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The Watts Prophets

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Also known as
  
Watts Prophets

Active from
  
1967

Years active
  
1967–present

The Watts Prophets httpsstatic1squarespacecomstatic520ed800e4b

Origin
  
Watts, California, United States

Members
  
Richard Dedeaux Father Amde Hamilton (born Anthony Hamilton) Otis O'Solomon

Albums
  
Rappin' Black in a White World, Things Gonna Get Greater: The Watts Prophets 1969-1971, When The 90's Came

Genres
  
Hip hop music, Jazz, Spoken word

Record labels
  
Acid Jazz Records, Universal Music, Universal Music Group, Classic Cut Musiz, Mercury Records

Similar
  
The Last Poets, Edgar Allen Floe, Xavier Mosley, Dazzie Dee, Don Cherry

The Watts Prophets are a group of musicians and poets from Watts, California, United States. Like their contemporaries The Last Poets, the group combined elements of jazz music and spoken-word performance, making the trio one that is often seen as a forerunner of contemporary hip-hop music. Formed in 1967, the group comprised Richard Dedeaux, Father Amde Hamilton (born Anthony Hamilton), and Otis O'Solomon (also billed as Otis O'Solomon Smith) (O'Solomon removed the "Smith" from his name in the 1970s).

Contents

The Watts Prophets The Watts Prophets Biography Hip Hop Scriptures

History

The Watts Prophets The Watts Prophets Biography Hip Hop Scriptures

Hamilton, O'Solomon, and Dedeaux first met and collaborated at the Watts Writers Workshop, an organization created by Budd Schulberg in the wake of the Watts Riots, as the Civil Rights Movement was beginning to take a new cultural turn. Fusing music with jazz and funk roots with a rapid-fire, spoken-word sound, they created a sound that gave them a considerable local following. They released two albums, 1969's The Black Voices: On the Streets in Watts and 1971's Rappin' Black in a White World, which established a strong tendency toward social commentary and a reputation for militancy. The group was unable to secure another record deal; a promising deal with Bob Marley's Tuff Gong label famously fell through. Unable to sustain success, the group has performed only sporadically since the mid-1970s.

The Watts Prophets Portfolio WattsprophetWattsprophet

In recent years, the group's profile has improved somewhat. The 1997 recording, When the 90's Came, found them in the studio with pianist Horace Tapscott, and a European tour reunited the trio with former collaborator DeeDee McNeil. In 2005, Things Gonna Get Greater: The Watts Prophets 1969-1971 combined the group's first two efforts, bringing them back into print for the first time in more than a decade.

The Watts Prophets The Watts Prophets Discography at Discogs

Amde Hamilton, who is a priest of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church can be seen performing a spoken-word piece at the 1981 funeral service of Bob Marley in Jamaica in the 1982 film Land of Look Behind. Hamilton was the third American to be ordained as a priest of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.

The Watts Prophets Another Heroes39 Return The Definitive Watts Prophets Can39t Stop

In 1994, the group appeared on the Red Hot Organization's compilation CD, Stolen Moments: Red Hot + Cool, appearing on a track entitled "Apprehension" alongside Don Cherry. The album, meant to raise awareness of the AIDS epidemic in African-American society was named "Album of the Year" by Time Magazine.

Richard Dedeaux died in December 2013.

Discography

The Watts Prophets Black In A White World Watts Prophets 197039s YouTube

  • 1969 - The Black Voices: On the Streets in Watts
  • 1971 - Rappin' Black in a White World
  • 1997 - When the 90's Came
  • 2005 - Things Gonna Get Greater: The Watts Prophets 1969-1971 (compilation)
  • Songs

    There's a Difference Between a Black Man and a Nigger2005
    A Pimp2005
    What Is a Man2005

    References

    The Watts Prophets Wikipedia