
The Issues

Wax Poetics Issue 25, October/November 2007
Twenty-five issues strong, Wax Poetics delivers its first photo issue featuring original pieces on New Orleans and Brazilian musicians, a Miles Davis feature on his funky fusion days, and photo-essays by David Corio, Janette Beckman, Jamel Shabazz, Joe Conzo, and Charlie Ahearn. Buy the Playlist!
Purchase at: Wax Poetics Storefront
Featured Articles:

Miles Davis
I have never been able to forget or forgive all those jazz and rock critics who trashed the music, the man, the band—and then, decades later, praised them as ahead of their time and records that they always championed. —Tom Terrell

Walking to New Orleans
Where were you during the last week of August 2005? Here in Memphis, I sat riveted to the TV while we witnessed the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in disbelief, watching as New Orleans's 17th Street Levee broke and an entire culture was flooded out.

The Beastie Boys
While the learning curve for most groups sets them in full motion after their first album, the Beastie Boys took a bit longer. But this wasn't necessarily a bad thing. In the search for their true identity, they made some pretty amazing music along the way.
Also includes:
Re:Discovery
Donald Byrd, Parliament, Horde Catalytique Pour La Fin, the Eliminators, and Merry Clayton
Obituary
Drummer Max Roach
Cold Chillin'
Iceland's Samuel Jon Samuelsson translates big band into funk
Realer than Real
The indisputable groove of Sharon Jones
Child's Play
Numero Group takes kid soul seriously
A New Universe
Live musicianship is central to the Heliocentrics
East Bay Spark Plug
Eugene Blacknell's Oakland grease gave rise to a new breed of funk
Rainforest Funk
Peru's perfect blend of traditional and modern
I Speak Music - Hip Hop - Old School
Photo-essay by George DuBose
The Black Chord
Photo-essay by David Corio
Who Shot Ya? Three Decades of Hip Hop Photography
Photo-essay by Ernie Paniccioli
Born in the Bronx
Photo-essay by Joe Conzo
Wild Style
Photo-essay by Charlie Ahearn
Seconds of My Life
Photo-essay by Jamel Shabazz
The Breaks
Photo-essay by Janette Beckman
Who Shot Ya
A history of hip-hop photography by Bill Adler, excerpted from Jeff Chang's
Brasilifornia
A photo-essay of Brazilian musicians by B+
Youthful Exuberance
The Dragon brothers dream up an unheard psych-soul monster
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