GRUNGECAKE

Category: News

  • YoungBoy Never Broke Again releases video for ‘Death Exclaimed’: Watch

    Earlier today, YoungBoy Never Broke Again released the official video for ‘Death Exclaimed’, which shows with his child at home and riding around in a Bentley. Unfortunately, the lyrics speak to someone wanting to take his life. If God’s protection is what he wants, we hope he gets it. Watch the Rich Porter-directed visual below.

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ted2pAnAnQc&h=315]


  • Stream Fivio Foreign’s track with Young MA ‘Move Like a Boss’

    Brooklyn artists Fivio Foreign and Young MA teamed up for a track called ‘Move Like a Boss’, which encompasses both signature styles. If you want to know about the kind of people they’ve both come across, stream the audio below; wait for the official video.

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CY7r8trHlAM&h=315]


  • Music vets Bryan Edwards and Kelsey Warren curate powerful Juneteenth mixtape to benefit BLM and SisterSong

    Late last night, music industry veterans Bryan Edwards and Kelsey Warren of Blak Emoji released their mixtape, which will benefit Black Lives Matter and reproductive and birth justice organisation, SisterSong. The twenty-song compilation features predominantly unreleased recordings by GRAMMY Award-winning artists like Fantastic Negrito and Van Hunt, Nova Twins, The Veldt, Marcus Macahdo, and Blak Emoji.

    Many people have curated playlists for this moment on the web, but there’s nothing quite like this decorated tracklist featuring explosive independent Black voices in the Rock realm. My top picks are the first four songs, and Marcus Machado’s ‘When Will It End’, and Starr Busby’s ‘Jenny (Lil Red)’. If you’re young, Black, and you aren’t in tune, Rock music is ours. We created popularised the genre. Read about Little Richard, the Rock music pioneer, who died last month.

    If you’re in the position to donate, please do. Every dollar counts. Without further ado, stream the playlist ‘Juneteenth: Mixtape 2020’ below. It’s available for download. Additionally, yesterday a collective of Black musicians gathered at 300 Ashland Place in Brooklyn to celebrate a Juneteenth Jam, in coordination with Six Nineteen: Defend Black Lives. Visit this link to see the coverage.

    Juneteenth : Mixtape 2020 by Various


  • Beyoncé returns with ‘BLACK PARADE’: Listen

    Beyoncé just released a new song called ‘BLACK PARADE’—in time before Juneteenth ends. Listen to the track below.


  • Quincy Jones’ Qwest TV launches educational initiative to provide free access

    With more than 1,000 video offerings, Qwest TV is bringing some of the most powerful performances in Jazz, Soul, Funk, Classical, and global music to students and educators for free. As part of its Qwest TV EDU initiative, the streaming service will provide carefully curated, culturally significant musical performances to all willing educational institutions starting in September 2020. All videos are available in the best possible quality.

    This initiative comes in response to and in support of the worldwide protests against brutality and anti-Black racism. Qwest TV hopes to be an entry point for those wanting to connect with and learn more about the wide-ranging music made by Black Americans, along with other striking musical artists from around the world. (See Quincy Jones’ full statement on the matter below.)

    Interested educators can find more via this link. Institutions already participating in the program include Harvard, Princeton, and The University of the Arts. The service now aims to reach as many students as possible, from elementary schools to conservatories and community colleges.

    Qwest TV features a range of music-related content including concerts by everyone from Herbie Hancock to Anderson.Paak; archival recordings and rarities from pivotal artists from Louis Amstrong to Gregory Porter; and interviews and documentaries from Tony Allen to Questlove, to add vital context. Extensive notes written by scholars and journalists further enhance the experience. Music lovers and curious explorers can browse the service carefully curated channels and discover more about a country, style, or artistic movement that intrigues them.


    A Statement from Quincy Jones on the Qwest TV Education Initiative

    Growing up in the Southside of Chicago and Bremerton, Washington during the Great Depression, I was fortunate enough to have been mentored by some of the greatest Jazz cats of all time. I’m talking about Dizzy Gillespie, Duke Ellington, Bird, Lionel Hampton, Benny Carter, you name it. The absolute best of the best. Their music and history was incredibly rich, and man, I got sucked in from day one. Fortunately, for me, I had a direct connection with these landmark figures, and now after having been on this planet for close to nine decades, I’ve personally experienced the highs and lows that this world has to offer.

