Lizzo is addressing the stigma that pop music still carries and the racist origin it stems from in a new interview over the Thanksgiving holiday.
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Her comments stemmed from her conversation with Entertainment Weekly, where they asked the โJuiceโ singer about her thoughts on the notion that her music isnโt โBlack enoughโ because itโs categorized as pop music.
โWell, genres [are] racist inherently. I think if people did any research they would see that there was race music and then there was pop music,โ Lizzo began. โAnd race music was their way of segregating Black artists from being mainstream, because they didnโt want their kids listening to music created by Black and brown people because they said it was demonic and yada, yada, yada. So then there were these genres created almost like code words: R&B, and then of course eventually hip-hop and rap was born from that.โ
She continued:
โI think when you think about pop, you think about MTV in the โ80s talking about โWe canโt play rap musicโ or โWe canโt put this person on our platform because weโre thinking about what people in the middle of America thinkโ โ and we all know what thatโs code for.
So yes, because of that โ fast-forward to 2022 โ we have this well-oiled pop machine, but remember that it has a racist origin. And I think the coolest thing Iโve seen is rap and hip-hop artists become pop. Now pop music is really rap in its DNA โ rap is running the game, and I think thatโs so cool. But we forget that in the late โ80s and the early โ90s, there were these massive pop diva records that were sang by Black women like Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey. And Iโm giving that same energy. Iโm giving that same energy with a little bit of rap, and I think that people just have to get used to me.โ
She concluded, โI think anything thatโs new, people are going to criticize and feel like itโs not for them. But once you know what it isโjust like Iโve got a friend who donโt like avocado but she likes guacamole; it donโt make no senseโbut once you get used to something, it might be for you. So for people who donโt like pop music or donโt like Black artists that make pop music, they may eventually like me. I might be guacamole to them. You just gotta get used to me because Iโm making good shit. You missing out.โ
Additionally, the Special singer also took home the award for Best Dance Performance for โAbout Damn Timeโ at this yearโs Soul Train Awards.
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