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  2. Music and Black liberation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_and_Black_liberation

    There were many musical artists who added their voice to those who sang the slave songs of the past, and many of those slave songs were the inspiration for these musical artists. Music provided a rhetorical outlet that allowed movement leaders and supporters, such as Aretha Franklin, to garner support from a large audience with diverse ...

  3. Chappell Roan blasted the music industry at the Grammys. It ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/chappell-roan-blasted...

    When Chappell Roan accepted the award for Best New Artist at the 2025 Grammys on Feb. 2, she seized the opportunity to urge “the most powerful people in music” to give artists a livable wage ...

  4. Protest songs in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protest_songs_in_the...

    After the death of Michael Brown, Black Lives Matter has become a widely known social movement. [78] Artist have begun creating songs in support of Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality. A primary protest slogan of Black Lives Matter is "I can't breathe" following the death of Eric Garner. These were Garner's last words before he died. [79]

  5. Hip-hop culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip-hop_culture

    In the early-to-mid 1980s, there wasn't an established hip hop music industry, as exists in the 2020s, with record labels, record producers, managers and Artists and Repertoire staff. Politicians and businesspeople maligned and ignored the hip hop movement. Most hip hop artists performed in their local communities and recorded in underground ...

  6. Music sparked the nation's largest farmworker movement, civil ...

    www.aol.com/news/music-sparked-nations-largest...

    Dolores Huerta, one of the most influential labor activists in the 20th century, attests that music was a crucial spark in America's largest farmworker movement. “So much of the music from that ...

  7. Outlaw country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outlaw_country

    Outlaw country [2] is a subgenre of American country music created by a small group of artists active in the 1970s and early 1980s, known collectively as the outlaw movement, who fought for and won their creative freedom outside of the Nashville establishment that dictated the sound of most country music of the era.

  8. Bebop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bebop

    Bebop or bop is a style of jazz developed in the early to mid-1940s in the United States. The style features compositions characterized by a fast tempo (usually exceeding 200 bpm), complex chord progressions with rapid chord changes and numerous changes of key, instrumental virtuosity, and improvisation based on a combination of harmonic structure, the use of scales, and occasional references ...

  9. American realism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_realism

    George Bellows, Dempsey and Firpo (1924), Whitney Museum of American Art George Bellows, New York (1911) Ashcan school artists and friends at John French Sloan's Philadelphia Studio, 1898. American realism was a movement in art, music and literature that depicted contemporary social realities and the lives and everyday activities of ordinary ...