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John TrudellAKA Graffiti ManJohn TrudellAKA Graffiti Man2 LP, 180 Gram, Transparent Red, Includes Download CardRecord Store Day ExclusiveLP
ROCKINSIDE RECORDINGS 0010401UPC: 696751040114Release Date: 4/22/2017This item is not available at this time. This is a Limited or Exclusive item. We reserve the right to limit orders to one per customer.
AKA Graffiti Man, the iconic 1992 album of John Trudell (1946-2015) is being reissued as a limited edition RECORD STORE DAY 2017 exclusive. Trudell was one of the leaders for the Indian of All Tribes Occupation of Alcatraz in 1969, and went on to serve as Chairman of the American Indian Movement (AIM) from 1973-1979. On February 11, 1979, he burned an American flag on the steps of the F.B.I J. Edgar Hoover building in Washington D.C., explaining he’d been taught in the military to burn the flag once it had been desecrated; and the US government’s treatment of Native Americans and its classism and racism had desecrated the flag. About 12 hours after the flag incident, a fire “of suspicious origin” burned down Trudell’s home on the Shoshone-Paiute reservation in Nevada, killing Trudell’s pregnant wife, Tina, their three children and Tina’s mother. The F.B.I. declined to investigate, and the blaze was officially ruled an “accident.” After the fire, Trudell turned his tears into writing poetry and later, spoken word music and acting. A lifelong activist and human rights advocate, he was quoted as saying “I’m just a human being trying to make it in a world that is rapidly losing its understanding of being human.”
Upon it’s original release, AKA Grafitti Man was lauded by Bob Dylan as “the best album of the year” in Rolling Stone Magazine. Dylan and the Grateful Dead played the album during intermissions on their summer tour together.
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