Jack the Rapper Conference

Jack the Rapper Conference

Jack the Rapper Conference

Jack the Rapper Conference

BAM Awards

BAM Awards

BAM Awards

BAM Awards

BAM Awards

Jack the Rapper Conference Jack the Rapper Conference Jack the Rapper Conference Jack the Rapper Conference BAM Awards BAM Awards BAM Awards BAM Awards BAM Awards

Jack the Rapper “remix” Conference

The Legacy. The Movement. The Blueprint.

In the 1920s, a young boy named Jack Gibson shook hands with Marcus Garvey. That moment foreshadowed a life that would shape Black American music for generations.

Over the course of his extraordinary career, Jack Gibson became known across the industry as “Jack the Rapper” — a connector, promoter, publisher, cultural architect, and visionary.

A Pioneer in Black Media

In the 1940s, Gibson co-founded WERD, the first Black-owned radio station in the United States. As a disc jockey and emcee, he built lasting relationships with icons including:

Sammy Davis Jr., Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughan, Nat King Cole, Pearl Bailey, Nancy Wilson, Ray Charles

By the 1960s and ’70s, he was working alongside Motown, Stax, and Revelot — helping introduce a new generation of legends:

Stevie Wonder, The Supremes, Smokey Robinson, Otis Redding, Jackie Wilson, Isaac Hayes, The Staple Singers

A Witness to History

During the Civil Rights Movement, Gibson didn’t just observe history — he reported it.
He interviewed Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., and reported from Detroit in the aftermath of Dr. King’s assassination.

His work bridged culture, journalism, activism, and entertainment at a pivotal moment in American history.

The Family Affair: Where the Industry Gathered

As publisher of the influential Black trade magazine Mello Yello, Gibson helped transform opportunities for African Americans in radio and the recording industry.

But his most enduring achievement was the legendary Family Affair — an annual Black music convention that became the ultimate industry gathering and launchpad for new talent.

The biggest names in music made it a priority to show up:

Prince, Tina Turner, Janet Jackson, James Brown, Whitney Houston, Eddie Murphy, Hammer, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, LL Cool J, Babyface, Heavy D, Tupac, Queen Latifah, Snoop Dogg, Suge Knight, Bobby Brown, And many more.

It wasn’t just an event.
It was where deals were made. Careers were born. Culture moved forward.

The Conference Experience

This conference builds on that legacy.

Expect powerful conversations, industry storytelling, generational insight, and Electrifying artist showcases rooted in the foundation Jack the Rapper created.

From media to music to movement-building — this is where history and future collide.

more details coming soon