    Much to our collective disservice, the United States is the only country without a Minister of Culture, and this communal inattentiveness to our roots has been detrimental to our individual and collective understanding of identity. Oftentimes, people don’t know who they are because they have no frame of reference. Well, everything is based upon what has happened before us, and if you know where you come from, it’s easier to get where you want to go! Kids (and adults alike) need to know where they come from. Plain and simple. Big Bands, Bebop, Doo-Wop, Hip-Hop, Laptop, that’s all sociological. The Bebop to Hip-Hop connection is about being aware: more specifically, being aware that all of our music springs from the same roots, and they inform much of what we call mainstream music today.

    When I lived in Paris during the late 50s, I learned a great deal about life, because having come from America in the midst of segregation, Paris taught me about acceptance, regardless of color or culture. They loved Jazz, and more importantly, they took people who looked like me in as their own. Man, we wouldn’t have Jazz if it weren’t for the French and Congo Square during slavery. Jazz conditioned me to be an open thinker and taught me how to improvise in nearly every area of my life. It has always been focused on freedom and pure imagination, through an absolutely beautiful and nonrigid, democratic perspective on music and the world.

    In the same way, there is something absolutely beautiful about the fact that music has the unique ability to connect people from all walks of life. I’m talking about individuals of different races, beliefs, socio-economic statuses, you name it. And man, the history of our music is incredibly deep; the fact of the matter is, people don’t know enough about it and the influence that it has had on our modern-day music and life.

    What we’re going through right now is nothing new. Take it from someone who has been on this planet since before electricity! ((:0)) It’s difficult to know what to say during a time such as this, because I’ve been dealing with racism my entire life. That said, it’s rearing its ugly head right now, and by God, it’s time to deal with it once and for all.

    Before the late, great Duke Ellington passed, we did the Duke Ellington… We Love You Madly TV Special (my first television credit as a producer) and my blessed brother, Duke, gave me a photo of him, signed, “To Q, who will be the one to de-categorize American music”, and that’s exactly what I’ve tried to do all of my life. Whether it was through the creation of my 1989 album, Back on the Block, a simmering musical stew of everything from Jazz to world to Hip-Hop to swing music; to working with every genre under the sun; to the South Central to South Africa trip with Nelson Mandela, it has been a part of the very fabric of my calling to help break down the barriers for any willing ear.

    So, it absolutely brings me a great deal of joy to announce that from September onwards, we at Qwest TV will be giving out free access to our “Qwest TV Educational Platform” to all willing elementary-high schools, music schools, colleges, and universities from all over the world, with over 1,000 programs of music, while rightly compensating the artists and rights owners. Documentaries, archives, and concerts from around the world highlight the beauty of our humanity and what makes our differences a strength to share. We want each kid and student to be able to freely explore their musical history by rediscovering their roots, both through Jazz and beyond.

    We’ve got to believe that we are multicultural miracles, and we at Qwest TV want all of you to embrace and celebrate that. The future is a bright, beautiful mix of colors, and we hope that many will join us by taking action in all fields of society, to lay the groundwork for a positive future for the kids of tomorrow.

    Avec la patience, on arrive à tout! Merci!

    -QUINCY JONES


  • Play this Sarkodie record ‘Brown Paper Bag’ featuring M.anifest more than once

    Photo: YouTube

    There is a God. It’s always been in the back of my mind, but I wasn’t sure if it would come to pass. If you’re new to my site, African music, or particularly music from Ghana, Sarkodie and M.anifest are Hiplife’s finest artists. A few years ago when a Ghanaian woman told me about M.anifest, she explained that he and Sarkodie have die-hard fans and they put the two against each other. It wasn’t an odd idea. In American, music fans tend to the same thing with rappers, especially if they are women. Knowing what I knew, I made sure I was careful with my wording and authentic in what I supported by each artist. To my surprise, this week, the two African giants released a record called ‘Brown Paper Bag’.

    On it, Sarkodie and M.anifest discuss slavery, self-hate and corrupt government officials in English, which I think is powerful for African artists to do right now. During Sarkodie’s verse, the BET Hip-Hop Award-winning rapper points out that we can read between the lines, but we still can’t read and lists what freedom is. M.anifest addresses the sitting American President, offering clarity on how we got here, stating “Religion is a prison” and valuing foreign exchange more. And before he ends his informative verse, the Ghana Music Award-winning rapper lists the people and ideologies we all need to beef with since we like beef.

