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Reply #60 posted 03/11/18 3:11pm

lastdecember

avatar

MotownSubdivision said:

lastdecember said:

I have said it before and I will say it again, these times, are more polarized people are MORE in a box and labelled then ever before. You are this and that because of this, you think there ever can be a stage where you have a Hall and Oates, Kool and the Gang, Lionel Richie, Earth Wind and Fire and Fleetwood mac and Chicago all sharing a stage?? or the same damn radio station? NO NO WAY in hell, i am tired of hearing how "oh these times, changes, this and that" I see us going backwards not forwards in most respects.

If you watch/listen to the Breakfast Club, Charlemagne tha God said that people today would never let Malcolm Little become Malcolm X, choosing to pick apart his past and other irrelevant details about him instead of allowing the man to decide his own future as he did.

That goes hand in hand with music today. With how touchy everybody has been allowed to be, nobody would be allowed to grow or change or create as they themselves are led too. Hall & Oates probably would've never gotten another video played on MTV after the first outcry of them "appropriating" R&B music. Kool & the Gang would've gotten slagged even more by black audiences for daring to make pop music.

It's one step forward and two steps back.

As Daryl Hall said "People sometimes call us blue eyed soul, to us that is pretty racist thing to say" and he is right. They are just two musicians who grew up in Phillie and that was what they were into, tired of the damn labels. This generation between it PC culture and then OUTRAGE machines or should i say FAKE outrage machines, people jumping on everything people say and do and then share and post it all over Social Media like the world is supposed to give a shit, we are quickly becoming a culture that has two personas, what they are in person and the person they are online, its like we all have a PR management firm working for us. Hopefully this will change though i really dont see it happening anytime soon because people LIVE for LIKES and CLICKS and SHARES and VIEWS and they will get them however they must.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #61 posted 03/11/18 3:22pm

Scorp

Regardless of our race or nationality, by creating something authentic, that person can be a contributor in leading music to the future and a new era of creativty that stands on its on rather than being celebrated for interpolating past works

It may be more of a challenge but in the end more rewarding

Ill never stop believing this
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Reply #62 posted 03/11/18 4:22pm

ThatWhiteDude

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So are people saying that Bruno Mars shouldn't do the music he loves? neutral Like do we really want to start to say who's allowed to do R 'n B, Pop, Rock, Jazz etc. and who's not? I mean, this is ridiculous people should be allowed to do the music they love, not the music they're forced to do.

The people who are hatin on artists like Bruno Mars, Eminem, George Michael and all the other none black artists, should focus on the real issue, and that is the industry and their biased promotions. Yes, THEY don't want black music from black people, THEY don't promote their black artists like they do with none black artists. If you really want to rant, rant on the real problem, not on single artists who just love the music they make.

And seriously, guys, there is literally no artist today who brings something new and original to the tabel, wether they be black or none black. Everybody's stealing from the inventors, no one is original these days and those who are, don't get the promotion they deserve. And by the way, the people who complain about Bruno Mars etc, could help those artists. But they choose to go on a rant on Bruno Mars, so they might be blind and can't see all these other artists, black artists, that could benefit from people like those from the GrapeVine.

Use your blogs, YouTube channels, whatever you got, to promote them. Don't just hate and sit on your ass while doing it, this won't solve the issue. Everybody can talk the talk, but can you walk the walk?

Oh and Sensei, in case you're reading this, if you accuse Bruno Mars of Cultural Apropriation, you shouldn't go by that name tho, hypos gonna crite, right? lol

[Edited 3/11/18 16:29pm]

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Reply #63 posted 03/11/18 4:23pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

lastdecember said:



MotownSubdivision said:




lastdecember said:


I have said it before and I will say it again, these times, are more polarized people are MORE in a box and labelled then ever before. You are this and that because of this, you think there ever can be a stage where you have a Hall and Oates, Kool and the Gang, Lionel Richie, Earth Wind and Fire and Fleetwood mac and Chicago all sharing a stage?? or the same damn radio station? NO NO WAY in hell, i am tired of hearing how "oh these times, changes, this and that" I see us going backwards not forwards in most respects.



