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== 1946 == | |||
Nik Cohn wird in London (Grossbritannien) geboren. Sein Vater ist der Historiker Norman Cohn, der unter den britischen Universotätsstudenten kultartig verehrt wird. | |||
In seiner Kindheit zieht die Familie nach Londonderry in Nordirland, wo er in jeder Hinsicht ein Aussenseiter ist, ein "Anglo-Irish Russian German South African Jew caught up in the tribal war between Protestant and Catholic, equally unacceptable to both." | |||
In seiner Jugend beginnt er sich erst für [[Little Richard]] und [[Elvis Presley]], nach ein wenig Forschungen auch für Jelly Roll Morton zu begeistern. | |||
== 1963 == | |||
Als 17-jähriger veröffentlicht er seinen ersten Roman, <i>Market</i>, später <i>I am the greatest says Johnny Angelo</i>, beide über das Leben auf der Strasse und den Teen-Pop-Mythos. | |||
== 1972 == | |||
Nik Cohn besucht erstmals New Orleans, als er mit den [[Who]] unterwegs ist. Von da an kehrt er immer wieder in die Stadt zurück. | |||
Einige Jahre später zieht er nach New York. | |||
== 1976 == | |||
Cohn veröffentlicht in der Zeitschrift <i>New York</i> den Artikel "Tribal rites of the New Saturday Night", der ihn in den USA bekannt macht und als Vorlage für den Film <i>Saturday night fever</i> mit John Travolta verwendet wird. | |||
<!-- was so forceful that the magazine appended a paragraph at the start of the story maintaining that it was wholly factual. As it turned out, it was not; Mr. Cohn had hung out in discos, sucked in the crowd and made composites. (He later became a hard factualist, but he deposited his checks. In "Triksta" he writes: "I'd been rich once in my life, and it hadn't suited me one bit.") --> | |||
== Mitte der 1980er Jahre == | |||
Er beendet seine Drogensucht, ist aber inmitten einer achtjährigen Phase, wo er überhaupt nichts schreibt. | |||
== Ende 1990er Jahre == | |||
Cohn ist nun von seiner Drogensucht geheilt, hat aber eine Hepatitits C hinter sich. | |||
<!-- It was then that Mr. Cohn saw, in the Tremé section, a street parade. A D.J. was playing the Triggerman beat, the menacingly thin, rattlesnake rhythm of early-90's southern hip-hop made popular by the Cash Money and Take Fo' labels. He was ready to be revived, and Triggerman made him hungry again. | |||
"But at this stage of the game, what I like is something that makes me feel more alive," he said, "and bounce makes me feel unbelievably - transcending age, transcending damage - alive. I had to have a piece of it. So it was a siren. An elixir." | |||
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Robert Caplin/The New York Times | Robert Caplin/The New York Times | ||
He has written a book about the experience, called "Triksta: Life and Death in New Orleans Rap." about New Orleans hip-hop - bounce, as it was locally known - and may be the only such in-depth look at the other New Orleans musical culture. | |||
He has written a book about the experience, called "Triksta: Life and Death in New Orleans Rap." | |||
In effect, he was dealing with the inverse of swinging London, the scene that he wrote about in the 1960's. That, he now says, was "a con": a movement of about 1,500 people which the press represented as a nationwide obsession. New Orleans bounce, on the other hand, has been a legitimately popular music for 10 years, but never engaged the attention of the mainstream cultural media; further, it is made by a poor populace who were the majority of New Orleans and yet aren't part of public consciousness. | In effect, he was dealing with the inverse of swinging London, the scene that he wrote about in the 1960's. That, he now says, was "a con": a movement of about 1,500 people which the press represented as a nationwide obsession. New Orleans bounce, on the other hand, has been a legitimately popular music for 10 years, but never engaged the attention of the mainstream cultural media; further, it is made by a poor populace who were the majority of New Orleans and yet aren't part of public consciousness. | ||
