Maroon Colony. The two groups began sharing bills together all over Seattle and the two MCs also began working with a community organization called Youth Undoing Institutionalized Racism. In 2001, YUIR sent them to a conference in New Orleans, and it was there that Teodros and Khingz saw how much they had in common outside of music. They formed the group Abyssinian Creole to both represent their peoples and the bridges between them.[5]

Also in 2001, Teodros released his first solo album, entitled Sun To A Recycled Soul.[4]

In 2005, Abyssinian Creole released its debut album, Sexy Beast,[5] a record that gives expression to the post-1990s cosmopolitanism thriving in South Seattle.[6] The album's featured guests include Moka Only, Geologic of Blue Scholars and Macklemore.[7] What Sexy Beast made apparent was the diversity of Northwest hiphop: It can come from anywhere (East Africa, Haiti) and be about anything (love, immigration, meditation).[8]

2006–2007: Lovework

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In the spring of 2006, Teodros completed the entire Lovework album with producer Amos Miller, around the same time MassLine Media was being formed with Teodros, Blue Scholars and Common Market.[5] Lovework had additional beat contributions from Sabzi of Blue Scholars, Moka Only, Kitone, and Specs One. Its sound was primarily influenced by Seattle veteran Vitamin D (who also mixed the record) and the late J Dilla.[6] The album title, Lovework was inspired by bell hooks and her book All About Love: New Visions, where hooks insists that to truly know love, one must agree that love is a verb. She goes further to say to truly know love, one must work to undo every system of domination that stops people from truly loving. The title was also inspired by a quote from Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet: "Work is love made visible".[5]

Also in 2006, Good Medicine was formed: a four-person group composed of Teodros, Khingz, Macklemore and Geologic of Blue Scholars. Good Medicine have headlined a handful of shows in the Seattle area but have never released any music as a group.[9] Towards the end of that year, Teodros independently released a mix-tape/CD entitled Westlake: Class of 1999, which was a collection of his unreleased songs recorded in four different cities between 2002 and 2006.[10]

The Lovework album was released on February 27, 2007, on MassLine, to critical acclaim.[11] The album topped the CMJ Hip Hop charts for two weeks and came in at No. 19 for the year 2007.[12] Teodros was also named as one of URB Magazine's "Next 100".[13]

2009–2010: Air 2 A Bird and GT's Ethiopium

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In the fall of 2009, after being deported from the London-Heathrow Airport and having to cancel a European tour, Teodros found himself in a Brooklyn, New York recording studio with Lovework producer Amos Miller.[14] They spent two weeks together crafting a 12 track album produced using mostly GarageBand, a piano, and the recordings of actual birds.[15] The result was Air 2 A Bird's Crow Hill, released independently in the summer of 2010.[16]

In December 2009, Teodros released GT's Ethiopium: A Jitter Generation Mixtape.[17] This release shined a light on the realities of Ethiopia, touched on America's own imperfections and stressed the importance of exploring one's own intelligence and spirituality. It was made completely using instrumentals from Oh No's Ethiopium, which was made completely using old-school and rare samples of Ethiopian music.[18]

2012: Colored People's Time Machine and CopperWire

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In January 2012, Teodros released Colored People's Time Machine, his first full-length solo album since Lovework.[19] Colored People's Time Machine was recorded in Seattle and Brooklyn and is a multi-lingual, multi-genre album that featured vocal, instrumental, and production collaborations with 20 different artists. On it, he explored themes of love (Goodnight, a brief interlude on a long-distance relationship), cultural identity (Blossoms of Fire), personal identity (Alien Native, a biographical tale), the concept of home (Diaspora and Beit), loss (Ella Mable Bright, a tribute to his grandmother featuring Meklit Hadero), music (Colored People’s Time Machine, and Sun and Breeze, also featuring Meklit Hadero and Amos Miller), and the music industry (You A Star, on which he warns about the pitfalls of the industry and the danger of buying into the illusion of stardom).[20] Other guests on the album include Mexico City's Bocafloja, Los Angeles emcee SKIM, and Palestinian wordsmith Sabreena Da Witch.[19]

