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Famous Figures

Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.

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Legacy · OEJD
musician Contemporary

Quincy Jones

Jones' investment in mentoring younger artists - producing hundreds of musicians across five decades, building institutions for music education, and consistently treating his work as the construction of a durable musical infrastructure - reflect a Legacy orientation in which the most important product is what survives you.

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Legacy · OEJD
musician 20th century

Chuck Berry

Berry's documented awareness that he was establishing the grammar of rock and roll - the guitar riff, the teenage subject matter, the driving rhythm - and his stated belief that he was building something that would outlast him, reflect a Legacy orientation in which current work is understood as foundation.

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Liberation · OEJF
musician Contemporary

Kendrick Lamar

Lamar's music systematically documents structural racism, intergenerational trauma, and psychological liberation, and his documented belief that hip-hop has an obligation to tell the truth about Black American experience, reflect a Liberation orientation in which art is fundamentally a tool for freedom.

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Liberation · OEJF
musician Contemporary

Missy Elliott

Elliott's music consistently challenged the ways Black women's bodies and creative voices are constrained by industry norms, and her documented determination to control her own production and image on her own terms reflect a Liberation orientation applied to the music industry's structures.

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Liberation · OEJF
musician 1990s-2000s

Rage Against the Machine

The band's explicit documentation of institutional power - capitalism, militarism, racial oppression - and their belief that music could contribute to collective awakening reflect a Liberation orientation in which art is political action by definition.

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Community · OECD
musician 20th century

The Grateful Dead

The Dead's documented investment in their fan community - encouraging bootlegging, creating dedicated recording sections at concerts, treating Deadheads as co-creators of the live experience - reflect a Community orientation in which the audience is understood as part of the institution rather than its consumer.

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Community · OECD
musician 20th century

Ravi Shankar

Shankar's documented lifelong commitment to transmitting the classical raga tradition - through teaching, through collaboration with Western musicians to demonstrate that tradition's depth, through institution-building in India - reflect a Community orientation in which culture is understood as a shared inheritance requiring active stewardship.

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Vitality · OECF
musician 20th century

Little Richard

Little Richard's documented physicality - the piano playing that left him drenched and ecstatic, the screaming that preceded screaming as a musical form - and his explicit statement that his music was meant to make audiences feel alive rather than merely entertained, reflect a Vitality orientation in its purest musical expression.

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Vitality · OECF
musician Contemporary

Frank Ocean

Ocean's music - luminous, emotionally unguarded, deliberately uncategorisable - and his documented belief that the purpose of his art is to make people feel the aliveness of their own experience, reflect a Vitality orientation applied to introspection rather than performance.

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Vitality · OECF
musician Contemporary

Billie Eilish

Eilish's documented use of her public presence to make teenage emotional experience legible and valid - depression, body image, the texture of being young and overwhelmed - and her consistent breaking of genre conventions to stay honest, reflect a Vitality orientation in which authenticity generates energy rather than depleting it.

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