The band formerly known as Lady Antebellum is suing a black singer who goes by Lady A after adopting the same stage name as her in a stated effort to fight racism.
Lady A, a country music group, announced the name change last month amid nationwide anti-racism protests and social upheaval.
The band, made up of Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley and Dave Haywood, said they had realized “Antebellum” invokes of pre-Civil War slavery and makes people feel “unsafe, unseen or undervalued.”
“We’ve watched and listened more than ever these last few weeks, and our hearts have been stirred with conviction, our eyes opened wide to the injustices, inequality and biases Black women and men have always faced and continue to face everyday,” they said in an Instagram post.
It was widely reported at the time that a Seattle-based blues, soul, funk and gospel singer named Anita White had been going by Lady A for more than 20 years.
White demanded $10 million for the name and told American Songwriter, “It shouldn't have taken George Floyd to die for them to realize that their name had a slave reference to it. It's an opportunity for them to pretend they're not racist.”
Lady A, the band, on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against White — rejecting her demand for payment and citing its trademark of the name back in 2010.
“When we learned that Ms. White had also been performing under the name Lady A, we had heartfelt discussions with her about how we can all come together and make something special and beautiful out of this moment,” said the band in a statement. “We never even entertained the idea that she shouldn’t also be able to use the name Lady A, and never will — today’s action doesn’t change that,” according to The Associated Press.
The reaction: White responded on Twitter with biblical defiance.
She was backed by commentators on the left and right alike.
Blaze TV host of The Chad Prather summed up the situation, and the prevailing sentiment.
So Lady Antebellum changed their name to Lady A in order to be racially “woke” but now they are suing the black singer that’s had that name for twenty years.
— Chad Prather Parler @watchchad (@WatchChad) July 8, 2020
Also on Wednesday, multiple news outlets reported the NFL's Washington Redskins are planning to stop using Native American imagery in response to renewed accusations that their name and logo are racially offensive.