On April 17, 2012, CopperWire's debut album Earthbound was released on Porto Franco Records.[21] CopperWire is a group composed of Teodros, Meklit Hadero and Burntface. All three celebrate their Ethiopian ancestry on the album, but do so through the characters of galactic fugitives aboard a hijacked starship.[22] Earthbound's story, as described in liner notes by award-winning science fiction author Nnedi Okorafor, casts CopperWire members as characters that journey to Earth in the year 2089 to learn what it means to be human. They include mad scientist Scholar Black (Burntface), alien-human hybrid Getazia (Gabriel Teodros) and interstellar telepath Ko Ai (Meklit Hadero).[23] The album uses metaphors of intergalactic distances to talk about diaspora and cultural connection and disconnection.[24] The album also uses sonified light curves (that is the sound of stars, processed through Fourier analysis into frequencies that can be heard by humans) courtesy of SETI Institute researcher and NASA Kepler Labs analyst Jon Jenkins.[23]

2014: Children of the Dragon and Evidence of Things Not Seen

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On May 7, 2014, Teodros independently released the album Children of the Dragon with Washington, DC–based producer AirMe. Teodros met AirMe in 2011 during a 24-hour layover in Washington, DC while traveling between the cities of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and Seattle, WA. They recorded their first song together that day, before co-creating 20 more tracks together the following month.[25] The title Children of the Dragon is a reference to mythology Teodros first heard of in Haile Gerima's film Teza.[26]

On October 28, 2014, Teodros released the album Evidence of Things Not Seen with Auckland, New Zealand–based producer SoulChef, and featured vocals from Jonathan Emile, Shakiah and Sarah MK. The album and its title were largely inspired by James Baldwin, and it was released within a full-size book of Teodros' lyrics.[27] City Arts Magazine described it as the best album of Teodros' career.[28]

2018: History Rhymes If It Doesn't Repeat (A Southend Healing Ritual)

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On September 21, 2018, Teodros released his fifth solo album, History Rhymes If It Doesn't Repeat (A Southend Healing Ritual), a concept album about healing from trauma that was partially inspired by Bessel van der Kolk's book The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. The album's featured guests included Meklit Hadero, Khingz, Nikkita Oliver, Essam, Shakiah, Mikaela Romero, Otieno Terry and it was entirely produced by Moka Only. [29] [30] NPR Music featured the album in a story titled "Beyond Grunge: 15 Artists Redefining Seattle Music" where they declared "Gabriel Teodros is one of the bravest rappers currently working in Seattle." [31]

2020: What We Leave Behind

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On June 24, 2020, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic and on the 20th anniversary of his first solo show at the Rainier Valley Cultural Center in South Seattle, Teodros released What We Leave Behind, a collection of previously unreleased tracks spanning decades in their creation, along with a few new songs recorded specifically for the release. Some of the track highlights included a Sandra Bland, Angela Davis and James Baldwin-inspired collaboration with Aisha Fukushima titled "If They Come for Me in the Morning...",[32] a DJ B-Girl-produced meditation on the pandemic's early months titled "Listening to Bill Withers",[33] and "Solidarity" an anthem for Black & Asian solidarity with Kimmortal and Wundrkut on production.[34]

2023–2024: From the Ashes of Our Homes and Embers

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On September 23, 2023, Teodros released his sixth solo album From the Ashes of Our Homes. The albums themes range from a tragic fire that he and his spouse, Ijeoma Oluo, had to flee from in September 2020, to longtime friends that have passed away, and a shifting landscape wracked by the pandemic, wars, and the climate catastrophe. Alex Ruder at KEXP wrote "From the Ashes of Our Homes finds strength in its honest and reflective lyrics that focus on building and nurturing relationships, both at home and in the community." Ashes also marks Teodros introduction to the world as a beat producer on a majority of the tracks.[35][36]