If you watch/listen to the Breakfast Club, Charlemagne tha God said that people today would never let Malcolm Little become Malcolm X, choosing to pick apart his past and other irrelevant details about him instead of allowing the man to decide his own future as he did.



That goes hand in hand with music today. With how touchy everybody has been allowed to be, nobody would be allowed to grow or change or create as they themselves are led too. Hall & Oates probably would've never gotten another video played on MTV after the first outcry of them "appropriating" R&B music. Kool & the Gang would've gotten slagged even more by black audiences for daring to make pop music.



It's one step forward and two steps back.




As Daryl Hall said "People sometimes call us blue eyed soul, to us that is pretty racist thing to say" and he is right. They are just two musicians who grew up in Phillie and that was what they were into, tired of the damn labels. This generation between it PC culture and then OUTRAGE machines or should i say FAKE outrage machines, people jumping on everything people say and do and then share and post it all over Social Media like the world is supposed to give a shit, we are quickly becoming a culture that has two personas, what they are in person and the person they are online, its like we all have a PR management firm working for us. Hopefully this will change though i really dont see it happening anytime soon because people LIVE for LIKES and CLICKS and SHARES and VIEWS and they will get them however they must.

"Blue eyed soul" extends further back than Hall & Oates. Boz Scaggs, Average White Band, Joe Cocker, Bobby Caldwell, The Doobie Brothers/Michael McDonald, all examples of such a label and unlike their successors today could actually be mistaken as black and still be thought of as such even after being revealed as white. It's become a meme just a month or so ago that a white man in Bobby Caldwell is the singer behind "What You Won't Do For Love"; 40 years after the song came out in the internet age millions of people are just finding out and trying to accept the fact that this dude is white. If that man came about today, he'd be one of the names in the conversation for exploiting black culture instead of celebrated for being such a legitimate soulful singer. Much more than the likes of Sam Smith and Adele, two singers with a soulful essence but not full on SOUL.

I'm just baffled at how Bruno who is a minority with even less representation in the industry than black people who loves the music he makes is getting criticized instead of actual culture vultures who make money off of what we made and discard it or downplay when it's convenient like Post Malone, Miley Cyrus and that walking minstrel show Iggy Azalea or even suspect people like JT (who people are just NOW turning against). The internet makes things seem bigger than they actually are and as RJ said, the internet has just given people a platform to voice opinions that weren't able to be voiced on such a level before but it's basically become a manhunt without a cause and as usual, whatever actual changes are desired never take place.
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Reply #64 posted 03/11/18 6:12pm

Scorp

MotownSubdivision said:

lastdecember said:

As Daryl Hall said "People sometimes call us blue eyed soul, to us that is pretty racist thing to say" and he is right. They are just two musicians who grew up in Phillie and that was what they were into, tired of the damn labels. This generation between it PC culture and then OUTRAGE machines or should i say FAKE outrage machines, people jumping on everything people say and do and then share and post it all over Social Media like the world is supposed to give a shit, we are quickly becoming a culture that has two personas, what they are in person and the person they are online, its like we all have a PR management firm working for us. Hopefully this will change though i really dont see it happening anytime soon because people LIVE for LIKES and CLICKS and SHARES and VIEWS and they will get them however they must.

"Blue eyed soul" extends further back than Hall & Oates. Boz Scaggs, Average White Band, Joe Cocker, Bobby Caldwell, The Doobie Brothers/Michael McDonald, all examples of such a label and unlike their successors today could actually be mistaken as black and still be thought of as such even after being revealed as white. It's become a meme just a month or so ago that a white man in Bobby Caldwell is the singer behind "What You Won't Do For Love"; 40 years after the song came out in the internet age millions of people are just finding out and trying to accept the fact that this dude is white. If that man came about today, he'd be one of the names in the conversation for exploiting black culture instead of celebrated for being such a legitimate soulful singer. Much more than the likes of Sam Smith and Adele, two singers with a soulful essence but not full on SOUL. I'm just baffled at how Bruno who is a minority with even less representation in the industry than black people who loves the music he makes is getting criticized instead of actual culture vultures who make money off of what we made and discard it or downplay when it's convenient like Post Malone, Miley Cyrus and that walking minstrel show Iggy Azalea or even suspect people like JT (who people are just NOW turning against). The internet makes things seem bigger than they actually are and as RJ said, the internet has just given people a platform to voice opinions that weren't able to be voiced on such a level before but it's basically become a manhunt without a cause and as usual, whatever actual changes are desired never take place.

