Daily Archives: May 8, 2013

In All the Wrong Places by Kero One

In All the Wrong Places by Kero One

Originally released in 2006, the single, “In all the Wrong Places” off his “Windmills of the Soul” album, from California rapper/producer Kero One finally gets the music video treatment. This song is arguably the best known track from Kero One throughout his 10 year professional music career, topping iTunes charts back in 2006 and since being uploaded to youtube as a stream in 2008, has now garnered almost half a million views.

With the passion to execute interesting visual interpretations and with the support of his Kickstarter fans, Kero One has managed to get together a music video for “In All the Wrong Places” that takes viewers on an strange journey complete with throwback references to “E.T.,” early 1900s war imagery, and diamonds falling from the sky. Although one might wonder why Kero One waited this long to finally come out with a video for a song he made 7 years ago, he claims: “I have a personal connection to this song. It’s always been a favorite of mine and I dreamed of having a music video for this song one day. There wasn’t a director whom I felt could do it justice at the time, so when I finally found one who could, I knew had to do it”. You can get the single on In All the Wrong Places - Windmills of the Soul or amazon.

Listen to more Kero One: RIP, To the Top, In Time, Shortcuts, Love & Hate, So Seductive, Fast Life, What Am I Supposed to Do?, Pieces, Stay on the Grind, When Sunshine Comes, Keep Pushin’, On Bended Knee, and Welcome to the Bay.

In All the Wrong Places by Kero One

A Thousand Names (Asian Heritage Month) by Jason Chu

A Thousand Names (Asian Heritage Month) by Jason Chu

With May being Asian Pacific Heritage Month, spoken word artist/rapper Jason Chu wrote a piece reflecting on culture and family. The piece commemorates not only a month on the calendar, but the lives and paths of the men and women who came before and gave birth to us. This is in memory of those who came before – their names, their stories, their journeys. Our history.

Listen to more Jason Chu : Grace, DTR (Define The Relationship), Color Blind, R.I.P. (Pvt. Danny Chen) , Vincent Chin, and Payroll.

A Thousand Names (Asian Heritage Month) by Jason Chu

Words to A Thousand Names (Asian Heritage Month) by Jason Chu

They came bringing names of a thousand villages
A thousand mothers and fathers and the lands they left
Came because to stay meant certain death
At the hands of those who seized and took with no regard
They came because they dreamed for the children not yet born
And so they worked – in restaurants and donut shops and liquor stores
And their tongues stumbled over words that were not yet theirs
And they grew old in a land that did not yet care
Holding on to food, clothes, words, the faint echoes from back there

They came in a million different journeys
And we grew up hearing their stories but didn’t always understand
Because I’m at home in this country, this land, this flag
This place where I speak a language that was composed by men
who never dreamed with eyes filled with Asia or lived in yellow skin

And so our distance grew like the silence
Like we were the aliens they had raised and carried inside them
And the air between us is thick, but we still bear their names
And each name carries stories that we rarely even claim
The sacrifices of a generation we sometimes can’t even stand
When we pick up the phone and hear their anxious demands
And honestly? Sometimes we curse them
Say they don’t get it, they’re so obsessed with curfews and grades
either the Ivy League or at least UCLA
Makin sure we play the violin, pushing us to earn a high paying wage
And we judge them saying they’re just playing a greedy and self-centered game

Not seeing behind them the stories with which they came
The villages they left, little sisters they couldn’t save
Traditions that they lost, the homes they gave away
In the hopes that their children would not go hungry to their graves
So today? We come bearing their names
A thousand generations lived in the lands they left
We come because we pray before they find their death
We can speak life into the world and that’s the legacy they’ll have left