C Liegh McInnis

C Liegh McInnis

C Liegh McInnis

C Liegh McInnis

1999 Tour Roundtable Moderator


What Time Is It? Presentation Panel Presenter

We Wear the Mask

How Prince Used the Time to Widen His Artistic Range

and the Perceived Humanity of African Americans

The Time is a definitive example that we have of Prince exploring and grappling with who he is as an artist. On his early records, Prince deals with introverted subjects in which he muses to himself aloud. With The Time, Prince is externally musing about who he is by recreating himself as an entire band. Even though many believe, as retold in Dave Hill’s Prince: A Pop Life, that The Time may have been primarily founded to pay a musical debt to Morris Day, it is obvious that The Time is an alter-ego of Prince, created to hold Prince’s R&B audience while he explores other musical genres. Where Prince is introverted, abstract, and whimsical, singing about social revolution through sexuality and individuality while waiting on the Armageddon to deliver us all, The Time is extroverted, realistic, and straightforward, singing about being hip and cool and identifying with a particular race of people. Where Prince is indefinable in clothing and music styles, The Time is black. In a period when Prince is attempting to explore all of his possibilities of being a rock star, The Time allows him to stay in touch with his R&B roots, write songs about partying, chasing girls, being cool, and being in love without being trapped in the genre. Ultimately, Prince uses The Time to force America to face the misconceptions about the dimensionality of the black race.

C Liegh McInnis is a poet, short story writer, retired instructor of English at Jackson State University, the former publisher and editor of Black Magnolias Literary Journal, and the author of eight books, including four collections of poetry, one collection of short fiction (Scripts: Sketches and Tales of Urban Mississippi), one work of literary criticism (The Lyrics of Prince: A Literary Look at a Creative, Musical Poet, Philosopher, and Storyteller), and one co-authored work, Brother Hollis: The Sankofa of a Movement Man, which discusses the life of a legendary Mississippi Civil Rights icon. He is also a former First Runner-Up of the Amiri Baraka/Sonia Sanchez Poetry Award sponsored by North Carolina State A&T. He has presented papers at national conferences, such as College Language Association, the National Council of Black Studies, the Neo-Griot Conference, and the Black Arts Movement Festival, and his work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including The Southern Quarterly, Konch Magazine, Bum Rush the Page: A Def Poetry Jam, Down to the Dark River: An Anthology of Poems on the Mississippi River, Black Hollywood Unchained: Essays about Hollywood’s Portrayal of African Americans, Black Panther: Paradigm Shift or Not? A Collection of Reviews and Essays on the Blockbuster Film, Asymptote, The Pierian, Black Gold: An Anthology of Black Poetry, Sable, New Delta Review, The Black World Today, In Motion Magazine, MultiCultural Review, A Deeper Shade, New Laurel Review, ChickenBones, Oxford American, Journal of Ethnic American Literature, B. K. Nation, Red Ochre Lit, and Brick Street Press Anthology. In January of 2009, C. Liegh, along with eight other poets, was invited by the NAACP to read poetry in Washington, DC, for their Inaugural Poetry Reading celebrating the election of President Barack Obama. He has also been invited by colleges and libraries all over the country to read his poetry and fiction and to lecture on various topics, such as creative writing and various aspects of African American literature, music, and history.

McInnis can be contacted through:
Psychedelic Literature
203 Lynn Lane
Clinton, MS 39056
601 383 0024
psychedeliclit@bellsouth.net

psychedelicliterature.comn
A C Liegh McInnis Deep Dive

Miss TLC

Miss TLC

Miss TLC

Miss TLC

Vanity 6 Presentation Panel Moderator


Miss TLC is an entertainment industry veteran with over 15 years of experience in the business of pop culture. As a graduate of NYU’s prestigious Music Business program, with a resume that includes Arista Records, MTV Networks, Jive Records & Universal Motown Republic Group; Miss TLC has studied music through the eyes of commerce AND creativity. While working as a consultant in 2016, Miss TLC’s world was rocked by the news surrounding her most treasured artist Prince. As a response to the tabloid-esque press potentially clouding his powerful legacy, Miss TLC recognized a need for details-driven celebrations of his immeasurable accomplishments & began posting uplifting online “lessons” focused around his work. Connecting holidays, world events, various artists & special dates to Prince, the “Princerversaries” concept was born in September 2016 & continues to spread the message of Mr. Nelson’s indelible mark on the world of music.

#Princerversaries
misstlc.com

Tonya Pendleton

Tonya Pendleton

Tonya Pendleton

Tonya Pendleton

1999 Super Deluxe Roundtable Panelist


Tonya Pendleton is a cultural critic, entertainment industry veteran writer, editor, broadcaster, and multimedia journalist with a two-decade history in news, sports, lifestyle, and entertainment reporting. In her current position as “Things To Do” curator for WHYY, she crafts content for a local and global audience. The Philadelphia resident was born and raised in New York City and is a graduate of The New School.


Elliott H. Powell

Elliott H. Powell

Elliott H. Powell

Elliott H. Powell

What Time Is It? Core 4 Roundtable Panelist


Vanity 6 Presentation Panel Presenter


Drive Z Wild

Vanity 6 and Gen Z

Although they only released one album, Vanity 6’s influence is still felt today, as artists like Beyoncé continue to incorporate the work of Vanity 6 into their performances. This presentation considers the generational impact of Vanity 6 by examining Gen Z’s assessments of Vanity 6’s self-titled album. In particular, we will explore the perspectives from enrolled students in the University of Minnesota’s “Prince, Porn, and Public Space” course. The class thinks through the intersections of music and sex culture in Minneapolis during the 1980s, and so the students’ responses—and this presentation—will pay particular attention to the place and power of race, gender, and sexuality on Vanity 6. In all, this presentation will highlight how students make meaning of Vanity 6, and how they find resonance with this groundbreaking all-women’s band and their 1982 debut.

Elliott H. Powell, Ph.D., is the Beverly and Richard Fink Professor in Liberal Arts and Associate Professor of American Studies at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of Sounds from the Other Side: Afro-South Asian Collaborations in Black Popular Music, which received the Woody Guthrie Book Award from the International Association for the Study of Popular Music, as well as the Philip Brett Book Award from the American Musicological Society. He’s currently at work on a new book titled Prince, Porn, and Public Space, which examines the intertwined worlds of music and sex in Minneapolis during the 1980s.

Sounds from the Other Side: Afro–South Asian Collaborations in Black Popular Music
University of Minnesota Faculty Profile