After her Grammy Award acceptance speech, Chapel Lawn gave $25,000 to “Struggling Artists” about how record labels treated developing musicians.
Charli XCX and Noah Kahan have announced that they have pledged to match Roan's donations in response to the authors of the OP-ED critical authors for their Grammy Award speech.
“I was inspired by you,” Kahan said in her Instagram story on Saturday. “I'm glad you helped me roll the ball. Where is my mouth!”
“We match $25,000 to support artists' access to healthcare,” Charli XCX also said on Saturday's Instagram story. “I thought (Noah Kahan) had said he would do the same, so I thought I'd follow that. Your speech at the Grammy Awards is an exciting, thoughtful place of care It was from. I'm glad they helped me roll the ball too. Where my mouth is.”
Lorne was the first to call the record labels at the Grammy Awards ceremony last Sunday when it accepted the Best New Artist award. “If I've won a Grammy Award and I could stand here in front of the most powerful people in music, I told myself: the industry label that earns millions of dollars from artists , particularly demanding that you provide livable wages and healthcare. The pop singer, who was signed as a teenager by Atlantic Records in 2018, stated:
When she was dropped on the label, she said, “I had zero work experience under my belt. Like most people, I struggled to find work during the pandemic and could not afford health insurance. There was none,” she said she applauded from fellow artists, including Taylor, Swift, Sabrina Carpenter and Benson Boone. “It was very devastating to feel so devoted to my art, betrayed by the system and dehumanized to have no health (care).
“If my label had prioritized the health of the artists, I might have been provided with care from the company that gave them everything,” she continued. “So, record labels need to treat artists as valuable employees with livable wages, health insurance and protection. Labels, we got you, but you got us Have you put it in?”
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Lorne tagged Jeff Laban on Friday with a screenshot of Hollywood reporter Op-Ed's Instagram Story. He described the 26-year-old musician as “it's too green and lacking information to be the agent of change she's aiming to be today.” ”
“If the label is responsible for the artist's wages, healthcare and overall well-being, where does it end and personal responsibility begin?” Rabhan, former chairman of the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at New York University. I wrote it. “There is no moral or ethical obligation on the standard that holds a label responsible for allocating additional funds beyond progress or royalties.”
Rabhan wrote that Roan “should do something about it, not just talk about it,” so Roan made a donation and challenged Rabhan to do the same.
“Mr. Rabhan. I love how you said in the article where you said, “put your money where your mouth is”!!! She said on her Instagram story, “Donation Receipts.” Show me the book,” he added, “screamsed a few artists worthy of more love and a bigger platform, “including Hemlock Springs, Sarakinsley, Devon, again Devon and Baby Stormy.”