Carlos Santana is making the news rounds today, following comments regarding Adele‘s victory at the 59th Grammy Awards this week. Santana told AAP that he thought that Adele won “because she can sing, sing.” He continued, saying “with all respect to our sister Beyoncé, Beyoncé is very beautiful to look at, and it’s more like modelling kind of music – music to model a dress – she’s not a singer, singer, with all respect to her.”
You’re reading this on a niche music website, so it’s safe to assume you’re aware that Adele’s 25 beat out Lemonade, as well as albums from Drake, Justin Bieber and Sturgill Simpson for Best Album. People have criticised the Academy for giving the prize to Adele in the same way the criticised the Academy for choosing Taylor Swift over Kendrick Lamar last year; we don’t need to spell it out for you.
During her speech, Adele spoke about her struggles with being an artist and mother, and noted that she felt as if a part of her had returned. She went on to basically lament her own win, though. “I can’t possibly accept this award. And I’m very humbled and I’m very grateful and gracious. But my artist of my life is Beyoncé. And this album to me, the Lemonade album, is just so monumental. Beyoncé, it’s so monumental. And so well thought out, and so beautiful and soul-baring and we all got to see another side to you that you don’t always let us see. And we appreciate that. And all us artists here adore you. You are our light.”
https://twitter.com/barkerrant/status/831011289048584192?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
Her comments were part of what became an inevitable debate over whether Adele “deserved to win” over Beyoncé, with many noting that, while her album sold a helluva lot more albums than Beyoncé, it didn’t hold the same cultural, political or even artistic relevance and ferocity that made Lemonade so great. 25 didn’t really top many critic polls, while Lemonade topped, or near-topped most. Many celebrities chimed in too, as they did when Kendrick lost to Swift (and when he lost to Daft Punk in 2014). Many points were brought up on both sides of the argument, from sales-based reasons to the more sinister race-based ones. The more radical Beyhive members went so far as to slam Adele for being untalented. And so on.
In some ways, Santana’s comments were correct. While not expressed terribly well, the core idea that Adele is primarily a singer and Beyoncé is primarily a performer makes sense in that Beyoncé’s shtick travels far, far further than simply singing; her output focuses as heavily on the visual aspect, including the full-length Lemonade visual album, her monumental live performances, outfits and so on. Adele, meanwhile, is fairly bells-and-whistles free, on stage and on record. Santana praises both artists, but he also wildly misses the point.
Santana’s argument implied that the Grammy voters viewed Beyoncé is less naturally talented than Adele, because she incorporates the “model”-like bells and whistles. He implies that Adele’s victory was solely because she is a fantastic singer. But this sets up a double standard. Everyone was quick to clamour that artistry matters more than commercial success when Beck beat out Beyoncé for Album of the Year in 2015, but when Taylor Swift won with 1989 over To Pimp A Butterfly? Crickets.
To say that it’s just talent is both blind and naive. While it’s easy to take each award as it comes, a quick look at past winners highlights some worrying trends. A black woman hasn’t won Album of the Year since 1999, and a black artist – of which there have only ever been ten winners – hasn’t won since 2008 (and it was a Joni Mitchell cover album). Paul McCartney has more Album of the Year Grammys than every woman of colour combined. I could go on.
This whole affair smells strongly with the #OscarsSoWhite controversy, albeit with a lot less insufferable thinkpieces being written about them (and yes I am aware of the irony of stating this in my own insufferable thinkpiece). Both major academy awards appear to have a problem with diversity. The Grammys have been whiter than the Republican Party in a snowstorm for ever, and it’s only been in the last few years that people have begun to notice.
But as the debate barges its way to the forefront of the popular consciousness for another year, we need to be wary not to turn it into #GrammysSoWhite. Not that the campaign was a bad cause or anything, just that it, along with Santana’s comments, kind of missed the point. As Vince Mancini‘s fantastic article about the #OscarsSoWhite controversy addresses, the issue is not with the awards. It’s with The Academy.
To pinpoint the problem with why racial minorities (particularly black artists) are so under-represented in the awards, you have to look behind the curtain. The Grammy winners aren’t chosen by a mystical and omnipotent being who knows all music and decides on the objectively best one. No, the winners of the awards are chosen by a little organisation called The Recording Academy. And it’s here where the real problems begin to appear. The problem is with the voters.
