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Celebrating Black Music Month – Cess Citizen

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My origin story begins in 9th grade English class with my teacher’s after school tutoring efforts sparking my true interest in words. As a result, I am in the business of bringing world peace by developing communities that focuses on grace, empathy, and process. My organization Go Company focuses on achieving goals while using these specific qualities. Fashion releases, music release, and collaborative efforts – they are all primary to the agenda of my brand. Co-Creative direction, music licensing management, and writing, recording, & performing songs is my responsibility to my brand.

Third Born

How successful have you been in your actions since starting out?
As a musician success is performing well for as many audiences as possible. For me, this has manifested performing at The Foundry at The Fillmore in Philadelphia last summer, to acquiring over a dozen SPOTIFY playlist placements within 6 months of releasing my latest project, ‘Third Born‘ produced by Grammy award winning Digital Crates. Recent experiences have taught me how more important grace is, as we all engage a new lifestyle of covering our faces and eyes in public spaces. To be enclosed, yet still exposed is a new and freeing feeling for most people. Adaptation has guided my recent album writing exercises I completed during March and April’s more confined time.

What are the top 3 things you’ve learned personally and professionally since starting out?
Grace, empathy, dedication and the process are the four personal attributes I have learned are critical to my business achieving longevity socially and financially. Overall my journey has defined what is authentic and what is present for the moment. This experience is a microcosm for life overall and I enjoy the feature presentation day to day. 

Given that we’re under quarantine, how has COVID-19 affected you?
COVID-19 has created a more tense environment around me, especially with the reports about people with melanin are more likely to test positive. This has put another target on my back and it’s another anxiety for people to deal with.

Why would you feel like the reports of people of color testing positive for COVID-19 puts a target on your back?
The reports were not clear about the cause of melanin people affected by C : reports did not say that the reason was due to high levels dehydration due to the lack of information distributed to people of melanin about the process of ALKALINE water that helps hydrate our bodies and our mental capacities as well. 

When reports broadcast to millions of people about just the affect and not the cause: then anxiety is born and hate is as well because people just believe that people with melanin are just irresponsible and savage.  Thus, we are treated that way as we are seeing in the news right now with the police brutality and citizen arrests.

Cess Citizen

What are you doing with your Quarantine time?
During this time I have been working my side job delivering essential products to those staying at home and helping to lower the hospitalization rate. Also, I am completing writing exercises for my next album: mediating to new beats, taking photos of nature that feels like those beats for organic marketing material, and sleeping.

What’s your most memorable experience of the shutdown so far?
My most memorable moment of the shutdown was the day I found out that my producer was selected to be featured on NPR Tiny Desk Website, with hope that he will perform in D.C. soon.

Who’s your favorite singer or musician right now?
Right now, Wale Folarin is my favorite artist, for his recent effort to free non violent offenders from federal incarceration facilities: with his  music visual presentation of “Sue Me” – his intro song to his recent music release “Wow…That’s Crazy”

I’m an artist having a hard time with the pandemic. What advice or tips do you have for me?
Music tip number one; listen to soul music from the 60’s and 70’s. It just feels good: the high notes and wide range of string and wooden instruments have healing powers. 

What do you have cooked up for 2020?
Current circumstances have redirected my 2020 efforts to the literary field and in turn I have started my writing residency with Hip Hop Afff Magazine: a subculture publication started by a DJ in The Bay Area. Our primary goal is to inform people politically and economically, to empower their communities, and to create opportunities for each other that directly benefits our readerships mental and physical conditions. By the end of 2020 I see myself with a greater network of artists who are dedicated to world peace as much as my brand is. In 5 years I believe I’ll have achieved a Grammy award. In 10 years I will create an artist community center that replenishes the souls of communities nationwide. It will have holistic health information panels, drama exhibits, and anything else that adds a strong thread to the fabric of minority communities. 

Any last words or shout outs to your fans and support people?
My last words are the same as my grandmother’s, be good to be not with people. Love people, do not patronize people.

Cess Citizen music is available on all music streaming platforms including iTunes

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Music

The Beat Goes On…In Two Songs?

Tre Prada heard a beat this morning that sounded like one of his song, and it turned out to be Cardi B’s. We take a closer look at the two.

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You ever hear a song and think to yourself, wait a minute, that sounds like a beat I’ve heard before? That’s how Philly native Tre Prada started his afternoon.

Here are his thoughts on the new Cardi B song “Up” which dropped at midnight on Friday morning.

When you listen to it his song “Goonies”, a song that dropped back in October of 2020, the notes and the beat seem to be remarkably similar. We’re gonna drop the videos here. In this case, hearing is believing.

Now let’s compare that to Cardi B’s brand new, 13 hours old video.

We want to know what you think about this. Do you hear a similar beat? Do you think the songs are different enough? Do they sound like any other songs you know? Let us know on our Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram what you hear and what you think about this situation. We’re here to talk about it and other issues in the music industry.

