Duanecia Evans Clark

Contributor

Born and raised in Harlem, Duanecia Evans Clark is a collagist, co-Founder, and Chief Brand Strategist at The Creative Summer Company. A creative services agency that empowers mission consistent, Black-owned brands and businesses. The Creative Summer Company leverages quality strategy, content, design, and research to close the competitive gap between Black-owned businesses and their competitors. In addition to this, she is pursuing her master’s degree in Education Policy and Management at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Education. Duanecia is a visionary leader who designs people-centered social impact strategies for national and local brands. She sits at the intersection of art, community-driven justice, and corporate social responsibility.

music-feature

This 1996 Law Was Meant to Save Radio. Instead, It Decimated Popular Black Music

The Telecommuncations Act ushered in a new era of radio consolidation, flattening Black music to fit under one ad-friendly umbrella.
Brian Josephs
10.21.20
music-feature

Black Artists Built the Music Industry. It's Time They Got Their Dues

Introducing Unpaid Royalties, a series about the myriad ways that the music industry exploits Black artists—and what's being done to change them.
Kristin Corry
10.21.20
music-feature

Inside the NYPD's War Against Drill Rap

Sheff G says he's among those being unfairly targeted by the NYPD's "Rap Unit." It's costing him and rappers like him their livelihood.
Andre Gee
10.21.20
music interviews

Hit-Boy Is Tired of Making Money for His Publishing Company

“People in the building have said, ‘This is unethical; this is wrong. This is not right,’” the producer said of his Universal Music contract.
Ashwin Rodrigues
10.21.20
music features

Bad Deals Are Baked Into the Way the Music Industry Operates

We broke down the three most common types of contracts an artist might sign today, offering a window into how the “bad deal” isn’t an anomaly—it’s by design.
Drew Schwartz
10.21.20
Features

Black Artists Are Still Getting Ripped Off the Way Little Richard Was

The kind of egregious exploitation Richard faced in the 1950s might seem unthinkable today. But for many Black artists, not much has changed.
Drew Schwartz
10.21.20
music-op-eds

From Prince to Whitney to Nicki: The Plight of the Black Pop Star

How does one exist as a Black pop musician when pop is predicated on whiteness?
Briana Younger
10.21.20
music-op-eds

The Co-Opting of Rap Criticism Is About More Than Just Music

The strongest reporting on the LA riots of 1992 came from Black writers at a hip-hop magazine. In 2020, the infrastructure for a robust Black press doesn't exist.
Kristin Corry
10.21.20