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12-year-old singer of Black anthem song signs deal with Warner Records

Keedron Bryant’s powerful video, posted on May 26, features the lyrics “I’m a young black man doing all that I can” from the song “I Just Wanna Live,” written by his mother.

This undated image released by Warner Records shows Keedron Bryant.
This undated image released by Warner Records shows Keedron Bryant.Read moreJohnnetta Bryant / AP

NEW YORK — Keedron Bryant, the 12-year-old who turned heads on social media with his passionate performance about being a young black man in today’s world, has signed a deal with Warner Records, and his poignant song was officially released last month.

Keedron’s powerful video, posted on May 26, features the lyrics “I’m a young black man doing all that I can” from the song “I Just Wanna Live,” written by his mother. The release of the track coincided with Juneteenth, the holiday to commemorate the emancipation of enslaved African Americans in the U.S.

“It’s very exciting because this is what God’s called me to do,” Keedron said in an interview with The Associated Press, adding that “it’s just been an exciting experience to work with my mom.”

Johnnetta Bryant, 38, said watching the video of George Floyd dying as a police officer pressed a knee on his neck “really hit my heart just so deeply because I am a mom to a Black son. I have a Black husband. I have Black brothers, uncles, cousins, friends.”

So she said a prayer and asked God to send her a sign.

“I needed his wisdom. I went into prayer. He gave me those words so clearly,” Johnnetta Bryant said of writing the “I Just Wanna Live” lyrics. “I shared it with Keedron … and I told him, ‘I want you to take these words and I want you to pray over them. Meditate on them. Whenever you’re done with them, come out and we’ll record it.’ He did just that.”

The clip went viral, with Barack Obama, LeBron James, Janet Jackson, Lupita Nyong’o, and more acknowledging its impact and importance on social media.

Like most of the world, music producer Dem Jointz saw the video of Keedron Bryant singing a cappella, saying “it hit me in the gut.”

“It just moved me to create music around his vocal,” said Dem Jointz, who produced music for the song and then contacted the family to share his version with them. “It was so much energy coming from the video alone, it was just easy for me to produce around that.”

Dem Jointz’s re-working of the song caught the attention of the head of urban marketing at Warner Records: “I was already moved by the record but hearing the vocals over the production, it just hit me in another way,” Chris Atlas said.

“I was like, ‘Wow this is an amazing song.’ We should be a part of making sure the world hears this on a larger capacity but then also donate proceeds from the song to the right cause,” the senior vice president added. “That’s actually giving back and using music as a healing mechanism, which I truly believe it is.”

Warner Records is donating 100% of the net profits of “I Just Wanna Live” to the NAACP and for every stream of the song on Amazon Music, the company donated $1 to the NAACP for the first 24 hours the song was out.

Born in Sicily, Italy, to minister parents, Keedron Bryant began singing when he was 5. He gained fame earlier this year when he appeared on the NBC variety series “Little Big Shots.”

Johnnetta Bryant said since writing “I Just Wanna Live,” she’s caught the songwriting bug.

“I actually just finished five songs,” she said. “I never would have considered myself to be a songwriter, but I do know that God speaks to me. What he gives me is necessary and in season. He’s doing a new thing in me. I’m humbly so grateful for it.”

“She has an untapped talent,” said Dem Jointz, who has produced for Christina Aguilera, Rihanna, Dr. Dre, Anderson .Paak and K-pop group NCT 127. “She was anointed by God and it came from her heart.”

Keedron Bryant, who turned 13 on July 3, said he’s excited to record more songs and work with Warner on music. He said though “I Just Wanna Live” came from a dark place, he’s looking forward to society changing for the better.

“It’s unfair that Black people can’t go out and enjoy life and live without having fear that something’s going to happen to them, so it was kind of sad to sing those lyrics,” he said. “But (there’s) still hope in the world that we can change the world.”