I don't recall those artists interpolating past music......that's the difference....that's the key

I believe this with everything....in the future, if there's a music industry left to follow, if there was a person to come to the forefront, whoever that person maybe culturally, if that person was to truly move forward and create his own/her own music with authenticity......that person will go down in history as changing the industry for the better and encourage others to do the same......all we need is one person to do this and others will follow that example......there's no doubt in my mind that would be the case

the new genres will originated as a result....

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Reply #65 posted 03/11/18 6:17pm

ChocolateBox31
21

avatar

MotownSubdivision said:

ChocolateBox3121 said:

Oh yea!? The Apollo CBS special when he went to the hood in New York to give away free tickets to his performance? That was a prime example of "cultural appropriation". That was so fake to me. Knowing he would have NEVER step foot in that hood or EVER even been there in any other circumstance. He was trying to get his honorary "black card".

But I agree that performance was AMAZING! He knows how to keep peoples attention in the urban communities with his well rehearsed stage show. Plus has them ALL fooled into thinking he's black with his new afro. rolleyes

Ignant

Are U referring to yourself? Because you're most definitely not calling me that.

"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when eye was doing the Purple Rain tour eye had a lot of people who eye knew eye'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream."prince
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Reply #66 posted 03/11/18 6:43pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

ChocolateBox3121 said:



MotownSubdivision said:




ChocolateBox3121 said:



Oh yea!? The Apollo CBS special when he went to the hood in New York to give away free tickets to his performance? That was a prime example of "cultural appropriation". That was so fake to me. Knowing he would have NEVER step foot in that hood or EVER even been there in any other circumstance. He was trying to get his honorary "black card".



But I agree that performance was AMAZING! He knows how to keep peoples attention in the urban communities with his well rehearsed stage show. Plus has them ALL fooled into thinking he's black with his new afro. rolleyes



Ignant



Are U referring to yourself? Because you're most definitely not calling me that.

Your post certainly is.
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Reply #67 posted 03/12/18 8:02am

RJOrion

so are we just gonna all ignore the fact that Stephanie Mills looks AMAZING for a 60 year old woman?...she looks almost exactly the same as she did in 1981. eek
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Reply #68 posted 03/12/18 8:17am

ChocolateBox31
21

avatar

RJOrion said:

so are we just gonna all ignore the fact that Stephanie Mills looks AMAZING for a 60 year old woman?...she looks almost exactly the same as she did in 1981. eek

Doesn't she though?! But U know black don't crack. biggrin

"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when eye was doing the Purple Rain tour eye had a lot of people who eye knew eye'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream."prince
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Reply #69 posted 03/12/18 8:20am

Scorp

Honest question

How many copies has 24K Magic sold as of today and how many copies did Robin Thicke sale for this album Blurred lines?

[Edited 3/12/18 8:28am]

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Reply #70 posted 03/12/18 8:21am

paisleypark4

avatar

Scorp said:

Honest question

How many copies has 24K Magic sold as of today?

Three million worldwide.

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #71 posted 03/12/18 8:28am

paisleypark4

avatar

ChocolateBox3121 said:

214 said:

I don't care, love his music. His november show at The Apollo was nothing short of amazing.

Oh yea!? The Apollo CBS special when he went to the hood in New York to give away free tickets to his performance? That was a prime example of "cultural appropriation". That was so fake to me. Knowing he would have NEVER step foot in that hood or EVER even been there in any other circumstance. He was trying to get his honorary "black card".

But I agree that performance was AMAZING! He knows how to keep peoples attention in the urban communities with his well rehearsed stage show. Plus has them ALL fooled into thinking he's black with his new afro. rolleyes

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/the-park-bruno-mars-used-to-call-home/

Have you seen his 'hood'? He came from some real humble beginnings man, you dont know anything about him obviously.

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #72 posted 03/12/18 8:40am

2020

avatar

Of course he was slammed...these kids today find fault in EVERYTHING

GTFOH WITH THAT BS!

The greatest live performer of our times was is and always will be Prince.

