Yeats and Whitman lovers may not get the Recipe.
But
that’s OK with Priest and 337, the two Kansas City hip-hop poets who
make up the duo. Theodore Hughes, 44, and Desmond Jones, 34, grew up in
the inner city, and they know they’ve taken what Robert Frost called the
road less traveled.
The two use poetic verse for performance
activism, appearing at events in the city and traveling the country to
rant theatrically on nuclear arms, West Bank occupation, gay rights,
minority issues, gang violence and even the Power & Light District’s
dress code.
“If it’s unjust, we’re going to talk about it,”
Hughes said. “It’s not about our careers. It’s about what’s wrong. We
know some people hate what we do.”
He paused: “But they’re listening.”
Earlier
this month, while nuclear weapons protesters were getting tossed from a
City Council meeting, the Recipe was across the street in Ilus Davis
Park slamming the United States for not drawing down its nuclear
arsenal. Their rhyme included these lines:
“An underhanded bandit,
trying to big brother the planet,
checking pockets
and pointing rockets.
Courting doubt.
Disarmament’s what’s this all about.
The U.S. acts like Napoleon on the block,
trying to see what the competition got.”