Saying Good-bye
to Gil Scott-Heron
African World
By Bill Fletcher, Jr.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board
(includes video)
When
I received word of the passing of noted poet and singer Gil Scott-Heron
I felt as if I had just heard about the death of a college friend whom
I had not seen in many years. Perhaps it was because I actually got to
know the work of Gil Scott-Heron while I was in college in the early 1970s.
His albums became part of my life and his songs and messages were part
of the support system on which I and many other Black radicals came to
depend.
There are tremendous ironies connected with the life and
work of GSH. If you listen to one of his most famous pieces, The
Bottle (Winter
in America [Vinyl]
), and another, Angel Dust (Secrets
) , you cannot but shake your head in knowing that the brother struggled
for years with his own substance abuse. The contradiction is startling
in its drama. Here was someone who went out of his way to warn us all
of the dangers of substance abuse, yet he fell prey to it himself. I
hope that a future biographer of GSH will explore the demons that haunted
him and had him live such a contradiction.
Yet we must recognize and honor the many contributions of
GSH. He and the The Last Poets (Last
Poets 1st Album) (actually there were two groups that both called themselves The
Last Poets) are seen as the parents of Hip Hop, but that does
not provide enough context. GSH arose at a critical moment in the Black
Freedom Movement and the New Left. As Manning Marable notes in his biography
of Malcolm X, Malcolm
X: A Life of Reinvention
, Malcolm spoke with the sound of contemporary jazz. GSH took
the rhetoric and analysis of the radical wing of the Black Freedom Movement
and the New Left, and both poetized and jazz-isized it. Whether through
his famous The Revolution will not be televised (Small
Talk at 125th & Lenox
) or later work like We beg your pardon America (Gil
Scott-Heron, Brian Jackson & The Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A
New Day (Arista) [Vinyl LP] [Stereo]),
GSH grabbed hold of challenges of the moment and created a popular analysis
that hit all of the right notes.
GSH was, in my opinion, at his best both when he was working
with Brian Jackson, but also when his voice and sound were integrally
part of a militant social justice movement. When he sang Johannesburg
(Best
of Gil Scott-Heron Live),
his words became the anthem of the anti-apartheid movement in the USA.
It was a song that came out at just the right moment, inspiring us all
with its fierceness and spirit of resistance. You could not listen to
that song without feeling defiance in your soul and without being prepared
to march. In fact, the last time that I actually saw GSH in the flesh
he was performing just that song in August 1983 at the 20th anniversary
of the famous March on Washington.
GSH never lost his relevance. I am always haunted by his
Message to the Messengers (Spirits
Album), which is a tremendous illustration of reaching across the
generational divide to both mentor as well as partner with younger generations,
offering them lessons from the movement that shaped us.
I appreciate all that he did and all that he offered. Thank
you, brother Gil.