On May 31, 2024, Teodros released Embers, a collection of new songs alongside previously unreleased remixes and reimagined songs from past projects.[37]

Touring

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As a part of Abyssinian Creole, Teodros performed alongside Khingz at the Under the Volcano Festival in North Vancouver, BC in 2003,[38] 2004[39] and 2009.[40]

Teodros performed at the Bumbershoot Festival in Seattle, Washington in 2006 (with Abyssinian Creole), 2007 (as a solo artist, and with Good Medicine), and in 2010 (with Air 2 A Bird).[41]

In 2007, Teodros toured the Western part of the United States with Blue Scholars and Common Market,[42] for the first and only MassLine Tour.[43] Also in 2007, Teodros performed at the Sasquatch! Music Festival, which was headlined by Björk, and also featured Manu Chao and Ozomatli.[44] Teodros also performed at the Trinity International Hip Hop Festival in Hartford, Connecticut in 2007 (as a solo artist),[45] and in 2008 (as a part of Abyssinian Creole).[46]

In the summer of 2009, Teodros toured in Mexico with Bocafloja, Eternia and Para La Gente.[3][47]

In 2011, Teodros toured Ethiopia alongside Meklit Hadero and Burntface,[48] where they did 12 shows including the first Hip Hop shows to ever happen in the cities of Harar and Gondar. He recorded an album in Washington, DC inspired by the experience,[49] that was released in May 2014[50]

Teodros has also performed in the United States alongside the likes of Lupe Fiasco,[51] Black Star,[52] K'naan,[19] Zap Mama, Fishbone, KRS-One and The Coup.[53]

Other work

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Teodros currently hosts a podcast titled Worldwide Underground focused on the art and politics of storytelling across every medium. [54]

Teodros leads writing workshops with youth, has helped spearhead after-school programs, and organizes all-ages events.[14]

In November 2012, Teodros did a TED Talk about hip hop and science fiction, at TEDxRainier in Seattle, Washington.[55][56] The Pittsburgh-based artist Alisha Wormsley cites this TED Talk as an inspiration in her afro-futurist project There Are Black People In The Future.[57][58]

In 2015, Teodros wrote curriculum, taught and helped launch The Residency, a summer program focused on youth development through hip-hop, in partnership with the Museum of Pop Culture, Arts Corps, and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis.[59][60]

Also in 2015, Teodros made his speculative fiction debut with a time-travel story titled "Lalibela" published in the anthology Octavia's Brood: Science Fiction Stories from Social Justice Movements (AK Press).[61] In 2016 he graduated from the Clarion West Writers Workshop for Speculative Fiction.[62]

From 2017 to 2023[63] Teodros was a DJ and Host on KEXP 90.3 FM in Seattle, WA. He started with an overnight show, and launched the show Early in the summer of 2020, which aired every weekday from 5–7 a.m., Pacific Time.[64] Teodros also served as Associate Music Director at the station, and he had a hand in bringing in shows like Sounds of Survivance[65] and Overnight Afrobeats[66] to the station.

In 2023, Teodros co-taught an interdisciplinary course in the University of Washington's Honors program called "Lovework: an unfinished syllabus", named for his 2007 LP and inspired by the work of bell hooks. [67]

Discography

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Solo albums

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  • Lovework (Massline, February 27, 2007)[68]
  • Colored People's Time Machine (Fresh Chopped Beats/MADK Productions, January 19, 2012)[69]
  • Children of The Dragon (produced by AirMe) (Independent, May 7, 2014)[70]
  • Evidence of Things Not Seen (produced by SoulChef) (independent, October 28, 2014)[71]
  • History Rhymes If It Doesn't Repeat (A Southend Healing Ritual) (produced by Moka Only) (independent, September 21, 2018)[72]
  • What We Leave Behind (independent, June 24, 2020)[73]
  • From the Ashes of Our Homes (independent, September 23, 2023)[74]
  • Embers (independent, May 31, 2024)[75]