Well, not the voters individually, but rather the voters as a whole. If we take a literal black and white approach to the situation and group the majority of mainstream music that gets Grammy recognition into “black music” and “white music,” and then apply this to the tastes of many people in positions of power in the music industry… well let’s just say it doesn’t look good for “black music.” This is, of course, ignoring a massive amount of people whose tastes aren’t what you would expect just looking at them (I’m a white guy typing to Migos at the moment, so sue me), but the broad sentiment remains. Not every voter knows about artists who don’t fit in line with their natural music tastes. Side note, does anyone know who Sturgill Simpson is? Asking for a friend.
The Recording Academy has never publicly released the statistics for the demographics of their members, but they do allow anyone with 12 credits on digital tracks or six credits on physical tracks to join their ranks (and subsequently vote). And as with many power structures (especially in the arts scene), there is a massive block of ageing white baby-boomers. Why is the voting block going to be filled with massive amounts of old white guys? Because most people who are 1) interested in being a part of The Academy and 2) have that many credits are generally from the artists from the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s, when black culture wasn’t exactly as mainstream in the media as it is today. Hopefully The Recording Academy isn’t as lily-white as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (the people who run the Oscars), who are sitting pretty with 94% white voting members. However, it’s unlikely that such results would occur and so many black artists would be snubbed if The Recording Academy did not echo – at least in part – the demographics of Oscars’ voting panel.
But does all of this actually mean that The Recording Academy – and subsequently, The Grammys – are racist? Not necessarily. In an article penned in 2014, Rob Kenner explained what it was like being a voter for The Grammys. For starters, he notes that not every voter knows every artist (although you’d have to be living under a rock to have never heard of Beyoncé). Voters are only supposed to vote in their fields of expertise, but everyone can cast a maximum of nine ballots for nominations. In addition, every member receives a vote each for Record of the Year, Album of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best New Artist. Kenner gets to the bottom line: most of the nominations are chosen by people who have very little experience or knowledge in the field. The actual voting is worse, with members being able to vote in up to 20 categories, plus the general four.
Secondly, and where the root of the problem most likely is (especially in regard to the general four categories), is that the demographics – and subsequently the tastes – of the voters aren’t representative of the wider population. Beyoncé didn’t win for a myriad of different reasons, but the baseline issue is this: she didn’t get enough votes. Duh, I hear you say, but she didn’t get enough votes because the most of the voters prefer Adele’s music over hers, and that is because Adele’s music is (to return to a previous grouping) “white music” and Beyoncé’s is “black music.”
So the system is a mess, that much is clear. But is it racist? Or at least, as racist as people are quick to claim? Well, kinda. Does not liking or being familiar with the music of an artist who has been nominated make a voter racist? No. As Vince puts it, being unaware of a particular artist doesn’t make someone racist. But is stacking the room in with primarily people who know and like “white music” over “black music” racist? Yep. The reason many voters are either unaware of or don’t like a black artist is more likely to be that the industry is, or at least used to be, fundamentally white-leaning.
Commercially successful albums are by and large less confronting and more accessible than those which might really say something, cause controversy, or at least comment on the world. This is why Macklemore and Ryan Lewis beat out Kendrick to win Best Rap Album, and why To Pimp A Butterfly, which has categorically been considered one of the most important albums in decades, lost out to 1989. Is it a race issue? Yes, but the problem doesn’t lie solely in the hands of the awards. Basically, don’t blame the awards: blame the industry that has historically kept black people under-represented in the circles that decide the winners.
So resist the urge to start tweeting #GrammysSoWhite. Resist the urge to tell people who think that Adele was justified in winning Album of the Year that they’re racist. Saying that the The Recording Academy is the root of the issue may seem like a simple statement, but it’s an important distinction to make. It’s the difference between a racial issue out of malice and a racial issue out of sheer ineptitude.
Image: Women’s Health
If you need any more proof that there really are great role models within the music industry, this is it.
Time’s list of the Top 100 Most Influential People for this year has been released with plenty of artists joining the ranks.
Among them were Kendrick Lamar, Adele, Nicki Minaj, Ariana Grande and Hamilton composer Lin-Manuel Miranda. Each person had a mini-essay written about them by another important person in society, honouring them with some words about their personal impact and their overall influence.
Below are extracts from a few examples.
Activist Alicia Garza spoke about Lamar in ways that speak on behalf of many of us:
“The first time I heard To Pimp a Butterfly was on a crowded plane heading to Jackson, Miss. With headphones on, there I was, bobbing my head and having audible conversations with myself because that album made me feel—moved and troubled, challenged, uplifted, angry, skeptical and raw. Far from creating “conscious rap,” Kendrick Lamar has evolved a new genre of movement music that asserts no answers but raises hard questions and brings us together to take them on.”
