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Julian B (born c. 1972)[citation needed] is a Native American rapper.
Julian B is originally from Oklahoma and is of Muskogee heritage.[1] His music is frequently political, with lyrics reminiscent of those of the rap group Public Enemy, and often focusing on the effects of colonialism on the indigenous peoples of the Americas.[2]
He has performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland, as well as at many Native American festivals such as the Red Nations Celebration in Los Angeles, the American Indian Movement Anniversary Celebration in Minneapolis, and various pow-wows across North America. He also performs in support of causes such as Black Mesa and the Zapatistas, as well as at events focusing on the Native American mascot controversy.
He has released two CDs, Once Upon a Genocide (1994) and Injunuity. (2002). He recorded with the Gap Band in 1990.
In 1998, the Native American Music Awards nominated him in the Best Hip-Hop Album category, and his Injunuity was nominated for Best Rap/Hip Hop Recording in 2002.[3]
Very unusually for Native American rappers (most of whom prefer to rap in English), Julian B has experimented with rap in the Muskogee language.
Discography
edit- 1994 - Once Upon a Genocide (Warrior)
- 2002 - Injunuity (Hot Commodity)
Bibliography
edit- O'Brien, Jill. "Julian B. raps about staying on the Red Road." Indian Country Today (Lakota Times), January 1995.
- Interview in The Plain Dealer, October 11, 1996, p. 23, sec. SU.
References
edit- ^ "Julian B". Myspace. Myspace LLC. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
- ^ "Julian B. (Native Rapper) To Perform "At Concert for Peltier and Oglala National Healing / Peltier Defense Committee Members to Speak"". The People's Paths. NLThomas. 31 May 2003. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
- ^ "Native American Music Awards". Native American Music Awards Inc. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
External links
edit- Julian B official site
- Julian B page
- "'It's Bigger Than Hip-Hop': Hip-Hop as Politics", by Dana Williams
- Julian B Myspace site