everything, however, which 's legions of fans were more than happy to point out. This content can also be viewed on the site it from.Less than seven hours after the original tweet, Warren tweeted again, walking back her original comment. “Ok, I meant no disrespect to [Beyoncé], who I've worked with and admire.
I'm sorry for the misunderstanding.” According to , Warren wrote Beyoncé's “I Was Here" in 2011. She also told that “every collaborator who worked on this record should be celebrated.” However, the artist's tepid I'm sorry you feel that way apology may have been too little too late for the Hive.
This content can also be viewed on the site it from.Warren had already spent a lot of time in the comments section defending her original position.
Responding to one person who asked why she didn't understand how samples work, Warren , “Cos I don't use them.” And when singer-songwriter The-Dream took the time to give the older artist some historical perspective—Black artists, he wrote, started using samples because they couldn't “afford certain things starting out” and turned them into an art form—Warren coldly, “No need to be mean about it.”Maybe it's time for Diane Warren to listen and learn—as Beyoncé herself just did by an ableist slur from one of her songs.
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