Lil Wayne wrote these words of admiration for Minaj:
“She’s reached far beyond everything I would have imagined. Man, she’s so influential and doing all the right things. She’s an icon, a boss and a role model to all these young girls out here on how to do it the right way. Her work ethic speaks volumes and has yielded these results. The scary thing is she’s still going. Ha!”
While actress Jennifer Lawrence poured her heart out for Adele:
“Growing up. Changing in some ways and being stuck forever in others. Being so young with the most successful career in the world. She says, “I wish I could live a little more, look up to the sky, not just the floor.” The way she is able to capture herself, and then in turn us, has turned her into a star that’s not a star we look at, but a giant star with its own gravity that we are drawn to. All of this about her lyrics, and I haven’t even gotten started on the voice—how could I? It’s once-in-a-lifetime. All this about her voice and I won’t have time to talk about her intelligence. Her 500-year-old wisdom. Her patience and kindness all wrapped up in the tough skin of a damn gangster.”
See the full list of the Most Influential People on Time’s website.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRK7PVJFbS8
Image: Danielle Hansen
Hello singer and pop icon Adele has been announced as the headline act for this year’s Glastonbury Festival. Perhaps a safer bet than last year’s headliner, Kanye West, the announcement has already drawn criticism.
I’m not exactly sure who in their right mind would think Adele is too “boring” to headline the massive festival, but the singer addressed those people after announcing a recent gig at her London show at O2 Arena.
“I wanted to do it last year but my record wasn’t ready. And to the people who say I am too boring to headline, you’re more fucking boring for moaning about me headlining.”
If you are one of these people, please go and watch her SNL performance from last November. You can’t deny her glorious stage presence.
It seems that the tides have changed, considering that last year she commented that she’d be too afraid to headline such a big event. “The crowds are too big – I don’t know if I could do it,” she stated. “I went this year to watch Kanye and I literally just crapped my pants on the size of the audience. It was pretty insane.”
She has mentioned her anxiety in regards to performing in an interview with Q Magazine back in 2011, saying “I will not do festivals. The thought of an audience that big frightens the life out of me. I don’t think the music would work either. It’s all too slow.”
“I’d hate to book a festival and have a fucking anxiety attack and then not go on stage, do you know what I mean?” she continued.
Fortunately, she soon realised she’s Adele, confidently made the decision to slay the stage on Saturday. Friday and Sunday will be occupied by other headliners Muse and Coldplay.
We are still waiting on the rest of the lineup to be confirmed, but we do know that PJ Harvey and Jeff Lynne’s ELO will make an appearance, as will David Bowie in the form of an archive video of his 2000 headlining set, which featured the performance of Heroes shown below.
More details on the lineup are soon to come. Catch the festival on the final weekend in June (22-26) in Pilton, England.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZUr5cFqqxw
Image: Billboard
The BRIT Awards, Britain’s biggest pop music award ceremony, has blown everyone away once again. Adele came away as the talk of the show, winning four awards including the Global Success Award and Best British Female, where she publicly voiced her support for Kesha. If it wasn’t for One Direction‘s music video win, Adele could have become the most awarded artist in a single Brit Awards ceremony.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMGr3N6KoTQ]
Above: Adele Wins Global Success Award
Performing their single Hymn For The Weekend, the ceremony was opened by Coldplay, who later went on to win best British group, making them the most successful band in the award’s history.
Rihanna soon came out performing two tracks from her latest album ANTI. She first performed Consideration with the help of the wonderful SZA, before smoothly transitioning to her newest single Work, during which the track’s featured guest, Drake, graced the stage to make this one steamy performance echoing their recent music video.
[vimeo 156616730 w=574 h=320]
The BRIT Awards also gave special tribute to the late, great David Bowie. Bowie’s band delivered a gorgeous medley of some of his most famous tunes, including Space Oddity, Rebel Rebel, Let’s Dance, Ziggy Stardust, Under Pressure and Heroes before Lorde took to the stage for a stunning and emotional performance of Life on Mars, in a tribute far more beautiful and real than Lady Gaga’s clunky tribute at the Grammys. Later on, the Icon Award was awarded to the man himself.
Other notable performances included The Weeknd singing The Hills, Justin Bieber with James Bay and of course Adele singing When We Were Young.
The international awards showcased talent from all around the world, with Justin Bieber and Icelandic singer Björk taking the solo awards and Perth Psych-Rock band Tame Impala taking their first Brit award for international group.
Favourite moment tonight….freakin @tameimpala winning best international act!!!
