DJ Monday Blue
DJ Monday Blue
Romance 1600 Roundtable
Iconoclastic daughter of the Southern Diaspora, Spelman, and DST turned BK tastemaker, DJ Monday Blue is a vinyl priestess with digital flex. A featured vinyl DJ at NYC’s Soho Grand Hotel, she’s powered stages for Soul in the Horn, Black Girls Love Vinyl, 651 Arts, Virgin Hotels NYC, Buy From A Black Woman, The Pulitzer Prizes, Andscape, and The Meteor, effortlessly blending genres and energizing diverse cultural spaces. Creator of Doyennes of Disc—a vinyl party celebrating women selectors—she continues to push sonic boundaries and grow community.
Chris Bournea
Chris Bournea
Romance 1600 Presentation
Romance 1600 Live
Sheila E. as Bandleader and Feminist Icon
I’ll present highlights from the Sheila E.: Live Romance 1600 concert video and discuss how the work showcases her as a bandleader in the tradition of her renowned father and uncles, Pete and Coke Escovedo. I’ll also analyze how the concert exemplifies her trailblazing career as one of the few high-profile female singer-percussionists in the industry.
Chris Bournea (bor-NAY) is a writer and filmmaker based in Columbus, Ohio. He directed the documentary “Lady Wrestler: The Amazing, Untold Story of African-American Women in the Ring.” The documentary chronicles the accomplishments of trailblazing African-American women who integrated professional wrestling in the 1950s and ‘60s, such as Babs Wingo, Ethel Johnson, Marva Scott, Ramona Isbell and Kathleen Wimbley.
Bournea wrote and directed the feature film “Things Are Tough All Over,” a drama about a Chicago family struggling through the Great Recession of 2008. The movie will be released in 2025.
Bournea co-wrote the nonfiction book “All Jokes Aside,” which chronicles the famous Chicago comedy club of the same name. The club served as a star factory in the 1990s, launching the careers of famous comedians such as Ohioans Dave Chappelle and Steve Harvey, Mo’Nique, Chris Rock, Cedric the Entertainer, D.L. Hughley, and many others.
Bournea is the author of the fiction series “The Chloe Chronicles,” about a young woman of color making her way in the cutthroat entertainment industry. He also wrote and directed the play “The Springtime of Our Lives,” a contemporary, urban take on Shakespeare’s “Romeo & Juliet.”
Bournea is also a journalist who is currently a writer and editor for Ohio State News, The Ohio State University’s news site.
Mauriciere de Govia
Mauriciere de Govia
ATWIAD #3 Presentation Moderator
Mauriciere de Govia, Ed.D. (Dr. Mauri) is a leader and transformation coach with over 25 years of experience in the field of education. Dr. Mauri is committed to transforming communities and redefining generational legacies via high-quality teaching and learning experiences that create new results that unleash limitless possibilities for all who participate in her workshops and seminars. She is the CEO and founder of The de Govia Group, LLC (2014), which is an organization that is committed to awakening the leadership maverick within all people. The de Govia Group, LLC aims to ignite, inspire, and innovate its clients via experiential teaching via life coaching, yoga and mindfulness, and meditation. Dr. Mauri is also the creator of “The Urban Vanguard” podcast , and the co-host of “The Purple Paradigm: Conversations and Revelations in a Post-Prince World.” Dr. Mauri received her Bachelor of Arts in Film Production (1995), Masters of Science in Elementary Education (1999), and her Advance Certificate in School Administration (2003) from Brooklyn College, The City University of New York. She received her Ed.D. in Educational Leadership from Sage College, Albany (2017). She is the recipient of the Outstanding Student in a Doctoral Program Award, The Sage Colleges, April 2017, the District 23 Legacy Award, July 2016, the Brooklyn Borough President Citation for Leadership, June 2016, the United States House of Representatives Proclamation, June 2016, the MHBA- She is Me Courage Award, April 2016, the Above and Beyond Award- Community Education Council, D23, Spring 2003, and the DOE/Broad Foundation, Exceptional Leadership -1st yr. Principal Award, Spring 2005. In May 2021, she was featured on the “Streets Politicians” podcast with Tamika Mallory. She possesses coaching certification via John Maxwell, INC. and the International Coaching Federation. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, and is the mother of two awesome children.
Marc Wiggins
Marc Wiggins
The Family Presentation
Time Runs Out... Family Steps Up
Digital media has provided many of us the opportunity to research and relive the past, particularly from 1983 into 1985. In 1983, the Purple Machine was in full stride. Prince’s 1999, The Time’s What Time Is It? and Vanity 6’s self-titled album were all hits and selling well. The Triple Threat Tour was scorching across the nation, powered in large part by The Time constantly upstaging Prince on the tour… I was there. The Rolling Stone magazine with the cover showing Prince and Vanity was the talk of the industry, all was good in the land of Purple…until it wasn’t. Defections, disagreements, firings and hirings, circumstances that led to the creation of… The Family. Like a comet, they burned hot and flamed out too soon…or did they?
Presently, I’m a Vice-Chair for the ABA Recording and Performing Arts division, a member of the Recording Academy San Francisco Chapter, a member of the Schwartz-Levi Chapter of the American Inns of Court, and a member of the United States Supreme Court Bar Association. The bulk of my law practice is in music industry transactions, which I LOVE. I’ll be renewing my NBA agent credentials in October. And I have applied to teach a music law course at King Hall, the UC Davis Law School.
