Warner Records Signs Black Lives Matter Protest Singer, 12

Warner Records Signs Black Lives Matter Protest Singer, 12
Black Lives Matter flag waves during a demonstration outside the First Police Precinct Station on June 13, 2020 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (AFP/Stephen Maturen )
WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
Telegram
LinkedIn
Print

 

Sooooooooo Thankful To Share Alongside The Bryant Family And @WarnerRecords, The Most Important Message In The World!! #IJustWannaLive By @KeedronBryant I Also Want To Officially Welcome Keedron To The #UMadeUsWhatWeAre Family!!! “I JUST WANNA LIVE” DROPS JUNETEENTH!!!

A post shared by Dem Jointz (@demjointz) on Jun 18, 2020 at 9:54am PDT

Keedron Bryant’s song “I Just Wanna Live”, about his fears growing up as a black man in America, will be released on Friday, which is the Juneteenth holiday marking the end of slavery in the US.

Bryant first posted the acapella gospel song on his Instagram account on May 26, the day after another African American, George Floyd, was killed by a white policeman in the city of Minneapolis.

just singing what’s on my heart…hope this blesses someone🙏🏾❤️ @sdhtoronto thanks for this dope shirt!!🔥🔥 #ijustwantolive #blacklivesmatter #ijustwannalive #equality #black #blackexcellence #racism #justice @mstinalawson

A post shared by Keedron Bryant (@keedronbryant) on May 26, 2020 at 2:01pm PDT

Floyd’s death — one in a long line of black people killed by white law enforcement — ignited mass Black Lives Matter protests against police brutality and a national reckoning on racism in America, both in the past and today.

Read Also: Nigerian Army Threaten Artiste For Song Against H’Right Abuse

“Every day I’m being hunted as prey. My people don’t want no trouble,” Bryant sings.

The original post has been liked well over three million times, and drawn praise from Barack Obama to Katy Perry.

It also caught the attention of producer Dem Jointz, who reportedly added music.

Dem Jointz said in an Instagram post Thursday that he was “Thankful” to share the song alongside the Bryant family and Warner Records.

The US music giant will reportedly donate proceeds from the song to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

YAHOO

WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
Telegram
LinkedIn
Print