Juneteenth Bandcamp Day

Written by Raphael Helfand

June 19, 2020, marks the 155th anniversary of the day the enslaved people of Texas (the most remote Confederate state) were finally made aware of their freedom. Though Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation more than two years earlier, and many Black Americans in the south remained in de facto slavery for years afterwards, Juneteenth has become an unofficial national holiday, celebrated universally in Black communities but unknown in most white ones.

This year, as protests of the USA’s corrupt, racist police system continue unabated, white America—liberal white America, at least—has been rushing to learn more about Black culture and, for the most part, has become aware of Juneteenth. Major, public-facing corporations, always quick to pay lip service to social justice issues, are largely giving their employees the day off. It’s a nice and necessary gesture, but it’s the bare minimum.

The music industry has toed the same line. Companies such as Warner Media and Sony Music have made Juneteenth a paid holiday, and Spotify has pledged to dedicate their New Music Friday playlist to Black artists, today through the 26th. This is the right thing to do and will undoubtedly help some Black artists promote new music that normally would have been drowned out by white musicians with better PR teams. Still, it’s an empty gesture, as it doesn’t actually cost Spotify anything. Apple Music has been completely silent about the holiday. In fact, the only way Apple has acknowledged Juneteenth at all is by adding it to their Calendar app.

As usual, Bandcamp is the only streaming platform putting its money where it’s proverbial mouth is. Throughout the COVID crisis, Bandcamp has set aside two days per month to waive their already low profit share (15 percent for digital content, 10 percent for physical merch), giving the artists 100 percent of their sales. Fans have flocked to the site in record numbers on these days to give their favorite working musicians a much-needed boost. Today, Bandcamp is donating its share again, but this time to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.

Now more than ever, it’s essential to support the Black artists who continue to shape American culture, as they have for over a century. Below are 100+ of my favorite albums by Black musicians, composers, DJs, singers, rappers and bands currently available on Bandcamp.

In case you’d rather not rely on a 25-year-old white guy to tell you which Black art to consume, Deforrest Brown, Jr., who runs Make Techno Black Again, has a much longer and more thorough (though still not completely comprehensive)  list of Black artists and labels on Bandcamp, hosted on his linktree. I referenced his list while compiling mine. [Last night, Bandcamp launched Blackbandcamp.info, a crowd-sourced, browsable list of Black artists on the site that also seems to draw extensively from Brown, Jr.’s master doc.]

I hope anyone reading this who isn’t immunocompromised or living with immunocompromised relatives will be out protesting today. But when you get home, get on Bandcamp and “open thy heart/wallet,” as the site says when you’ve listened to an album too many times for free. The event runs until 3 a.m. Happy Juneteenth, and happy listening. Black lives matter.

Expect The Unexpected by 79rs Gang

Mardi Gras Indians rap crew with a Bone Thugs vibe.

ROSE by ABRA

Atmospheric synth-based Atlanta R&B.

PARTS, Act I by AF THE NAYSAYER

Beats that belong in your favorite videogame.

Road To A Rolex by Alfred Banks

New Orleans rapper with an old school sensibility and an unmatched work ethic.

The Oracle by Angel Bat Dawid

Otherworldly spiritual free jazz, one of the best albums this year so far.

Sextet (Parker) 1993 by Anthony Braxton

One restructuralist king plays the music of another.

Don't Call the Cops by Archibald SLIM & Dexter Dukarus

Slow, old school Atlanta hip-hop featuring some of Awful Records’ best

Shrines by Armand Hammer

No-nonsense bars, glitchy beats, hits the spot.

BBF Hosted by DJ Escrow by Babyfather

Dean Blunt’s radiant cool.

Primal Prayer by Beverly Glenn-Copeland

Transcendent, operatic vocals and film score instrumentation from a true legend.

REMAINS by B L A C K I E... All Caps, With Spaces

High-octane metal rap.

Terror Management by billy woods

Armand Hammer rapper goes in on some more traditional instrumentation.

Distinctive Juju by Blacker Face

Screams alternate with sweetly sung vocals, metal guitars pop out from behind swamp soul synths.

Learnings by blk

Buzzing synths over club beats, pulling from Baltimore, Tokyo, Chicago and New Orleans.

Angel's Pulse by Blood Orange

The latest alt-neosoul record from the (predictably) angel-voiced Dev Hynes.

Liff Up EP by Breakage

Grimy London breakbeats.

Electricity is on our Side by BUSDRIVER

Spastic beats make nerdy raps sound cool.

KILLA ESSENTIALS by Cakes Da Killa

A hit-filled best of, feat. badass bars over club beats.

Black Moses by Channel Tres

Deep house instrumentals, Barry White bars


PEAK by Choker

Breezy summer instrumentals under a deep rapping voice that blossoms into a beautiful falsetto at a moment’s notice.


Ancestral Recall by Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah

Future trumpet jazz.


GUM by Cities Aviv

Found sound, spacey samples, conversational raps.


Believer / Can U Read Me? by DaM-FunK / Nite-Funk

(Predictably) funky soul-based west coast house.