Collaborative albums

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  • Sexy Beast (with Khingz, as Abyssinian Creole) (MADK/Pangea, November 30, 2005)[7]
  • Crow Hill (with Amos Miller, as Air 2 A Bird) (independent, July 22, 2010)[76]
  • Earthbound (with Meklit Hadero & Burntface, as CopperWire) (Porto Franco Records, April 7, 2012)[77]
  • Sexy Beast EP (with Khingz, as Abyssinian Creole) (MADK/Pangea, 2005)[78]
  • No Label (Massline, 2007)[11]
  • The Lentil Soup EP (produced by DJ Ian Head) (Everyday Beats, May 2011)[79]
  • The Anniversary EP (independent, December 9, 2019)

Mixtapes

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  • Westlake: Class of 1999 (Independent, September 11, 2006)[80]
  • GT's Ethiopium: A Jitter Generation Mixtape (Independent, December 15, 2009)[81]

Non-album singles

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  • "Me & You" featuring Silver Shadow D (independent, July 28, 2009)
  • "Black Love (OCnotes Remix)" with Sarah MK (independent, October 1, 2014)
  • "Domestic Imperialism" with SoulChef (independent, August 25, 2016)
  • "The World Is a Hidmo" (independent, August 29, 2020)
  • "Coffee & Sage" with Third Eye Bling (independent, October 7, 2022)

Guest appearances

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  • Moka OnlyFlood – "Liquid Sunshine" featuring Gabriel T. (Underworld/Battle Axe Records, 2002)[82]
  • MacklemoreThe Language of My World – "Claiming The City" featuring Abyssinian Creole (independent, 2005)[83]
  • Common MarketCommon Market – "Every Last One (Cornerstone Remix)" featuring Geologic (of Blue Scholars) & Gabriel Teodros (MassLine, 2006)[84]
  • Nam – Exhale – "Ghetto" featuring Gabriel Teodros & Toni Hill (independent, 2008)[85]
  • The Kafa Beanz – Andromeda: The Chronicles of Blackopia Volume 1 – "Tizita" – Gabriel Teodros featuring B Sheba (Burntface Media, 2008)[86]
  • DJ Ian Head – Pieces – "Sippin Coffee" featuring Abyssinian Creole (independent, 2008)
  • Khingz – From Slaveships To Spaceships – "Boi Caimen At Adwa" featuring Gabriel Teodros (Fresh Chopped Beats/MADK, 2009)[87]
  • Big World Breaks – 4 Those Lost... – "Emerald City Step" featuring Yirim Seck, Khingz, B-Flat, Gabriel Teodros, okanomodé (independent, 2009)[88]
  • The LivinYard – Summer's Here / Society Of Summer – Khingz, Nam & Gabriel Teodros (independent, 2009)[89]
  • Canary Sing – Boss Ladies: A Mixtape – "Raindrops" featuring Gabriel Teodros, Slay, Chev, One. Two (independent, 2010)[90]
  • Sabreena Da Witch – A Woman Under The Influence – "Beit / Home" featuring Gabriel Teodros (independent, 2010)[91]
  • Random Abiladeze – Indubitably! – "On My Feet" featuring Gabriel Teodros & Uptown Swuite (independent, 2011)[92]
  • BocaflojaPatologías del Invisible Incómodo – "Agonia" featuring Gabriel Teodros & Hollis Wong-Wear (Quilomboarte, 2012)[93]
  • KA.LIL (Khingz) – Between Saturday Night & Sunday Morning – "Year 3000" featuring Gabriel Teodros (Wandering Worx, 2013)
  • SoulChef – Food For Thought – "Black Love" featuring Gabriel Teodros & Sarah MK (independent, 2013)[94]
  • Hightek Lowlives – Humanoid Void – "Humanoid Void" & "Believe In Me" featuring Gabriel Teodros (Cabin Games, 2014)[95]
  • BluRum13 & Conn-Shawnery – BluConnspiracy – "Mr. Brainwash" & "Unify the Body" featuring Gabriel Teodros (independent, 2016)
  • Rebel DiazYou Mad! – "You Mad!" featuring Gabriel Teodros (independent, 2018)
  • Chris Carroll – Blue – "Blue" featuring Gabriel Teodros (Raindrop Sound, 2021)[96]
  • Khingz – A Safe Place For Us – "Badtz Maru", "No Perfect Person" & "Ashes '95" featuring Gabriel Teodros (OTOW/freshcutlowers, 2023)[97]
  • BocaflojaDespués de Ma​ñ​ana – "Fanonian" featuring Gabriel Teodros & Aisha Fukushima (independent, 2023)

