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Bad Bunny


Stevie Wonder


Kendrick Lamar


Roberta Flack


Chaka Khan


Luther Vandross

“The future of music may not lie with music itself, but rather in the way it ... makes itself a part of the finer things that humanity does and dreams of.”

— American composer Charles Ives

“Those who have no record of what their forebears have accomplished lose the inspiration which comes from the teaching of biography and history.”

— Carter G. Woodson

We have raised questions before about the future of music. As we continue this exploration, we must ask: What role does music play in society today, and how is this generation shaping its direction?

To understand music’s role, we must ask: How does this generation seize its power to define and express our human condition?

The rise of our spiritual traditions and a public class of artists, actors, intellectuals, preachers and poets began transforming communities, then the nation, and ultimately, the world.

Nina Simone reminded us “An artist’s duty is to reflect the times. …We will shape and mold this country, or it will not be shaped at all. That to me is the definition of an artist.”

Watching the past two years of Grammy Awards performances, I noticed two key developments:

n First, there is now a broader presentation of genres, styles and cross-cultural dynamics, inviting a deeper connection with contemporary entertainment and music.

n Second, today’s artists are concerned, brave, innovative and daring — challenging old systems and creating space in the industry with new dance, costumes, produced projects and songwriting.

As an older musician who grew up on Stevie Wonder, Stevie Nicks, Stevie Ray Vaughn and Chaka Khan, I’m now grooving to Lamar, SZA, Bad Bunny and feeling joy with Samara Joy.

SZA said, “We are governed not by the government but by God.”

And Bad Bunny said, “We have to do it with Love… and that’s the way to do it, with Love.”

Representing country music radio big time in big and deeper ways was for sure, Jelly Roll. He preached like no other I have ever seen on popular TV mainstream time.

“There was a time in my life when I was broken, that’s why I wrote this album (“Beautifully Broken”). I didn’t think I had a chance. There were days when I thought the darkest, darkest things, and I was a horrible human. There were moments in my life where all I had was a Bible this big and a radio in my hand... in a 6-by-8-foot cell... and I believed that those two things could change my life. ... I believed that music had the power to change my life, and God had the power to change my life. Jesus is Jesus, and anybody can have a relationship with him. I love you, Lord.”

Now that’s the gospel! You talk about authenticity, identity, and having “street cred.”

I was trained in theology and the arts.

The most important lesson I learned was from my professor, Gordon Kaufman. I asked him, “What should theology do ?” He charged back immediately, “You must illuminate the people and move them beyond.” “Beautifully Broken” reached the people this night, who stood cheering and applauding voraciously.

You gotta love that! Hip-hop artist Kendrick Lamar was presented with the most awards, five, and appeared on stage as an elder statesman, claiming Luther Vandross was one of his “favorite artists of all time.”

Now wait a minute, Luther Vandross is one of my favorites too!

Those five awards included Record of the Year for Luther, a duet with SZA and Best Rap Album for GNX.

Tyler, The Creator’s appearance was banging on Michael Jackson’s video door as being “most thrilling.”

His originality of voice and concept does very much match his own brand as creative artistry with voice. No doubt about it!

The night’s biggest Grammy, Album of the Year, was given to Puerto Rican star Bad Bunny.

Hip-hop is a definitive American and global music culture, shown by its production, conception, popularity, sales and admired artists; it dominates today’s music entertainment landscape.

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl performance was a visual celebration of global ritual in song, community and the sheer beauty of living life like it was “Golden...without fear or shame.” You gotta love that!

Many other notable and meaningful artists also stood out. Billie Eilish’s “Wildflower,” Lady Gaga’s “Abracadabra,” Doechi’s “Anxiety,” Sabrina Carpenter’s “Manchild,” Leon Thomas for Best R&B Album (“Mutt”) and Olivia Dean as Best New Artist, an English Black artist, with non-American rooted ancestry.

And, I can proudly wear my Cher T-shirt now. As a kid, she was our TV star who sang and snubbed the academy with her “zing and zesty industry, I don’t care if you try and dismiss me, I matter.”

Tributes and griots

Let’s talk R&B, classics, Aretha, James Brown, Prince, D’Angelo, Donny Hathaway, Luther, Mint Condition, and Stokley Williams. After the D’Angelo loss earlier this year, I wrote, “When D’Angelo died, my ‘art-heart’ cried. Loudly! Great musicians die too young. D’Angelo was the continuation of that long kind of genius and a grassroots griot in progressive Black music. It shook and saddened me to read that the Grammy Award-winning R&B singer had passed at the young age of 51.”

The biggest moment for me on Grammy night 2026 was the ending — a collective consciousness and Black music “ring shout” ritual of enormous proportions. Featuring a music griot who stole America’s musical hearts, the leading lady of hip-hop and neo soul, Lauren Hill, the moment culminated in a mega medley. Dozens of leading artists and musicians joined her on stage to pay tribute to D’Angelo and Roberta Flack, shining artists of presence, musical power and inspiring magic.

Our maps of meaning forward

The fusion of Black music, culture, arts and spirituality has deeply shaped America’s cultural fabric — showing the power of these traditions to unite, inspire and forge identity.

My guiding principle is this:

Cultural experiences and heritage, conveyed through the arts, are essential for illuminating pathways forward and inspiring people to move beyond current limitations.

If you listen to the street political shouts for social rights from the 1980s to the 2000s, and the next generation’s protest in hip-hop, you will hear and feel those notes.

“It is not taboo to fetch what is at risk of being left behind.”

The Sankofa Principle of the Akan

I share here my dear colleague, Dr. Emmet Price, who wrote: “With all that is going on in the world and within the United States of America, I am increasingly reminded of the Sankofa Principle. Sankofa is a word of the Akan people (present-day Ghana, Ivory Coast and Togo) that translates as ‘it is not taboo to fetch what is at risk of being left behind.’ In essence, to make forward progress, one has to reclaim the history, truths and wisdom of the past. The Sankofa Principle is symbolized by a bird with its body facing forward while its neck and head face backward, with an egg in its mouth.”

Our values, our vision for the future, our conversations at all the tables we can sit at, and with our younger people must be focused on strategic partnerships to move all the dials forward. A revolution of related relevance for recognizing, recovering and reengineering paths forward, robustly and smartly.

The foundations of our faith forward depend on the knowledge of our combined heritages. That’s how we never lose the inspiration that comes from the teaching of our culture and the cultivation of our forward history.

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