Miller Brewing Company announced a two-day concert highlighting the contributions of African-Americans in Rock & Roll music, amidst criticism of a commemorative can series honoring 50 years of rock & roll music that only featured white artists.
Wyclef Jean, Bo Diddley, James Brown, Lenny Kravitz and others will participate in an end of the summer concert, the culmination of the promotion.
“Miller Brewing Company sincerely apologizes to the African-American community, to music fans and to our valued consumers for this occurrence,” the company said in a statement. “African Americans obviously have played a formative role in the development of rock 'n roll, and despite our efforts, we did not manage this component of the promotion appropriately.
The eight-can series is collaboration with Rolling Stone magazine. The beer cans feature cover images from the weekly publication.
The promotion started in May with images of Elvis Presley, Rick Nelson, Bon Jovi, Def Leppard, Alice Cooper and Blondie on the beer cans. The other two images are guitars.
Marketing executives for Miller and Rolling Stone both agreed that business and not race played a factor in the glaring omissions.
"On the marketing side, anything we do with these covers, we need the artist's permission,” Gary Armstrong, chief marketing officer for Wenner Media, which publishes Rolling Stone, told MTV. “Jimi Hendrix's estate declined participation. Some artists wanted fees, and we weren't paying people to participate. Some had rehab issues, and they didn't want to align with an alcohol product."
Miller said that cans are just one part of a multi-pronged campaign and that other events pay proper tribute to African-American artists.
“We took a hard look at the situation and realize where we fell short,” Virgis Colbert, Miller's executive vice president of worldwide operations said. “You can count on Miller to step up."
Source: allhiphop.com
Wyclef Jean, Bo Diddley, James Brown, Lenny Kravitz and others will participate in an end of the summer concert, the culmination of the promotion.
“Miller Brewing Company sincerely apologizes to the African-American community, to music fans and to our valued consumers for this occurrence,” the company said in a statement. “African Americans obviously have played a formative role in the development of rock 'n roll, and despite our efforts, we did not manage this component of the promotion appropriately.
The eight-can series is collaboration with Rolling Stone magazine. The beer cans feature cover images from the weekly publication.
The promotion started in May with images of Elvis Presley, Rick Nelson, Bon Jovi, Def Leppard, Alice Cooper and Blondie on the beer cans. The other two images are guitars.
Marketing executives for Miller and Rolling Stone both agreed that business and not race played a factor in the glaring omissions.
"On the marketing side, anything we do with these covers, we need the artist's permission,” Gary Armstrong, chief marketing officer for Wenner Media, which publishes Rolling Stone, told MTV. “Jimi Hendrix's estate declined participation. Some artists wanted fees, and we weren't paying people to participate. Some had rehab issues, and they didn't want to align with an alcohol product."
Miller said that cans are just one part of a multi-pronged campaign and that other events pay proper tribute to African-American artists.
“We took a hard look at the situation and realize where we fell short,” Virgis Colbert, Miller's executive vice president of worldwide operations said. “You can count on Miller to step up."
Source: allhiphop.com