Remember there is only one destination and that place is U
All of it. Everything. Is U.
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Reply #73 posted 03/12/18 8:45am

2freaky4church
1

avatar

We need to put our foot down on this pc shit.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #74 posted 03/12/18 8:48am

illimack

avatar

I love me some Bruno,my kids love them some Bruno....muthafuckas have too much time on their hands. Bruno employs several black people. Muthafuckas need to find something else to be mad at and go sit down somewhere.
**************************************************

Pull ya cell phone out and call yo next of kin...we 'bout to get funky......2,3 come on ya'll
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Reply #75 posted 03/12/18 8:51am

2freaky4church
1

avatar

Jealousy is a mother.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #76 posted 03/12/18 8:51am

ChocolateBox31
21

avatar

paisleypark4 said:

ChocolateBox3121 said:

Oh yea!? The Apollo CBS special when he went to the hood in New York to give away free tickets to his performance? That was a prime example of "cultural appropriation". That was so fake to me. Knowing he would have NEVER step foot in that hood or EVER even been there in any other circumstance. He was trying to get his honorary "black card".

But I agree that performance was AMAZING! He knows how to keep peoples attention in the urban communities with his well rehearsed stage show. Plus has them ALL fooled into thinking he's black with his new afro. rolleyes

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/the-park-bruno-mars-used-to-call-home/

Have you seen his 'hood'? He came from some real humble beginnings man, you dont know anything about him obviously.

thumbs up!

"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when eye was doing the Purple Rain tour eye had a lot of people who eye knew eye'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream."prince
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Reply #77 posted 03/12/18 8:52am

2freaky4church
1

avatar

Why are they complaining when Kendrick and others are making better albums.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #78 posted 03/12/18 8:58am

ThatWhiteDude

avatar

2freaky4church1 said:

Jealousy is a mother.

What kind of mother is she? biggrin

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Reply #79 posted 03/12/18 9:08am

MotownSubdivis
ion

Scorp said:



MotownSubdivision said:


lastdecember said:



As Daryl Hall said "People sometimes call us blue eyed soul, to us that is pretty racist thing to say" and he is right. They are just two musicians who grew up in Phillie and that was what they were into, tired of the damn labels. This generation between it PC culture and then OUTRAGE machines or should i say FAKE outrage machines, people jumping on everything people say and do and then share and post it all over Social Media like the world is supposed to give a shit, we are quickly becoming a culture that has two personas, what they are in person and the person they are online, its like we all have a PR management firm working for us. Hopefully this will change though i really dont see it happening anytime soon because people LIVE for LIKES and CLICKS and SHARES and VIEWS and they will get them however they must.



"Blue eyed soul" extends further back than Hall & Oates. Boz Scaggs, Average White Band, Joe Cocker, Bobby Caldwell, The Doobie Brothers/Michael McDonald, all examples of such a label and unlike their successors today could actually be mistaken as black and still be thought of as such even after being revealed as white. It's become a meme just a month or so ago that a white man in Bobby Caldwell is the singer behind "What You Won't Do For Love"; 40 years after the song came out in the internet age millions of people are just finding out and trying to accept the fact that this dude is white. If that man came about today, he'd be one of the names in the conversation for exploiting black culture instead of celebrated for being such a legitimate soulful singer. Much more than the likes of Sam Smith and Adele, two singers with a soulful essence but not full on SOUL. I'm just baffled at how Bruno who is a minority with even less representation in the industry than black people who loves the music he makes is getting criticized instead of actual culture vultures who make money off of what we made and discard it or downplay when it's convenient like Post Malone, Miley Cyrus and that walking minstrel show Iggy Azalea or even suspect people like JT (who people are just NOW turning against). The internet makes things seem bigger than they actually are and as RJ said, the internet has just given people a platform to voice opinions that weren't able to be voiced on such a level before but it's basically become a manhunt without a cause and as usual, whatever actual changes are desired never take place.



I don't recall those artists interpolating past music.....that's the difference....that's the key



I believe this with everything....in the future, if there's a music industry left to follow, if there was a person to come to the forefront, whoever that person maybe culturally, if that person was to truly move forward and create his own/her own music with authenticity.....that person will go down in history as changing the industry for the better and encourage others to do the same.....all we need is one person to do this and others will follow that example.....there's no doubt in my mind that would be the case



the new genres will originated as a result....

