GloRilla has released her first solo offering of 2023 with the new single “Internet Trolls.” Glo raps about what people present on the internet is never what it actually is offline.
“You could be who you wanna be, live how you wanna live/Stunt how you wanna stunt, give what you ’posed to give,” Glo raps track’s opening verse. “Say what you wanna say, feel how you wanna feel/Sometimes, I think they be forgettin’ the internet a fairytale.”
She supported the new single with a visual where she is seen kidnapping people who are posing on the internet.
“Internet Trolls” arrives ahead of Grammys weekend. The Memphis rapper is up for Best Rap Performance for her breakout hit, “F.N.F. (Let’s Go).” She also will be performing in Questlove's co-curated 50th-anniversary celebration of Hip-Hop during the Grammys. Glo will reportedly be joined by Missy Elliott, Lil Wayne, Big Boi, Queen Latifah, Salt-N-Pepa, Run-D.M.C., De La Soul, Method Man, and many others.
Last month, Glo was featured in Moneybagg Yo’s “On Wat U On” where the music video paid homage to the 2001 film Baby Boy.
Last year, was Glo’s breakout year after dropping “F.N.F. (Let’s Go)” and “Tomorrow.” The latter was followed up with a remix with Cardi B titled “Tomorrow 2.” She also dropped her debut EP Anyways, Life’s Great…, which she later announced a U.S. tour for in November.
Take a look at “Internet Trolls” below:
2023 Grammys: Hip-Hop and R&B Records That Could Be Broken
Song Of The Year
– If Beyoncé wins for “Break My Soul” she will join nine other songwriters who have won the award twice. She previously won for “Single Ladies” in 2010.
– “God Did” by DJ Khaled could break the record for the most co-writers on a winning song in this category if it wins – the record is currently held by Bruno Mars for “That’s What I Like” with eight co-writers, “God Did” has nine.
Record Of The Year
Beyoncé could win her first Record of the year for “Break My Soul” after a record-breaking 8 nominations. She is the most the most nominated artist in the category and the most nominated artist without a win.
Album Of The Year
Kendrick Lamar could become the first male rapper to win “Album Of The Year” for a solo rap project if he wins for Mr.Morale & the Big Steppers. Previous rap winners of Album Of The Year” are Lauryn Hill and OutKast for The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill and Speakerboxxx/The Love Below respectively.
Best Rap Performance
– Kendrick Lamar could extend his record as the most awarded artist in the “Best Rap Performance” category – He currently is first place with five wins and could win his sixth trophy in this category if he wins for “The Heart Part 5”
– Doja Cat could become the first woman to win for a solo rap performance if she wins for “Vegas” – In 2021, Beyoncé and Megan Thee Stallion became the first women to win in the category since male and female rap performance category merged into a gender-neutral one
Best Melodic Rap Performance
Latto could become the first female artist to win for a solo performance in the “Best Melodic Rap Performance” if she wins for “Big Energy (Live).”
Best Rap Song
Jay-Z could come one step closer to tying Kanye West’s seven wins in the “Best Rap Song” category if he wins for co-writing “God Did.” Jay-Z has won five times and this is his sixth nomination.
Best Rap Album
Kendrick Lamar could break his tie with Tyler, the Creator & OutKast for the third most wins in the “Best Rap Album” category if he wins for Mr.Morale & the Big Steppers. He previously won for DAMN. and To Pimp a Butterfly. This is his fourth nomination in the category. Eminem holds the most wins with six and Kanye follows with four wins.
Best Traditional R&B Performance
Beyoncé could tie Lalah Hathaway (3 wins) as the most-awarded artist in this category if she wins for “Plastic Off The Sofa.” She previously won for “Love On Top” and “At Last.”
Best R&B Song
Beyoncé could extend her record as the artist with the most wins in the R&B song category. She currently has four wins and is nominated this year for co-writing “Cuff It” from her Renaissance album.
Best Music Video
Kendrick Lamar could break his tie with Peter Gabriel, Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson, Johnny Cash & Beyoncé and become the sole holder of the record for the most wins in this category if he wins for “The Heart Part 5.”
