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Black British music can quite easily be defined by eras. The sounds are intrinsically linked to the Black British experience and a direct reflection of the times. Creating some of the most innovative, unapologetic, influential music in the world, Lovers Rock roots to UKG (Garage) and Grime.
Space exploration is often told as a story of nations and machines, of geopolitical rivalry, engineering audacity, and the sheer industrial might required to slip free of Earth's gravity. But threaded through that story, frequently pushed to its margins, is another history: one of Black Americans who contributed to every chapter of the space age, from the calculating pools at Langley in the 1950s to the Orion capsule that lifted off in April 2026. This is that history.
By the mid-1950s, Black Americans had been living under systematic racial oppression for centuries, legally segregated, economically exploited, and violently suppressed. What emerged was a movement that would shake the foundations of American democracy. From 1954 to 1968, the Civil Rights Movement dismantled segregation, secured voting rights, and demanded that America live up to its own promises. Its victories came at enormous cost. They were won by lawyers, organisers, journalists, preachers, and sharecroppers who refused to accept the world as it was. These are ten of them.