Ocean Bridges by Damu the Fudgemunk, Archie Shepp & Raw Poetic

Post-bop-inspired beats, freestyle bars, free jazz saxophone and musings from a living legend.

dean blunt - FREE JAZZ by World Music

Mayhem.

Violet Ep by Delish Da Goddess

Hard-hitting bayou hip-hop.


NEW GROWTH by Delores Galore

Best New Orleans synth pop.

Galactic Ass Creatures From Uranus by Detroit Grand Pubahs

(Ironically) Portland-based electrofunk.


Digable Planets Live by Digable Planets

Legendary Philly jazz-hop trio 2017 reunion show.

VAULT by DJ Earl

Chicago footwork pioneer back at work.


Revolução (2005 - 2008) by DJ Marfox

The origins of Portuguese batida.


Cartas Na Manga by DJ NIGGA FOX

More batida with chilled out synths over the top.


Sold Out by DJ Paypal

More Chicago footwork with a sardonic sense of humor.


New Jack Philly II: Club Is Still A Drug by DJ Sega

Abrasive Philly club, descending from the slightly less chaotic Baltimore scene.


Juneteenth (Extended Club Mix) by dreamcrusher

Eclectic medley of harsh sounds from the artist with the best live show on Planet Earth. See also, Another Country and Panopticon, two of this year’s best albums.


COOCHI3 by Edge Slayer

Droning vocals over ambient trap beats, regular at New Orleans’s Banks St. Bar.


Shit Don't Rhyme No More [REMASTER] by E L U C I D

Armand Hammer beatmaker produces, raps, gets weird.


Look At Me by ETHEREAL

(Predictably) spacey record from Awful Records standout.


HU$BAND by Father

Absolute smut per usual from the founder of Awful Records.

AFTER... by Fhloston Paradigm

Minimalist, futuristic house from Philly’s King Britt


Playgrounds Forever by FRANK/IE CONSENT

Weirdo ambient folk from Atlanta, not to be confused with Frankie Cosmos, who is also great.

Fuck U Pay Us Live at Cielo Gallery for Casa Solidaria del Sur's Melanin Unity Show by Fuck U Pay Us

Chaotic punk rockers asking politely for you to buy their album on Bandcamp, painful listening.

Proof by Galcher Lustwerk

Addictive uptempo NYC techno, on pre-order (out 7/10).

Just Look At That Sky by Ganser

Chicago post-punk drenched in reverb, on pre-order (out 7/17).

Life in the Sugar Candle Mines by Gerald Cleaver's Black Host

Free jazz with a punk ethos.

Guayaba Presents: Fantasmagoría by Guayaba

Orchestral cubana horrorcore.

Xtra by Honey Dijon

Berlin techno meets Chicago house.


Shugga Sextape (Vol. 1) by Ian Isiah

Dance music from Dev Hynes’s equally angel-voiced Blood Orange collaborator.


stray by ikea graveyard

Heartbreakingly simple singer-songwriter.


Dear, Sudan by Infinity Knives

A potpourri of drone, hip-hop, soul, opera, etc… truly wild.


Who Sent You? by Irreversible Entanglements

Album of the year contender, controlled free-jazz chaos, spoken word poetry from Moor Mother.

Neurogeist by James Ferraro

Gregorian chori, John Carpenter synths, room tone, what could be better?


LEGACY! LEGACY! by Jamila Woods

Hype-rreferential neosoul, rich production, beautiful singing.


Significant Changes by Jayda G

Euro house that’s got harmonies and doesn’t suck, for once.


MERRYPOCALYPSE by Jean Grae & Quelle Chris

Everyone’s favorite silly/serious rap duo, back with a cute EP about the end of days.

All My Heroes Are Cornballs by JPEGMAFIA

A hot mess of an album from the Internet’s favorite rapper.

Forever, Ya Girl by KeiyaA

Faded, sample-packed neo-soul.

Cut 4 Me (Deluxe) by Kelela

Club synths under heavenly R&B vocals.

HX.PRT14.8 by Knxwledge.

The king of lo-fi backpacker beats, the guy who was replacing vowels with the letter X before it was cool, delivers again.

Vari-Colored Songs by Leyla McCalla

Fingerpicked folk from New Orleans.

Stillness In Wonderland (Deluxe Edition) by Little Simz

London’s most lyrical emcee pulls no punches.

Power by Lotic

Creepy Berlin electronics.


Moving Parts by Lunice & The Alchemist

Quebecois future jazz.

COSMIC BROWNIE by Lust$ickPuppy

Industrial screamo you can dance to.

Coin Coin Chapter Four: Memphis by Matana Roberts

Nobel-worthy spoken word poetry, panoramic sound quilting.

Ibitlan by Mdou Moctar

Two new tracks from the Hendrix of the Sahara that, of course, rip.

Cold Water by Medhane

Jazzy beats under slow, pensive Brooklyn bars.