— Mark Ronson (@MarkRonson) February 24, 2016
https://twitter.com/brits/status/702595566417514496?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
Watch the whole ceremony in it’s entirety here.
Full List of Winners for the night included:
British Male: James Bay
British Female: Adele
British Group: Coldplay
British Breakthrough: Catfish and the Bottlemen
British Producer: Charlie Andrew
British Single: Adele
British Album: Adele
British Video: One Direction
International Male: Justin Bieber
International Female: Björk
International Group: Tame Impala
Critics Choice: Jack Garratt
Global Success: Adele
Image: The Brit Awards/YouTube
The loudmouthed, large lunged songstress Adele made headlines for all sorts of reasons last year, with her comeback album 25. And of course, the lead single Hello with its accompanying video. But while Adele was smashing records, and record sales, and we were all having a good laugh as she hung up on poor old Lionel Richie, college students in Oklahoma, US, looked on with concern.
The University of Oklahoma’s Gender + Equality Centre have flagged a Hello lyric as potentially normalising stalking behaviour. Utilising the line “I must have called a thousand times” as part of a poster campaign, Gender + Equality Centre director Kathy Moxley commented that, “The music examples were used to demonstrate how aspects of popular media could be interpreted to normalize unhealthy relationship behaviors”.
The posters were produced by a student group to promote “Stalking Awareness Month”, featuring lyrics from artists including Adele and Maroon 5. The sentiment of the words taken from Maroon 5’s Animals is admittedly somewhat more aggressive; “Baby I’m preying on you tonight, hunt you down, eat you alive”. But, realistically, I think we can make allowances for poetic license at play given the title.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQHsXMglC9A]
Moxley was quick to clarify that the posters were not intended as criticisms of artists, nor of their songs, but as examples of how music can desensitise audiences to certain issues. However, I can’t help but feel that these students fall a little short in their research. The Police’s Every Breath You Take is universally recognised as a great love song, despite having intensely creepy, and most definitely stalker promoting, lyrics. And not forgetting Andy, You’re A Star by The Killers – by those standards, Adele’s phone number isn’t even worth blocking.
Admittedly, I’m making light of this – personally I feel that maybe whoever it was old Adele was trying to call, should maybe have had the decency to pick up. And I would be more inclined to haul in Adam Levine on assault charges given his cited intentions. But seriously, the concerns that music can influence, and normalise unacceptable behaviours, are really quite real and reach back over decades. But to pin up such mild examples, when songs like Blurred Lines are topping charts? Clubs have been heaving to Sexy Bitch? And Rick Ross’s idea of a love story is “Put Molly all in her champagne, she ain’t even know it/ I took her home and I enjoyed that, she ain’t even know it”? Now that isn’t funny.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ78AlHYXc8]
Image via Stage Door
If you’re an Adele fan, maybe you should consider making your way to a tory fundraiser.
The British conservative political party held their annual ‘Black and White Party’ in central London with tickets to see Adele in concert amongst the prizes up for auction.
According to The Guardian, twenty tickets were auctioned off at the event, eventually raking in a 30,000 pound return, coming to roughly 1500 pounds each.
It was an awkward present to auction off, given that The Independent reported that she had in fact confessed that she was a “labor girl.”
It’s not the first time that Adele has had her brand used for political purposes.
Last month U.S presidential candidate Mike Huckabee parodied the pop star in this piece of cyber web rubbish to try to win over the minds of the more easily amused voters.
More recently the singer banned US presidential candidate and walking meme Donald Trump from using her music at his rallies.
In a statement by her management team after Trump used Rolling In The Deep at political events, it was noted that “Adele has not given permission for any of her music to be used for any political campaigning.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYEDA3JcQqw
Adele is yet to comment on the scalping of her tickets by the British conservatives.
Image: Facebook
Adele has released a statement through her spokesperson denouncing Donald Trump’s use of her songs to amp up the crowd at his gathering-of-the-racists rallies.
The Republican, whom the world dreads may one day be president, has been using Adele’s tracks Rolling in the Deep and Skyfall. However, Adele’s rep has gone on record for The Independent saying that: “Adele has not given permission for her music to be used for any political campaigning.”
It is a fairly welcome trend amongst musicians to not allow their songs to be used for the purpose of whipping up a roomful of mouth-frothing bigots into a frenzy. Last year, Frankie Sullivan, co-writer of Eye of the Tiger, slammed the use of the hit song to introduce well documented homophobe, Kim Davis, at another presidential hopeful’s idiot gathering.
