The point Seren and others are making is there is a whole scene of black American and British artists making uptempo 90s influenced RnB years before Bruno did and they didn't get any major support. Bruno comes in and gets credit for bringing it back. It's really not that different than Elvis getting credit for creating rock n roll. Little Richard had to go on every talk show in the 80s to set the record straight. Or its like Madonna pulling from Black gay culture and getting credit for vogue. Mark Ronson and Bruno took Trinidad James song and video All Gold Everything as the basis for Uptown Funk. He got a writing credit and cut in the profits, but you have to wonder if it was a geniune or parody of hip hop culture.
Here's an uptempo 90s throwback by Mack Wilds. And let's not forget Janelle Monae. She's been doing the uptempo retro funk thing for almost a decade and still hasn't had a major hit. I'm actually shocked she still managed to stay in the game. And she is just as good if not better than Bruno as a songwriter and performer.
[Edited 3/13/18 11:04am] | |
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Yeah it happens, and I swear until after you hit 'post or send' you don't see the errors. The cyber-world we live in.
I typed Polynesian in error
I have read Hebrew(by the way of the Ukrain)-Puerto Rican(father) Filipino-mother Spain(Spanish) Chinese admixture in distant past He should contact Finding Your Roots and have the dna test etc
His grandfather Peter Gene Hernandez
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that's bad [Edited 3/13/18 12:05pm] | |
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lrn36 said:
The point Seren and others are making is there is a whole scene of black American and British artists making uptempo 90s influenced RnB years before Bruno did and they didn't get any major support. Bruno comes in and gets credit for bringing it back. It's really not that different than Elvis getting credit for creating rock n roll. Little Richard had to go on every talk show in the 80s to set the record straight. Or its like Madonna pulling from Black gay culture and getting credit for vogue. Mark Ronson and Bruno took Trinidad James song and video All Gold Everything as the basis for Uptown Funk. He got a writing credit and cut in the profits, but you have to wonder if it was a geniune or parody of hip hop culture.
Here's an uptempo 90s throwback by Mack Wilds. And let's not forget Janelle Monae. She's been doing the uptempo retro funk thing for almost a decade and still hasn't had a major hit. I'm actually shocked she still managed to stay in the game. And she is just as good if not better than Bruno as a songwriter and performer.
[Edited 3/13/18 11:04am] I get their point and I do agree with it, I can't agree with it enough but they're using the wrong person as a scapegoat. Bruno, being Filipino and Puerto Rican, is in fact, black. He's not as dark as me and probably you but we as a people come in a variety of shades, tints and tones anyway. Bruno's natural skin color fits within that spectrum and furthermore he actually has African in his blood. Attack Miley Cyrus, Iggy Azalea, Post Malone and make more of a case for JT instead of bashing Bruno. Criticize Usher, Chris Brown, NeYo and this infestation of trap rappers (those black artists who have name value and some degree of clout) for making the music they chose to make instead of what Bruno makes. And most importantly, continue to focus on the root of the problem and launch an assault on the music industry for being so stupid and still marginalizing the many talented artists we have, especially those of color despite history showing how stupid it is. Elvis was taken advantage of, he was exploited and only had so much control over his career. At least Bruno has the choice to make the music he does and is free to say where he got it from and if people actually did their research, they'll see that the music he's making is actually his music to make. I mean this response with no disrespect toward you but this subject fires me up. [Edited 3/13/18 12:12pm] | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
Yeah it happens, and I swear until after you hit 'post or send' you don't see the errors. The cyber-world we live in.
