Kirk Franklin & Maverick City Music Featured On Apple Music Juneteenth Playlist
In the US, Juneteenth is the day recognizing the news of the Emancipation Proclamation finally reaching slaves in Texas. To honor Juneteenth 2021, Apple Music commissioned a specially curated collection of songs â Juneteenth 2021: Freedom Songs.  The compilation features original compositions and covers in service of the holiday from Amaarae, Black Thought, Chloe x Halle, D Smoke, H.E.R., Hit-Boy, Honey Dijon, Jean Dawson, Jimmie Allen, Kane Brown, Kirk Franklin, Madison Calley, Maverick City Music, Saba, Sech, Tobe Nwigwe, Tems, Terrace Martin & Brandee Younger, Willie Jones and Zeal & Ardor. In addition, Ghanaian American visual artist Kwadwo Obeng pairs with some of the artists works to create timeless visualizations of their individual Juneteenth messages. The Juneteenth Freedom Songs playlist is available today only on Apple Music. Listen HERE.
â2021 marks an important moment in Black History with Juneteenth finally being recognized as a holiday by cities and states across America. Until now, many people were not taught about the importance of June 19th in public schools and corporations and state governments werenât giving time off. This is a very big moment in history that the mainstream is embracing and acknowledging the day enslaved Black Africans were set free from physical bondage by the US government âa painful part of American history that can no longer be a side-note,â said Ebro Darden, Apple Music global head of Hip-Hop and R&B. âOur teams at Apple Music are pushing the Black Music Month conversation internationally, working to make sure the world understands that all popular music today was started by Black people. The significance of these recognitions is helping normalize the truth and the trauma done to Black people worldwide by white supremacy and racism.â
Darden adds, âJuneteenth 2021: Freedom Songs is an idea born with the desire to make sure new sounds were available for this important day. Many corporations and state governments are acknowledging Juneteenth now, so our idea was to help lift this day higher and create more awareness. Black artists from many genres and from around the world contributed this moment this year, the same way Black creatives and storytellers over centuries shared their talent, soul, joy and pain to create all the music the world enjoys today.ââ
Artists taking part in Juneteenth 2021 Freedom Songs were commissioned by Apple Music to speak to the spirit of this day through the majesty of music. The project spans over 20 artists and a dozen genre perspectives from Hip-hop, Gospel, Metal, Jazz, R & B, Country and more. Within this collection, the listener uncovers the complexity of the Black experience against the backdrop of the historical touchpoint that is Juneteenth. From joy to pain and from hope to rage, Freedom Songs is a sonic journey through covers from the past and new works of today.
A full list of participating artist quotes and info on their songs can be found below.
Additionally, Apple Music will celebrate Black artistry and influence all month long in honor of âBlack Music Month 2021,â an exploration of the legacy, artistry, impact, and influence of Black musicians around the globe through Playlists, DJ Mixes, Original Content, Apple Music TV, Radio Programming & More. Check out Apple Musicâs celebration of âBlack Music Month 2021â HERE.
Apple Music Original Playlist: Juneteenth 2021 Freedom Songs
Black Thought (Original Song âApproximately Freeâ)
D Smoke (Original Song called âKinfolkâ)
H.E.R. (Cover of âInner City Bluesâ by Marvin Gaye)
Hit-Boy (Original Song âBack In Trafficâ)
Jimmie Allen (Cover of Charley Prideâs âKiss An Angel Good Morninâ)
Kirk Franklin (Cover of âWe Shall Overcomeâ called âOvercome 2021âģ)
Madison Calley (Cover of âLift Every Voice And Singâ)
Maverick City Music (Original Song âBreatheâ)
Tobe Nwigwe (Original Song âPassing Throughâ)
Willie Jones (Cover of Bob Marleyâs âRedemption Songâ)
Amaarae (Cover of Herbie Hancockâs âButterflyâ)
Tems (Cover of John Legendâs âOrdinary Peopleâ)
Zeal & Ardor (Original Song âCallowayâ)
Sech (Original Song âSomos Igualesâ)
Kane Brown (A reimagining of his own song âWorldwide Beautifulâ)
Saba (Original Song âBlack Astronautâ)
Honey Dijon (Original Song âUnleashâ)
Chloe x Halle (Cover of TLCâs âWaterfallsâ)
Jean Dawson (Original song âGhostâ)
Terrace Martin & Brandee Younger (Cover Song âDamageâ)
ARTIST QUOTES
Kirk Franklin, âWe Shall Overcomeâ
The gospel giant honors the hope that is born from trauma.
âThe Black experience in America is just so multilayered,â gospel legend Kirk Franklin tells Apple Music. âThe things we celebrate are also things birthed out of tragedy. We are a group of people who have historically always taken lemons and made lemonade. I think [Juneteenth] is more than the acknowledgment of the day because we still have the issues of Reconstruction, we have Jim Crow, we still have segregation. Juneteenth was not this âMeet us in the promised landâ moment, because we still had to deal with and address so many other issues. And there is a myriad of systemic issues that people of color continue to have when it comes to the political history of the Americas.â
For Apple Musicâs 2021 Juneteenth-inspired Freedom Songs, an exclusive collection of covers and originals, Franklin recorded an exclusive-to-Apple Music cover of gospel turned civil rights protest anthem âWe Shall Overcome.â âTo be able to take this historic chant that has meant so much to so many people of African descent and to be able to find a tone and a narrative and to be able to reimagine the different verses and reimagine the DNA of the song is humbling,â he says. âI hope that itâs something special for people.â
Maverick City Music, âBreatheâ
The Atlanta-hailing contemporary Christian collective reminds us that our breath is sacred.
Like many who had learned the story behind Juneteenth as children, Maverick Cityâs Jonathan McReynolds was confused. âI had a very basic understanding and assumed at that point that someone could get on their cell phone and just call and tell everybody,â he tells Apple Music. âI remember my first reaction was âWhy did it take so long?ââ While that sort of indignation at the news of the Emancipation Proclamation not reaching some slaves until well over two years after its instatement is hardly uncommon, the faith-driven praise and worship collective is likely well familiar with the biblical directive of âlean not unto thine own understanding.â For their contribution to Apple Musicâs Juneteenth-inspired Freedom Songs, a collection of covers and originals, the group delivered âBreathe,â a song McReynolds says he hopes reminds fans to be grateful in each moment. âChandler [Moore] was praying in the session and talking about how the events that have taken place in America have a lot of usâespecially Black menâwaiting for the next shoe to drop,â McReynolds says. âAs we began writing our way through it, we just realized this connection to all of the breaths that have been snuffed out over the past years because of racism and discrimination. So the first idea was centered around us bracing ourselves for the next issue, the next trending topic, the next killing, the next trial, and how necessary it is for us as believersâand just people in generalâto make sure that we donât miss out on living, praising, and believing because of worry.â