A writer since childhood, Amina grew up in her father’s homeland of Nigeria where she and her family moved shortly after her 7th birthday and didn’t return to Chicago for good, until after high school. "I missed a whole lot of hip-hop,” she explains, “…but in retrospect, I kinda consider myself lucky to have had such wonderful musical influences like Fela and Sunny Ade in my life. But my mom made sure I had a healthy dose of everything. She played everything from The Spinners, and Roberta Flack,, to Miriam Makeba, Yusef Lateef, and Miles Davis.” Within 6 months of being back in the U.S., hip-hop came knocking, when Amina joined her first rap group. “With roots like that,” she admits. “it’s no wonder I became hip-hop.”
By ’92 Amina was not only an emcee, but had began performing her poetry, and had soon become a regular at legendary open mic sets like Spices, and Another Level at Literary Explosion (Lit Ex). She would later be featured at The Bop Shop, Jazz Oasis, Hot House (former location on Milwaukee Ave), Wabi Sabi, and even performing a hip-hop & poetry show for inmates at the Statesville Correctional Facility.
While rocking mics across the city, Amina decided she wanted to learn more about the music business, and set out on a quest to do just that. She spent the next several years working as a street promotions rep, advertising accounts rep, event planning, and in promotions for a prominent Chicago radio station. It was also during this time that Chicago’s hip-hop scene was coming of age, and Amina realized that more needed to be done to bring this underground culture together and help unify this vastly diverse scene, so she began to organize. She started Chicago Urban Mines (Music Industry Networking & Entertainment Socials), which later became a monthly networking & showcase party featuring some of the city’s top, and upcoming dj’s, emcees, poets and singers
By this time Amina had also teamed up with producer, and Spalaney’s (Elements Of Nature) member, Coolout Chris to form Urbanized Music, a songwriting and production collaborative. It didn’t take long for Urbanized Music to gain solid footing on Chicago’s music scene.
In ’01 Urban Mines organized a year long campaign to salute Chi hip-hop called the ‘Chicago One Love Campaign’. Two years later Amina founded the Chicago Hip-Hop Initiative, a not-for-profit community development organization, and in ’03 C.H.I drafted, and presented a resolution, which passed the Chicago City Council, proclaiming the month of July as the official observance for Chicago Hip-Hop Heritage Month.
Today, on the dawn of her debut release, Amina has a truly candid story to tell about life. Her music reflects the intricacies of life. The little things. Weaving through love and pain, reality and illusion, with a subtle hint of seduction and mystery. A genuinely talented writer, Amina has the unique gift to paint pictures we can all identify with. “Within our lives, we all experience the same forces of energy,” she explains, “…it is how we interact with these energy that defines us. My songs are inspired by that energy, and the many possibilities within it." And she truly exemplifies it. Whether in song, lyric, rap, spoken or written word, Amina makes her point. She is a poignant communicator, aiming directly for the listener’s intellect. Her poetry is direct and unpretentious. Her songs are well-crafted, eclectic gems. And when she flips into emcee mode, her lyrical prowess has even the most hardcore fan pumping his fist in the air as metaphors and punch lines fire in rapid succession.
Amina is far from being ‘just another female emcee’; she’s the newest force to be reckoned with. She is soul, rhythm and politics, compassion and intrigue, representing the core of all of us. Amina has something for you too, and you can bet………. it’ll truly change your life.
shows
-a partial list- Jay Pritzker Pavillion - Millennium Park (2008) - And it Don't Stop The Movement Continues (curator)
w/ Ang 13, All Natural, Poetree Chicago, Primeridian, FM Supreme, Deja Taylor, Kuumba Lynx, DJ Manowax, GQ The Teacher, AquaMoon, Stick & Move, & Coolout Chris
Jay Pritzker Pavillion - Millennium Park Steppenwolf Theater Presents: Traffic Series 'Hip-Hop & Blues Intersection'
f/ Sylvia Ewing. Billy Branch and The Sons of Blues, Avery R. Young, Kevin Coval, Idris Goodwin; BeatMonstas, Butter, Itch 13, Sense, FM Supreme, Mae Koen, Russ Green, Ugochi
African Festival of The Arts, Washington Park (06-08) - This Is HIp-Hop Stage Special Ed, The Lady of Rage, Big Daddy Kane, Slum Village, MC Lyte,
Steppenwolf Theater - 'Music & Memories' w/ Sylvia Ewing, Lucy Smith Quintet, Avery R Young, Dolores Scott, Kevin Coval, Sense, Eve Ewing, Itch 13, and Molly White... honoring Koko Taylor, Tom Burrell, and Laura Washington
MCA/Hip-Hop Theater Festival 2006 - Opening Night Co-Host w/ Kamilah Forbes & Brendon Ayanbadejo
Joe's - w/ Urbanized Music, @ Comedy show f/ BET Comics
Cotton Club - w/ Urbanized Music Cubby Bear - w/ Mic One Old Town School of Folk Music - w/ Greeweedz f/ Hypocrisy
Club Reunion - w/ DJ Fathom
Chicago Historical Society - Youth Poetry Slam w/ Reggie Gibson, Typical Cats
The Vic - w/ Lyrisis, Bahamadia, Princess Superstar
The Navy Pier Skyline Stage- Joi, Rhea
Nevin's - w/ Urbanized Music, DJ Teebot, & Lee Chestafeel
workshops panels conferences
PANELS/CONFERENCES/WORKSHOPS
Women in Washington: A Progressive Gala at The University of Chicago (2008) w/ Gloria Steinem, Maria Teresa Petersen, Pamela Bozeman-Evans, Robyn Spencer, Shelby Knox, and Nikki Skies
2006 National Hip-Hop Political Convention
w/ Ayinde Jean Baptiste, Billy 'Upski' Wimsatt, Dr. Carol Adams
Campus Progress 2006 National Student Conference
w/ Billy 'Upski' Wimsatt, Fat Joe, Bakari Kitwana, Alexis McGill
International Hip-Hop Film Festival
w/ Coolout Chris, Harry Allen, Jeff Chang, Kevin Coval -'06
w/ Coolout Chris, Avery R Young - '07
Women in Hip-Hop, at the Chopin Theater
w/ Kuumba Lynx, Rhea
Women Singer-Songwriters and Guild Complex
w/ Maggie Brown, Ellen Rosner, Nikki Mitchell
The Influence of Women in Hip-Hip at Harold Washington College
Hip-Hop in America at the University of Illinois at Chicagow/ Dave Stovall, Anacron, Staceyann Chin
Finding Your Passion, Francis Parker School
all 8th & 12th grade girls
Women In Hip-Hop, University of Illinois Champaign/Urbana
w/ Christie Z Pabon, Isela Estrada
Hip-Hop Entrepreneurship, University of Illinois Champaign/Urbana
w/ Kareem Muhammad
Urban Dialectics Conference
w/ Capital D, Ang 13, TJ Crawford, Lord Cashus D
moderator
"Don't Call Me Sassy!" at Jane Addams Hull House Museum/University of Illinois Chicago f/ Keisha Farmer-Smith, Renisha Campbell, Sharon Powell, Mariame Kaba, Dr. Stephanie Brown, and AquaMoon
A Conversation on Race & Hip-Hop
f/ Bakari Kitwana, Raquel Rivera, William 'Upski' Wimsatt, Oliver Wang, & Ernie Paniccioli
Hip-Hop & Cultural Obstacles
f/ Ang 13, Simeon Viltz, DJ Artek, Lexx Lugar, Arron Bowen