He worked some music-industry contacts and got a small budget from DreamWorks, then an active major label, to executive-produce some New Orleans bounce records. Having rented a converted oyster shack in the Mid-City neighborhood, he got to work. | He worked some music-industry contacts and got a small budget from DreamWorks, then an active major label, to executive-produce some New Orleans bounce records. Having rented a converted oyster shack in the Mid-City neighborhood, he got to work. | ||
== 2001 == | |||
Working on a freelance basis in 2001, he had produced tracks with a local rapper named Choppa. (At the time, the song "Choppa Style" was No. 1 on the New Orleans hip-hop station.) Now Mr. Cohn brought in a producer for the musical issues but supplied ideas for samples, including Algerian rai music, bits of John Adams and Ennio Morricone, and New Orleans rhythm-and-blues riffs by Eddie Bo and King Floyd. | Working on a freelance basis in 2001, he had produced tracks with a local rapper named Choppa. (At the time, the song "Choppa Style" was No. 1 on the New Orleans hip-hop station.) Now Mr. Cohn brought in a producer for the musical issues but supplied ideas for samples, including Algerian rai music, bits of John Adams and Ennio Morricone, and New Orleans rhythm-and-blues riffs by Eddie Bo and King Floyd. | ||
And he brought all his experience as a writer. "Nik's passion, really, is a story, " said Shorty Brown Hustle, part of a group Mr. Cohn worked with called Da Rangaz. | And he brought all his experience as a writer. "Nik's passion, really, is a story, " said Shorty Brown Hustle, part of a group Mr. Cohn worked with called Da Rangaz. | ||
Shortly afterward, the DreamWorks label ran aground. Mr. Cohn started paying production expenses himself. He secured an advance for "Triksta" so he could keep working with a rapper named Che Muse, with whom he wanted to make the ultimate New Orleans rap album, a catalogue of the city in its glory and sadness. | |||
== 2004 == | |||
Nik Cohns Frau Michaela holt ihn aus New Orleans zurück | |||
Mr. Cohn | Mr. Cohn's wife, Michaela, dragged him out of New Orleans in 2004 when he ran out of money as well as psychic and physical energy. He regenerated enough this year to return and make a few more recordings; then Katrina blew his posse all over the South. Mr. Cohn has spent the last months helping to relocate them. None of the records he worked on, except Choppa's, were commercially released, but he continues to talk with his contacts about the next move. | ||
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{{cat|Biografie}} | {{cat|Biografie}} | ||
{{cat|Nik Cohn}} | {{cat|Nik Cohn}} |
Aktuelle Version vom 11. Dezember 2011, 19:20 Uhr
1946
Nik Cohn wird in London (Grossbritannien) geboren. Sein Vater ist der Historiker Norman Cohn, der unter den britischen Universotätsstudenten kultartig verehrt wird.
In seiner Kindheit zieht die Familie nach Londonderry in Nordirland, wo er in jeder Hinsicht ein Aussenseiter ist, ein "Anglo-Irish Russian German South African Jew caught up in the tribal war between Protestant and Catholic, equally unacceptable to both."
In seiner Jugend beginnt er sich erst für Little Richard und Elvis Presley, nach ein wenig Forschungen auch für Jelly Roll Morton zu begeistern.
1963
Als 17-jähriger veröffentlicht er seinen ersten Roman, Market, später I am the greatest says Johnny Angelo, beide über das Leben auf der Strasse und den Teen-Pop-Mythos.
1972
Nik Cohn besucht erstmals New Orleans, als er mit den Who unterwegs ist. Von da an kehrt er immer wieder in die Stadt zurück.
Einige Jahre später zieht er nach New York.
1976
Cohn veröffentlicht in der Zeitschrift New York den Artikel "Tribal rites of the New Saturday Night", der ihn in den USA bekannt macht und als Vorlage für den Film Saturday night fever mit John Travolta verwendet wird.
Mitte der 1980er Jahre
Er beendet seine Drogensucht, ist aber inmitten einer achtjährigen Phase, wo er überhaupt nichts schreibt.
Ende 1990er Jahre
Cohn ist nun von seiner Drogensucht geheilt, hat aber eine Hepatitits C hinter sich.