“The ‘So What’ Mentality – Reclaiming Black Artwork & Possession”: An Essay by Anthony Briscoe for Black Historical past Month

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In honor of Black Historical past Month, Atwood Journal has invited artists to take part in a collection of essays reflecting on id, music, tradition, inclusion, and extra.
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Right this moment, Down North frontman and Black & Loud Fest co-founder Anthony Briscoe shares some hard-earned perspective in his essay, ‘The ‘So What’ Mentality: Reclaiming Black Artwork & Possession,’ as part of Atwood Journal’s Black Historical past Month collection!
Down North frontman and Black & Loud Fest co-founder Anthony Briscoe shares some hard-earned perspective in his essay The “So What” Mentality: Reclaiming Black Artwork & Possession.
The music that Down North has laid to tape to this point is driving, crisply executed, and tight as all get out. It’s funky – however it could be fallacious to name it funk. Robust pop melodicism anchors searing punk power. Brash technical virtuosity nods to Different rock. Funky gospel metallic, perhaps? No matter what you name it, the dangerous’s music exudes its creators fierce focus and willpower. It’s highly effective, defiantly celebratory, and downright fascinating. No Retreat, No Return, No Give up certainly.
Comprised of frontman Anthony Briscoe, bassist Brandon Storms, guitarist Nick Quiller, and drummer Conrad Actual (who additionally performs with icons Digable Planets), Down North are a singular voice within the music area: Trailblazing creatives that choose and select just-right bits and flavors drawn from the entire of recent Western music, like painters with limitless palates. The band’s sophomore album No Restraint Quantity 2 offers with the timeless topic of affection, and is out now on all platforms.
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Reclaiming Black Artwork & Possession

by Anthony Briscoe

As a Black artist, I’ve been reflecting on a rising pattern within the music trade – one which I can’t ignore.

We create the tradition, we set the tendencies, however too typically, we don’t personal what we construct.

Again within the day, my grandfather’s era had what they referred to as a “so what” mentality. Yeah, the system was unfair. Yeah, racism made it more durable for us to advance. However so what? If you happen to needed one thing badly sufficient, you found out learn how to get it. It wasn’t about ignoring injustice—it was about outworking it, outthinking it, and successful regardless of it.

However in the present day? I really feel like we’ve misplaced a few of that battle. We concentrate on limitations greater than options. We look forward to another person to open doorways as an alternative of constructing our personal. And in an trade the place Black creativity fuels billion-dollar platforms, we nonetheless don’t personal sufficient of our work, our affect, or our future.

We Constructed Social Media – And Barely Profit from It.

Each main social media platform blew up due to Black creativity. Give it some thought.

  • TikTok? No person was paying consideration till Black artists made it pop. Lil Nas X went viral, and instantly each artist needed to leap on.
  • Instagram? Blew up partially due to hip-hop tradition and dance challenges.
  • MySpace? Music pages, particularly hip-hop and R&B, saved it alive.
  • Even Fb and Twitter? Black tradition fuels engagement, whether or not it’s memes, viral moments, or your entire idea of “Black Twitter.”

We make these platforms helpful. But, as an alternative of constructing our personal, we maintain giving our creativity away without spending a dime.

That’s why I’ve been watching Fanbase, a Black-owned social media platform created by Isaac Hayes III. It’s designed to compensate artists higher. So why aren’t extra Black creatives utilizing it? Why will we maintain making different folks wealthy whereas combating for scraps?

The Music Business Is a Hustle – However Who’s Actually Successful?

The music trade has all the time had middlemen profiting off Black expertise. Contracts? MOB contracts. A number of the worst offers possible.

  • Within the U.S., when a tune is performed on the radio, solely the publishers receives a commission—not the artist.
  • That’s why artists like Beyoncé battle for publishing rights. Folks criticize her for demanding a reduce even when she didn’t write the tune, however are you able to blame her? The system is designed to chop artists out of their very own success.
  • Each decade, the trade finds a brand new technique to exploit us—whether or not it’s 360 offers, unfair streaming payouts, or AI recreating our voices with out compensation.

And but, we maintain signing away possession. We maintain trusting labels, platforms, and corporations that don’t prioritize us. At what level will we cease ready for a seat on the desk and begin constructing the home?

Make the Artwork, However Make It Transfer.

One factor my grandfather’s era understood: expertise isn’t sufficient—you must be simple.

If you wish to be heard, your music must hit first. Messages are necessary, but when the music isn’t nice, folks received’t care.

Have a look at Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On.” It’s a protest tune, however before everything, it’s an amazing tune. The melody, the manufacturing, the groove—all of it makes you are feeling one thing.

Similar with Rage Towards the Machine. They’d a message, however the music slapped. They weren’t simply saying one thing—they had been saying one thing over beats that made you progress.

That’s the method. If the music doesn’t join, the message received’t both.

Possession Over Entry.

James Brown as soon as stated, “I don’t need no one to offer me nothing – simply open the door, and I’ll get it myself.

However in the present day, why are we nonetheless ready for doorways to be opened after we can personal the entire rattling constructing?

We have to cease specializing in DEI initiatives and begin being the executives, the buyers, the shot-callers. After slavery and thru Jim Crow, Black folks turned impartial contractors as a result of they needed to. We had Black docs, legal professionals, and full communities that thrived with out exterior approval.

That’s why I co-founded the Black & Loud Pageant. I used to be uninterested in seeing Black musicians caught within the background. If white artists needed soulful backing vocals or the very best musicians, they referred to as us—however they hardly ever put us entrance and middle.

Afropunk was a blueprint, however we additionally took inspiration from Warped Tour – a competition that showcased new artists throughout completely different genres. As a result of right here’s the reality: Black folks created most American music.

From nation to rock to hip-hop to heavy metallic, all of it traces again to us. And we don’t want permission to reclaim it.

If Your Thought Doesn’t Assist Others, It’s Too Small.

Crucial level: Your success ought to elevate others up.

Proper now, we’re residing in an period of self-indulgence. Everybody is targeted on their very own model, their very own bag, their very own success. But when your thought can’t assist a minimum of 10 folks, it’s not large enough.

  • We as soon as had Black Wall Avenue, the place our cash circulated ten instances earlier than leaving the neighborhood.
  • Now, Black {dollars} depart our fingers virtually instantly.
  • Church buildings are full, however what number of pastors are instructing monetary literacy?
  • We push children towards faculty however don’t train them entrepreneurship, investing, or enterprise lending.

We maintain taking part in by the system’s guidelines as an alternative of studying how the wealthy construct generational wealth.

The “So What” Mindset Must Return.

Sure, there are obstacles. So what?

If we don’t take management – of our music, our platforms, our industries—we’re gonna be left behind. And at that time, we received’t be capable to blame anyone however ourselves.

So the query is: Are we able to take possession? Or are we simply going to maintain making different folks wealthy? – Anthony Briscoe

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:: join with Anthony Briscoe right here ::
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