Videography

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  • 2007: "No Label (Esma Remix)"[98]
  • 2007: "Don't Cry For Us" featuring Khingz & Toni Hill[99]
  • 2008: "Third World Wide"[100]
  • 2008: "Tizita"[101]
  • 2011: "Computer Parlor"[79]
  • 2012: "Blossoms of Fire"[102]
  • 2012: CopperWire "Phone Home"[103]
  • 2012: Bocafloja "Agonia" featuring Gabriel Teodros & Hollis Wong-Wear[93]
  • 2012: "Mind Power"[104]
  • 2014: "Black Love" featuring Sarah MK[105]
  • 2014: "Light Attracts Light & Everything Else Too"[106]
  • 2015: "Greeny Jungle" featuring Shakiah[107]
  • 2016: "Domestic Imperialism"[108]
  • 2022: "Coffee & Sage" with Third Eye Bling
  • 2022: "Open Letter"
  • 2023: "Spacetime"
  • 2023: "You & Me" featuring Aisha Fukushima & Ijeoma Oluo

References

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  1. ^ Biography by Cyril Cordor. Allmusic.
  2. ^ "Interview: Gabriel Teodros". The Find Magazine. July 13, 2010.
  3. ^ a b Interview: Gabriel Teodros. The Find Magazine. July 13, 2010.
  4. ^ a b "Profile: Gabriel Teodros" by Alison Isaac Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. Sheeko Magazine. July 2008.
  5. ^ a b c d Gabriel Teodros (of Abyssinian Creole) - interview by Todd E. Jones. Insomniac Magazine. December 19, 2006.
  6. ^ a b "Let 'Lovework' Rule" by Charles Mudede. The Stranger. February 27, 2007.
  7. ^ a b "My Philosophy" by Larry Mizell Jr. The Stranger. December 1, 2005.
  8. ^ "Up & Coming" by Charles Mudede. The Stranger. January 10, 2008.
  9. ^ "Things are hopping for hip-hoppers Blue Scholars" by Tom Scanlon Archived 2013-02-01 at archive.today. The Seattle Times. January 19, 2007.
  10. ^ "I Don't Label, I Just Call It Like I Hear It" by Angelica LeMinh Archived 2018-10-18 at the Wayback Machine. Shotgun Reviews. 2007.
  11. ^ a b "My Philosophy" by Larry Mizell Jr. The Stranger. February 14, 2007
  12. ^ College Music Journal. New Music Report. 2007.
  13. ^ "Next 100" Gabriel Teodros - Reviewed by Kevin Polowy[permanent dead link]. URB Magazine. 2007.
  14. ^ a b "Gabriel Teodros Talks about Life, Music, and the Future" Interview by AddisTunes. AddisTunes. November 20, 2009.
  15. ^ Air 2 A Bird "Crow Hill" Album Review by Alex. KEXP 90.3 FM. August 12, 2010.
  16. ^ "Gabriel Teodros & Amos Miller’s Air 2 A Bird" by Chul Gugich. SSG Music. August 17, 2010.
  17. ^ "Ethiopium" by Toast. Last Night's Mixtape. December 17, 2009.
  18. ^ "Gabriel Teodros – GTs Ethiopium: A Jitter Generation Mixtape (2009)" Dopehug. December 18, 2009.
  19. ^ a b c "Review: Gabriel Teodros - Colored People's Time Machine" by Jonathan Cunningham. Okayplayer. January 2012.
  20. ^ "New Release: Colored People's Time Machine by Gabriel Teodros" by Anne Mazimhaka. This Is Africa. January 18, 2012.
  21. ^ "NEW MUSIC: Earthbound – Copperwire". 206up.com. April 16, 2012.
