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THE BACKSTORY

THE BACKSTORY

By Trevor J. Adams

tadams@unravelhalifax.ca

Unravel HIGHLIGHTS

Growing up — new developments are on track to add hundreds of new residential spaces in downtown Halifax. Learn more on page 17.

Context is king

Clarifying Keonté Beals’s views on how the music industry is changing

When you’re trying to communicate an idea, context is as important as content. That’s not a groundbreaking new concept, but it is an easy one to forget.

It’s one I wish I’d remembered when we put together the last issue of Unravel Halifax. Our cover story, by Robyn McNeil, aimed to explore how Halifax’s music scene is evolving, becoming more inclusive, opening opportunities for more people, after decades of being a place where most of the power and profit ended up in the hands of white people.

Robyn did an excellent dive into the subject, talking with several established and rising talents and industry insiders about their journeys. The story included the following passage, featuring quotes from Keonté Beals about Music Nova Scotia’s efforts to give artists of colour their due at Nova Scotia Music Week.

“They put a lot of effort into diversifying our lineup and making sure that there is a place for everyone,” says Meghan Scott, newly elected president of the MNS board. “I think we had at least a half dozen new Canadians.”

She’s referring to Music Nova Scotia executive director Allegra Swanson and other staff. “It was extremely important to us ... to present a diverse lineup, and I’m really proud of that,” adds Scott.

Beals is encouraged by the change, at least for now. “Diversity is in,” he says. “So, I just hope that it’s something that continues to move in that direction.”

Beals encourages younger artists to grab the chances suddenly coming within reach. “So many opportunities for funding now are directly targeting African Nova Scotians,” he says. “That’s something to take advantage of. It’s not something to let pass by.”

In the context of the larger story, it’s clear that he’s talking about awareness, not trendiness — a gradual righting of the systemic racism that saw non-white artists often denied funding, venues, and opportunities.

But when we needed a pithy quote to caption a photo, we edited that down to “Diversity is in ... So many opportunities for funding now are directly targeting African Nova Scotians.”

For many readers, that edited quote, prominently displayed without the surrounding explanation, seemed to mean something very different from what Keonté had really said. Some read it as a statement that diversity is trendy, so get in there and make your money.

This misinterpretation is harmful to both Keonté and the Black community and we should have anticipated it. To avoid further misunderstanding, we’ve removed that caption from the digital edition, and we apologize both to readers and to Keonté for not being more attentive to the context of his words. We’re also reexamining how we choose and edit our photo captions, to avoid similar situations in the future.

Read the complete story (unravelhalifax.ca/music-city) to hear Keonté and his peers in the music scene tell their stories, and learn about the opportunities that are finally opening up and the challenges that remain.

Unravel NEWS

If all goes as planned, cruise ships will return to Halifax this spring. What does that mean for our city and the businesses that depend on them? See page 42.

Unravel ONLINE

Visit unravelhalifax.ca every weekday for our Roundup — an opinionated selection of highlights from Advocate Media newspapers around the province.

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VOL 2/ ISSUE 2 • DATE OF ISSUE: MARCH 2022

PUBLISHER Fred Fiander • fredfiander@unravelhalifax.ca

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Crystal Murray • crystalmurray@unravelhalifax.ca

SENIOR EDITOR Trevor J. Adams • trevoradams@unravelhalifax.ca

CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Jodi DeLong • jodidelong@unravelhalifax.ca Janet Whitman • janetwhitman@unravelhalifax.ca

VICE PRESIDENT OF BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Linda Gourlay • lindagourlay@unravelhalifax.ca

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Susan Giffin • susangiffin@unravelhalifax.ca Pam Hancock • pamhancock@unravelhalifax.ca Stephanie Balcom • stephaniebalcom@unravelhalifax.ca Connie Cogan • conniecogan@unravelhalifax.ca

SENIOR DIRECTOR CREATIVE DESIGN AND PRODUCTION Shawn Dalton • shawndalton@unravelhalifax.ca

ART DIRECTOR Mike Cugno • mike@acgstudio.com

PRODUCTION COORDINATOR Nicole McNeil • nicolemcneil@unravelhalifax.ca

PRODUCTION AND DESIGN ASSISTANT Kathleen Hoang • kathleenhoang@unravelhalifax.ca

DESIGNERS Roxanna Boers • roxannaboers@unravelhalifax.ca Rachel Lloyd • rachellloyd@unravelhalifax.ca Andrezza Nascimento • andrezzanascimento@unravelhalifax.ca

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ALEX MACASKILL is an illustrator, graphic designer, and printer in Halifax, operating a small studio called Midnight Oil Print & Design House. He loves drawing and bringing joy to his projects. KEAH HANSEN is a freelance writer who has published articles in Unravel Halifax, Maisonneuve Magazine, This Magazine, and McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, among others. She is from Halifax, and currently a doctoral candidate at York University. AMEETA VOHRA is a news and sports writer with work published throughout North America. Her Halifax Magazine story “Thunderstruck” was a 2020 Atlantic Journalism Awards silver medallist. BRUCE MURRAY has been creating food and lifestyle photography for more than 20 years in the Maritimes and in his original studio in Vancouver. visionfire.ca @VisionFire.

JANET WHITMAN is a city- and nature-loving journalist who divides her time between Halifax and her cottage on the Northumberland Shore. She’s happiest digging in the dirt, picking up a hammer, or messing around in the kitchen. PAULINE DAKIN is a journalist, professor of journalism at the University of King’s College, and the award-winning author of Run, Hide, Repeat: A Memoir of a Fugitive Childhood.

MARIANNE SIMON is a writer and subeditor and has published many children’s stories, articles and poems in magazines and newspapers. Her interests include teaching and conducting Englishconversation classes. KATIE INGRAM is a freelance writer, author, and journalism instructor based in Halifax. LEM LIAN is a multi-award-winning conceptual artist, originally from China. Now Canada-based, she’s an illustrator, art instructor, and collage maker. Her narrative art is discovering esoteric aesthetic from black and white.

ALEC BRUCE is an awardwinning journalist whose bylines regularly appear in major Canadian and American publications. He is completing a master of fine arts (2022) in creative nonfiction at the University of King’s College in Halifax. PHILIP MOSCOVITCH is a frequent contributor to Saltscapes and East Coast Living, and the author of Adventures in Bubbles and Brine — a book about Nova Scotian fermentation stories and traditions. The closest he’s ever come to being on a cruise is taking overnight ferries.

BROOKLYN CONNOLLY is a freelance journalist based in Halifax. She’s the 2021 recipient of the Investintech – CAJ data journalism scholarship, and has written for the CBC, the Guardian (U.S.), the Chronicle Herald, and the Nova Scotia Advocate, among others.

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