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Azealia slams white rappers & soul singers
Azealia Banks Calls White Soul Singers & Rappers ‘Corny’

Quote:
Originally posted by NecoleBitchie
Azealia Banks is no stranger to talking that talk!
When it comes down to speaking her mind, the pretty faced raptress has managed to ruffle the feathers of the likes of Iggy Azalea, Pharrell Williams, T.I., Lil Kim, Nicki Minaj, Angel Haze, Jim Jones, A$AP Rocky, Rita Ora…and that’s just to name a few. And even though she managed to do things on her own terms, and recently dropped her much-anticipated ‘Broke With Expensive Taste’ LP to rave reviews, folks have wondered if her public spats and beefs have hindered her career since her talent is undeniable.
During an interview with Pitchfork recently, Azealia says that she’s learned some “tact,” but she definitely had a few words to says about the music industry and it’s embracing white singers/rappers who, according to Azealia, exploit black culture for profit.
She said:
It’ll be like, “For a couple of years, we’re gonna f-ck with blue-eyed soul, and here’s Duffy, here’s Adele”—who’s great—but now we’ve got a thousand white girls singing blue-eyed soul. It’s so regurgitated and corny. You have it in everything. You have it in indie rock. You’ll have Interpol, and then the National, and it’s just like, “Really, dude? Really?”
Or it’ll be like, “We’re gonna pop off the white-girl rapper,” so we’ll have Gwen Stefani and Fergie, and then it’ll get worse and worse and worse. And you’re just like, “What the f–k is this?” The whole trend of white girls appropriating black culture was so corny—it was more corny than it was offensive. Trust me, I’m not offended: All the things I’m trying to run away from in my black American experience are all the things that they’re celebrating. So if they f–kin’ want them, have them; if they want to be considered oversexualized and ignorant every time they open their f–king mouth, then f–king take it. But more than that, the art is not good. These songs are not good. It’s like, “Oh my God, you’re doing this black woman impression, is that what the f–k you think of me, b—h? I need to meet the black woman that you’re imitating because I’ve never met any black woman who acts that bizarre.” It’s crazy that this becomes mainstream culture. All of America is celebrating s–t like that. It’s so weird.
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