Roughhouse Dandy 8,397 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 (edited) One is highlighting HBCU's, African culture, civil rights, black empowerment quotes from notable figures throughout history in their art, and presented the Black National Anthem on the Coachella stage. The other has a skin bleaching controversy under their belt. So who is tap dancing for white people again? Just Olympic-level yapping. Yappatron-3000 Edited March 21 by Roughhouse Dandy This is my Hannah Montana™️ lipgloss. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
GagaSine 7,464 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 She's right, she's a genius, love her 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
raragaga 8,111 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 oh she's still talking? xoxo Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
spookytanooki 299 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 Hold up... She made some points tho. I'm all for black women finally being seen in the country genre, don't get me wrong. I'm horrified that for Tracy Chapman to finally get any recognition, her song had to be covered by a white man. I also regard the majority of what AB has to say as psychobabble, but she really did make some points with this one. *I base this information on absolutely nothing* 15 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
phantasmas 9,927 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 a true wordsmith 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
nATAH 42,278 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 54 minutes ago, Shakmasda said: Well, she makes some good points. I'll be playing **** him all night just for the sake of it. you actually read all of that? mother, what must i do? 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
gumzy3000 6,924 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 She should be a life coach for people to get their life together trolly troll troll 2 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Snejana 984 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 okay ms cultural critic azealia theodor adorno banks but in all seriousness this time she made some points and was kinda respectul (by her standards) lol 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ziggy 10,731 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 Look she’s right sugar mama SHOULD have that Grammy. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
clownery 3,519 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 I mean I see her point but she is absolutely deranged and negative all the time it's actually insane 3 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
NCgaga 4,278 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 1 hour ago, spookytanooki said: Hold up... She made some points tho. I'm all for black women finally being seen in the country genre, don't get me wrong. I'm horrified that for Tracy Chapman to finally get any recognition, her song had to be covered by a white man. I also regard the majority of what AB has to say as psychobabble, but she really did make some points with this one. This is a made up narrative regarding “fast car” by Tracy Chapman. People have wanted so bad for the narrative to be “country white man steals success of black Tracy chapman’s song”. The version by Tracy Chapman was #6 on the pop charts in 1988. She got plenty of recognition then. It’s like saying Dolly Parton never got recognition from “I will always love you” until Whitney Houston covered it. People reach so hard for victim situations they just make up narratives. 9 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
spookytanooki 299 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 22 minutes ago, NCgaga said: This is a made up narrative regarding “fast car” by Tracy Chapman. People have wanted so bad for the narrative to be “country white man steals success of black Tracy chapman’s song”. The version by Tracy Chapman was #6 on the pop charts in 1988. She got plenty of recognition then. It’s like saying Dolly Parton never got recognition from “I will always love you” until Whitney Houston covered it. People reach so hard for victim situations they just make up narratives. I'm speaking specifically on the fact that she didn't win a Country Music Award until her song was covered by a white man. She was a black woman singing country, and she was categorized as pop. Her song was never recognized as a country hit until it was covered by a white man. *I base this information on absolutely nothing* Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
NCgaga 4,278 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 (edited) 5 minutes ago, spookytanooki said: I'm speaking specifically on the fact that she didn't win a Country Music Award until her song was covered by a white man. She was a black woman singing country, and she was categorized as pop. Her song was never recognized as a country hit until it was covered by a white man. “Fast Car” was not a country song. It was a folk pop song in the 80s, written by a lesbian. Folk music is and has always been been in the lesbian community. I think you are getting folk music and country music confused. The original version shouldn’t be celebrated as a country song, as it never was one. It was a very successful folk song that soared up the pop charts. The new version is by Luke Combs- and it is a country version, sung by a country artist. Thats why the new version is being recognized as a country song. Tracy Chapman was never a country artist. Edited March 20 by NCgaga 11 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
spookytanooki 299 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 Just now, NCgaga said: “Fast Car” was not a country song. It was a folk pop song in the 80s, written by a lesbian. Folk music is and has always been been in the lesbian community. I think you are getting folk music and country music confused. The original version shouldn’t be celebrated as a country song, as it never was one. It was a very successful folk song that soared up the pop charts. Hold up. So you're telling me that it's not a country song, yet it suddenly gets awarded a CMA when it's performed by a 1. White 2. Man But when it was sung by a 1. Black 2. Woman It's a folk song? *I base this information on absolutely nothing* Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
hELXIG 41,585 Posted March 20 Share Posted March 20 I'll be myself until they fūcking close the coffin. 1 3 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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