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It’s a hard life on easy street / Just white painted picket fences far as you can see /
If you think we live in the land of the free / You should try to be Black like me . Mickey Guyton, “Black Like Me” (2020)
Mickey Guyton could make music history for the second time in four months during next Sunday’s CBS telecast of the 63rd annual Grammy Awards.
The Texas-bred singer and songwriter first made history in December when her stirring, social justice-inspired song, “Black Like Me,” made her the first Black female solo artist to ever earn a Grammy nomination in any country-music category. Her fellow nominees for the Best Country Solo Performance honor include Miranda Lambert for “Bluebird,” Vince Gill for “When My Amy Prays,” Eric Church for “Stick That in Your Country Song” and Brandy Clark for “Who You Thought I Was.”
108 Years of service: The call The journey The destination – Capital Outlook capitaloutlook.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capitaloutlook.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By HOLLY ZACHARIAH | The Columbus Dispatch | Published: March 2, 2021 COLUMBUS, Ohio (Tribune News Service) He wore a Buffalo Soldier hat. He had the emblem of his all-African American cavalry regiment emblazoned on his T-shirts. And when Mr. John B. Williams introduced himself to you because that is always how he said it his historic service to his country during World War II inevitably came up. But Williams never bragged. He had no bluster, no puffed-out-chest blow. And he always asked about you first. Yet the pride he had for all that he had done was clear. Williams was a public servant. A patriot. A history-maker. A civil rights fighter.