Why Hip-Hop Artist Mystic is Devoting February to Revolutionary Love | KQED
Briefly

BRIAN WATT: This celebration of Additional Love Month is inspired in part by your latest work, which draws on the writings of bell hooks.Tell me more about that.MYSTIC: [My album] Dreaming in Cursive: The Girl Who Loved Sparklers is what I call my healed Black woman music.When I first started creating hip-hop, when I was 16, I was, what I call, a broken Black girl, having experienced sexual assault and just the kind of in and outs of daily life in the '90s in Oakland.
Read at KQED
[
add
]
[
|
|
]