So many great Black Motown, Jazz and Soul artists, not to mention rock 'n' rollers like Jimi Hendrix who brought so much uplifting music that I was fortunate enough to grow up with. I never knew how much of a treasure it was until I got older.
The rap and hip hop music they play today (which I mostly hear at the gym) is so un-musical, formulaic, and covers the basest of topics. It is a true travesty. Much of the blame goes to radio. Just because your audience demands crap doesn't mean you have to play it. But enough will and do. How can today's youth (especially underprivileged ones in the ghettos) be inspired by that music to make something more of themselves to better their positions in life?
Where is there any positivity in relationships and life overall? A few of my favorite songs growing up expressed this beautifully like:
- "Love Train" by the O'jays.
- "Ain't no Stoppin' Us Now" by Mcfadden & Whitehead.
- "Nothing from Nothing" (A humorous take on the same subject) by Billy Preston.
- Multiple numbers from Stevie Wonder, but "Isn't She Lovely" and "Overjoyed" to name just a few.
- "The Greatest Love of All" by both George Benson and Whitney Houston.
- Whitney Houston's own "One Moment In Time".
- Multiple Numbers from Roberta Flack, but I will name "The Closer I Get to You" and "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" here.
- "Mornin'" by Al Jarreau - Such positivity first thing in the morning!
- Multiple hits by Aretha Franklin, but I will just name "Respect" and "You Better Think" here.
- Anything By Sam Cooke, I will name-check "You Send Me" here.
So many other great male artists such as Ray Charles, Smokey Robinson, Fats Domino, Marvin Gaye, Bill Withers, Lou Rawls, Jackie Wilson, Little Richard, Chuck Barry, and Sly Stone.
.
So many other great female artists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Diana Ross, Gladys Knight, Chaka Kahn, Donna Summer, Dionne Warwick, Anita Baker and of course the "girl groups" of the sixties like the Ronnettes and the Crystals.
What all of these songs and artists have in common is a great positivity about them. That is not to say they didn't have something to say that they believed needed to be said, such as Marvin Gaye's "What's Goin' On", but it was done tastefully, artfully and most beautifully. All were positive role models (at least in their performances) who gave inspiration to others.
I am going to end this post with one of my all time favorite songs "Living in America" by James Brown. Brown didn't write the song, but you would never know it in his 110% performance. It is a rockin' love letter to the greatest country of all, the USA. It celebrates getting to the good life by working hard, putting in the late nights, and making the best of yourself. America (even still) offers everyone a chance to move up; it is up to each individual to choose to take it. Brown celebrates and glorifies that opportunity. Awesome!