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aristocrat Of Bands Made History At the 2023 GRAMMYs
Members of the TSU Aristocrat of Bands during the Southern Heritage Classic game in 2019

Photo: Nick Tre. Smith/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

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How HBCU Marching Band Aristocrat Of Bands Made History At The 2023 GRAMMYs

By blending gospel and marching band music, Tennessee State University's marching band created a GRAMMY-winning gospel record, 'The Urban Hymnal.'

GRAMMYs/Feb 16, 2023 - 12:23 am

For Tennessee State University's marching band, Aristocrat of Bands, being a part of history isn’t enough. The band needed to make history themselves, and they did just that at the 2023 GRAMMYs.

On Music's Biggest Night, singer/songwriter and producer Sir The Baptist won Best Roots Gospel Album for his work on TSU’s debut album, The Urban Hymnal. This achievement makes Aristocrat of Bands the first collegiate marching band whose work has won a GRAMMY, as well as the first Historically Black College or University (HBCU) marching band to win the prestigious award.

The Urban Hymnal blends historical gospel hymns, soulful hip-hop, and Aristocrat of Bands' signature energetic sound. Co-produced by Baptist, Assistant Band Director Larry Jenkins and songwriter/producer Dallas Austin, Hymnal also features powerfully uplifting sermons of faith and perseverance. Nominated albums in this category must contain greater than 50 percent playing time of newly recorded, vocal, traditional/roots gospel music, Southern gospel, bluegrass, and Americana recordings.

"There are straight ahead, full-band renditions of 'Jesus Loves Me' and 'I’m So Glad' — the melody of which is employed in TSU’s school song — but also forays into hip-hop and contemporary R&B," Jon Freeman wrote in Rolling Stone. "Rhythm sections are underlaid with thumping 808s, tubas are rounded out with electric bass, and synths add new texture to the brass arrangements."

Baptist, Jenkins, and TSU alum and hip-hop producer Aaron "Dubba-AA" Lockhart accepted the Best Roots Gospel Album award during the 65th GRAMMY Awards Premiere Ceremony, representing the marching band. "These kids worked so hard," Baptist said in his acceptance speech, candidly highlighting the financial difficulties involving the album’s creation.

"To be honest with you guys, HBCUs are so grossly underfunded to where I had to put my last dime to get us across the line," Baptist continued, thanking Tennessee State University staff, faculty, students, and alumni for their efforts. "Our pockets are empty but our hands aren’t!" 

The Tennessee State University campus in Nashville hosted a watch party on Feb. 5, where black and blue-clad students gathered around a large screen eagerly awaiting the results. The room erupted in joy when Baptist and the Aristocrat of Bands were announced as the category's winners. TSU Students proudly chanted "AOB!", the abbreviated nickname for the marching band, in unison.

Known as "The Band of Firsts," AOB have made collegiate band history throughout the decades. The Aristocrat of Bands became the first marching band from an HBCU to appear on national television in 1955, performing during a halftime show at a football match between the Los Angeles Rams and Chicago Bears. In 1961, TSU performed at John F. Kennedy’s inauguration, landing the group the honor of being the first HBCU band to perform at a presidential inauguration. In 1993 and 1997, AOB performed at Bill Clinton’s inaugural parades.

AOB took their talent to Tokyo’s National Olympic Stadium in 1984, performing at a game between the United States Military Academy’s Army Cadets against the University of Montana’s Grizzles. . In 2002, AOB became the official marching band for the Tennessee Titans —  and the first HBCU marching band to be commissioned by the National Football League.

After sharing their talent in a multitude of venues around the world, Aristocrat of Bands began work on another monumental first: creating a GRAMMY Award-winning album. To achieve this, AOB needed to combine two music traditions rooted in African-American history: gospel music and HBCU marching bands.

The collaboration between Baptist and AOB began in 2019 when the producer visited the marching band during one of their performances. Impressed with what he heard, Baptist knew he needed to be a part of their sound. 

"I heard [AOB] in the band room for the first time and it blew my mind," Baptist recalled in an interview with American Songwriter. "The amount of energy that’s coming out of these horns and from these kids really blows you away when you’re in front of it. It’s a level of power that I wasn’t used to, especially in gospel."

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Baptist signed on to become TSU’s artist-in-residence and began discussing with Jenkins about prospective endeavors for the band. "We both wanted to see the kids win," Baptist explained in an interview with NPR. "We wanted to be a part of the kids’ story as they are creating their legacy, and really, really zone in on how to preserve the future for HBCU bands."

