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10 Powerful Songs That Embody and Support Black Lives Matter Movement

(Theo Wargo/Getty Images)

Black recording artists have long been highlighting the perils of racism and police brutality through music, but recent events are brightening the spotlight on racial injustice and oppression.

Keeping in the tradition of black art reflecting the times, the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and subsequent protests have further ignited a passion in artists inspired to use their music as a sounding board for change.  

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Check below for 10 protest songs that highlight the importance of the Black Lives Matter movement.

1. Trey Songz - “2020 Riots: How Many Times” 

Trey Songz sheds light on the injustices faced by the black community at the hands of police brutality and institutionalized racism on the compelling new single, “2020 Riots: How Many Times.” Songz was inspired to record the song after joining in protests over Floyd's murder. “With the words in this song I just wanted to speak to everyone’s hearts and acknowledge the pain and anguish everyone is going through right now,” Songz said in a statement. 

A portion of the proceeds from “2020 Riots: How Many Times” will benefit Black Lives Matter and the Community Justice Exchange's National Bail Fund Network.  

 

2. Usher - “Chains”

Released in 2015, Usher’s “Chains” amplifies stories of police brutality and racial violence. Coupled with an interactive music video featuring images of Trayvon Martin, Ramarley Graham, Caesar Cruz, Rekia Boyd, Amadou Diallo, and other victims, the Nas-assisted track provides a sobering perspective on the reality of being black in America. 

3. Prince - “Baltimore”

“Baltimore,” one of Prince's final singles, was inspired by Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man who died in police custody in 2015, and the subsequent uprisings that followed his death. Recorded exactly one-year before Prince died, “Baltimore” was the lead track off the Purple One’s album, Hit n Run Phase Two

In commemoration of what would have been Prince's 62nd birthday last Sunday, the music legend's estate released his handwritten note on intolerance that reads, "Nothing more ugly in the whole wide world than INTOLERANCE (between) Black, white, red, yellow, boy or girl. INTOLERANCE." 

 

4. Kendrick Lamar - “Alright”

The GRAMMY-winning rapper’s 2015 single, “Alright,” spotlights the beauty of black life co-existing within the throes of oppression and police brutality. Produced by Pharrell Williams, Lamar's critically acclaimed track became an anthem for Black Lives Matter protests, rallies and marches for serving up a slice of faith amid despair. 

 

5. Leon Bridges - “Sweeter” 

The GRAMMY-winning singer-songwriter shares the perspective of a black man taking his last breath in “Sweeter” featuring fellow GRAMMY winner Terrace Martin. Originally recorded for a future album, Bridges decided to release the song early in light of current events. The Texas native has experienced racism throughout his life but Floyd’s death marked a “breaking point.” 

“It was the first time I wept for a man I never met,” Bridges shared in a statement. “I am George Floyd, my brothers are George Floyd, and my sisters are George Floyd. I cannot and will not be silent any longer. Just as Abel’s blood was crying out to God, George Floyd is crying out to me. So, I present to you Sweeter." 

6. Nasty C featuring T.I. - “They Don’t Listen” 

T.I. and Nasty C address racial injustice and police brutality on “They Don’t Listen.” Proceeds from the song, which was released on Friday, will benefit Until Freedom & The Solidarity Fund. 

 

7. J. Cole - “Be Free”

J. Cole’s “Be Free” illuminates some of the trauma of oppression. Inspired by the police killing of Michael Brown, the chilling chorus to the 2014 track makes a powerful statement as Cole repeats, “All we want to do is take the chains off. All we want to do is be free.” 

Besides music and joining marches in Ferguson, Missouri, Cole expressed his feelings on the death of Brown in a 2014 blog entry. “That coulda easily been me,” he wrote at the time. “It could have been my best friend. I’m tired of being desensitized to the murder of black men.” 

 

8. Black Thought - “Rest in Power”

Black Thought paid tribute to Trayvon Martin with “Rest in Power,” the lead track from the 2018 JAY-Z-produced docuseries Rest in Power: The Trayvon Martin Story. The song includes a 911 call from Martin's killer, George Zimmerman, and words from the slain teenager's mother, Sybrina Fulton. 

 

9. Janelle Monae — “Hell You Talmbout” 

“Silence is our enemy and sound is our weapon,” Janelle Monae once said of her protest song, “Hell You Talmbout.” The 2015 track channels the frustrations felt by the families who have lost loved ones to brutality. The six-and-a-half-minute song includes a roll call of black men and women whose lives were taken through brutality, dating all the way back to the 1955 murder of Emmett Till.

 

10. John Legend - “Glory” 

John Legend and Common joined forces for the Oscar-winning lead track from the film Selma. “Glory” debuted four months after Michael Brown's murder and amid protest in Ferguson. Although Selma is centered around one of the most prevalent marches of the civil rights movement, “Glory” speaks to the present fight against injustice while paying homage to the past. 

 

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