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Iyeoka Ivie Okoawo is a Nigerian-American
poet/singer residing in Boston.
Winner of "Performance Poet of the Year" and "Slam Poet of the
Year" for the 2003 Cambridge Poetry Awards, Iyeoka initially gained
national attention in the National Poetry Slam. For the past 5
years she has been a strong member of the Boston Slam Team 2000-2004.
As a member of the 2000 Boston Slam Team, she won fourth place
overall in the individual competition.
She has opened for numerous artists such as Gil Scot Heron with
the Jeff Robinson Trio and most recently Vivian Green performing
at Afrocentrics. She has been featured at the House of Blues in
Boston, the Cambridge Center for Adult Education, and Avalon where
she opened for the hip-hop/soul recording artist Musiq Soulchild.
Iyeoka was showcased in Russell Simmons' Def Comedy Jam airing
on HBO and was a highlight on the late night CBS hip-hop show The
Source All Access. Combining
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her vocal talents, passion for
writing and theater background, she captivates audiences with pieces
that touch on a wide range of issues -- love, women, culture, struggle,
relationships,
among many others. Iyeoka's performance
was described at the National Poetry Slam as "a conversation stopper"
and a "refreshing return to the essence of good spoken word poetry."
In 2004, Iyeoka released her second album LP "Black and Blues"
through Phanai Records produced by Francis Phan. Black & Blues
is the solo debut album from nationally award winning slam poet
Iyeoka (sounds like- tapioca), formerly one of the leaders for
one of Boston's poetry's most artistically proactive groups, BlackoutBoston.
The record is full of groove-laden, contemporary R&B singalongs,
most recorded with a full band -- heavy on the bass, keys and poetry
-- and no reliance on sampling. Much of Black & Blues focuses
on the songwriting and delivery with just enough attention paid
to the groove.
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