  22. ^ "Space Music: CopperWire, Eastern Bloc Funk and Mœbius" by Robert Lamb. Discovery News. April 25, 2012.
  23. ^ a b "With Earthbound, CopperWire Creates a Soulful Sci-Fi Space Opera" by Scott Thill. Wired. April 25, 2012.
  24. ^ "Star search" by Mirissa Neff. San Francisco Bay Guardian. May 2, 2012.
  25. ^ "Premiere: Gabriel Teodros x AirMe '24 Hour Layover'" by Alyssa Klein. Okayafrica. March 18, 2014.
  26. ^ "Gabriel Teodros: Children of the Dragon". Africa Speaks 4 Africa. July 6, 2014.
  27. ^ "Stream Gabriel Teodros' James Baldwin-Inspired 'Evidence Of Things Not Seen' LP" by Z Weg. Okayafrica. October 30, 2014.
  28. ^ "The Power Of Place" by Jonathan Cunningham. City Arts Magazine. December 2014.
  29. ^ "Gabriel Teodros addresses trauma and the healing he found in music and the Southend on his new album" by Regan Jackson. South Seattle Emerald. October 4, 2018.
  30. ^ "‘History Rhymes If It Doesn’t Repeat (A Southend Healing Ritual)’ by Gabriel Teodros" Album Review by Jonathan Zwickel. City Arts Magazine. October 10, 2018.
  31. ^ "Beyond Grunge: 15 Artists Redefining Seattle Music". NPR Music. June 12, 2019.
  32. ^ "Gabriel Teodros - If They Come for Me in the Morning... (feat. Aisha Fukushima)" Song Of The Day. KEXP. July 10, 2020.
  33. ^ "Gabriel Teodros - What We Leave Behind" Review by Chi Chi Thalken. Scratched Vinyl. June 24, 2020.
  34. ^ "“A World Where Many Worlds Fit”: Kimmortal and Gabriel Teodros on Black and Asian Solidarity" Interview with Tia Ho. KEXP. August 30, 2021.
  35. ^ "New Music Reviews (9/25)". KEXP. September 25, 2023.
  36. ^ "Gabriel T: A Lifelong Journey in Music and Community" by RayJaun Stelly. Converge Music. July 3rd, 2024.
  37. ^ "New Music Reviews (6/3)" KEXP. June 3rd, 2024.
  38. ^ Waterfront Stage. Under the Volcano 2003.
  39. ^ Artists - Malcolm Lowry Stage. Under the Volcano 2004.
  40. ^ Performers. Under the Volcano 2009.
  41. ^ History Archived January 26, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Bumbershoot.
  42. ^ "Massline West Coast tour with Blue Scholars, Common Market, Gabriel Teodros" by imaginary dana. Three Imaginary Girls. April 23, 2007.
  43. ^ "A study in educated hip-hop" by Tom Scanlon. The Seattle Times. May 11, 2007.
  44. ^ 2007 Sasquatch Posters Archived 2013-01-19 at the Wayback Machine. Sasquatch! Festival | Gallery.
  45. ^ 2007 Trinity International Hip Hop Festival.
  46. ^ 2008 Archived 2013-11-20 at the Wayback Machine Trinity International Hip Hop Festival.
  47. ^ "Road Warriors" by Zachary Stahl. Montery County Weekly. July 30, 2009.
  48. ^ "CopperWire: How Jam Sessions in Ethiopia Became a Hip-Hop Space Opera" by Ian S. Port. SF Weekly. May 4, 2012.
  49. ^ "Song of the Day: Gabriel Teodros - Mind Power" by Leigh Bezezekoff. KEXP 90.3 FM. February 24, 2012.
