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Black Star Line Inspire Chance and Vic Mensa

Chance The Rapper and Vic Mensa have announced that they will be putting together a festival. The Black Star Line Festival will take place in Africa. Activist Marcus Garvey inspired Chance The Rapper and Vic Mensa.

The Black Star Line Festival Announcement

WhatsTheWord reports that Chance The Rapper and Vic Mensa took eight high school graduates from Chicago to Accra, Ghana. Each student will soon be a college freshman. Taking students from Chicago to Ghana is important for both rappers. Vic Mensa says that the trip has been a year in the making.

“Our dream is to build bridges that cross the ocean of divide created by the Transatlantic slave trade” -Vic Mensa (Instagram)

 

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Chance and Vic made a big announcement during the trip. Outside the doors of Free The Youth, the Chicago natives grab a microphone and start talking to a crowd. The rappers tell everyone that they will host The Black Star Line Festival in Ghana. The crowd goes crazy once they hear the news.

“To the Black people around the world, we need connections”- Chance The Rapper

 

The Marcus Garvey Inspiration

Marcus Garvey was born in 1887 on the island of Jamaica. Garvey grew up to be an activist who gained a huge following and is still inspiring people today. Eventually, he created the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA).

In 1919, Marcus created the shipping company Black Star Line under UNIA. Sources from History.com state that the goal was to establish a nation on the continent of Africa for enslaved people or descendants of those who were enslaved.

A Continued Movement

Chance The Rapper and Vic Mensa want to continue what Marcus Garvey started. The artist is inspired to connect Black people all over the world to Africa. The Festival is one way to bring people back to Africa.

“When we came here and touched down and felt the love that we received and the fans that we got to connect with, the understanding for the need for the connection became apparent to us. We need a music festival bringing major artists to Ghana” – Chance The Rapper

 

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A post shared by Chance The Rapper (@chancetherapper)

The Black Star Line Festival will be held January 6 at the Black Star Square in Accra, Ghana.

Stay connected to all things hip-hop here at FmHipHop.

 

Xavier “Writer X” Griffin | Facebook @WriterX93 |Twitter @WRITER_X_713| Instagram xaviegriffin81

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A Day in Ghana With Kendrick Lamar Documentary Review

Kendrick Lamar released a four-minute documentary in collaboration with Spotify this past week (Jun. 17). What can fans expect?

Meeting Kendrick and Accra

We open with several rapid shots of Ghanaians living their everyday lives. Instantly, Kendrick presents his thesis; beautiful black people. This is an extremely persistent theme in Kendrick’s art, from his humble first mixtape Youngest Head Nigga in Charge (Hub City Threat: Minor of the Year), to his Grammy award-winning damn. The camera sets on Kendrick watching some boys box in the street, as he sets the stage.

“First time in Ghana,” he says, camera looming over his head.

The setting is Accra, Ghana. In his hometown of Compton, Kendrick would probably be dodging phone cameras and endless crowds. But In Accra, the 35-year-old can casually play some foosball outside.

“I can’t even tell you what day it is, I just be in the moment.”

The future of skating

Lamar’s ‘Crown’ echoes in the back while the camera pans across Freedom Skate Park. Skating has become a bit of a phenomenon with kids in Ghana recently. Skaters like Joshua Odamtten have launched the sport into popularity in the small nation. Now, Ghanaian boys and girls are going viral for their mainly self-taught tricks.

Freedom Skate Park is a former hospital repurposed for the youth of the community. This safe haven for Accra was developed by Skate Nation and Surf Ghana, and erected in Virgil Abloh’s honor. Abloh first reached out personally to Skate Nation after seeing them in Vogue Magazine. Immediately, the designer and skate crew saw eye to eye and began collaborating on the logo, brand identity, and ramp design of Freedom Skate Park.

A large portrait stands brightly in Freedom Skate Park to honor the entrepreneur, who tragically passed from cardiac angiosarcoma in November last year.

“How it makes them feel to be over here. Virgil, what he means to them you know, as far as letting them have this creative space for them to enjoy themselves. They’re special.” Kendrick explained upon being asked what he speaks to the East African youth about.

Getting some help

The doc quickly transitions to a more personal perspective, as the focus becomes Kendrick’s latest album Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers. In his fifth studio album, Kendrick explores the topic of mental health amongst his black male peers and the rejection of traditional therapy. This reflects his real experiences as the ‘DNA’ rapper just recently began unlearning the “black men don’t need therapy” trope.

