#30DaysOfBounce #BounceForWhat Day 14: "Monkey on tha Dick" by Magnolia Shorty. So I’ve been really busy and it’s been hard keeping up with my blog. But I had to bring back dat Bounce for Magnolia Shorty’s birthday. (I know I’m breaking chronology, but I’ll pick back up with the all-important 1993 shortly.) You can read the complete version at www.brokeballer.com, but here's an excerpt: Among the many memorable figures of Yoruba lore stands the “trickster” dichotomy of Eshu-Eleggua. On one side, you have the playful but powerful Eleggua, representing opening and closing, the beginning and ending of life. Then you have the mischievous and unruly Eshu, who means no harm but whose unpredictable “tricks” can hurt you if you play around with his energy. Eleggua is represented by the number 3, the colors red and black, and toys, including toy soldiers. And since Eshu-Eleggua have been associated with the figure of a monkey, their “trickster” tales have been translated into African-American folklore as the tales of the so-called “Signifying Monkey”. So then, is it a coincidence that the cover of Magnolia Shorty’s album Monkey on tha Dick features 3 figures (a monkey and two women scantily-clad in soldier gear) as well as the colors red and black? Or that the “two” women on the cover are really the same woman duplicated in reverse, much like the mirror-image dynamic of Eshu-Eleggua? Or that Magnolia Shorty herself was named after the infamous Magnolia Projects in the 3rd Ward of New Orleans? Or that renowned music writer Nik Cohn, who has a whole chapter in his New Orleans Bounce book called “Monkey On Tha Dick”, named the book no less than Triksta? (Happy birthday and rest in peace to the Signifying Soldier, Magnolia Shorty!) https://www.instagram.com/p/BoW4IfvA8oq/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=151lp5j5119sn
















