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Black Radio is an album by Robert Glasper, recorded with his electric quartet, the Robert Glasper Experiment.Released on February 28, 2012, on the Blue Note label, the album won Best R&B Album at the 55th Grammy Awards and also received a nomination for Best R&B Performance from the album cut "Gonna Be Alright (F.T.B.)", which featured R&B singer Ledisi, in February 2013.
Black Radio 3 (stylized as BLACK RADIO III) is an album by American musician Robert Glasper. It was released on February 25, 2022, via Loma Vista Recordings , serving as the follow-ups to 2012's Black Radio and 2013's Black Radio 2 .
Black Radio 2 is the sixth studio album by American musician Robert Glasper.It was released on October 29, 2013 via Blue Note Records as the sequel to the Robert Glasper Experiment's 2012 Black Radio marking his second album with the band.
Glasper's breakout album, Black Radio (2012), peaked at number 15 on the Billboard 200 chart and won Best R&B Album at 55th Annual Grammy Awards. The following year, he released its sequel, Black Radio 2. In 2015, he played keyboards on Kendrick Lamar's album To Pimp a Butterfly, and appeared on the soundtrack for the 2015 drama film Miles Ahead.
The show itself acknowledged the fandom name by having the titular character refer to his in-universe fans using the same name in an almost fourth-wall-breaking comment in Season 03 Episode 02. [244] [245] Lucy: Wal wal Music group The sound of a puppy barking, this continues the theme they began by naming their band after a dog. [246] Luke Black
Sidney Miller III was born in 1980 in Los Angeles to two music trade magazine founders, Sidney Miller Jr. [4] and Susan Miller; they started publishing Black Radio Exclusive, popularly known as BRE Magazine in 1976. [5] Miller attended the Brentwood School in Brentwood, California, graduating in 1998. [6] He then went to college at University ...
Jack Leroy Cooper (September 18, 1888 – January 12, 1970) was the first African-American radio disc jockey, [1] [2] [3] described as "the undisputed patriarch of black radio in the United States." [ 4 ] In 2012, he was inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame .
The idea was to create The All-Negro Hour, a radio program specifically for black audiences by black creators and performers. [2] Silverstein was the only station owner that took interest in his show and agreed to air it on November 3, 1929. [2] The show featured exclusively black guests, performers, actors, musicians, and comedians. [6]