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Black Music Month, Celebrating the Voices of the Unheard

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by Tiffany Livingston

Our culture is saturated in pure soul and through our music; we sing and perform songs of the Gospel, rhythm and blues, rock, funk, conscious lyrical hip-hop, and rap music. Growing up in the 90’s was a black liberating era listening to artists such as, Arrested Development, KRS-One, Tupac, and too many great black music artists to name. I took pride in being black only because the songs resonated with me. I started to become conscious of my blackness and for the first time in my life, I began to see racism and the mistreatment of my people for what it was because the music provoked me to open my eyes (Woke). I was becoming of age at the perfect time, becoming aware, strong-minded and took pride in celebrating my blackness through music.

Arrested Development

Growing up, music always played in the house. Sounds ranged from Gospel to Funk, Soul, R&B and the ever so infamous Hip-Hop. We would do our chores Saturday morning and cook dinner, dancing and singing along to music. The famous words my Father used to say to me (and he still does till this day) were “Who’s that Singing?” My job was to not guess, but know who it was especially since they were black artists. Arrested Development released a song called Tennessee. It was 1992 and I was about 9 years old. I was probably wearing pattern vests, silk/polyester shirts, and patent leather shoes (LOL). The song wasn’t too far from my first intro to music “Gospel”. Front man MC Speech rapped about black awareness and asked God for his direction during a troubling time; A prayer in the form of song over a hip-hop beat. It felt good to be black. I felt the love through the music, movies and the books I read. Self-love, reflection, and bold expressions is what black music is for me.

KRS-One

The following year in the late Fall of 1993 music began to take a turn into political hip-hop when KRS-One’s controversial single Black Cop was released. The track “Black Cop” was a song that challenged the thoughts of black men who willfully joined and accepted position as a police officer. Why would a black man want to become apart of a system whose goal has always been to kill, taunt, and destroy urban communities as a people? Black slave turned black cop is not logical– KRS-One. Police Brutality has been an on-going issue for centuries, not decades. He was just shedding light on the issue and he rapped about it. My people, like many others, have had too long of a journey fighting just to live. Sadly! This song is so fresh and prevalent in 2020 (Victim Name Here) and it’s shameful, scary and makes us feel unsafe. We are not a scared people and we fight back. We fight through our music and we fight through our voices to fight injustice and systemic racism. I could go on and on, but my goal is to celebrate Black Music. KRS didn’t stop there. He ended the Return of the Boom Bap  (1993) album with the single, Sound of the Police. It was my freshman year in High School in 1996  KRS-One released another challenge, but it was for music artists with Step Into a World. “Yo, I’m strictly about skills, and dope lyrical coastin’ relying on talent, not marketing and promotion”.(Step into A World) – KRS-One

Before J. Cole’s Change and Kendrick Lamar’s Alright there was another conscious/Hip-hop artist on TV named Tupac Shakur (2pac). I remember watching The Box music video channel and Urban Xpressions (Philadelphia TV) show waiting for my favorite artist’s videos to come on. It was the highlight of the weekend and something to talk about Monday morning at school. If you know of Tupac you may have been told only about his “Gangster Rapper” persona from his time with Death Row Records, but I know him as a Poet, Expressionist, Actor and Activist. While making music, Tupac was gaining film credits in a few fan favorites, Juice and Poetic Justice. During this time he continued to make music and in 1993 Tupac showed the Sista’s some love with his  Keep Ya Head Up  single featuring Dave Hollister from (Blackstreet):

Poetic Justice, featuring Janet Jackson and Tupac Shakur

“Some say the blacker the berry, the sweeter the juice I say the darker the flesh then the deeper the roots I give a holla to my sisters on welfare Tupac cares, if don’t nobody else care.” -Tupac (Keep Ya Head Up).

He continued his love for black women with another song Dear Momma a tribute to his own Mother/Activist the late Afeni Shakur. On September 13, 1996 Tupac Shakur was assassinated. The hip-hop community lost not one, but two great artist and not even a full year later on March 9, 1997 The Notorious B.I.G. (Biggie) was also assassinated. I know a lot of folks question the word assassination when it comes to a “Rapper” as they would say, but they were more than that.

Both deaths affected the black community and as a teenager at that time I was angry, we were angry. We hate violence in our communities as well as racist cops (not every cop) killing black men and women, which has been going on for far too long. The music Tupac made was for his people and the gangsters too. One of my all-time favorites is the song Changes recorded in (1992), then later released in 1998 added to his Greatest Hits Album 1998 . He spoke on black-on-black crime, police brutality, and ways to heal the black community:

“And the only time we chill is when we kill each other It takes skill to be real, time to heal each other. And although it seems heaven-sent, we ain’t ready to see a black president”. – Tupac (Changes).

Former President Barack Obama with his wife Michelle

Little did he know 13 years after his death a black man from Chicago named Barack Obama became America’s President in 2009. I wish he was still alive to see that some things do eventually change, and some stay the same. Most of the time us black folks know that, “that’s just the way it is things will never be the same”. (Changes)

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Beast Mode

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Beast Mode, shot by Philly Music Videos, highlights the brutality experienced by African Americans during this time of Quarantine. Featuring Marcus G and Xin, these artist go all out to address what’s occurring in minority communities throughout the states.

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