“One of my favorite lines in the album is where’ll say you really need to go to therapy. And I say real niggas don’t go to therapy.” the West Coast artist says with a laugh. The image of Kendrick and a group of friends on the beach underlies this narrative of black men taking the steps to self-healing.

“Cause that’s how niggas feel. You know what I’m saying we grew up where our parents don’t know about that our grandparents don’t know about that. “ Kendrick explained.

“To challenge myself to go to therapy, that’s like a whole new step in a whole new generation. That’s growth.”

Show don’t tell

The visuals are the star of this show. Of course, Kendrick’s narrations and the accompanying music do their part. However, it’s the kids playing soccer, houses stacked by the brim, and friends smiling on the beach, that make ‘A Day in Ghana with Kendrick Lamar’ truly special. Getting an intimate look into a West African country outside of the usual lens of poverty is extremely refreshing.

This doc contains no sad violin music or starving bodies. Ghana specifically and purposefully isn’t portrayed as a place to feel pity for. ‘A Day in Ghana with Kendrick Lamar’ is a love letter to black adversities and experiences. Whether those experiences are a kid learning to skateboard in Accra, or a grown man in California going to therapy for the first time, they’re equally rich and valid. This is particularly reinforced through the doc’s final words and Kendrick’s ‘Duckworth’ serving as an epilogue soundtrack.

“Everything we do out here, everything that we say everything that’s been done, it’s all a representation of all of us.”

Although the video is admittedly short, it provides that signature Kendrick authenticity. It’s storytelling at its most simple, and it’s effective.

Watch for yourself and see what you think of ‘A Day in Ghana with Kendrick Lamar’.

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Dreema Carrington|IG@dr3amgirl79|Twitter: @notdreema

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Chance the Rapper Gets Mistaken For Quavo in Ghana

During his recent vacation in West Africa, an employee mistook Chance the Rapper for Quavo.

Chance and Quavo are famous artists, but a hotel employee believed Chance to be Quavo. The rapper took to Instagram to share his hilarious experience with the caption, “Bro a n***a just thought I was Quavo No glasses G WTF.”

“Qua, Quavo! Migos! Migo gang!” Chance said as they chanted his fellow rapper’s name.

https://twitter.com/2cooI2blog/status/1480037059729534977?s=20

Most commenters also found the moment funny and joked about it. Even Chance’s friends joined in on the joke. Before the video came up, Chance posted a picture of himself hiking in the Ghanaian hills. 

“My homie from Chicago said I’m out in Ghana looking like @quavochuncho and I’m CRINE,” the caption read.

 

 

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A post shared by Chance The Rapper (@chancetherapper)

And the joke’s kept coming.

Chance The Rapper’s Trip

As stated before, the rapper took a vacation back to his roots in Ghana’s city of Accra. He brought along fellow Chi-City rhymer Vic Mensa, who shared posts on his Instagram about the experience.

Chance seemed to have enjoyed his time in Accra. While there, he tweeted:

“Accra I love you, you save my life.”

https://twitter.com/chancetherapper/status/1479561521114058754?s=20

He also went back to Instagram to post another picture of him at Freedom Skatepark, the first park for skating in Ghana. The city built the park in honor of the late designer Virgil Abloh.

“I have much to share with you, brothers and sisters,” his caption read.

Chance has been to many places during his trip, and he’s shared most of them with his fans. One significant location includes the church that his family built years ago.

The rapper revealed that Bishop Nkansah, the church’s leader, was an acquaintance of his great grandmother in an Instagram story.

For more news on Chance and hip hop, check us out at @FMHipHopTwitterInstagramFacebook.

Written by Anthony Jamal Bicy | Instagram | Twitter

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“N****s in Ghana” – The Year of Return

“N****s in Ghana” 

 

After history continues to repeat itself here in America, Ghana welcomes Black Americans back home to Africa with open arms. Clearly our brothers and sisters back home haven’t forgotten about us.

Is moving 6000-ish miles across the world the peace of mind and security Black America needs? The program of African Americans returning to Ghana started as a promotion called “The Year Of Return.” A government-financed public program for the African diaspora to travel to Ghana. In most cases the goal is to explore the country four centuries since the first slave ship reached the American coast.

#FmPolitics City of Ghana