MULTI-MEDIA BOOK/CD PACKAGE
PUTS PRESIDENTIAL RACE IN
CONTEXT FOR PHILLY KIDS


By JONATHAN TAKIFF
Philadelphia Daily News
takiffj@phillynews.com

Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008

FOR TODAY'S schoolchildren, how would the ascent of Barack Obama
to the presidency really resonate?

Obviously, everyone would mark this as a most historic occasion, the first time a
man of color had achieved the highest leadership post in the land. But would young
people be able to put this landmark into true, historic context and cause for
celebration, contemplating the depths of discrimination and the many battles for civil
rights that were waged for this day of justice and equality to finally prevail?

In Philadelphia, the answer is, "Yes, we can, can, yes we can," thanks to "Get It From the Drums,"
a unique, multi-media book and CD package put together by local author Wynne Alexander.

Used in about 60 Philadelphia public junior high and high schools, the package
makes it a mission to "Wake Up Everybody" to the history and growth of the civil-
rights movement and such other grass-roots activist causes as feminism,
environmentalism and the anti-war movement.

And it does so, intriguingly, by connecting the causes to protest soul, rock and folk
music. More specifically, to enlightening songs from artists like Marvin Gaye ("What's
Going On"), Janis Ian ("Society's Child"), Nina Simone ("Mississippi Goddamn") and
James Brown ("Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud") that rallied the downtrodden
and rattled the establishment.

"So many students find the history of the civil-rights movement to be 'old-head stories,' "
noted Dennis Creedon, chief of the School District of Philadelphia's Office
of Creative and Performing Arts, who commissioned Alexander to write and package
the mixed-media project. "But when you contextualize the movement through the
music of the times - much of which they've never heard - it brings the curriculum to life.
They realize these were real struggles with real people who gave their lives to gain their civil rights."

The book and disc are used, said Creedon, "in eighth-grade social-studies classes, in
high-school American history classes as part of constitutional-rights discussions
and also in music-composition classes."

ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ / Staff photographer

Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell (left) helps honor
Alexander in City Council on Oct.30

Wading In

Starting with its title and cover art, the book reminds us that music has been used as
a positive force for protest and empowerment since the Revolutionary days that
created these United States, when rebel Colonists marched into combat to the beat
of a drum.

During the era of slavery, runaways took aid and comfort from gospel songs such as
"Wade in the Water" and "Follow the Drinking Gourd" that were actually guarded
messages on how to avoid capture and find the way north (in the latter, by looking
for the Big Dipper in the night sky).

In her breezy-reading, fact-filled book, Alexander suggests that the use of music as a
tool for populist protest and change skyrocketed in the 1960s and '70s - an era she
witnessed from a unique insider's perspective.

Alexander's grandfather, Max Leon, owned WDAS-AM and FM radio; her father, Bob Klein,
was general manager of the stations.

'DAS-AM was the loudest and proudest voice of the African-American community,
with a signal that came in especially well in North Philadelphia. Before it likewise
aligned with that culture, WDAS-FM functioned in the late 1960s as Philadelphia's
first full-time underground rock music station, with long-haired hippie DJs making
hits of protest songs such as the Chambers Brothers' "Time Has Come Today," also
featured in Alexander's book and disc compilation.

While her first love was music (which she still pursues, crafting piano-based songs
with symphonic ambitions), Alexander jumped into the trenches, just shy of 19, she
joined the 'DAS news staff as an anchor and reporter (heavy on the investigative beat),
roles she'd maintain for a decade as the only white woman and one of just two
Caucasians on the team.

"We had a very vibrant news department, with seven full-time reporters, numerous
stringers and two networks at our disposal," she recalled. "But we couldn't really 'rip
and read' wire copy, because the news services weren't covering black events, didn't
recognize a black power structure.

"So people like [the] Rev. Leon Sullivan, Dr. [Martin Luther] King and Judge
Raymond Pace Alexander [no relation] had to be met and put on the air as
newsmakers. And both reporters and DJs regularly punctuated the news copy with
music, using songs like the Isley Brothers' 'Fight the Power' or Stevie Wonder's 'Past
Time Paradise' as a commentary on something that we'd reported that was racially
backwards and disgusting."

Finding the Beat

In 2004, when Creedon persuaded Alexander to take on "Get It From the Drums,"
she said she "had to work backwards." Her first mission was to gain rights to songs
so she could print full lyrics in the book and press up original artist performances on
a special companion CD teachers play in the classroom.

"I started with a wishlist of 35 to 40 of my favorite songs that I knew that were
crucial then," said Alexander. Using old connections and her considerable guilt-tripping
skills, she reminded contacts that "for years, the industry has been bemoaning the lack of
music education in the schools."

In the end, she persuaded major labels such as EMI and Warner Brothers, and heirs
to the estates of Gaye, John Lennon ("Imagine") and others to ante up multiple
tunes for free - "which was unprecedented" - then built her text and time line around
those hits.

She also got noted composers and producers such as Philadelphia International
Records' principal Kenneth Gamble, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Janis Ian and Pete Seeger to
sit still for interviews, included in the textbook, about the times and circumstances in
which their protest songs came together.

Ian's controversial song about an ill-fated interracial romance, "Society's Child,"
came out the same year the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a Virginia law barring
co-habitation of interracial couples. Mere coincidence?

Seeger and Sainte-Marie suffered government blacklisting, having been labeled as
"communist" or "socialist" (sound familiar?) for speaking their minds in song.

"It's important," said Creedon, "that students see how much these artists really put
themselves on the line. Also, that they realize protest is a democratic American right.
Not that we want to agitate negatively, but we want to believe in a better opportunity
for all."

Another sign the times they are a-changing: Philadelphia City Council hauled Wynne
Alexander into chambers last Thursday . . . to give her a special commendation.

Introduced by Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell, the document honored Alexander's
"impressive career as a journalist, author, composer, civil rights activist and
international recording star."

Most especially, it praised her for "the accomplishments of her ground-breaking new
book," which school-curriculum planners in Washington, D.C., and elsewhere are
studying with interest.

"In my acceptance, I ended my remarks with, 'Go Barack,' " Alexander shared with a
laugh. "Then everyone came up to shake my hand. The Republican councilmen were
actually among the most enthusiastic."

Yup, it's really looking like the start of a brand-new day. Go, Wynne.

Return to Reviews Section