Saturday, February 24, 2018

Music with Influence

              Black folk have used many strategies to resist segregation and discrimination in the Jim Crow South. However, music has been a way for African Americans to access resistance in an artistic and mainstream way, influencing both black and white people. Incorporating discourse from Marcus Anthony Hunter and Dr. Zandria Robinson’s Chocolate Cities, black people used music as a form of not only resistance but of place making. Place making is a form of resistance to the everyday struggle of living under Jim Crow. Memphis is a chocolate city that has produced an abundance of music, such as jazz, blues, and soul music that speak to black resistance. Otis Redding, a notable artist signed to Memphis’ Stax Records, supplied black people with support and pride for the black race. Otis Redding wrote the influential song Respect, that became a hit among black and white people by Memphis-born Aretha Franklin. Redding’s lyrics song through Franklin reinforces black resistance. Robinson and Hunter interpret Respect, stating “’Respect’ as also being about demanding respect from White people who are ‘running outta’ fooling’ and might walk in and find Black people have left” (99).  Demanding of respect was a explicit and meaningful to the black resistance struggle. Not only was this a song directed toward white people, but it was also a song of empowerment for black women. With white women growing increasingly more autonomous, black women needed a call that demanded respected for their bodies and existence. Not only amongst white people, black women need respect from their own African American community. Music was a liberating strategy for black women to resist racist institutions and sexism.


              Music continues to fuel the resistance struggle among black folk today. Memphis is still producing extraordinary music that liberates black bodies from the confines of racism. Hip-hop artist and social activist, Marco Pavè has created music that speaks to the black struggle and pride in Memphis. In the song Black Tux, Pavè raps “Ignorance that was said. Trying to get in my head. Murders of the dream, leaving inspirations dead. That go deeper than my rap dog. I’m from a city where they killed Dr. King to make us all fall.” His lyrics speak to the continuous black struggle in Memphis, leaving the mark of racism after the death of Dr. King. However, Pavè raps in the chorus “Seem to keep us down, but this crown. No, we racing.” Although, racist institutions persist in Memphis, black people are still creating and being empowered. The use of music in black resistance was and still is a recurring theme in the motivation for black folk. From the blues to hip hop, black people are making music that speaks to the black experience and their resilience.

Source: Hunter, Marcus, and Zandria Robinson. Chocolate Cities: The Black Map of American Life. University of California Press, 2018.

3 comments:

  1. This post is very informative; the modern everyday resistance should have more light shed upon it.
    However, I think that it’s important to note that racism is still present in the Memphis music system today, despite all the progress that artists have made. I would argue that when many people think of the Memphis music scene, their immediate thought is of Elvis. Graceland has had well over 20 million visitors in its time open to the public; I personally have never been but it doesn’t seem like there is much homage paid to the influence of the Blues. Couple this with Elvis’ ‘complex’ relationship with black culture, and history continues to be whitewashed.

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  2. This post got me thinking about racial appropriation. I'd like to learn more about the history of black music, its subsequent appropriation by whites (because that's pretty much always what happens, right?), and the ways in which black music styles evolved to once again reclaim independence from white pop culture.

    Speaking of appropriation, we generally assume that integration is always a net positive. But would white people integrating into black spaces be a good thing? I'm pretty sure that the end result of white bodies moving into black spaces is almost always gentrification. Maybe there's some way of regulating the movement of white bodies within black cultural spaces?

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  3. Music has often been used as a form of subversion, as it is subtler and harder to control than other forms of expression. I think these attributes are part of what made music so popular as a medium for black artists

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