Santa Cruz Sentinel

George Floyd kin joins protest anthem album project

- By Aaron Morrison

NEW YORK >> Before a late night rehearsal in December, Terrence Floyd couldn’t remember the last time he squatted on a drum throne, sticks in hand and ready to perform.

Surely, he said, it had not happened since his brother, George Floyd, died at the hands of police in Minneapoli­s last May, sparking a global reckoning over systemic racism and police brutality.

Now, Terrence is lending a talent he honed as a youngster in a church band to help produce and promote a forthcomin­g album of protest anthems inspired by the Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ions prompted in part by his brother’s death.

“I want to pay my respects to my brother any way I can, whether it’s a march, whether it’s just talking to somebody about him, or whether it’s doing what I do and playing the drums,” Terrence told The Associated Press.

“His heartbeat is not beating no more,” he said, “but I can beat for him.”

The untitled project, set for release one year after George Floyd’s death, follows a long history of racial justice messages and protest slogans crossing over into American popular music and culture. In particular, music has been a vehicle for building awareness of grassroots movements, often carrying desperate pleas or enraged battle cries across the airwaves.

Terrence was recruited for the project by the Rev. Kevin McCall, a civil rights activist who said he believes an album of street-inspired protest anthems does not yet exist.

“These protest chants that were created have been monumental,” said McCall. “It created a movement and not a moment.”

Some songs make bold declaratio­ns, like the protest anthem album’s lead single, “No Justice No Peace.” The well-known protest refrain, popularize­d in the U.S. in the 1980s, is something that millennial­s grew up hearing before they joined the front lines of their generation’s civil rights movement, McCall said.

McCall is featured on the track, along with his fiancée, singer Malikka Miller, and choir members from Brooklyn’s Grace Tabernacle Christian Center. The song is currently available for purchase and streaming on iTunes, Amazon Music and YouTube.

Godfather Records, a label run and owned by David Wright, pastor of Grace Tabernacle Christian Center, plans to put out the seven-song album. His late father, Timothy Wright, is considered the “Godfather of gospel music.”

“We’re mixing gospel music with social justice, to reach the masses,” Wright said.

There is a history of interplay between music and Black protest. The 1991 beating of Rodney King by Los Angeles Police Department officers — as well as the contempora­ry “war on drugs” — amplified NWA’s 1988 anthem, “F(asterisk) (asterisk)(asterisk) tha Police,” and Public Enemy’s “Fight the Power,” released in 1989. More recently, Kendrick Lamar’s “Alright,” Beyoncé’s “Freedom” featuring Lamar, and YG’s “FDT” provided a soundtrack for many BLM protests.

Legendary musician and activist Stevie Wonder released his hit 1980 song, “Happy Birthday,” as part of a campaign to recognize the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr’s birthday as a federal holiday. King’s Day, which faced years of opposition at the national level, was officially recognized in 1986, three years after it won the backing of federal lawmakers.

Some historians cite Billie Holiday’s musical rendition of the Abel Meeropol poem, “Strange Fruit,” in 1939 as one of the sparks of the civil rights movement. The song paints in devastatin­g detail the period of lynching carried out against Black Americans for decades after the abolition of slavery, often as a way to terrorize and oppress those who sought racial equality.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States