Friday, September 23, 2022

Industry folk turned out in large numbers for the
Black Music Action Coalition's 9/22
Music in Action Awards Gala in Beverly Hills. The well-dressed throng was there to see awards bestowed upon
Lil Baby,
Sony Publishing boss
Jon Platt,
300 supremo
Kevin Liles, teams from
Amazon Music and the
Recording Academy, Congresswoman
Maxine Waters and more. The honorees were all hailed for playing a role in effecting social change.
Platt, who received the
Clarence Avant Trailblazer Award, joked that he had asked his team for "no more awards" but couldn't resist BMAC and especially an honor named for his mentor, Avant (for whom one of Platt's sons is named). The pubco chieftain read a 30-year-old letter from Avant envisioning the kind of change that would empower Black executives in entertainment and urged all in attendance to ensure that in another 30 years more progress will have been made. He also singled out the trailblazing companies and execs in hip-hop, especially
Sean "Puffy" Combs, for paving the way.
Quincy Jones III read a letter from his dad congratulating Lil Baby on his
Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award and noting the superstar
Quality Control/
Motown rapper's creative and activist contributions.
Coach K and
P looked proud enough to bust a button.
Tyler, The Creator, a friend and fan of Amazon Music Head of Hip-Hop and R&B
Tim Hinshaw, brought the Amazon team up in an emotional moment.
The sizzle reel preceding the acceptance by
Harvey Mason Jr. and his
Grammy team of their award noted Mason's abolition of the "Secret Committees" as well as the huge gains in diversity made during his tenure. Liles, who received the Social Impact Award, spoke of leading by example. Journalists
Gail Mitchell of
Billboard and
Shirley Halperin of
Variety received 365 Awards.
Joi Brown of
Culture Creators, manager
David Ali, powerhouse attorney/author
Brittany K. Barnett (who earned a standing O for her criminal-justice crusading) and journalist
Nikole Hannah-Jones also collected laurels. Congresswoman Waters, aka "Auntie Maxine," who accepted her Icon Award via video, spoke up for the importance of protecting creators.
Attorney, activist and past honoree
Dina LaPolt welcomed to the stage U.S. Reps.
Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) and
Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), who introduced the
Restoring Artistic Protection (
RAP)
Act, of which Bowman declared, "The RAP Act is about ensuring that we are not criminalizing hip-hop, we are not criminalizing rap and we are not criminalizing Black men."
Entertainers
Coco Jones and
Kenny Burns co-hosted. Support for the Music in Action Awards Gala came from
Primary Wave,
Live Nation,
AEG Presents,
Spotify,
Amazon Music,
Saban Music and
Rémy Martin.
Avant,
Irving Azoff and Jones serve on the BMAC Advisory Board.

Platt (with writer/producer Warryn Campbell, who introduced him) reads Avant's letter

Team Amazon Music (l-r): Josh Beas, Rochelle Balogun, Tim Hinshaw and Sierra Lever

Capitol Music Group topper Michelle Jubelirer and newly appointed EVP of A&R and Artist Development Gordan Dillard

Lil Baby accepts his Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award

Quality Control's Coach K and P in their formal finery

Team Recording Academy: Panos Panay, Harvey Mason Jr. and Valeisha Butterfield-Jones

Colture co-founder and Brent Faiyaz manager Ty Baisden with entrepreneur/designer Neikita Stewart

Team BMAC: Courtney Stewart, Naima Cochrane, Caron Veazey, Shawn Holiday, Jamil Davis, Damien Smith and Willie "Prophet" Stiggers