I responded to one of your posts earlier and asked a question I'm about to repeat.

What more can be done to push music forward? Artists are still using synthesizers and drum machines, technology that dates back to the late 70s. How can artists innovate sound at this point (without it being unpleasant to listen to) when the latest music making equipment is around 40 years old? The closest thing to an innovation in sound today is trap music so if all you want is for artists to constantly push boundaries and do something "new', that's as good as it's gonna get.

The aforementioned artists didn't interpolate music of the past because there was no reason too. Music has hit a wall now, a wall that can't be scaled so that's why so many are going back. In the 70s there was still plenty of music to be made; now the well has run dry. It's not like people haven't been wanting old school vibes and sounds back in music so now that we habe someone who is doing that why is it such a bad thing?

Bruno generally gets compared to Lenny Kravitz and it is an apt comparison, however where the line gets drawn between them is the eras of their respective heydays. In the 90s, there was plenty of new, interesting things to listen too. Hip hop was booming, R&B was bopping with a variety of groups and solo singers, rock was still popular and grunge was its newborn child in addition to its older brother metal. Compare that to now where hip hop (on a mainstream level) has grown stagnant, R&B has been assimilated in hip hop, there's not a trace of rock music to speak of and pop music is more one dimensional, shallow and monotonous (in more ways than one) than ever. There's an unsung but widespread nostalgia within people, even in many of the younger people of this generation. Who's going to stand out more doing old school music? Lenny in the fertile and bustling 90s or Bruno in the barren, dried up 2010s?

Lastly, how is what Bruno makes not authentic? How is someone who has displayed nothing but love and respect for his influences which he always touts for the music he makes, inluding shouting out names not relevant within the general public at present not authentic? Just because you've heard the music that its similar to before? Nonsense.

Artists could be making far better music than they are but they aren't required to push boundaries, break new ground or make something completely new. If anything, people in the mainstream are trying too hard to be "serious" artists and they come off as pretentious pseudo-intellectuals. I'd much rather have someone who knows how to have fun with his music and do so in a way that's evocative of a happier time.
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Reply #80 posted 03/12/18 9:14am

MotownSubdivis
ion

paisleypark4 said:



Scorp said:


Honest question



How many copies has 24K Magic sold as of today?



Three million worldwide.

According to Wikipedia, 24K has sold 1 million in the US. Blurred Lines has sold 800,000. The latter has been out since 2013 and hasn't even gone platinum despite having a far more succesful single.
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Reply #81 posted 03/12/18 9:41am

Empress

2freaky4church1 said:

Jealousy is a mother.

You got that right Freaky!

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Reply #82 posted 03/12/18 10:04am

RJOrion

for the record...as one of the so called Bruno Mars "haters" i never ever accused Bruno Mars of "cultural appropriation"... as a "black" man, i acknowledge his puerto rican and asian ancestry as non-white...when it comes to words like "gentrification" and "cultural appropriation", that is more specifically a black vs. white thing...i just think he's overrated and overhyped as a talent...his music is basic pop and bubblegum..
[Edited 3/12/18 10:05am]
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Reply #83 posted 03/12/18 10:05am

StrangeButTrue

avatar

MotownSubdivision said:

Bruno generally gets compared to Lenny Kravitz and it is

Lastly, how is what Bruno makes not authentic?

How is someone who has displayed nothing but love and respect for his influences which he always touts for the music he makes, inluding shouting out names not relevant within the general public at present not authentic?

.

But there are different cultural considerations one must not forget when comparing Lenny Kravitz and Bruno Mars in this argument.

.

This argument is that he appropriates certain aspects of culture thus making his efforts inauthentic by the definition of the word authentic ("of undisputed origin; genuine"). Origin is what is being disputed/discussed.

.