I typed Polynesian in error
I have read Hebrew(by the way of the Ukrain)-Puerto Rican(father) Filipino-mother Spain(Spanish) Chinese admixture in distant past He should contact Finding Your Roots and have the dna test etc
His grandfather Peter Gene Hernandez
People, however, only need to refer to Dr. Google to find out the history of Puerto Ricans and Filipinos to see how they trace back to the motherland that is Africa. If "Sensei" and everyone who agrees with her really knew what they were talking about, they wouldn't be pointing at Bruno in accusation with their noses turned up. | |
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She has criticized those artists and the industry that supports them. Usher, Chris brown, and Neyo were pushed into the edm sound because no one was buying straight r n b from black artists. Now all of a sudden 90s r n b is hot from an artist who is not black. If the whole 90s sound was hot, why aren't we seeing more success from these other artists. Why didn't Anderson Paak sell big with a catchy song like Come Down when he can sing, dance, write, and play instruments just like Bruno? People are more caught up with defending Bruno than dealing with the points that are being brought up about how the industry treats black artists. If Bruno is a true ally to the people who created and developed the music he loves so much, then he should be willing to take the heat to draw attention to a greater problem. [Edited 3/13/18 12:35pm] | |
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I totally agree with that. I already stated in another thread, that every artist, wether they black or not, that they should protest against this industry. But giving one artist shit for a much bigger problem, doesn't help and it won't solve it. Because it's not in Bruno's power as it wasn't in Elvis' or Eminem's (both elvis and Eminem even stated that the black artists, the inventors of Rock and Hip Hop, deserve so much more credit. Eminem even criticised the white media in particular because they put him on a pedestal he didn't really deserve). Single artists won't change the industry, because these people only give a fuck if every single one turns their back on them and show them that their way doesn't work anymore. It's not only in Bruno's or JT's hands to make a change, everybody that's bothered by that should protest against it. | |
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lrn36 said:
She has criticized those artists and the industry that supports them. Usher, Chris brown, and Neyo were pushed into the edm sound because no one was buying straight r n b from black artists. Now all of a sudden 90s r n b is hot from an artist who is not black. If the whole 90s sound was hot, why aren't we seeing more success from these other artists. Why didn't Anderson Paak sell big with a catchy song like Come Down when he can sing, dance, write, and play instruments just like Bruno? People are more caught up with defending Bruno than dealing with the points that are being brought up about how the industry treats black artists. If Bruno is a true ally to the people who created and developed the music he loves so much, then he should be willing to take the heat to draw attention to a greater problem. [Edited 3/13/18 12:35pm] What more is he supposed to do? He already works with several black musicians and singers and makes no bones about it, he speaks up for black culture by acknowledging the people who made his music possible including his influences and has vouched for black artists. He is taking the heat, there's really no way he can't. It's not as though he's getting defensive and lashing back at the people personally attacking him. Once again, this obvious problem with the industry is not his fault and trying to imply that Bruno himself is part of the problem is attacking a benign symptom instead of the true disease. We all agree on one thing: the music industry fucks over black artists and other artists of color. Bruno is an artist of color whose heritage is rooted in Africa. Bruno is not part of the problem; the people defending him aren't disagreeing with the race problem of the music industry; they're just saying Bruno is not part of the problem and given what we know, he isn't. There are far better examples of a culture vulture than someone who doesn't hide the fact that he loves making black music and his career wouldn't be possible without black people. | |
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lrn36 said:
She has criticized those artists and the industry that supports them. Usher, Chris brown, and Neyo were pushed into the edm sound because no one was buying straight r n b from black artists. Now all of a sudden 90s r n b is hot from an artist who is not black. If the whole 90s sound was hot, why aren't we seeing more success from these other artists. Why didn't Anderson Paak sell big with a catchy song like Come Down when he can sing, dance, write, and play instruments just like Bruno? People are more caught up with defending Bruno than dealing with the points that are being brought up about how the industry treats black artists. If Bruno is a true ally to the people who created and developed the music he loves so much, then he should be willing to take the heat to draw attention to a greater problem. [Edited 3/13/18 12:35pm] Exactly. And the problem will continue to linger | |
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Well, when Sha Na Na & The Stray Cats were popular, there weren't really any other acts doing rockabilly, early rock, & doo wop having popular records. Sha Na Na had a TV show. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Micky is bringing some decent perspective. I'm cool with Mars being our new Sha Na Na. if it was just a dream, call me a dreamer 2 | |
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That's kind of a stretch to say he is black. We don't know for sure and he isn't claiming to be black. His father could be only Taino Indian and European for all we know. Until their is confirmation from him, then I'm going to assume no. The Joan and Constance Bennett were two famous actress from the 1930s who had a black Jamaican grandfather. And the late talk show host Morton Downey Jr. was their nephew. Do you think black people are claiming them as black? The issue is white artists like Bobby Caldwell, Teena Marie, Michael McDonald, and Jon B saw success along side black artists. No one was saying there were the face of black music. Now we have a situation where black artists are not only be sidelined, they're not getting signed at all. Black singers have been doing the type of music Bruno is doing but were not getting the marketing push. And now Bruno is being pushed as the lone face of R n B and some how its black artist's fault for not stepping up. | |
