to white people, all black music is adult. black music to them is taboo. black music is sexy. black music is “maturity” to them.
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017
their new “adult image” is fueled by black features, black producers, & black culture. their “maturity” = blackening up their sound & look pic.twitter.com/anMyAOcbts
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017
their new “adult image” is fueled by black features, black producers, & black culture. their “maturity” = blackening up their sound & look pic.twitter.com/anMyAOcbts
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017
their new “adult image” is fueled by black features, black producers, & black culture. their “maturity” = blackening up their sound & look pic.twitter.com/anMyAOcbts
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017
and that’s why their reasoning for shying away from black music always sounds something like this pic.twitter.com/aA87XIWpUG
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017
so when y’all ask us why we are not here for these white girls making “R&B” records and featuring Big Sean and 2 Chainz. Consider this
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017
black people are tired of white people using our culture to prove a point. it’s racist. it’s not appreciation. it’s racist. that’s all.
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017
and I’m tired. plenty of people manage to mature musically. without appropriating black culture and using it for your darker/adult image.
— Richey Collazo?? (@richey_collazo) May 5, 2017