A variety of acclaimed acts in the gospel music community got involved with the album’s creation, among them Jakelyn Carr, J.Ivy, Fred Hammond, Kierra Sheard, and Louis York.

Ivy, who was featured on  "Alright," — a spoken word track about gratitude and remaining hopeful for what the future holds — also collaborated with AOB on his album The Poet Who Sat by The Door, which received a GRAMMY for Best Spoken Word Album. 

Tennessee State University’s historic win follows that of Nashville-based HBCU Fisk University. At the 63rd GRAMMY Awards, a capella group the Fisk Jubilee Singers won in the same category for their album Celebrating Fisk!, which celebrated the 150th anniversary of Fisk University. 

Back at the 65th GRAMMY Awards. Jenkins praised Aristocrat of Bands for continuing the pioneering group's legacy and making history again. 

"All your hard work and dedication created the pen that allowed you to write your page in the history books," Jenkins said onstage at L.A.'s Microsoft Theater. "[TSU] made history but this is also February, so we also made Black History." 

According to Rolling Stone, part of the album’s proceeds, will "benefit TSU’s Marching band foundation, so the album will continue to provide for Aristocrat of Bands in the years ahead."

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Omar Apollo Embraces Heartbreak On 'God Said No'
Omar Apollo

Photo: Aitor Laspiur

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Omar Apollo Embraces Heartbreak And Enters His "Zaddy" Era On 'God Said No'

Alongside producer Teo Halm, Omar Apollo discusses creating 'God Said No' in London, the role of poetry in the writing process, and eventually finding comfort in the record's "proof of pain."

GRAMMYs/Jun 27, 2024 - 01:21 pm

"Honestly, I feel like a zaddy," Omar Apollo says with a roguish grin, "because I'm 6'5" so, like, you can run up in my arms and stay there, you know what I mean?"

As a bonafide R&B sensation and one of the internet’s favorite boyfriends, Apollo is likely used to the labels, attention and online swooning that come with modern fame. But in this instance, there’s a valid reason for asking about his particular brand of "zaddyhood": he’s been turned into a Bratz doll.

In the middle of June, the popular toy company blasted  a video to its nearly 5 million social media followers showing off the singer as a real-life Bratz Boy — the plastic version draped in a long fur coat (shirtless, naturally), with a blinged-out cross necklace and matching silver earrings as he belts out his 2023 single "3 Boys" from a smoke-covered stage.

The video, which was captioned "Zaddy coded," promptly went viral, helped along by an amused Apollo reposting the clip to his own Instagram Story. "It was so funny," he adds. "And it's so accurate; that's literally how my shows go. It made me look so glamorous, I loved it."

The unexpected viral moment came with rather auspicious timing, considering Apollo is prepping for the release of his hotly anticipated sophomore album. God Said No arrives June 28 via Warner Records.

In fact, the star is so busy with the roll-out that, on the afternoon of our interview, he’s FaceTiming from the back of a car. The day prior, he’d filmed the music video for "Done With You," the album’s next single. Now he’s headed to the airport to jet off to Paris, where he’ll be photographed front row at the LOEWE SS25 men’s runway show in between Sabrina Carpenter and Mustafa — the latter of whom is one of the few collaborators featured on God Said No

Apollo’s trusted co-writer and producer, Teo Halm, is also joining the conversation from his home studio in L.A. In between amassing credits for Beyoncé (The Lion King: The Gift), Rosalía and J Balvin (the Latin GRAMMY-winning "Con Altura"), SZA ("Notice Me" and "Open Arms" featuring Travis Scott) and others, the 25-year-old virtuoso behind the boards had teamed up with Apollo on multiple occasions. Notably, the two collabed on "Evergreen (You Didn’t Deserve Me At All)," which helped Apollo score his nomination for Best New Artist at the 2023 GRAMMYs

In the wake of that triumph, Apollo doubled down on their creative chemistry by asking Halm to executive produce God Said No. (The producer is also quick to second his pal’s magnetic mystique: "Don't get it twisted, he's zaddy, for sure.") 

Apollo bares his soul like never before across the album’s 14 tracks,  as he processes the bitter end of a two-year relationship with an unnamed paramour. The resulting portrait of heartbreak is a new level of emotional exposure for a singer already known for his unguarded vulnerability and naked candor. (He commissioned artist Doron Langberg to paint a revealing portrait of him for the cover of his 2023 EP Live For Me, and unapologetically included a painting of his erect penis as the back cover of the vinyl release.) 

