Tag Archives: jesse bernard

VF Live: Jesse Bernard #2

“R’n’b deep cuts from 1976-2020.”

With quarantines and lockdowns due to the Coronavirus pandemic ongoing around the world, artists are finding new ways to connect with people worldwide.

In VF Live, our favourite collectors take you inside their homes, record shops and studios, for intimate record selects and mixes.

Writer and presenter Jesse Bernard returns for his bi-weekly show, taking you on “a journey through r’n’b deep cuts from 1976-2020.”

Watch the set above and check out the tracklist below.

Tracklist:

1. Dennis Taylor – Enough is Enough
2. Cheryl Lynn – Encore
3. Eugene Wilde – Gotta Get You Home Tonight
4. Jodeci – S-more
5. Richard Anthony Davis – When You Need My Lovin’
6. Janet Jackson – I Get So Lonely (Jason Nevins Remix)
7. Maxwell – Dancewitme
8. Children of Zeus – Get What’s Yours
9. Maxi Priest – I Know Love (Steven Stanley mix)
10. Freddie Gibbs – Gat Damn

Relationship between gospel, grime and God explored in new podcast, The Gospel of Grime

Spanning from Stormzy and Kano, to Kirk Franklin and Fela Sowande.

Music journalist and presenter Jesse Bernard has helmed a new podcast exploring the relationship between genres including gospel, hip-hop, grime and drill with Christianity – titled The Gospel of Grime – released as part of the BBC’s Art of Now series.

Read more: VF Live with Jesse Bernard

Delving into the origins of of gospel music and gospel sub-genres, The Gospel of Grime ultimately questions, “what really happens when grime or other contemporary black music forms meet the institution of Christianity?”

Investigating how colonialism and slavery shaped the role of music within black Christian faith communities, Bernard questions the impact of social inequality and austerity on both black churches and the music being produced by black artists across the UK.

“I see black music as a space that… allows black people to reclaim agency in their own bodies and spirituality, and that can, and has, included the music of black churches,” explains Bernard.

“Music like grime, hip-hop and drill offer young people the language to contextualise their own experiences. ”

Head here to listen to The Gospel Of Grime in full.