Diana Ross
Diana Ross has never won a competitive Grammy Award, and this year she received her 13th nomination in the “Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album for Thank You. She won a Lifetime Achievement Grammy in 2012 for her solo career and also won it this year as a member of the Supremes.
Viola Davis
If Viola Davis wins the Grammy in the “Best Audio Book, Narration & Storytelling” category for her memoir “Finding Me”, she will complete EGOT, winning Emmy, Grammy, Oscar & Tony – Grammy is the only award that she is missing to join the elite group of EGOT winners.
Jay-Z: Overall Potential Records
Jay-Z is currently the most nominated man and overall artist (record 88 nominations in a tie with Beyoncé), the most awarded rapper (24 wins in a tie with Kanye West), and 10th most awarded Grammy winner of all time (once again, in a tie with Kanye West – 24 wins).
Depending on the number of Grammys that he could win out of his five nominations this year he might extend his record as the most-awarded rapper of all time (and break his tie with Kanye West) and climb up on the rank of the most-awarded Grammy winners.
Beyoncé: Overall Potential Records
Beyoncé is currently the most-awarded female artist of all time (28 wins), most awarded vocalist (28 wins), most nominated woman and overall artist (record 88 nominations in a tie with Jay-Z) & second most awarded person in a tie with Quincy Jones (28 wins) after Georg Solti (31 wins).
Depending on the number of Grammys Beyoncé takes home out of her nine nominations, she might:
– Break her tie with Quincy Jones and become the sole holder of the record for the second most awarded winner of all times (1 win needed)
– Tie or surpass Georg Solti as the most awarded Grammy winner of all time (3 wins needed for a tie, 4 wins needed for surpassing Solti)
– Extend any of the previously mentioned records, depending on the number of her wins
– Tie (8 wins needed) or surpass (9 wins needed) Michael Jackson & Santana as the most-awarded artist in one night; if she wins 7 or more awards, she will break her tie with Adele as the most-awarded female artist in one night
– Tie Paul McCartney as the artist with the most nominations in one night without a win (she would have to win 0 awards out of her 9 nominations)
– If Beyoncé’s Renaissance wins all of its nine nominations, it could tie Santana’s Supernatural & U2’s How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb) as the most awarded album in the Grammys history
Fayetteville & Black History: The African-American Heritage Trail
Did you know Fayetteville had an African-American Heritage Trail? As we reach the end of Black History Month, it’s important to continue to recognize the contributions of the Black community on the history of Fayetteville, and this might be the perfect way to do it.
The Fayetteville Area Convention and Visitor’s Bureau has a number of culturally significant trails across the area, and the African-American Heritage Trail is one of the best.
“The African-American Heritage Trail consists of sites that provide a historical glimpse into the life of African-Americans who resided in Fayetteville and Cumberland County. The hard labor bourn by slaves, the entrepreneurship of free blacks, the devotion to religion and education, service to our country, and the desire to learn and preserve valuable history await to tell the visitor a grand story.”
The Trail pays tribute to notable Blacks in Fayetteville’s history, like Henry Evans, E.E. Smith, Charles W. Chesnutt and Hiram R. Revels.
Of course a journey through Black history in the South is filled with a number of focuses on slavery and the impacts on the region. As the FACVB points out, much of our area was built on a foundation of Black contributions, largely through that early slavery.
“African-Americans arrived in this area as slaves of European settlers. The institution of slavery sustained the agrarian-based society that had quickly developed. Slave labor was also used to support another leading industry—naval stores—the harvesting of resin from pine trees to produce tar, pitch, and turpentine. When the nation recorded its first census in 1790, Cumberland County’s total population was 8,671, which included more than 2,100 blacks.”
There are 17 stops in and around Fayetteville on the African-American Heritage Trail. We take a look at those stops here, and help guide you through some of the most important contributions the Black community has had on our region.
Stop 1: Fayetteville Convention and Visitor's Bureau
245 Person Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301
Start out at the visitor’s center and you can pick up additional information to help you along your journey on the trail.
Stop 2: Fifer's Grave
North Cool Spring Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301
According to the CVB, the fifer Isaac Hammond is buried in this spot.
