The Sun (Lowell)

Artists, historians examine country music’s past, future

- By Kristin M. Hall

NASHVILLE, TENN. » As country music’s biggest stars prepared to celebrate the annual CMA Awards, a group of artists, academics and historians gathered to correct the record on the genre’s past and offer ideas on how it can expand outside its typical white lines.

Just steps from the show’s home at Bridgeston­e Arena, speakers addressed the erasure of Black artists from country music’s history and whether the industry could be more welcoming to artists of color.

Dubbed the Rosedale Summit and held Monday simultaneo­usly in Nashville at the National Museum of African American Music and the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles, it was a timely event acknowledg­ing the genre’s recent struggles to address race within its ranks.

“It’s overdue. The CMAS are later this week and we want to have a conversati­on about what the awards really should look like,” said Sam Viotty, cofounder of the record label Rosedale Collective and one of the organizers of the event.

Beyond the glittery awards and dazzling onstage performanc­es, country music has been confronted this year with racial representa­tion not just in its past, but in its future as well. One the genre’s biggest stars, Morgan Wallen, was disinvited from the CMAS this year, after he was caught on camera using a racial slur, but still remains a nominee for album of the year.

The issues that plagued country music in 2021 were reflection­s of what was happening decades prior. Two pioneers and activists — Dr. Cleve Francis and Frankie Staton — both spoke about being silenced as Black country artists.

Francis, who stepped away from his career as a cardiologi­st to pursue a career in country music in the 1990s, said in a videotaped message during the event that he was told that the genre would only support one Black country artist and that was Charley Pride.

“It was if the music industry shook the music tree and just one Black man could sing country music,” said Francis. “They were accepting no one else.”

Undeterred, he continued to record and tour and went on to co-found the Black Country Music Associatio­n.

“It wasn’t enough to ask people to let us in the industry. We needed our own recording studios, our own associatio­n,” Francis said.

He later handed over the reigns of the organizati­on to Frankie Staton, a country singer-songwriter, who hosted the first ever showcases for Black singersong­writers at the famed Bluebird Cafe.

Staton said when she first started shopping her songs around Nashville, the publishing houses dismissed her, telling her they didn’t believe she wrote them. Her dream became to help others like her.

 ?? Ap ?? valerie ponzio, from left, Claude Kelly, and Chuck harmony take part in a discussion moderated by rissi palmer, on screen, during the rosedale summit at the National museum of african american music monday in Nashville.
TAURUS:
Ap valerie ponzio, from left, Claude Kelly, and Chuck harmony take part in a discussion moderated by rissi palmer, on screen, during the rosedale summit at the National museum of african american music monday in Nashville. TAURUS:

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