cover image Vibrate Higher: A Rap Story

Vibrate Higher: A Rap Story

Talib Kweli. MCD, $27 (304p) ISBN 978-0-37428-340-7

Hip-hop musician Kweli recounts his rise through the music industry and shares his thoughts on current events in this outspoken and enthusiastic memoir. Kweli shares his upbringing as a “supernerd” from a middle-class Brooklyn family who went to boarding school and later incorporated Afro-centric philosophy into his “Black consciousness” hip-hop style. He narrates his rise as a whirl of deals and tours, collaborations with celebrities including Jay-Z and Dave Chappelle, recording sessions, and confrontations with industry execs who mismarketed his music and business managers who neglected his finances. Kweli is effusive about most of the musicians he knows, and waxes mystically about the “vibe”—a blend of social scene and creative ferment—at the metaphysical heart of musical collaboration. (“A vibe cannot be re-created; it can only be appreciated for what it is.”) On nonmusic matters, he revisits his activism at the Ferguson, Mo., protests after the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown, chastises President Trump and Kanye West for promoting white supremacy, battles tirelessly with racists on Twitter, and weighs in on his privilege (“As a straight American male, I was born into at least three oppressor groups”). The tone leans toward the hyperbolic at times, but the prose remains strong throughout. Kweli’s fans are in for a treat. (Jan.)