“Hammond became the first fifer in the Fayetteville Independent Light Infantry and served 30 years. He also served in the 10th NC Regiment Continental Line during the Revolutionary War. He became a barber in town and participated in politics even though blacks were not permitted to vote at the time.”
Hours: Exterior View Only. Open to the public, daily before dusk.
Stop 3: Evans Metropolitan A.M.E. Zion Church
301 North Cool Spring Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301
A remarkable church, founded by Henry Evans – a Black shoemaker and Methodist preacher. Most notably, Evans brought Methodism to Fayetteville for the first time, AND he was preaching to both Blacks and whites, which was unheard of at the time. The current building was built in 1893, according to the CVB, while the original church was founded in 1801. Evans died in 1810 and is buried in the mantle of the church.
This biography on Henry Evans is a remarkable one. Read this before your stop on the trail.
Stop 4: Saint Ann Catholic Church
357 North Cool Spring Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301
Just down the road from Evans A.M.E. Zion is St. Ann’s which was created in 1934, primarily to serve the Black population who did not like being treated poorly at the primarily white St. Patrick’s church. The school on the site was the first school in North Carolina to be integrated from its inception.
Stop 5: Cross Creek Cemetery (Brookside)
(Image courtesy Fayetteville CVB)
North Cool Spring Street and Grove Street (Head to Lamon Street for the Brookside portion)
Across the street from Saint Ann’s is the Cross Creek Cemetery. In a portion across Grove St. called Brookside, many of the most famous Black families after the Civil War are buried. You’ll find graves for the Chesnutt family, Dr. Paul Melchor, Robert Harris, and E.E. Smith.
Stop 6: Saint Joseph's Episcopal Church
509 Ramsey Street, Fayetteville, NC 28302
This beautiful church was built in 1896 for a Black congregation, and has windows from Tiffany & Co. in New York, as well as a pipe organ built in 1857 – one of the oldest still in use in the United States.
Stop 7: Orange Street School
600 Orange Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301
Tons of great info from the CVB on this one: “Built in 1915, by African-American contractor James Waddell. The Orange Street School is believed to be the oldest building associated with education in Fayetteville. Before its construction, black students had been attending classes in a small, one-room schoolhouse for nearly 50 years. The school continued to function as an educational facility for 38 years. The upstairs now serves as a museum where Bishop James Walker Hood’s top hat and bible can be viewed. He was an early founder and pastor of Evans Metropolitan A.M.E. Zion Church. The home of Edward Evans, the original principal of Orange Street School, is located across the street.”
Stop 8: Fayetteville State University
1200 Murchison Road, Fayetteville, NC 28301
Fayetteville State University – originally the Howard School for African-Americans – was founded in 1867. Named for General O.O. Howard. “In 1877, the Howard School was designated as the first State Colored Normal School to educate African-American teachers. In 1939, it became a four year college and in 1972, it became part of the UNC System. At the Chesnutt Library, historical artifacts, such as E.E. Smith’s sword, can be viewed in the archives room.”
Stop 9: E.E. Smith Monument
1200 Murchison Road, Fayetteville, NC 28301 (at Fayetteville State)
“Dr. E.E. (Ezekiel Ezra) Smith, a respected African-American educator, headed Fayetteville State University for an impressive 50 years. In fact, Smith gave some of his own land to build some of FSU’s first buildings. He also served as an ambassador to Liberia and as the adjutant of the 3rd NC Regiment during the Spanish-American War. Other notable accomplishments include founding North Carolina’s first black newspaper and serving as a Baptist Minister for the black First Baptist Church.”
Stop 10: Martin Luther King Jr. Park and Sculpture
739 Blue Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301
Paying tribute to Civil Rights icon Martin Luther King Jr., this park and memorial statue are perfect for picnics or other gatherings.
