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 Saul Williams Interview

interview 0170 added 12.01.04 words: Nikesh Shukla technical: QED


SAUL WILLIAMS: MOTHER EARTH’S PRIVATE NECTAR STOCK
Saul Williams is God (and so are you!)

Saul Williams, the supreme intellect, the poetic visionary and the multi-tasking workaholic has been working hard over the past few years. Touring has given way to ploughing the theatre boards to EP releases, to music production to the writing and publishing of his last set of poetry “,said the shotgun to the head”. There is nothing, it seems, that artistically this man won’t try his hand at.

“,said the shotgun to the head” is an apocalyptic study of the human emotions and sheer despair at the world events around us as well as the possible destruction of the human race, through anonymous men in suits with fingers on buttons. It is a near stream of consciousness based around a countdown to 10, as if filling in the gaps between each crucial second as we tick away closer and closer to destruction. This poetry release goes hand in hand with last year’s “Not In My Name” release (Big Dada), which was a spoken word testament to activism and voicing opposition to the establishment. Backed with two new rap songs and a bunch of mixes, Saul was able to sum the anti-war movement as well as articulately state valid reasons for the West not being allowed to police other parts of the world. It was a pivotal release in a historic year. Over a series of e-mail exchanges I asked him to let us into his mindset on current world events as well as the current dire state of Hip Hop.

What, in your view, is the next evolution necessary for Hip Hop to keep sounding fresh?

Saul WilliamsI believe that what is lacking from Hip Hop in it's current commercial state is the same thing that is lacking from American culture at large: a firm belief and grasp in the power of imagination and visualisation simply stated, there seem to be few visionaries apparent in the main stream. Too many aim to appeal to the existing aesthetic and too few have the courage to aim at creating a new aesthetic. One that appeals to a wider realm of beliefs and understanding. Andre 3000 serves as a primary example of a Hip Hop artist in the spotlight who delves into visualising a new aesthetic rather than appealing to what is already there. And his faith to step out into uncharted ground has actually rewarded him with the benefits of staying high on the charts. Because, the fact of the matter is, that whether people realise it or not, have the ability to articulate it or not, they are hungry for something new. Something that speaks to them on levels they have never been spoken to on. And how would they know to ask for it when they hardly know what is truly to be discovered within them? How many people are actually surprised at themselves at how much they like "hey ya"? And that is exactly how malnutrition works. The person who lacks protein or vitamin b in their diets cannot taste the absence of these essential nutrients in the food they eat. At the end of their meal they feel as full as the person who has had a well-rounded meal. But silently their body yearns for the nutrients to support itself and if it doesn't somehow get them, it slowly begins to create disease.


"...it was fun to write the material on the Not in Our Name EP. I wrote that stuff because I needed to read it. I said it because I needed to hear it..."

Unfortunately, people simply consume what is given to them: food, music, programming. So the distributors of these essentials are in positions where they must be mindful of contributing to the balanced diets of society. The American diet is imbalanced. We are fed fear, consumption, dog eat dog tales of might and power lacking of any social responsibility, and lies. Hip-hop reflects that. But there is also a great shift that's happening. A shift towards balance. And Hip Hop has and will also reflect that.

What current projects are you working on? Do you have any plans to do more music albums?

I am currently working on my new album which is scheduled for release here in the states this coming summer.

What is more important: the written word or the spoken word?

Saul WilliamsI believe that the written word and spoken word both have a great deal of power. The power of the spoken word is that of calling things into existence. Sound vibration effects reality. In fact, it shifts it. Some would say that we call our reality into existence. Another way of saying that is "you get what you ask for". So that, a need for mindfulness when speaking or asking is essential (add that to beats, DJs, constant rotation, speakers, tweeters, woofers, and increased decibels of sound and increased mindfulness is suggested).


"...I believe that the written word and spoken word both have a great deal of power. the power of the spoken word is that of calling things into existence..."


