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Home ยป 15 Songs Celebrating Black Americans, Resistance for a Juneteenth Playlist
Education

15 Songs Celebrating Black Americans, Resistance for a Juneteenth Playlist

Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldJune 20, 202510 Mins Read
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From Campus to Classroom: Stories That Shape Education

WASHINGTON, DC – JUNE 17: An attendee adjusts his Juneteenth-themed hat during a neighborhood Juneteenth festival on June 17, 2023 in Washington, DC. Two years ago, President Joe Biden signed bipartisan legislation establishing Juneteenth as a federal holiday. Juneteenth commemorates the day on June 19, 1865 when a Union general read orders in Galveston, Texas stating all enslaved people in the state were free according to federal law. (Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images)

Happy Juneteenth! In a world where racism, the erasure of Black history and even attacks from the federal government try to take us out, Black people do as we always do: survive and thrive. Today, we honor the sacrifices made by African Americans since the beginning of slavery all while celebrating just how far weโ€™ve come as a community.

History paints us as some of the most resilient people of all timeโ€ฆ and that deserves some theme music! To do so, The Root has collected some of the many โ€œfreedomโ€ songs from our favorite Black musicians. These hits are reminders of the fierceness within the Black community. Prepared to feel empowered!

John Legend, Common โ€“ Glory

Starting off strong, the lead single for the 2014 film โ€œSelmaโ€ starring Oprah Winfrey and David Oyelowo is a reminder of the long road to freedom. John Legend and Common linked up to produce โ€œGlory,โ€ which won Best Original Song at the 2015 โ€ชGolden Globe Awards and at the 87th Academy Awards. The record was inspired by the 1965 Selma marches. Common also dedicated the track to the 2014 Ferguson, Mo. protests after Michael Brownโ€™s killing that year.

Joey Bada$$ โ€“ Land of the Free

The lead single for Joey Bada$$โ€™s most polarizing album to date, โ€œALL-AMERIKKKAN BADA$$,โ€ calls out mass incarceration and racism in the country while he raps on a groovy beat. He says, โ€œIn the land of the free, itโ€™s full of free loaders / Leave us dead in the street to be their organ donors / They disorganized my people, made us all loners / Still got the last names of our slave owners.โ€ Joey released the song on Jan. 20, 2017, which is his birthday and the anniversary of President Donald Trumpโ€™s first and second inaugurationsโ€ฆ Talk about juxtaposition.

Beyoncรฉ โ€“ Freedom

Unlike previous tracks,ย โ€œFreedomโ€ was Beyoncรฉโ€™s boldest record, with unapologetically Black lyrics, a powerful music video and even a feature from one of hip-hopโ€™s goats, Kendrick Lamar. In 2020, the song became somewhat of an anthem for Black Lives Matter protesters. She sings, โ€œIโ€™m telling these tears, โ€˜Go and fall away, fall awayโ€™ / May the last one burn into flames.โ€ The chorus of the song addresses the long fight to freedom and even questions where freedom and justice is in times like this. โ€œI break chains all by myself / Wonโ€™t let my freedom rot in hell / Hey! Iโ€™mma keep running / Cause a winner donโ€™t quit on themselves.โ€ In 2024, the song took new light when former Vice President Kamala Harris used it as the official song for her campaign.

Marvin Gaye โ€“ Whatโ€™s Going On

One of Marvin Gayeโ€™s most notable songs is one asking a question every Black American wants to know: whatโ€™s really going on in the country? The title track of Gayeโ€™s โ€œWhatโ€™s Going Onโ€ album reflects the uncertainty occurring in 1970, in the height of Vietnam War and just two years after MLKโ€™s assassination. He begins the song singing, โ€œMother, mother / Thereโ€™s too many of you crying / Brother, brother, brother / Thereโ€™s far too many of you dying.โ€ Gaye urges folks to take a closer look at what society has tuned into, and more importantly, our individual roles in it all.

Jimi Hendrix โ€“ Hear My Train A Cominโ€™

Channeling the history of blues music, Jimi Hendrix sings about finding salvation after dealing with the baggage of his past and present. โ€œHear My Train A Comin’โ€ acts as a hopeful mantra in the face of adversity as he sings โ€œWaitinโ€™ for that train / Take me, take me / Take me away / From this Lonesome town.โ€ To make matters worse, Hendrix is also dealing with unrequited love, as he tells his love interest โ€œToo bad you donโ€™t love me no more, girl / Too bad your people put me down.โ€

Kendrick Lamar โ€“ The Blacker The Berry

The saying goes the blacker the berry, the sweeter the juice but Lamar takes things to a more militant level with this 2015 record. Set in the middle of an ongoing riotโ€“ probably a race riot or protestโ€“ he calls out racism while reclaiming the same slurs used against him. โ€œI want you to recognize that Iโ€™m a proud monkey / You vandalize my perception but canโ€™t take style from me,โ€ Lamar raps. The song is also juxtaposed with โ€œiโ€ off the same album, โ€œTo Pimp a Butterfly.โ€ Top Dawg Entertainer boss Punch compared โ€œiโ€ to MLKโ€™s more digestible nature after the record won a Grammy. On the flip side, โ€œThe Blacker The Berryโ€ is more of a Malcolm X inspired trackโ€“ unapologetically Black without looking for validation from the oppressors.