  50. ^ "Gabriel Teodros & AirMe - Children Of The Dragon"[permanent dead link]. GabrielTeodros.com, May 19, 2014.
  51. ^ "Seattle Weekly's Recommended Events" by Kate Silver and Rachel Shimp. Seattle Weekly. January 31, 2007.
  52. ^ "My Philosophy" by Larry Mizell Jr. The Stranger. November 1, 2011.
  53. ^ Lovework Album Assets Archived 2012-05-03 at the Wayback Machine. Terrorbird. July 23, 2007.
  54. ^ Worldwide Underground. GabrielTeodros.com.
  55. ^ "TEDx Video: Gabriel Teodros Does Hip Hop & Science Fiction" by Tigist Selam. Tadias Magazine. December 12, 2012.
  56. ^ "Video: Gabriel Teodros – Hip Hop & Science Fiction (TEDxRainier)" by Danny. The Find Magazine. December 14, 2012.
  57. ^ "How Do We Build a Better Future?" by Arlette Hernandez. MoMA Magazine. May 13, 2021.
  58. ^ "40 Acres and a Movie" by Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham. New York Times. April 8, 2021.
  59. ^ "Hip-Hop Summer Camp" by Shaun Swick. City Arts Magazine. June 24, 2016.
  60. ^ "Macklemore’s youth program seeks permanent home in gentrifying Seattle for the next generation" by Michael Rietmulder. Seattle Times. October 24, 2019.
  61. ^ "A Crash Course in the History of Black Science Fiction" by Nisi Shawl Fantastic Stories of the Imagination. February 2016.
  62. ^ Introducing the Clarion West Class of 2016. Clarion West. March 31, 2016.
  63. ^ A Radio Lineup Update. KEXP. July 18, 2023.
  64. ^ "The many lives of KEXP, now a more diverse, online global phenomenon" by Brendan Kiley. The Seattle Times' Pacific NW Magazine. April 29, 2022.
  65. ^ "KEXP’s New Indigenous Radio Show Sounds of Survivance" by Devon Leger. Earshot Magazine. August 2024.
  66. ^ "2021 in Review: New KEXP DJ Signals Emergent Seattle" by Josh Feit. Publicola. December 28, 2021.
  67. ^ Faculty Details. University of Washington Honors Program.
  68. ^ Review by Robert Christgau. Rolling Stone. March 22, 2007.
  69. ^ "RapReview Of The Week" by Steve 'Flash' Juon. RapReviews. January 17, 2012.
  70. ^ "Gabriel Teodros ‘Children Of the Dragon’ Exclusives". Okayafrica. March 27, 2014.
  71. ^ "Gabriel Teodros Unearths Things Not Seen Via His Ethiopian Hip Hop". MTV Iggy. November 20, 2014.
  72. ^ "Beyond Grunge: 15 Artists Redefining Seattle Music". NPR Music. June 12, 2019.
  73. ^ "Gabriel Teodros - What We Leave Behind" by Chi Chi Thalken. Scratched Vinyl. June 24, 2020.
  74. ^ "Best of September". KRCL. September 29, 2023.
  75. ^ "New Music Reviews (6/3)". KEXP. June 3, 2024.
  76. ^ "Air 2 A Bird Gets Chirpy via Gabriel Teodros and Amos Miller's Crow Hill" by Nick Feldman Archived 2014-05-20 at the Wayback Machine. Seattle Weekly. July 28, 2010.
  77. ^ "Copperwire's 'Earthbound' album review" by Aidin Vaziri. San Francisco Chronicle. April 15, 2012.
  78. ^ "My Philosophy" by Larry Mizell, Jr. The Stranger. February 3, 2005
