paroles de chanson Malcolm’s Theme - Kamasi Washington
Here
in
this
final
hour
We
come
to
bid
farewell
To
one
of
our
brightest
hopes
Extinguished
now
and
gone.
Harlem
has
memory
of
a
champion
More
brave
and
gallant
than
he
Who
lies
before
us
unconquered
still
Honor
Pride
and
Love
Afro-American
was
Malcolm
A
master
of
words
was
he
To
We
we
grew
so
long
ago
'Negro'
no
more
it's
through
I
say
again
Afro-American
As
he
would
want
me
to
To
those
who
tell
us
To
flee
his
memory
We
smile
and
say
to
you:
Tenor
Saxophone
Solo--Kamasi
Washington
I
say
again
Afro-American
As
he
would
want
me
to
To
those
who
tell
us
To
flee
his
memory
We
smile
and
say
to
you:
Have
you
ever
talked
to
Brother
Malcolm
Or
had
him
smile
at
you
Did
you
ever
really
miss
him
If
so
you'd
know
it's
true
Malcolm
was
our
manhood
Our
living
Black
manhood
For
this
we
honor
him
And
so
we
honor
the
best
in
ourselves
The
gift
he
gave
us
all
We
leave
you
now
with
words
from
El
Hajj
Malik
El
Shabazz:
.. .before
I
get
involved
in
anything
nowadays,
I
have
to
straighten
out
my
own
position,
and,
which
is
clear.
I
am
not
a
racist
in
any
form
whatsoever.
I
don't
believe
in
any
form
of
racism.
I
don't
believe
in
any
form
of
discrimination
or
segregation.
I
believe
in
Islam.
I
am
a
Muslim.
And
there's
nothing
wrong
with
being
a
Muslim,
nothing
wrong
with
the
religion
of
Islam.
It
just
teaches
us
to
believe
in
Allah
as
the
God.
And
those
of
you
who
are
Christians
probably
believe
in
the
same
God,
because
I
think
you
believe
in
the
God
who
created
the
universe.
And
that's
the
One
we
believe
in,
the
one
who
created
the
universe,
the
only
difference
being
you
call
Him
God
and
I--we
call
Him
Allah.
The
Jews
call
him
Jehovah.
If
you
could
understand
Hebrew,
you'd
probably
call
him
Jehovah
too.
If
you
could
understand
Arabic,
you'd
probably
call
him
Allah.
But
since
the
white
man,
your
"friend,"
took
your
language
away
from
you
during
slavery,
the
only
language
you
know
is
his
language.
You
know,
your
friend's
language.
So
you
call
Him,
you
call
for
the
same
God
he
calls
for.
When
he's
putting
a
rope
around
your
neck,
you
call
for
God
and
he
calls
for
God.
... But
the
real
religion
of
Islam
doesn't
teach
anyone
to
judge
another
human
being
by
the
color
of
his
skin.
The
yardstick
that
is
used
by
the
Muslim
to
measure
another
man
is
not
the
man's
color
but
the
man's
deeds,
the
man's
conscious
behavior,
the
man's
intentions.
And
when
you
use
that
as
a
standard
of
measurement
or
judgment,
you
never
go
wrong.
Know
more
a
man
by
the
seed
Which
will
come
forth
again
We'll
know
him
as
a
prince
Our
own
black
shining
prince
who
died
Because
he
loved
us
so.
Composed
by
Terence
Blanchard
Lyrics
adapted
from
Ossie
Davis's
eulogy,
delivered
at
Faith
Temple
Church
Of
God,
Harlem,
on
27
February
1965
Lyrics
set
to
music
by
Kamasi
Washington
and
Patrice
Quinn
Malcolm
X
words
from
his
speech
"After
the
Bombing,"
delivered
at
Ford
Auditorium,
Detroit,
on
14
February
1965
1 Change of the Guard
2 Askim
3 Isabelle
4 Final Thought
5 The Next Step
6 The Rhythm Changes
7 Miss Understanding
8 Leroy and Lanisha
9 Re Run
10 Seven Prayers
11 Henrietta Our Hero
12 The Magnificent 7
13 Re Run Home
14 Cherokee
15 Clair de Lune
16 Malcolm’s Theme
17 The Message
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