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yeah,Bruno is not black.He is half Filipino and half Puerto Rican. | |
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lrn36 said:
That's kind of a stretch to say he is black. We don't know for sure and he isn't claiming to be black. His father could be only Taino Indian and European for all we know. Until their is confirmation from him, then I'm going to assume no. The Joan and Constance Bennett were two famous actress from the 1930s who had a black Jamaican grandfather. And the late talk show host Morton Downey Jr. was their nephew. Do you think black people are claiming them as black? The issue is white artists like Bobby Caldwell, Teena Marie, Michael McDonald, and Jon B saw success along side black artists. No one was saying there were the face of black music. Now we have a situation where black artists are not only be sidelined, they're not getting signed at all. Black singers have been doing the type of music Bruno is doing but were not getting the marketing push. And now Bruno is being pushed as the lone face of R n B and some how its black artist's fault for not stepping up. It doesn't matter if other black people don't claim them as their own. If they have a black biological grandfather, they have black in them. Dwayne Johnson (The Rock) is half black, half Samoan and while he identifies as Samoan that doesn't erase the fact that he's still black. Obama is half white but identifies as black, does that mean he's not white too? [Edited 3/13/18 15:08pm] | |
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Most R&B acts at any time had little or no crossover. The mainstream media have always focused on the pop Top 40. So in the 1980s, to the the general public, Lionel Richie, Michael Jackson, or Billy Ocean was the face of R&B, not Stephanie Mills, as she didn't really crossover like they did or Whitney Houston and Kool & The Gang did. Jody Watley got Top 40 airplay and Howard Hewett didn't. Howard's Quiet Storm style had little pop appeal, unlike Jody's dance music. Notice that Lionel still has some popularity today and is on American Idol, when the Commodores with JD Nicholas as an act today are mostly forgotten. Some of the acts now that are said to be traditional R&B are more neo-soul or mid tempo and they won't get any airplay other than maybe on the "adult R&B" format. Neo-soul has about as much appeal as zydeco to Top 40. The mainstream popular R&B now is more hip hop based, like DJ Khaled. Bruno is just an exception to Beyonce, Rihanna, & Fifth Harmony. They're popular and their music doesn't really sound like what Bruno is doing. Bruno is an exception like the Stray Cats. You can't say that black artists are not popular now when Lil' Wayne & Drake have more Hot 100 hits than anyone, including Elvis, Michael Jackson, Mariah Carey, & The Beatles. Mariah is one that became known for doing collabos with rappers. Hip hop itself has crossed over in a way that R&B never has. Hip hop has replaced rock n roll as the biggest genre in the US. These hotep types that make these videos probably would call a Lionel Richie or a Whitney Houston a "coon" because they made music on purpose to get the white audience. They're the ones who will say Erik Killmonger is the good guy and T'Challa is a sellout to the white CIA agent Everett Ross and the UN. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when was doing the Purple Rain tour had a lot of people who knew 'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream." | |
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I was talking about it from a cultural angle. Bruno seems like he gets his dark complexion from his filipina mom. Some Filipinos do have Moorish ancestry in their background, but so do Sicilians. And they're not claiming to be black. Actor Nicholas Turturro is Silician, but he could pass for Dominican. The point is he is not black. You might not see Bruno as the face of RnB, but there are a lot of young people who think Bruno created this sound. Will we see a time when a black artist dominates country music so much that they have the biggest sales and win all the awards? And they have to remind people that white people contributed to that music. When we get to that point, let me know. l
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lrn36 said:
I was talking about it from a cultural angle. Bruno seems like he gets his dark complexion from his filipina mom. Some Filipinos do have Moorish ancestry in their background, but so do Sicilians. And they're not claiming to be black. Actor Nicholas Turturro is Silician, but he could pass for Dominican. The point is he is not black. You might not see Bruno as the face of RnB, but there are a lot of young people who think Bruno created this sound. Will we see a time when a black artist dominates country music so much that they have the biggest sales and win all the awards? And they have to remind people that white people contributed to that music. When we get to that point, let me know. l
That may be true but a lot of these children have parents and grandparents who know better so it would be wise of them to educate their offspring. Also with the internet, no telling what else a kid might stumble upon because they listened to a Bruno song. In any case, Bruno is not an appropriator and people need to realize the difference between that and inspiration. | |
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It's cool. Thanks for the civilized discussion. | |
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What difference does that make? How many Filipinos or Latinos have had mainsteam success in any format in the US or-non white, non-black acts in general? Apl.de.ap from the Black Eyed Peas is Filipino and Taboo is Mexican. But the Black Eyes Peas didn't really get mainstream success until they got Fergie rather than with their previous singer Kim Hill. Japanese singer Kyu Sakamoto had a hit in the 1960s, and Native American band Redbone had a hit in the 1970s. Hawaiian singer Hon Ho was popular on TV in the 1970s, but wasn't really on the radio though. Japanese band Hiroshima had some success in the smooth jazz field. Probably the most successful as far as Top 40 goes is Gloria Estefan and then Carlos Santana with classic rock. There's acts who are really big with their ethnicity/race like Vicente Fernandez, Romeo Santos, & Selena but less so with mainstream America (aka the white audience). Probably because they primarily sing in Spanish. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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lol well people have to research more than a google search. Google will pull up a lot of stuff that don't agree.