Pieces of a Man by Mick Jenkins

Deep-voiced story rapper stays true to his tricks, spitting wisdom over blissed out beats.

tears of joy by MIKE

Beautifully tragic tale told piecemeal by New York’s most thoughtful emcee, fractured production from Standing on the Corner. New album Weight of the World out 6/21 but not yet available for pre-order on Bandcamp.

Pressures EP by MoMA Ready

Top-notch NYC rave music.

Breathing While Black by MonoNeon

A moving new protest track from the usually lighthearted bass virtuoso. Also check out My Feelings Be Peeling from last year.

SINNER | KDJ-48 by Moodymann

One of last year’s best albums from a Detroit techno deity.

ANTHOLOGIA 01 by Moor Mother and Olof Melander

Cosmic journey through Moor Mother’s mystic poetry and Meander’s disconcerting soundscapes.

Pen15 Club by Mooseknuckle Sandwich

Righteous grindcore from Pheonix, AZ.

græ by Moses Sumney

Passionate soul experiments with strikingly heavy accompaniment.

//Juneteenth// by Mourning [A] BLKstar

Essential listening for the revolution, a beautiful document of intense suffering. See also, Reckoning, one of last year’s best albums.

Mykki by Mykki Blanco

Channels the energy of Mykki’s kinetic live show, melodramatic beats, vocals soaked in autotune.

Startisha by Naeem

The rapper fka Spank Rock is back with a much rawer, more meditative sound. Interview with Laid Off NYC out tomorrow!

Não Fales Nela Que A Mentes by NÍDIA

Dynamic new record from the queen of Portuguese batida.

BRAT by NNAMDÏ

Formerly the best nerdcore hip-hop had to offer, now singing falsetto over slippery beats that range from strummed acoustic guitar to synth drones.

Room 25 by Noname

Hip-hop’s hyper-intellectual voice of reason, evidenced by her current beef with J. Cole.

ulogy by Oddboy TEN

Slow, mournful London soul

Red Summer by ONO

Second best live show on Planet Earth, also essential listening for the movement, better heard than described.

Brick Body Kids Still Daydream by Open Mike Eagle

Scene veteran spinning story raps over slightly off-kilter old school beats.

53,000. by Phony Ppl

Homegrown Brooklyn funk/soul outfit doing what they’re best at. See also, Phony Ppl backing Megan Thee Stallion for her tiny desk concert.

Innocent Country 2 by Quelle Chris & Chris Keys

The Chrises unite for an understated but hard-hitting hour-long saga. See also, Quelle Chris’s much more deranged Guns record from last year.

Raw Fruit Vol. 5 & 6 by Ras G

A posthumus addition to the late great beatsmith’s prolific canon, out today!

I'll Tell You What! by RP Boo

A sleek, updated take on Chicago footwork.

The Return by Sampa The Great

Carefree soul beats underscore hopeful, delightfully nasal rapped and sung vocals, from a different era (9 months ago).

Apparition EP by serpentwithfeet

Theatrical vocals tell stories of heartbreak of equally dramatic, juicy production.

Don't Play My B Sides by Sexy Dex and the Fresh

Prince meets vaporwave.

A Quiet Farwell, 2016–2018 by Slauson Malone

Splinter samples provide the template for profound musings, jump scares, shoutouts to Steve Reich, and a Sun Ra diss from an ex-member of the Standing on the Corner crew.

hybtwibt? by Space Afrika

Snippets of conversation, drones, mic hiss, static, and other spliced oddities merge to form a tearjerker of an ambient record.


Black Nationalist Sonic Weaponry by Speaker Music

Surprise Juneteenth release from Speaker Music (Deforrest Brown, Jr.), protest techno


The Passion Of by SPECIAL INTEREST

Third best live show on Planet Earth, New Orleans’s best and only no wave band, brand new album today and it absolutely shreds all the way through.


Athena by Sudan Archives

Lush, stuttering R&B, complimented by a versatile violin.


Sorry You Couldn't Make It by Swamp Dogg

The purest of southern soul by long-standing luminary Jerry Williams, Jr. (b. 1942).


Any Way Is Not My Own Nor Your Own To Judge by Teams

Hypnotically jittery club music from Cuba.


THE SUN GOD A.K.A. Jamal Moss – THE ANTICIPATORY ORGANIZATION by THE SUN GOD A.K.A. Jamal Moss

More Euro deep house that’s actually good! Maybe white people were the problem all along.


Amadjar by Tinariwen

Mesmerising tuareg guitar music from Mali.


Loyal Opposition by Urban Tribe

Uppace Detroit techno that’s impossible to sit down to.


Vagabon by Vagabon

Uplifting indie rock with a sad silver lining.


STRICTLY FOR MY SOULJAHS (DELUXE EDITION) by WIFIGAWD

DIY D.C. hip-hop that reminds me what I used to love about Soundcloud rap.


Black Terry Cat by Xenia Rubinos

Super-smooth jazz vocals over tight grooves.


Heaven To A Tortured Mind by Yves Tumor

Genre-bending, Prince-indebted future pop, album of the year contender.


Gremlin by Zelooperz

Danny Brown apostle who, like his mentor, has mellowed and mature with time, but retains the spark that keeps his music exciting.

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