Sault โ€“ Wildfires

Released in the height of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, Saultโ€™s โ€œWildfiresโ€ calls out police brutality while also promising to never back down or lose their light, despite the violence. โ€œYou should be ashamed / The bloodshed on your hands / Anotherโ€…man / Takeโ€…off your badge / Weโ€…all know it was murder,โ€ Cleo Sol sings in the first verse. Quickly, however, the song flips to a more inspiration record as the hook sings โ€œBut we will never show fear / Even in my eyes / I will always rise / In wildfires.โ€

Jay Z โ€“ Legacy

Track 10 on arguably one of Hovโ€™s best albums, โ€œ4:44,โ€ is a reminder of the importance of legacy, especially within the Black community. On the song, Jay-Z details what the word means to him as a former drug dealer turned billionaire hip-hop mogul. It doesnโ€™t get any better than that! After rapping about his family history and how he builds on those stepping stones to create his own for his childrenโ€™s future, Jay adds โ€œLegacy, legacy, legacy, legacy / Black excellence baby, you gonโ€™ let โ€™em see.โ€

Bob Marley & The Wailers โ€“ Get Up, Stand Up

Bob Marleyโ€™s career was largely shaped by his willingness to sing about political injustices. โ€œGet Up, Stand Upโ€ was no different. On the 1973 record, Marley calls for people to open their eyes to the oppression happening in the world. Moreso, he urges folks to take a stand against โ€œThe Man.โ€ He sings, โ€œYou can fool some people sometimes / But you canโ€™t fool all the people all the time / So now we see the light (what you gonโ€™ do?) / We going to stand up for our right.โ€

Michael Jackson โ€“ They Donโ€™t Care About Us

Michael Jacksonโ€™s 1995 hit proved to be the most controversial of his career. The King of Pop largely stayed away from politics, but clearly, he was fed up and had to speak his peace. On โ€œThey Donโ€™t care About Us,โ€ he echos generational complaints from Black people who claim the government doesnโ€™t care about them. โ€œSome things in life / They just donโ€™t wanna see / But if Martin Luther was livinโ€™ / He wouldnโ€™t let this be,โ€ Jackson sings before declaring โ€œAll I wanna say is that / They donโ€™t really care about us.โ€ Naturally, the song was met with backlash from folks who wrongly claimed it celebrated anti-semitism. Jackson later came out to clarify the opposite was true.

Solange โ€“ F.U.B.U.

Remember the clothing brand F.U.B.U (for us, by us)? Well, Solange takes that and remixes it into a record just for Black people by Black artists. The song featuring BJ the Chicago Kid and The-Dream, details experiences as a Black person that other groups simply canโ€™t relate to. โ€œWhen you driving in your tinted car / And youโ€™re criminal, just who you are / But you know youโ€™re gonna make it far, oh,โ€ she sings. Or, โ€œWhen you feeling all alone / And you canโ€™t even be you up in your home / When you even feeling it from your own.โ€ In the end, she says she hopes this record turns into a Black anthem so that her own son, Julez, can one day listen to with pride.

Tracy Chapman โ€“ Talkinโ€™ Bout a Revolution

Tracy Chapman warns that a revolution is slowly brewing in her 1988 song
โ€œTalkinโ€™ Bout a Revolutionโ€ฆโ€ and she was right! She sings โ€œWhile theyโ€™re standing in the welfare lines / Crying at the doorsteps of those armies of salvation / Wasting time in the unemployment lines / Sittinโ€™ around waitinโ€™ for a promotion / Donโ€™t ya know? / Theyโ€™re talking about a revolution.โ€ Although the song didnโ€™t get the love it deserved in the United States, Chapmanโ€™s record actually found a comfortable place internationally. Decades later, โ€œTalkinโ€™ Bout a Revolutionโ€ is still referenced in rallies, protests and other demonstrations across the world. Most notably, in 2011, the record was on repeat during the 28-day period of civil resistance known as the Tunisian Revolution. This would eventually lead to the infamous Arab Spring protests against corruption in the Middle East.

Public Enemy โ€“ Fight the Power

Originally just meant for Spike Leeโ€™s film โ€œDo the Right Thing,โ€ the Public Enemy record has since transformed into a generational anthem signaling unrest and rebellion from Black Americans fed up with racism and injustice. โ€œOur freedom of speech is freedom of death / Weโ€™ve got to fight the powers that be,โ€ Chuck D raps. The chorus acts almost as a battle cry, โ€œFight the power (Let me hear you say) / Fight the power (Let me hear youโ€”) /Weโ€™ve got to fight the powers that be.โ€ Peace to Radio Raheem!

Andra Day โ€“ Rise Up

Andra Dayโ€™s 2015 record takes power back from the oppressor. She sings โ€œIโ€™ll rise up / And Iโ€™ll do it a thousand times again/ For you.โ€ The track was yet another anthem for the Black Lives Matter Movement and has since been used in multiple movies over the years. In an interview, Day said, โ€œInstead of having to prove my point or say, โ€˜Youโ€™ve hurt me, you get no more love,โ€™ people are more transformed by mercy and unconditional love. Iโ€™d rather take the offense than be the offender and carry that burden.โ€

Kendrick Lamar โ€“ Alright

Lamar begins the Pharrell Williams produced track with โ€œAlls my life, I has to fightโ€“โ€ a direct reference to Sofiaโ€™s monologue in โ€œThe Color Purpleโ€ played by Oprah Winfrey. From there, the Compton rapper joins forces with Pharrell to promise Black folks that despite the ongoing struggle and all thatโ€™s wrong with the world, โ€œWe gonโ€™ be alright.โ€ The record focuses on trusting God and staying the course, no matter how hard things get. This is one of Lamarโ€™s biggest songs to date.

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