In the rich tradition of taking our loved ones home, C. Liegh McInnis often feels compelled to reflect on a range of topics when a notable Black figure passes. He’s not satisfied to simply inform readers of his newsletter that so-and-so died and lived a good life. No, he has to show you how this comedian, literary artist, or especially this or that musician emerged from a long line of other figures, and how they, in turn, influenced a whole group of subsequent artists or entertainers.
It’s the eulogy as Black history lesson. And more than that, it’s a convergence of concepts, people, and ideas. Down at the crossroads over here is where all these things meet, he seems to say, again and again.
McInnis is from Clarksdale, so naturally I thought of him while watching Ryan Coogler’s Sinners. The key moment for me is the scene where a blues musician begins to play, and suddenly, the entire history of Black music, past and present, floods the screen. African music and dance. Jazz. Funk. Hip hop. It’s, well, it's a convergence of concepts.
As I was blogging recently, that Coogler scene had me thinking about Amiri Baraka and his writings on Black music. Coogler managed to do, cinematically, what Baraka, McInnis, and others have long been doing on the page. Blending. Mixing and matching.
Back in 2022, McInnis sent out this post, which was mostly about three comedians. But to make the point about influences and comparisons, he needed to check to discussing Prince and Jimi Hendrix and then Deion Sanders (as a player) and Jim Brown and Gayle Sayers and Walter Payton. Then it was back to more comedians, then over to music and eventually to some literature.
What he was doing was displaying what I've been calling cultural cataloging. But doing that also represents convergences.
In film, Coogler doesn't have to list things out, he can show and project sounds, so the experience is different.
Anyway, this is just more of me trying to wrap my mind around that scene in the film and also making sure I chart how it connects to some of my ongoing conversations here.
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