Petition calls on Virgin Records founder and Chris Blackwell to back venture after profiting from such music
The Virgin Records founder Richard Branson and the Island Records owner Chris Blackwell should financially support a permanent exhibition dedicated to Black British musical history, according to backers of a petition.
The petition, which has been signed by artists and musicians including George the Poet, Jazzie B and Sonia Boyce, calls for a new home that would recognise and celebrate African and Caribbean performances, recordings and “contributions to the evolution of genres that have reshaped British culture, while safeguarding rare artefacts, recordings, memorabilia, and untold stories for future generations”.
The sociologist Prof Paul Gilroy, who also signed the petition, said executives who made significant profits from Black British and Caribbean music should put up money for the venture that would focus on the history of Black music in the UK.

He said: “I don’t understand why the resources are all being squeezed out of the state, when actually there’s private sector resources, people like Richard Branson, people like Chris Blackwell, whose company has made enormous amounts of capital out of Black British music production and Caribbean music production.
“I think the people who’ve done so well out of the corporate side of Black music in this country ought to be paying for a building and a museum and an architect. They should be making a temple.”
Virgin Records was one of the earliest backers of reggae music in Britain and ran a dedicated imprint called Front Line in the 1970s (Branson sold the label for $1bn in 1992), while Island Records was the home of Bob Marley throughout his career until his death in 1981.
The petition was created by Black Music Research Unit, which is run by Mykaell Riley, an academic and co-curator of the Beyond the Bassline exhibition at the British Library, which told 500 years of Black British musical history, from the court of Henry VIII to lovers rock and grime.
It also asks for the integration of Black British music into UK classrooms, and comes as a government review into the national curriculum is under way.
Riley said the success of temporary exhibitions including 2 Tone: Lives & Legacies at the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum in Coventry; Dub London at the London Museum; Google’s Union Black: Sounds of a Nation project; and Beyond the Bassline show there is an appetite among Britons for something more substantial and permanent.
“The exhibition then ended with the majority of people saying, so you’re going to tour, right?” said Riley. “Or why is it ending so soon? Or what’s happening next? What happens to all the artefacts, what happens to the story?”
Gilroy used the example of the Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen funding the Experience Music Project (EMP), a museum dedicated to Jimi Hendrix in Seattle that later became the Museum of Pop Culture (MoPOP), as the kind of model the UK could follow with private sector money creating a public museum.
Riley and Gilroy said the permanent exhibition would not necessarily have to be housed in a bricks-and-mortar institution and could exist digitally online.
Jazzie B, the founder of Soul II Soul who was this year’s recipient of the lifetime achievement award at the Mobos, said it felt “archaic” to be having a conversation about a permanent exhibition to Black music in 2024.
“The support should come from the community … with people allowed to pledge their support to make this happen,” he said.
V&A East, which will open in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in east London next year, announced that its inaugural exhibition would be a survey of Black British music in the 20th century, titled The Music Is Black: A British Story.
News
ABC Suspends Whoopi Goldberg Indefinitely After Disgusting Comments About Charlie Kirk, “We’ve Had Enough Of Whoopi”
It finally happened. After years of teetering on the edge of controversy, Whoopi Goldberg has been given the dreaded “indefinite suspension” stamp by ABC executives. The straw that broke the camel’s back? Not a poorly timed Holocaust analogy, not an…
Dolly Parton postpones Vegas shows: Here’s what she told fans about her health
Dolly Parton announced Sunday that she is postponing her upcoming Las Vegas residency due to health concerns. The country icon shared the news in a statement on Instagram. Related Articles ‘Hello, I’m Dolly’: Dolly Parton’s life story will come to Broadway in…
Bad Bunny will be performing at the Super Bowl LX halftime show on February 8, 2026
Bad Bunny to Headline 2026 Super Bowl Halftime Show The halftime show, presented by Apple Music and executive produced by Roc Nation and Jesse Collins, will air live Feb. 8 from the Bay Area. Bad Bunny en el escenario durante la…
Jimmy Kimmel Launches GoFundMe After Losing Another $20 Million in Sponsorships Over Charlie Kirk Comments
If you thought Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension was rock bottom, think again. The late-night host has now reportedly launched a GoFundMe page after losing another $20 million in sponsorships over his controversial comments about the late Charlie Kirk. That’s right: the…
Guy Ritchie’s next Action Thriller film — IN THE GREY. Starring Henry Cavill, Jake Gyllenhaal, Eiza González and Rosamund Pike. Set to hit theaters in fall 2025, it’s shaping up to be the most anticipated horror film of the year.
In a thrilling departure from his signature action and gangster flicks, director Guy Ritchie is set to unleash In the Grey, a horror film poised to dominate the genre in fall 2025. Starring an all-star cast led by Henry Cavill, Jake…
Superman ending, James Gunn sets up the new DCU and Peacemaker season 2
Henry Cavill steps into the iconic role of James Bond in 007 Bond 2025, bringing suave charisma, brutal power, and refined intensity. This explosive new chapter delivers world-class espionage, heart-pounding action, and a mission that could change everything. Superman, the…
End of content
No more pages to load