    Stream the beautiful record—produced by Nova—below because it doesn’t condemn anyone, it offers solutions and helpful depictions. I think both of the men did a fantastic job.

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9L4EiRsp7U&h=315]


  • Stream ShaqIsDope’s latest track ‘No Choice’ produced by Halfademic

    Toronto artist ShaqIsDope is back with a new record called ‘No Choice’, which is more mellow than his previous releases like ‘Level Up’ and ‘Lucky’. Produced by Halfademic, the song’s lyrics take us through why women shouldn’t date him, his hustle style, having bad management in the past, and his aspirations. Check it out below.


  • EBONY’s two-day Juneteenth summit wants to ensure future Black generations live in a different America

    Community leaders, celebrities, and athletes will use the 154th anniversary of Juneteenth to spearhead action around how to make real changes and open the doors to the American dreams to a people that has long been locked out.

    From COVID-19, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery, Anthropolgie’s policy on identifying Black customers as “Nicks”, Colin Kaepernick to the fight to be able to cast a vote—the friction between our actions as a nation and the beliefs upon which we built our country require prompt immediate change. The unconscionable treatment of African American’s by the criminal justice system, Corporate American, and the sports industries, for the most part, have been largely unchallenged of late. Juneteenth will change that.


    Panels will include:

        EQUAL JUSTICE NOW
        w/ Ben Crump; Willie Gary; Jorge Sanchez; Walter Mosley Jr
        SAY HER NAME: BREONNA TAYLOR
        w/ Lonita Baker, Taylor Family Attorney; Miss DC USA 2019; Miss Kentucky USA USA 2018; Miss Teen USA 2018;
        RESPONSIBILITY IN FASHION
        w/ Andre Leon Talley; Angela Davis
        CHANGING THE NARRATIVE: Millennial Women of the movement
        w/ J Mulan; Milan Zoe, Miss Diddy; Sidnee Michelle
        CORPORATE RESPONSE TO SOCIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY
        w/ McDonalds; Google; TCF Bank; Omerge Alliances; Carla Hill
        EBONY CANNABIS Day
        w/ Rico Lamitte; Mieko Hester-Perez; Tommy Johnson

    To join on Friday, visit this link.

    Saturday’s Cannabis Track can be accessed by visiting this link.

    We will also stream live on EBONY’s Facebook page and the EBONY CHANNEL on Roku and Amazon.


  • Pop Smoke’s family announces non-profit foundation ‘Shoot for the Stars’

    Today, the family of Bashar “Pop Smoke” Jackson is announcing Shoot for the Stars, a (501(c)(3)) foundation established by Pop Smoke prior to his passing and led by his mother. “The foundation is meant to inspire inner-city youth to do just what the name states, ‘shoot for the stars’”, Ms Jackson says, “and help urban youth everywhere turn their pain into champagne by making their dreams a reality.”

    As [Bashar] travelled around the city, he realized that the technology he had access to during his school years was not the norm for urban schools, says Ms Jackson. It was great fun brainstorming and planning [Shoot for the Stars] with him. I am looking forward to working with the team he put together before he was so tragically taken from us.

    With everything happening in the world today, I know Bashar would feel the urgency of need, now more than ever before, Head of Victor Victor Worldwide, Steven Victor says. He strived to inspire youth and would have loved to see people playing his music and dancing in the streets while they marched in the fight for equality and justice. He made music, not only for the kids in his neighborhood but around the world, to inspire them to dream big regardless of their situation. The hope he carried for the next generation will live on through Shoot for the Stars. It was something that was very important to him and we’re honored to continue his legacy. This is only the beginning.

    In summary, Ms Jackson shares, “We make this announcement and look forward to Pop’s debut album via Victor Victor.”


  • Swae Lee activates petty side on ‘Reality Check’: Listen

    I’m unsure what’s wilder: The fact that he said that on record, or that a vast majority of human beings check on the people they used to live to see if they’re doing better than them. In any event, Swae Lee, one of the best voices of the 10s, is back with a petty creme-filled banger called ‘Reality Check’. If you’re one for tongue-in-cheek bars, the track is one to add to your personal playlists.