I know the history of Puerto Ricans (and Filipinos)
But to call Filipinos 'black' is not culturally on point. They too are heavily Native.
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[Edited 3/13/18 17:35pm] "if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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I said non-white, non-black performers. Very few have had mainstream success (Top 40) in the US compared to white & black performers. Some black acts have had mainstream success since the Louis Armstrong, Bessie Smith, & Count Basie era and George W. Johnson & Scott Joplin to an extent before that. The ones I named like Redbone were considered "one hit wonders". Charley Pride was popular with the country audience, not really the mainstream so much. Not like a Kenny Rogers, Dolly Parton, Garth Brooks, Shania Twain, and Dixie Chicks. George Strait had more Top 10s on the country chart, but nothing really on the Hot 100. So George isn't really mainstream and neither is Charley Pride, Melre Haggard, and George Jones. The Hot 100 is the mainstream chart. All the others like R&B, country, jazz, dance, alternative rock, etc. are sub-charts for niche audiences. There's a reason that some people on the sub charts try to crossover to the main chart like Michael Jackson & Kenny Rogers You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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"Well, besides us having the same birthday [laughs], we're destined to get together and people always have a way of speaking to someone and that was his way of speaking to me," Riley said of Bruno Mars' Grammy acceptance speech. "I honored it. I truly honored it."
Speaking specifically about the influence of his sound on Bruno's music, the Grammy Award-winning entertainer had only positive things to say.
"First of all, it brings our stock up –Babyface, Jimmy Jam, Terry Lewis and myself— and that puts us even more in the game and helps to sustain us. It's a known fact that God blesses us to bless others, and then sometimes, you get the blessing. But, I'm more of a giver, I like to give. So, him giving....sometimes we don't understand receiving a gift. But, the most incredible gift to be given, for me, is someone paying homage. So, I feel wonderful about it."
https://www.essence.com/festival/2018-essence-festival/teddy-riley-bruno-mars-cultural-appropriation
"That mountain top situation is not really what it's all cracked up 2 B when was doing the Purple Rain tour had a lot of people who knew 'll never c again @ the concerts.just screamin n places they thought they was suppose 2 scream." | |
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"if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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It's not my formula, it's Billboard magazine. The entire point of Billboard is to track what is popular by sales and/or airplay and the main chart is the Hot 100, and the songs at 40 and above are considered "real" hits and the Top 10 are the biggest hits. If a song only gets to 89 on the Hot 100, it's not considered a hit. In some cases there's songs popular in certain areas of the US, but are not nationwide hits, they're considered regional hits, and so wouldn't be considered "mainstream". I used to read it every week and I listened to Top 40 and I've never heard Charley Pride on it. That's why I said mainstream, like getting featured on Entertainment Tonight or getting on the cover of People magazine and get a lot of sales. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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Don Ho was all over top forty radio when I was a little kid. My parents and their friends bought his albums. I'm saying what I actually remember about top forty radio. The formula was not as lockstep because as you said, there were different folks listening to their local sound all over the US and passing it around and DJs had sway too. The cookie cutter industry was not as in place logistically. "if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all" | |
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Being popular in one area means it's not mainstream. Mainstream means the most people know about it over the entire United States heard it and/or bought it and it charted high and sold enough copies to reach the upper parts of the pop singles or pop albums chart (Top 200). Being known worldwide is really mainstream like Michael Jackson. In the movie equivalent, Star Wars is mainstream known, but Amazon Women On The Moon or Dynamite Chicken aren't. A mainstream extremely popular singer/group is well known enough to get toys and games or to sell clothes and other merchandise. Like Rihanna has a cosmetic line. More people have at least heard of The Beatles, even if they don't know their music, than heard of Don Ho. Which makes them mainstream or a household name. So he is no way more known than The Beatles or Elvis Presley.
You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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lrn36 said:
It's cool. Thanks for the civilized discussion. | |
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