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“Let’s Make the Dance Music of the Future Inclusive”: Aluna Pens Open Letter to EDM Community

“Let’s Make the Dance Music of the Future Inclusive”: Aluna Pens Open Letter to EDM Community

Earlier in the month of June, Aluna of esteemed musical duo AlunaGeorge courageously took to Instagram to share her experiences with racism in the EDM community and the music industry at large.

In her message, Aluna detailed how she feels “practically invisible” despite her significant contributions to music from white collaborators. “Over the years I’ve accepted my role as the black accessory to white peoples dance music, internally bowing and scraping for these opportunities with no acknowledgement for my contribution because I’m just used to it,” she wrote.

Aluna, who recently embarked on a solo career, today penned an open letter to the dance music community in which she outlines how the industry can initiate an urgent paradigm shift in its efforts to support Black artists. Highlighting the glaring lack of diversity despite early pioneering developments by Black, Brown, and LGBTQI people, she goes on to elucidate how the dance music community can become more inclusive. A-Trak, Diplo, Dillon Francis, Icona Pop, DJ Snake, Anna Lunoe, and many more have already pledged their support.

You can read the full letter below and find Aluna’s original post here.

Let’s make the dance music of the future inclusive.

As a member of the Black Music Action Coalition and a Black woman in dance music, I need to challenge the “dance music industry” on its long standing racial inequalities. We not only need to give credit to the artists that created the genre, we also need to establish a long-term plan to secure a healthy future for dance music that is culturally and racially inclusive.

What I’m proposing is that the current genre definition and industry-designed parameters of dance in particular need an upgrade.

Many of us know that dance music wasn’t invented in 1988 in Europe. Its real history is still to be widespread and appreciated since it was virtually erased — House and Techno were pioneered by Black and Brown LGBTQI people, once creating a safe place of escapism and healing for those communities. Dance music was protest music, liberation from oppression, so it’s bitterly ironic for it to be appropriated by the white community, both burying its rich history and casting out the wider Black artists from a genre their community invented. ​(Read: ‘Dance and club music is Black and Brown protest music’, Electronic Beats 2020).

There are many types of dance music made by Black producers that were never accepted into the genre widely (Juke, Jersey club, Baltimore club, Philly club, footwork, soflo jook, ballroom/vogue, slowflo, Miami jook, UK funky, New Orleans bounce and more). (​Credit: ‘DJ Sliink on Racial Inequity in the dance Industry’, Billboard 2020)​. The original sounds of dance drew from and embraced many aspects of Black peoples rich musical heritage.

As the genre was westernized the sound changed to the point where its original cultural influences were no longer heard or associated with the genre. This means that only the subgenres of EDM or European-style House/Techno are consumed by the masses via DSPs (Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, YouTube, etc), radio, and mainstream media — any other styles of dance music from African-born artists and producers of the wider African diaspora are left out. This is especially shortsighted since currently, due to the lack of diversity, white dance music producers are further appropriating the beats of the very people left out of the main genre, creating an extreme double standard. For example, if a white producer uses African beats, it will be accepted and playlisted as dance which has a well worn pathway to mainstream pop music. However, African house music produced by a Black person will not get the same opportunity.

There is no reason why dance music of the African diaspora and African-born artists shouldn’t be included under the banner of dance under DSPs. You should be able to find Gqom, afrobeats, afropop, dancehall, reggaeton, juke, Jersey club, Baltimore club, Philly club, footwork, soflo jook, ballroom/vogue, slowflo, Miami jook, UK funky, UK garage, New Orleans bounce and more under the banner of dance.

Additionally, the top performing songs of these sub-genres should feed into the marque dance playlists at each platform. Some DSPs have editorial playlists for afrobeats, afropop, dancehall, and reggaeton genres, which I believe is important to have in order for those communities to have their own ecosystems — however, most of these playlists are not prominently placed within DSP platforms, and these styles of music aren’t given opportunities to grow within the dance genre. They’re treated like an isolated genre, yet, these sounds have influenced mainstream dance and pop music for years.

Dance music needs to be progressive and move us into the future, especially right now, as we have globally united in the fight to end racism. The role of dance is to give healing, to uplift us, and to serve as a celebration of those who are on the front line making a better future for us all.

– Aluna

FOLLOW ALUNA:

Instagram: instagram.com/alunaaa/
Twitter: twitter.com/alunaaa
Spotify: spoti.fi/2ZnR4td

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