This is a beautiful interview. Corinne, thank you so very much for applauding black women to be who we are, just as God made us, beautiful, without apology. 🤎✊🏾
Always a pleasure to hear from this magnificent woman. I got serious beef with the editor of this video tho. Seriously couldn't get an image of the product and poster to insert in this video in post? Seriously? Smdh
Wow, this album 😱! There is a #CastleMilkStout ad that says that what you did to my mind should be illegal 🤯. #CorinneBaileyRae this is your best work yet 👏👏👏👏👏! You took me to a place I did not know we could go 😳, a whole nother level 🕴🏼! What a spiritual experience and sonic boom 💥. Thank you for adding some metal Rock 'n Roll too, because we truly are versatile lovers of music undefined by the lovely tones of our gleaming skin. Although, I would still love to see what a flat-iron does to your hair. It must be so long now ❣️. Thank you for sating a hunger you know I have for your music 🙏.
love corinne and this song but when are mixed people going to acknowledge that they’re mixed and not black. corinne and naomi campbell are not black in the same way at all. it would be interesting to know how corinne found inspiration to write this as a mixed person.
The "New Negro" movement was a specific moment in post civil war African American history (the phrase was popularized by African American philosopher Alain Locke when he published an anthology with that title in 1925) which reached its peak during the Harlem Renaissance. It referred to an idea of Black cultural dignity, education, and sophistication in contrast to the lives Black folks were forced to live in the Jim Crow south. Obviously, it's a term mired in problematic respectability politics (which Corinne is addressing here, as "New Negro" respectability often hinged on a proximity to whiteness, hence the idea of the "New Negro" woman embracing (and aspiring toward) straighter hair and lighter skin). What I'm confused about is how a specific term created by Black people, to label a cultural movement created by Black people, being discussed by a Black woman makes you feel like a white person is speaking?
This is a beautiful interview. Corinne, thank you so very much for applauding black women to be who we are, just as God made us, beautiful, without apology. 🤎✊🏾
my absolute favorite song on the album!!
Always a pleasure to hear from this magnificent woman.
I got serious beef with the editor of this video tho. Seriously couldn't get an image of the product and poster to insert in this video in post? Seriously? Smdh
Thank you for giving us insight into your art 🎨 ✨️ 🙏🏾 your history lessons are deep ❤
I appreciate how much I'm being taught by these videos👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾...but our history still 💔🥺
So wonderfully and beautifully explained! Love!!!
Beauty is such a deep and interesting subject.
Simply beautiful and wonderful ❤❤❤❤
Wow, this album 😱! There is a #CastleMilkStout ad that says that what you did to my mind should be illegal 🤯. #CorinneBaileyRae this is your best work yet 👏👏👏👏👏!
You took me to a place I did not know we could go 😳, a whole nother level 🕴🏼! What a spiritual experience and sonic boom 💥.
Thank you for adding some metal Rock 'n Roll too, because we truly are versatile lovers of music undefined by the lovely tones of our gleaming skin. Although, I would still love to see what a flat-iron does to your hair. It must be so long now ❣️.
Thank you for sating a hunger you know I have for your music 🙏.
Maravilhosa ❤❤❤❤
❤❤
love corinne and this song but when are mixed people going to acknowledge that they’re mixed and not black. corinne and naomi campbell are not black in the same way at all. it would be interesting to know how corinne found inspiration to write this as a mixed person.
I use to love Corrine in high school, but listening to her say "Negro" feels like Im listening to a white person.... ehhh
The "New Negro" movement was a specific moment in post civil war African American history (the phrase was popularized by African American philosopher Alain Locke when he published an anthology with that title in 1925) which reached its peak during the Harlem Renaissance. It referred to an idea of Black cultural dignity, education, and sophistication in contrast to the lives Black folks were forced to live in the Jim Crow south. Obviously, it's a term mired in problematic respectability politics (which Corinne is addressing here, as "New Negro" respectability often hinged on a proximity to whiteness, hence the idea of the "New Negro" woman embracing (and aspiring toward) straighter hair and lighter skin). What I'm confused about is how a specific term created by Black people, to label a cultural movement created by Black people, being discussed by a Black woman makes you feel like a white person is speaking?