  79. ^ a b "Gabriel Teodros x DJ Ian Head - Computer Parlor" by Larry Mizell, Jr. The Stranger. April 19, 2011.
  80. ^ "My Philosophy" by Larry Mizell Jr. The Stranger. December 28, 2006.
  81. ^ "Tonight: Gabriel Teodros at Chop Suey" by Kevin Capp. Seattle Weekly. March 15, 2010.
  82. ^ Moka Only - Flood. Discogs.
  83. ^ Macklemore - The Language Of My World. Discogs
  84. ^ "Seattle's hip-hop scene comes into its own" by Andrew Matson. The Seattle Times. April 27, 2007.
  85. ^ "Pho Shizzle" by Jonathan Cunningham. Seattle Weekly. May 19, 2009.
  86. ^ "The Kafa Beanz" by Will Georgi. Okayplayer. January 4, 2010.
  87. ^ "Khingz: Time to Share the Wealth" by Jonathan Cunningham. Seattle Weekly. June 16, 2009.
  88. ^ "CD Review: Big World Breaks' 4 Those Lost" by Jonathan Cunningham. Seattle Weekly. July 21, 2009.
  89. ^ "Seattle's New Summertime Hip-Hop Group" by Jonathan Cunningham Archived 2014-05-20 at the Wayback Machine. Seattle Weekly. August 11, 2009.
  90. ^ "Canary Sing's Lioness Talks About Neumos Ladies Night" by Jonathan Cunningham. PubliCola | Seattle Met. February 9, 2010.
  91. ^ A Woman Under The Influence Archived 2013-02-24 at the Wayback Machine. Harvard Hiphop Archive.
  92. ^ "That's so Random" by Nick Miller. Sacramento News & Review. August 18, 2011.
  93. ^ a b "Bocafloja – Agonia". Ritmo Urbano. August 2012.
  94. ^ "Gabriel Teodros ft. Sarah MK ‘Black Love’". Okayafrica. November 6, 2013.
  95. ^ "Seattle Music 2014: Soul Artists". Seattle Magazine. September 2014.
  96. ^ "Song Of The Day: Chris Carroll - Blue (feat. Gabriel Teodros)". KEXP. November 29, 2021.
  97. ^ "Stranger Suggests: Dee's Nuts, Three-Body Problem, Who Is She? Record Release Party, and New Music from Gabriel Teodros and Khingz". The Stranger. September 20, 2023.
  98. ^ "2009 Stranger Film Genius Zia Mohajerjasbi" by Charles Mudede. The Stranger. November 12, 2009.
  99. ^ "My Philosophy" by Larry Mizell, Jr. The Stranger. July 12, 2007.
  100. ^ "Gabriel Teodros - Lovework" by dantana. Okayplayer. January 18, 2007.
  101. ^ "My Philosophy" by Larry Mizell, Jr. The Stranger. August 7, 2008.
  102. ^ "Video: Gabriel Teodros - Blossoms of Fire" by Shamz. Okayplayer. January 11, 2012.
  103. ^ "PREMIERE: CopperWire’s New Music Video - Phone Home" by Garrett Houghton. MTV Iggy. April 17, 2012.
  104. ^ "Gabriel Teodros - Mind Power" by Ado. African Hip Hop. March 3, 2013.
  105. ^ "Watch Gabriel Teodros & SoulChef’s ‘Black Love’ Ft. Sarah MK [Premiere]". Okayafrica. October 1, 2014.
  106. ^ "Stream Gabriel Teodros' James Baldwin-Inspired 'Evidence Of Things Not Seen' LP". Okayafrica. October 30, 2014.
  107. ^ "Gabriel Teodros & SoulChef Premiere Their Protest Video For 'Greeny Jungle". Okayafrica. February 20, 2015.
  108. ^ "Gabriel Teodros & SoulChef / Domestic Imperialism". Sociedad Cimarrona. September 3, 2016.
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