On lead single "Spite," he’s pulled between longing and resentment in the wake of the break-up over a bouncing guitar riff. Second single "Dispose of Me" finds Apollo heartsick and feeling abandoned as he laments, "It don’t matter if it’s 25 years, 25 months/ It don’t matter if it’s 25 days, it was real love/ We got too much history/ So don’t just dispose of me." 

Elsewhere, the singer offers the stunning admission that "I would’ve married you" on album cut "Life’s Unfair." Then, on the very next song — the bumping, braggadocious "Against Me" — Apollo grapples with the reality that he’s been permanently altered by the love affair while on the prowl for a rebound. "I cannot act like I’m average/ You know that I am the baddest bitch," he proclaims on the opening verse, only to later admit, "I’ve changed so much, but have you heard?/ I can’t move how I used to."

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Given the personal subject matter filling God Said No — not to mention the amount of acclaim he earned with Ivory — it would be understandable if Apollo felt a degree of pressure or anxiety when it came to crafting his sophomore studio set. But according to the singer, that was entirely not the case.

"I feel like I wouldn’t be able to make art if I felt pressure," he says. "Why would I be nervous about going back and making more music? If anything, I'm more excited and my mind is opened up in a whole other way and I've learned so much."

In order to throw his entire focus into the album’s creation, Apollo invited Halm to join him in London. The duo set up shop in the famous Abbey Road Studios, where the singer often spent 12- to 13-hour days attempting to exorcize his heartbreak fueled by a steady stream of Aperol spritzes and cigarettes.

The change of scenery infused the music with new sonic possibilities, like the kinetic synths and pulsating bass line that set flight to "Less of You." Apollo and Halm agree that the single was directly inspired by London’s unique energy.

"It's so funny because we were out there in London, but we weren't poppin' out at all," the Halm says. "Our London scene was really just, like, studio, food. Omar was a frickin' beast. He was hitting the gym every day…. But it was more like feeding off the culture on a day-to-day basis. Like, literally just on the walk to the studio or something as simple as getting a little coffee. I don't think that song would've happened in L.A."

Poetry played a surprisingly vital role in the album’s creation as well, with Apollo littering the studio with collections by "all of the greats," including the likes of Ocean Vuong, Victoria Chang, Philip Larkin, Alan Ginsberg, Mary Oliver and more.

"Could you imagine making films, but never watching a film?" the singer posits, turning his appreciation for the written art form into a metaphor about cinema. "Imagine if I never saw [films by] the greats, the beauty of words and language, and how it's manipulated and how it flows. So I was so inspired." 

Perhaps a natural result of consuming so much poetic prose, Apollo was also led to experiment with his own writing style. While on a day trip with his parents to the Palace of Versailles, he wrote a poem that ultimately became the soaring album highlight "Plane Trees," which sends the singer’s voice to new, shiver-inducing heights. 

"I'd been telling Teo that I wanted to challenge myself vocally and do a power ballad," he says. "But it wasn't coming and we had attempted those songs before. And I was exhausted with writing about love; I was so sick of it. I was like, Argh, I don't want to write anymore songs with this person in my mind." 

Instead, the GRAMMY nominee sat on the palace grounds with his parents, listening to his mom tell stories about her childhood spent in Mexico. He challenged himself to write about the majestic plane tree they were sitting under in order to capture the special moment. 

Back at the studio, Apollo’s dad asked Halm to simply "make a beat" and, soon enough, the singer was setting his poem to music. (Later, Mustafa’s hushed coda perfected the song’s denouement as the final piece of the puzzle.) And if Apollo’s dad is at least partially responsible for how "Plane Trees" turned out, his mom can take some credit for a different song on the album — that’s her voice, recorded beneath the same plane tree, on the outro of delicate closer "Glow." 

Both the artist and the producer ward off any lingering expectations that a happy ending will arrive by the time "Glow" fades to black, however. "The music that we make walks a tightrope of balancing beauty and tragedy," Halm says. "It's always got this optimism in it, but it's never just, like, one-stop shop happy. It's always got this inevitable pain that just life has. 

"You know, even if maybe there wasn't peace in the end for Omar, or if that wasn't his full journey with getting through that pain, I think a lot of people are dealing with broken hearts who it really is going to help," the producer continues. "I can only just hope that the music imparts leaving people with hope."

 Apollo agrees that God Said No contains a "hopeful thread," even if his perspective on the project remains achingly visceral. Did making the album help heal his broken heart? "No," he says with a sad smile on his face. "But it is proof of pain. And it’s a beautiful thing that is immortalized now, forever. 

"One day, I can look back at it and be like, Wow, what a beautiful thing I experienced. But yeah, no, it didn't help me," he says with a laugh. 

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