Stop 11: Sandhills Family Heritage Center
230 Chapel Hill Road, Spring Lake, NC 28390
From the CVB: “Formerly called the Spring Lake Civic Center, it was founded by African-Americans as a community activity facility for local black youth in 1951. The center was used for youth and adult social gatherings, such as family reunions, birthday parties, church gatherings and during the 1960s, as a civil rights meeting place. Plans are underway to restore the building as an African- American Heritage Center by the Sandhills Family Heritage Association, which frequently hosts events and tours here about African-American Heritage. Today, you can view several outside exhibits including, a replica of a brush arbor, a section of a plank road, and a farmer’s market. For Heritage Tour and Re-enactment information, please contact Ammie Jenkins, Executive Director of the Association, at (910) 497-0628, or sandhillsfamily@yahoo.com.”
Stop 12: Bethel AME Zion Church
255 Vass Road, Spring Lake, NC 28390
The church founded by Jack Murchison was started here.
Stop 13: Simon Temple A.M.E. Zion Church
5760 Yadkin Road, Fayetteville, NC 28303
This church location traces its roots back to 1873, when land was sold to the Trustees of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church of America.
Stop 14: Museum of the Cape Fear Historical Complex
801 Arsenal Avenue, Fayetteville, NC 28305
Heading back toward downtown Fayetteville, the Museum of the Cape Fear has a large selection of artifacts from the African-American story in our region.
Stop 15: Airborne & Special Operations Museum
100 Bragg Blvd., Fayeteville, NC 28301
Among the notable military displays in the museum, an exhibit on the Triple Nickels Battalion – an all-Black Airborne unit, stands out.
Stop 16: Fayetteville History Museum
325 Franklin Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301
“The Fayetteville History Museum exhibits contributions made by local African-Americans. The museum also has staff oversight of Fayetteville’s Historic Districts and Designated Local Landmark Properties, many of which have strong ties to African-American history.”
Stop 17: Market House
A street mural has been painted around the Market House in Downtown Fayetteville saying “Black Lives Do Matter” and “End Racism Now.”
100 Hay Street, intersection of Hay, Green, Person and Gillespie Streets
A controversial downtown landmark, the Market House has some debate behind its history. But it’s important in the story of African-Americans in Fayetteville’s past, regardless.
From the CVB: “Previously known as the State House, it was here that North Carolina ratified the U.S. Constitution in 1789 and chartered the University of North Carolina. In 1831, a fire destroyed downtown Fayetteville, including the State House and the Market House was rebuilt on its site. As a marketplace, various peddlers sold cotton and other agricultural products here. In fact, one of the first meat merchants to sell their goods under the Market House in 1832, was a free born African American. Although not built as a slave market, slaves were sold here over the years until slavery was abolished in 1865. Historical debate also circles around the possibility that the structure was built by a local free black man, Thomas Grimes, one of the best brick masons in the area at the time.”
Stop 18a: Notable Historical Markers - Charles W. Chesnutt
Fayetteville has a few other notable historical markers for Blacks, including:
Charles W. Chesnutt – “Negro novelist and short story writer, teacher and lawyer. Taught in a school which stood here.” (Location on Gillespie Street)
Stop 18b: Notable Historical Markers - Henry Evans
Henry Evans – “Free black cobbler & minister. Built first Methodist church in Fayetteville. Died 1810. Buried 2 blocks north.” (Marker is at corner of Person and Cool Spring Streets)
Stop 18c: Notable Historical Markers - Hiram R. Revels
Hiram R. Revels – “First African American to serve in Congress, he represented Mississippi in Senate, 1870-1871. Born in Fayetteville.” (Marker is at corner of Murchison and Blue Streets)
Stop 18d: Notable Historical Markers - Lewis Leary
Lewis Leary – “Free black abolitionist & conspirator in 1859 with John Brown in attack on U.S. arsenal at Harpers Ferry. Killed in assault. Lived in Fayetteville.” (Marker is at corner of Murchison Road and Washington Drive.)
Stop 18e: Notable Historical Markers - Omar Ibn Said
Omar Ibn Said – “Muslim slave & scholar. African-born, he penned autobiography in Arabic, 1831. Lived in Bladen County and worshipped with local Presbyterians.” (Marker is at Murchison Road, N 35°05.479, W 78°54.632)
Stop 18f: Notable Historical Markers - Fayetteville State University
“Est. 1867 as Howard School. State-supported since 1877. A part of The University of North Carolina since 1972.”