Market vs. message: Aloe Blacc weighs in on the role of the artist right now in America - Action News
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Market vs. message: Aloe Blacc weighs in on the role of the artist right now in America

Against the backdrop of rapper superstars Kanye West and Childish Gambino shaking up our group consciousness, Nantali Indongo sat down with American singer, songwriter and producer Aloe Blacc to talk about using your art to do good.

Nantali Indongo's guest on The Bridge, Grammy-nominated singer talks about using your art to do good

'If you want to make true social change, then you gotta be in the trenches doing the work,' says Aloe Blacc, seen here performing at the 2016 Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival in Indio, Calif. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

With American rappers, superstar Kanye West and the equally multi-talented Donald Glover, a.k.a. Childish Gambino, shaking up our group consciousness, there is no better time to be discussing the role of the artist in America.

In the last three weeks, West and Gambino have provoked conversation via tweet and TV interview, in the case of West, and through song and video, in the case of Gambino's This is America with their statements about black identity, violence and their birth country, America.

The controversy started when Kanye started tweeting about his affinity for Donald Trump, calling the U.S. president his "brother" who shares his "dragon energy."

A week later, in an interview on TMZ, he sent more shockwaves rippling when he suggested that if black people were enslaved for 400 years, it hadto be their choice.Just as we were digesting that, along came This is America, breaking the internet within days of its release on Saturday Night Live.
Gambino juxtaposes minstrel-esque performance with gun violence against black bodies.

His moves and music are mesmerizing, but the message is harsh and, in some parts, confusing: is he just mocking black culture?

Childish Gambino's This Is America video stirs debate

6 years ago
Duration 2:26
Childish Gambino, better known as Donald Glover, has gone viral with his music video This is America.

Reaction to both West and Gambino has varied.

Many are disappointed, hurt and frustrated by West. Others are praising Gambino's work almost in response to West. Still others are askingwhether Gambino's video was more insensitive than progressive.

Aloe Blacc's insights

Thinking about all of this as I sat down with American singer, songwriter and producer Aloe Blacc, I asked for his insight. What should be the role of the artist right now in America?

Blacc was in Montreal for the launch of a new Imax film he's featured in called America's Musical Journey, now playing at Montreal's Science Centre.

In the documentary, he travels across the country uncovering the roots of American music and the stories behind the people who brought those genres to life, as well as those who continue to carry the torch.

The singer of Wake Me Up, I Need a Dollar, and I'm The Man fame sat down with me for the latest episode of The Bridge to talk about his own journey to music and life in general.
The host of The Bridge, Nantali Indongo, quizzes singer and songwriter Aloe Blacc, in Montreal for the launch of America's Musical Journey, now playing at the Science Centre. (Frank Opolko/CBC)

At 38, Blacc is a contemporary of Westand Gambino. He, too, is a rapper, even though we hear him mostly as a singer on popular radio.

As for my question about the role of the artist in America:his answer started off tenderly.

"I feel like as artists, we have to use our voices to enlighten people. As artists we speak not only to our community but to the world."

But then his line hardened.

"Domestically, at home, in the U.S, we [artists] have this battle between market and message," he said.

"So when people conflate the two, it becomes very convoluted and confusing for the audience."

Many brushed off both West and Gambino's latest efforts as ultimately being part of a marketing plan: West has an album coming out, and we are all waiting for the next Star Wars to come out, starring Glover, a.k.a Gambino.

Keeping things positive

West and Gambino's statements about social issues shocked. They felt negative. And why not? Being in America, and being black in America, is not a very positive experience right now.

In comparison, Blacc keeps things positive. He's all about positive social change.

If you read his website and his Instagram posts or if you have followed his career since his late 90s days as the rap element of hip-hop duo Emanon, it's hard to miss.

For him, artists are graced with tools, by virtue of the money they make and the visibility they achieve through their art, tools that allowthem to spur change.
Common and Andra Day perform 'Stand Up For Something' with members of the Cardinal Shehan School Choir during the March for Our Lives rally on March 24, 2018 in Washington, DC. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

"If you really want to make dramatic change, if you want to make true social change, then you gotta be in the trenches doing the work," Blacc told me.

"Common and John Legend are doing the work now with their activities, the shows that they're doing, with their alignments."

Yes, that part looks a little like he's throwing shade on Kanye West: Common and John Legend are both from Chicago, and are friends and collaborators of his, as well.

But West is also a philanthropist with a foundation that operates primarily in Chicago. And Gambino gives back, too.

In Aloe Blacc's case, part of his approach, he said, is to use the money from hisrecord label to make high-quality videos that tell stories about current social themes immigration, youth incarceration, malaria in Africa.

Blacc wants more artists to do more. And it seems he's saying the message does not have to be compromised for the market: just make the message one that's about issues and not narcissistic one that will do good and not damage.

He saysif that approach can become a trend, "then you have a new generation of artists and a new generation of informed listeners."