Written word is powerful because it helps consolidate thought. Also, written word is often bound (into books, or simply bound to happen). Written word takes the power of word into the solidified chambers of the mind which is only accessible through the retina, thus creating a new level of real"eye"zation (I'm makin' this shit up, perhaps a bit inebriated by the 5 discs in the changer: Illmatic (Nas), In Utero and Nevermind (Nirvana), Pre-millenium Tension (Tricky), African Space Craft (Keziah Jones)).

Tell me about what inspired “, said the shotgun to the head”. The “not in my name” release was the soundtrack to a lot of protest and demonstrations this year, in light of the Iraq “war”… did you intend to be the voice of the resistance or were you just “voicing your opposition to the war”?

Said the shotgun to the head was simply inspired. I didn't know what I was writing until I was halfway through and I was in no real rush to find out. I simply wrote to empty myself and when I found myself filled I wrote again. After 9/11 (2 years after I had begun writing) things became a bit more clear. Literally. Kamikaze means divine wind in Japanese. So when American newscasters spoke of kamikazes I simply inserted the meaning of the word "kamikaze" into what I heard them saying and heard something completely different from what they intended and, thus, chose to follow the pathway to meaning and understanding rather than the pathway of intention (I believe some people call that the road to hell). Meanwhile many of us became disoriented by the agenda of the American government and the media. Well, "dis-oriented", literally means, turned away from the east. Why would I do that? I kept writing. It was fun to write, just as it was fun to write the material on the Not in Our Name EP. I wrote that stuff because I needed to read it. I said it because I needed to hear it.


"...I believe that what is lacking from Hip Hop in it's current commercial state is the same thing that is lacking from American culture at large: a firm belief and grasp in the power of imagination and visualisation..."


There is a lot of pre-apocalyptic despair invoked in the book, is the world nearing meltdown? The book works on a countdown, ending with “ready, aim, fire, water, earth, wind”. Do you feel this is a positive hopeful end or a possibly pessimistic end?

Saul WilliamsThe book is a countdown to zero and back to one. The end makes way for the beginning. The survivors of the downfall of the west are those who invested in love. The book is more so a prologue to the new age than it is a poem of pre-apocalyptic despair. And the ending is beyond optimistic, simply because the book doesn't end where the words do.

What happens now? With such worldwide opposition to the war being met with a complete wall of silence from the powers that be… what is the next level of protest that can reach our “world leaders”? George bush is presently in London to meet Blair, is there any advice you’d give to any members of the stop the war coalition to make a scene?

There is no reason to be disillusioned by the current state of affairs. The global society has been involved a beautiful evolutionary process of cleansing itself. More and more people are informing themselves beyond what is simply given them by the media. More and more people are taking it upon themselves to balance their own diets. More and more people are voicing their opposition to the current powers that be, whether that be in politics, music, wherever. More and more people are realising that they have just as much power and talent to add their voice to the melee. More and more people are realising the powers of being and realising that those powers will always trump the powers that be. They may not be able to articulate it, but they feel it, even when they doubt it. And they only doubt it because they have been programmed to. But shift is still occurring there is a major cleanse going on within the psyche and spirits of humanity and our world leaders are simply the toxins coming to the surface. But they know their time is up. Some of them will willingly surrender: allow stocks to go public, provide health care for their work force, release their last album and publicise it as such, while others will fight to the (or rather "their") finish. Let it be.

And there we leave, Saul lost in thoughts and myself lost in a whirlwind of words and imagery and somewhere in the chaos of it all, I’m left with a positive smile on my face. Inspiration comes at strange times and lends its name to odd projects. The next project, whatever it may be, from Saul, is eagerly anticipated. Don’t let the stereotype of navel-gazers and Anticon-fans being into poetry, get the book because it may give you some space to place yourself in the centre of these fast-moving world events… The total and perspective vortex may seem huge sometimes, but with artists like Saul Williams, we know we are together in our isolation.

Respect,


-
Nikesh Shukla


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