Donald Trump has also been called out by other artists for using their music. Aerosmith frontman Steve Tyler has asked for Dream On to not be used in any of Donald Trump’s events, and perhaps most notably REM frontman, Michael Stipe, released a statement after the bands song, It’s the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine), was used without a hint of irony during Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, stating: “Go fuck yourselves, the lot of you – you sad, attention-grabbing, power-hungry little men. Do not use our music or my voice for your moronic charade of a campaign.”
Donald Trump will most likely cry some tears into his unconvincing hair piece after hearing the news, being a self-confessed fan of the Hello singer, and attending her concert in New York City last year.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYEDA3JcQqw]
American politics continues to feel like a terrible Chuck Lorre produced sitcom. Now, Former Arkansas Governor and current Presidential Candidate Mike Huckabee released a campaign video which parodies hit Adele song, Hello.
The parody was posted on Huckabee’s YouTube channel last Wednesday. Over a karaoke version of the original song, a female vocalist sings about Iowa’s idiosyncrasies, ahead of its crucial caucus vote next week. “Hello, Sioux City,” she croons, as we see Huckabee attempting to emulate Adele’s stoic expression. “Your Woodbury County Supper Club has quite a cute baby / Try the pork chops / baked beans / Just as good as Pizza Ranch and La Mars ice cream.”
After addressing the state’s “arctic blasts and sub-zero chills,” the singer takes a shot at fellow presidential candidate Hilary Clinton, singing, “there’s just no difference between Obama and Hillary,” with a shot of Clinton dancing on The Ellen Show. It seems, however, that Clinton winning isn’t the worst of Huckabee’s fears, with the admission, “If Bernie wins, I’m gonna die.”
Over all, this video is pretty uncomfortable and I can’t help but think that it’s a really pretty desperate play at appealing to a more modern demographic. With that said, American politics never cease to amaze and entertain, perhaps Tony Abbott should have released a parody of his own.
Mike Huckabee is currently polling at an average of 2.2% in Iowa, putting him in eighth place.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TG_pEGVpQfc
By now, chances are you’re one of the 24 million people who have viewed Adele‘s Carpool Karaoke, a new episode of the celebrity segment on The Late Late Show With James Corden, which has previously featured Justin Bieber, Stevie Wonder and more. Not only did the segment prove that Adele is one of the funniest, most down-to-earth superstars around, but it sure as hell shows that she can spit a bar or two.
Among singing her own songs and a brilliant rendition of the Spice Girls’ Wannabe, the Hello singer rapped Nicki Minaj‘s insane verse on Kanye West‘s 2010 track Monster, from one of, if not his best album to date, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.
The video has proved so influential that the original track, which also featured Rick Ross, Bon Iver and Jay-Z, has actually shot back up into the iTunes hip-hop top ten, five years after it first came out.
Nicki Minaj herself responded to the rendition:
https://twitter.com/NICKIMINAJ/status/687524031046750208
While the song is climbing the hip-hop charts, it has not yet reached the main chart’s top 100. The top spot is currently owned by Bieber’s Love Yourself, while, awesomely, more than twenty tracks on the top 100 are by the late great Starman, David Bowie.
It’s amazing to consider how influential one fifteen-minute video segment can be on audiences and charts!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ona42jz8w0k
While Drake and Bieber dominated the headlines for 2015, it was pop superstar Adele who took home the gold. The UK artist made a welcome comeback with her long-awaited album 25 last year, and it’s now been confirmed that it was the highest selling artist of the entire year. The Official Charts tally counts any album released after March 25, so this is a particularly impressive feat considering the album was only released in November.
25 has sold close to 2.5 million copies since its release. In second and third place respectively is Ed Sheeran‘s X and Sam Smith‘s In The Lonely Hour, both of which actually came out in 2014. Rounding off the top five were If I Can Dream by Elvis Presley, and of course, Justin Bieber‘s Purpose.
Adele’s album has dominated all manner of records, coming in as the biggest chart-topping album in UK chart history, selling more than 800 000 copies in its first week. It also surpassed one million sales after only ten days, and two million after 29, both of which are record-smashing numbers.
Interestingly, it was also one of only three albums to go platinum in 2015, following Purpose and Drake’s If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late.
Here’s the top five in numbers:
1. Adele, 25: 2 496 000
2. Ed Sheeran, X: 971 000
3. Sam Smith, In The Lonely Hour: 893 000
4. Elvis Presley, If I Can Dream: 881 000
5. Justin Bieber, Purpose: 645 000
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQHsXMglC9A
Image: GoodThingsGuy