Before starting college and after dropping out of high school, I was a roadie in the Bay Area, and among the acts I worked with were Journey and Santana. Music is “my thing” and other than a possible run for the judicial bench, I don’t see myself in any other areas of law.
When I’m not doing my thing in the legal world, I can be found dining at various Michelin-star restaurants or listening to my audiophile sound system and reading a music biography or a comic book. I’m a complex cat…
Kamilah Cummings
Kamilah Cummings
ATWIAD #2 Presentation
Colorful People
Reclaiming the Psychedelic Soul Roots of Prince’s Around the World in a Day
Following Purple Rain, Prince’s Around the World in a Day album marked what appeared to be a radical sonic and thematic departure. Many critics hastily labeled it “Prince’s Beatles album,” continuing the practice of crediting musical innovation to whiteness. This presentation challenges this persistent mischaracterization and instead situates the album within the lineage of psychedelic soul music. By reframing the album as a continuation of the innovative work of artists such as Charles Stepney, Norman Whitfield, Funkadelic, The Chambers Brothers, and Sly and the Family Stone, this discussion highlights the ways in which Prince was not imitating white psychedelic rock but rather expanding upon the work of his Black musical influences, who have been historically overlooked.
Blending funk, soul, blues, gospel, and rock with sophisticated orchestration and social commentary—both overt and coded, Around the World in a Day is more musically varied and thematically complex than the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Band album, which is frequently and inaccurately positioned as its primary influence—despite Prince, himself, stating that it was not. On this album, Prince, like his Black predecessors, used psychedelia as a space for cultural critique, escapism, and sonic experimentation. This analysis firmly positions Around the World in a Day not as a departure from Black musical tradition, but as a progression of it—an affirmation of its limitlessness.
Kamilah Cummings is a writer, editor, and visiting senior lecturer at DePaul University in Chicago. She has presented on Prince at Purple Reign, the first academic Prince conference (University of Salford, UK), and polished solid Prince symposia at New York University, Spelman College, and online. She has also presented on Prince at The 2021 Pop Convergence (PopCon).
Her work on Prince has been published in the Howard Journal of Communications, the Journal of Popular Music Studies, AMP: American Music Perspectives, and Prince and Popular Music: Critical Perspectives on an Interdisciplinary Life (Bloomsbury). She has also created the course, Prince: A New Breed Leader.
A House music researcher as well, she created the course The House Chicago Built, has presented on House music at Black Portraiture[s] IV (Harvard University), and appears as a featured speaker in the documentary The Woodstock of House. She is passionate about exploring the intersections of race and identity in media and pop culture, with a particular focus on centering Blackness in the narratives of Black people.
Violet Brown
Violet Brown
Romance 1600 Roundtable
Violet Brown is a Civil Rights Attorney, Constitutional Law Professor, Musician, and … PrinceGirl4Ever. Raised by two Prince Fam Parents (dad especially) she grew up on his music; Purple Rain being the first song she learned to play on keys, Musicology being the tour that changed her life. In addition to helping cultivate diversity in the Minnesota Law School and Legal Worlds, Violet plays bass, keeps positivity flowing about Prince, music in general, and all things related via her social media, and has traveled the globe visiting Prince-related historical locations, attending concerts, and continuing to support The Work of Real Music by Real Musicians.
Tonya Pendleton
Tonya Pendleton
Romance 1600 Roundtable
Tonya Pendleton is a cultural critic, entertainment industry veteran writer, editor, broadcaster, and multimedia journalist with a two-decade history in news, sports, lifestyle, and entertainment reporting. In her current position as “Things To Do” curator for WHYY, she crafts content for a local and global audience. The Philadelphia resident was born and raised in New York City and is a graduate of The New School and host of “Reality Check on WURD Radio”.
Tonya Giddens
Tonya Giddens
Romance 1600 Roundtable
Tonya Giddens has always had a passion for fashion and music. A former plus-size model, she has graced numerous runways and served as the Beauty Director for Full Figured Fashion Week®—a groundbreaking event that celebrates the visibility and style of plus-size women.
Tammy Sharpe
Tammy Sharpe
The Family Roundtable
Tammy Sharpe, a Brooklyn native, is a Visual Merchandising Manager, Stylist, Event Planner, and Creative Designer. She’s had the pleasure of styling Janet Jackson, Leslie Uggams, Rosie O’Donnell, Natalie Merchant, Roberta Flack, Cynthia Nixon, and more.
From the tender age of 5, she has embarked on a lifelong purple journey. She has since amassed a formidable collection of memories, having attended a plethora of his shows over the years.
Indelibly influenced by the legendary Prince, she has meticulously crafted her approach to fashion down to the tiniest details. Prince’s impact on her style is undeniable—a constant source of inspiration.
“Style is not thinking about style. So let me stop.” ~Prince
Ricky Wyatt
Ricky Wyatt
The Family Roundtable
Ricky Wyatt, “The Ricker,” is a bassist, performer, comic book author, long time Prince fan and a disciple of the MPLS sound. A native of Atlanta, GA, currently living in Richmond, VA. Ricky leads the jazz-funk unit “SoWhut?!” and the R&B unit “Footprints.” A graduate of Virginia State University’s Department of Political Science, and a student of Prince’s purple grooves since ’79, Ricky teaches History at the Binford Middle Arts & Integration Program for Richmond Public Schools and maintains an active performance schedule. Ricky often guests on What Did Prince Do This Week?