If the names of the people that Bruno tributes/copies/karaokes aren't "relevant" why did he tribute/interpolate/copy them in the first place and why do articles and Mars' team keep bringing them back up? Is the 'general public at present' in this instance 23-27 year olds and/or younger? Anyone over 30 with ears knows Bobby Brown's style, even Sequence and Zapp.

if it was just a dream, call me a dreamer 2
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Reply #84 posted 03/12/18 10:06am

StrangeButTrue

avatar

RJOrion said:

for the record...as one of the so called Bruno Mars "haters" i never ever accused Bruno Mars of "cultural appropriation"... as a "black" man, i acknowledge his puerto rican and asian ancestry as non-white...when it comes to words like "gentrification" and "cultural appropriation", that is more specifically a black vs. white thing...i just think his music is overrated and overhyped as a talent...

.

What about his Ashkenazi ancestry? Thats Germanic, right?

if it was just a dream, call me a dreamer 2
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Reply #85 posted 03/12/18 10:13am

RJOrion

StrangeButTrue said:



RJOrion said:


for the record...as one of the so called Bruno Mars "haters" i never ever accused Bruno Mars of "cultural appropriation"... as a "black" man, i acknowledge his puerto rican and asian ancestry as non-white...when it comes to words like "gentrification" and "cultural appropriation", that is more specifically a black vs. white thing...i just think his music is overrated and overhyped as a talent...

.


What about his Ashkenazi ancestry? Thats Germanic, right?




im not trying to dig up his family plot to find decomposed Europeans...im going by what he claims and what i see... if he was living in South Carolina in 1818, he most likely would have been forced to pick cotton, so i have no beef with Bruno as a brown man...
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Reply #86 posted 03/12/18 10:26am

ChocolateBox31
21

avatar

"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when eye was doing the Purple Rain tour eye had a lot of people who eye knew eye'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream."prince
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Reply #87 posted 03/12/18 10:37am

MotownSubdivis
ion

StrangeButTrue said:



MotownSubdivision said:



Bruno generally gets compared to Lenny Kravitz and it is



Lastly, how is what Bruno makes not authentic?



How is someone who has displayed nothing but love and respect for his influences which he always touts for the music he makes, inluding shouting out names not relevant within the general public at present not authentic?



.


But there are different cultural considerations one must not forget when comparing Lenny Kravitz and Bruno Mars in this argument.


.


This argument is that he appropriates certain aspects of culture thus making his efforts inauthentic by the definition of the word authentic ("of undisputed origin; genuine"). Origin is what is being disputed/discussed.


.


If the names of the people that Bruno tributes/copies/karaokes aren't "relevant" why did he tribute/interpolate/copy them in the first place and why do articles and Mars' team keep bringing them back up? Is the 'general public at present' in this instance 23-27 year olds and/or younger? Anyone over 30 with ears knows Bobby Brown's style, even Sequence and Zapp.

So in other words, what you're saying is that because Bruno isn't black, his music isn't authentic?

Those non-relevant names I was referring to were Jam & Lewis and Bootsy Collins whom he gave shout outs/ made reference to during live performances. The general public at present is the current mainstream public, most of which are youths no older than 20 who would generally know little to nothing about Bobby Brown, Jam & Lewis and Bootsy Collins. If Bruno was really aping the black culture, how would even know much about someone like Bootsy who is in fact, not a relevant figure in the public eye. This is not dusrespect to Boitsy or any of the others; they're legends but they aren't what's currently hot or such widely known luminaries who despite their age are still relevant figures to the general public (i.e. Michael Jackson, Madonna, Paul McCartney, etc.). Bruno made acknowledgements to those people. Compare this gesture to an Iggy Azalea or a Post Malone; do you see the former onstage seguing into the beat of a Big Daddy Kane song or the latter giving a shout out to DJ Cool Herc for his contributions to hip hop? I certainly don't.

Bruno making music that shows strong inspiration from earlier works makes his music inauthentic too? I'm not seeing what the big deal is; it's not completely original but that doesn't mean it isn't authentic.
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Reply #88 posted 03/12/18 11:38am

RodeoSchro

"Black, white, Puerto Rican, everybody just a'freakin'."

-A really smart and talented guy

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Reply #89 posted 03/12/18 12:03pm

ThatWhiteDude

avatar

RodeoSchro said:

"Black, white, Puerto Rican, everybody just a'freakin'."

-A really smart and talented guy

fro headbang music

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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Bruno Mars Slammed By YouTuber For Appropriating Black Culture