Los Angeles Times

New voices raised in protest

- By Lorraine Ali lorraine.ali@latimes.com

Musicians including Prince, Ice Cube and Killer Mike are speaking out against social injustice.

The death of Freddie Gray while in police custody and the ensuing unrest surroundin­g it have prompted another round of musicians to speak out on the value of black lives and on racial issues in America.

Prince’s representa­tives confirmed Friday that the once-enigmatic star would dedicate his forthcomin­g song “Baltimore” to the people of the city where Gray died. The track, which does not have a release date yet, will address various social justice issues, including the disproport­ionate killing of young black men in America.

At the Grammy Awards in February, Prince invoked the protest slogan “Black Lives Matter” while onstage as a presenter, adding his voice to the ongoing protests sparked by the killings of unarmed black men in Ferguson, Mo., and Staten Island by law enforcemen­t last year.

Since the slaying of Trayvon Martin in 2012, rappers and other music artists such as John Legend, Common and J. Cole have become more vocal about the need to reform a system that disproport­ionately finds people of color the victims of poverty, crime and what many see as an unequal justice system.

Veteran rapper-turned-comedic-actor Ice Cube recently tweeted out eerily similar photos of riots in Baltimore circa the 1960s and photos from today’s unrest, with the caption “Then and now.”

Perhaps one of the most outspoken critics, however, has been Killer Mike, who has written another op-ed in Billboard about the crisis in Baltimore. The Run the Jewels rapper published his piece, the second he’s written on the topic of racial injustice for Billboard, on the heels of the White House Correspond­ents’ Assn. dinner, which he attended at the invitation of Arianna Huffington.

“I tweeted and Instagramm­ed so my fans could share this incredible night — and as I followed social media, I saw that Baltimore was burning,” he wrote. “As I sat there and watched my timeline, I felt helpless, hopeless: ‘Here I am at this lavish event — the most powerful man in the world is black, and people like him are being killed by the citizens who are paid to protect them.’ I left the dinner numb.”

He goes on to talk about the unfair coverage the protesters in Baltimore received from the likes of Geraldo Rivera and Wolf Blitzer, “because they’re players in the game that sensationa­lizes and objectifie­s this in the worst ways — I don’t trust ... that they want to see the change,” he wrote.

“I’m grateful to have been invited to the dinner,” he concluded. “But as I got into the car at the night’s end, and the driver played ‘Pressure,’ a song by me and Ice Cube, I could not help but wonder if this country will ever truly be what is promised in our Constituti­on for people who look like me.”

 ?? Jason Kempin
Getty Images ?? KILLER MIKE has written an op-ed about the crisis in Baltimore.
Jason Kempin Getty Images KILLER MIKE has written an op-ed about the crisis in Baltimore.

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