
Kehlani speaks out after Cornell performance canceled over views: 'I am anti-genocide'
Kehlani speaks out after Cornell performance canceled over views: 'I am anti-genocide'
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Kehlani at Grammys, talks about creating 'After Hours'
Kehlani talks 'After Hours' ahead of 2025 Grammy nomination.
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Kehlani is speaking out after her performance at Cornell University was canceled over what the school described as "hateful views."
The R&B star, 30, in an Instagram video on April 26 said "I am not antisemitic" in response to Cornell scrapping plans for her to headline its "Slope Day" year-end celebration.
Cornell President Michael Kotlikoff said he rescinded Kehlani's invitation after hearing "grave concerns" that a performer "who has espoused antisemitic, anti-Israel sentiments in performances, videos, and on social media" would be featured.
In Kehlani's video, the "After Hours" singer maintained "for the millionth time" that they are not "anti-Jew" but is instead "anti-genocide" and "anti the actions of the Israeli government."
USA TODAY has reached out to Cornell for comment.
"I'm asked to clarify because this keeps coming up as a means to silence me, as a means to stop things that happen in my career, as a means to change the course of my life, and I just don't believe that," Kehlani said.
Kehlani axed from Cornell performance over 'hateful views,' Gaza comments
Kehlani has been a vocal supporter of Palestine amid the Israel-Hamas war. The Grammy nominee appeared before a Palestinian flag in the 2024 video for their song "Next 2 U" and has expressed opposition to Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip and ongoing military campaign there.
Kehlani denies allegation she is member of a 'cult' amid custody battle with ex
The artist also once described Zionists, a term which can take on different meanings but which many view as supporters of a Jewish state, as "scum."
In the caption of the video, Kehlani said that in addition to the Cornell cancellation, "now there are attempts at other cancellations," without providing details.
"This is a played out game," the singer wrote. "all this because we want people to stop dying."
Kehlani said she was filming the video while working on a new album and while in the presence "of my Jewish and Palestinian best friend and my Jewish engineer," both of whom briefly appeared on camera in the background. But in the caption, she described this "friend flex" as "SATIRE & SARCASmmmmm."
Kehlani's video received more than 200,000 likes on Instagram, including from Melissa Barrera, the actress who was fired from "Scream 7" over comments she made in support of Palestine that production company Spyglass alleged constituted "hate speech."
Contributing: Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY
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Hypebeast
6 minutes ago
- Hypebeast
Kaytranada: Waves of Rhythm
This article originally appeared in Hypebeast Magazine Issue 35: The Wavelength Issue. Whether we inspect the behavioral mechanisms that propel the cosmological motions of the universe or the spiritual shifts within us, the wave is nature's most fundamental rhythm. One either learns the power of its force—or drowns beneath it. For the two-time Grammy-winning artist KAYTRANADA, success—as producer, DJ, and now singer—has been predicated on a profound understanding and manipulation of how the waves flow. This mastery has been both self-evident and continuously evolving throughout his career, as reflected through his production's maturation. Sonic alchemy appears on the track 'Feel a Way,' from 2024's TIMELESS , where his adroit ears transmute the quotidian into gold. It is a seemingly effortless feat in chopping samples to fit his swinging grooves. Here, he takes an innocuous sound, a drag-of-a-joint, from an obscure Jack Margolis record and transforms it into a slinking percussive loop. This is the kind of aural latticing that might be lost on casual listeners, but in perceiving its sonic nature, one realizes how each part of the whole is important—where, in this instance, the sample texturally accentuates the song's salient and hazy ambiance. Throughout KAYTRANADA's process, sounds are expertly flipped, stretched, and run through an effect bus, ultimately becoming his LPs or loosies. Those recordings are then tightly curated onto unassuming flash drives. Tracks are spun on CDJs from a sleek, lectern-like station; his DJ sets become gatherings where the 32-year-old, Port-au-Prince-born artist can commune with the energy his music stirs in the crowd. His sets unfold as an emotionally-pendulous journey. Bodies in the crowd ripple in waves and screams as his careful choreography guides every listener's pulse to his whim. 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Black America Web
7 minutes ago
- Black America Web
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Black America Web
7 minutes ago
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50 Cent Claims He Will Talk To Donald Trump About Potentially Pardoning Diddy, X Applauds His Commitment To Being A Hater
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