Cornel West gave an online interview via the Washington Post the other day to talk about race, politics, the 2008 campaign, and his new album, “Never Forget: A Journey of Revelations.” Other performers on the record include Prince, Andre 3000 of Outkast, Jill Scott and KRS-One.

Asked to describe the album, West said…

This CD is a danceable education. Its aim is to keep alive the spirit and legacy of Curtis Mayfield. We want to bring together the spiritual and the social, the personal and the political. We want to contribute to an awakening in our culture, especially youth culture….

Here is the most interesting and, to me, most Harvard-related exchange:

Washington: Prof. West, You have blended your scholarship with pop/mass culture quite a lot over the past several years. Do you have any concerns that, unlike WEB Dubois, you are aligning yourself with lesser rather than greater cultural traditions, and that you are leading promising young black students to ignore more intellectually challenging art and music in favor of what they already frequently see on TV and hear on the radio?

Dr. Cornel West: I appreciate the question. I do not believe in an either/or approach between high culture and popular culture. Instead, I adopt a both an approach that highlights the John Coltranes, Stephen Sondheims, Beethovens and Ellingtons as well as Common, Lauren Hill, Chuck D and Talib Kweli.

I continue to think that, the more time passes, the more those people who blasted West during the Larry Summers dust-up for making a “rap” cd will have to reconsider the attitudes that caused them to deride such a project and deem it unworthy of Harvard. Some apologies are owed…..