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M Lamar

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M Lamar
mmádu
ụdịekerenwoke Dezie
mba o sịNjikota Obodo Amerika Dezie
Aha ọmụmụReginald Lamar Cox Dezie
aha ezinụlọ yaLamar Dezie
ụbọchị ọmụmụ ya29 Mee 1972 Dezie
Ebe ọmụmụMobile Dezie
nwanneLaverne Cox Dezie
ọrụ ọ na-arụonye na-ede ihe, onye na-abụ abụ Dezie
ụdị olucountertenor Dezie
webụsaịtịhttps://www.mlamar.com/ Dezie

Reginald Lamar Cox (amụrụ n'ubochí irí abụọ na itoolu n'ọnwaa Mee, 1972), nke a maara dịka M Lamar, bụ ónyé America na-ede egwu, ónyé na-eme ihe nkiri, na ónyé na-ese ihe.[1][2] Ọ bụ ónyé na-eme ihe nkiri na ónyé na-akpọ piano nke ọrụ ya gụnyere ihe nkiri, ihe ọkpụkpụ, ntinye, na arụmọrụ.[3]

Lamar bụ ejima yiri nke ónyé na-eme ihe nkírí Laverne Cox, ma kpọọ àgwà nwanne ya nwanyị tupu mgbanwe na ihe omume abụọ nke ihe ngosi Netflix Orange Is the New Black .[4][5][6]

Mbido ndụ na ọrụ

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A mụrụ Reginald Lamar Cox na Mobile, Alabama, ma dị ka nwatakịrị bụrụ abụ dị ka soprano na ukwe chọọchị ya.[7][8][9] Ọ gụrụ ihe osise na San Francisco Art Institute wee gaa Yale màkà ụlọ akwụkwọ gụsịrị akwụkwọ na ihe ọkpụkpụ tupu ọ kwụsị iji lekwasị ányà na egwu.[1] Ọ kwagara New York iji soro Ira Siff, ónyé guzobere ma na-eduga soprano nke La Gran Scena Opera Company, nweta ọzụzụ olu.[10]

N'afọ 2014, Lamar sonyere na mkparịta ụka ghere oghe na ndị édémédé, Marci Blackman, na Samuel R. Delany kpọrọ "Transgressive Sexual Practice" dị ka akụkụ nke ọrụ dị ka ónyé ọkà mmụta na-ebi na The New School.[11] O depụtara ederede nke nko na Toni Morrison, yana onye na-ede egwu egwu Diamanda Galásʹs Plague Mass, dị ka ihe mkpali màkà ọrụ ya.[10]

One Archive na Mahadum nke Southern California nyere iwu Lamar's Funeral Doom Spiritual, nké gosipụtara na 2016 dị ka arụmọrụ na ntinye multimedia na ihe, vidiyo, na mbipụta.[12][13] Ọrụ ahụ dabere na ndụ na ọnwụ nke Willie Francis, ónyé Black American nke a na-ebo ebubo igbu nwoke ọcha dị afọ iri isé na atọ mgbè ọ dị afọ irí na isé, ikpe Francis nwetara nlebara anya dị ukwuu mgbè ọ lanarịrị mgbalị igbu ya site na oche eletrik, mgbè nke ahụ gasịrị, NAACP gwara ya okwu ma mata na ha abụọ anọwo na mmekọrịta mmekọahụ.[14][10] Ihe omume a dugara na mmepe nke Funeral Doom Spiritual, nke nwéré mmalite echiche ya na ọmụmụ Lamar banyere nnọchiteanya nke ojii, nwoke ojii, ọchịchọ agbụrụ, na njikọ nke ọrụ Michel Foucaultás na panopticon na Frantzanon Fáz na edemede banyere ịkpa ókè agbụrụ na anya ọcha.[10]

  • Omenala LGBT na New York City

Edensibia

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  1. 1.0 1.1 "M. Lamar: 'Negrogothic, a Manifesto, the Aesthetics of M. Lamar'", The New York Times. Retrieved on January 13, 2015. Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid <ref> tag; name "2015 NYT Feature" defined multiple times with different content
  2. Als (13 July 2009). Diva Deconstructed. The New Yorker. Retrieved on 7 March 2021.
  3. Wickstrom (January 2017). "M. Lamar: Singing Slave Insurrection to Marx". Theatre Survey 58 (1): 68–85. DOI:10.1017/S0040557416000697. Retrieved on 7 March 2021. 
  4. Laverne Cox And M. Lamar Discuss Identity, Collective Trauma, Celebrating The Black Penis And More. HuffPost. Retrieved on January 13, 2015.
  5. Bertstein. "In Their Own Terms – The Growing Transgender Presence in Pop Culture", The New York Times, March 3, 2014. Retrieved on June 21, 2014.
  6. 'Orange Is The New Black' Star Laverne Cox's Twin Brother Plays Her Pre-Transition Counterpart (VIDEO). HuffPost. Retrieved on January 13, 2015.
  7. M Lamar on Rate Your Music.
  8. Exploring M. Lamar's 'Negro Gothic Sensibility'. Out Magazine. Retrieved on January 13, 2015.
  9. Woolfe (12 January 2017). A Goth Male Soprano Who Plumbs the Darkness. The New York Times. Retrieved on 7 March 2021.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Colucci (3 October 2014). The Plantation Is Still Here: An Interview with Artist M. Lamar. VICE. Retrieved on 7 March 2021. Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid <ref> tag; name "2014 VICE Interview" defined multiple times with different content
  11. Swan (10 November 2014). She Came, She Saw, She Transgressed. The New School Free Press. Retrieved on 7 March 2021.
  12. News From ONE Archives at the USC Libraries and the ONE Archives Foundation. ONE Archives Foundation. Retrieved on 7 March 2021.
  13. Mashurov (2016). Coffins Across Centuries: M. Lamar's real life Negrogothic Horror. IMPOSE Magazine. Retrieved on 7 March 2021.
  14. Bernstein (25 April 2016). "Virtuosity Provides Freedom": Thoughts from an African American Composer. Hyperallergic. Retrieved on 7 March 2021.

Njikọ mpụga

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