What happens first, the Triad becomes the Southern equivalent of the Rust Belt or rap music goes the way of jazz?
In other words, the former means that an area that already has trouble getting on the same page suffers an overall loss in population by 2025 or 2030 while the latter means rap music goes from being a popular genre to reverting back to a musical novelty that will eventually be reduced to noncommercial stations two generations from now (try finding a good jazz station and you know what I mean).
Showing posts with label rap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rap. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 5, 2017
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
A pivotal moment for hip hop culture
Commercial rappers have to change their tone starting now.
Daveed Nelson and Jason Whitlock were right to denounce the overall state of
hip hop. What has passed for hip hop in the last 17 years is heavily tilted in
favor of negative stereotyping—which may have not only led to George Zimmerman
getting away with murder but Zimmerman’s supporters resorting to ugly tactics
to demonize Trayvon Martin and black people in general. Over the last decade,
rap music has heavily focused on the negatives—bling, thugging it up, treating
women as sex objects, glorifying illegitimacy, excessive drug use. As long as
blacks go along with what the ratchet rappers are selling, then, the
stereotyping of blacks by other races will continue. Yet, there has been a bit
of backlash to the Whitlock column locally (a nighttime DJ and a gossip
reporter were both bemused by Nelson’s statements) and nationally (two
allhiphop.com postings that paint Nelson as out of touch and another member of
the Last Poets distancing himself from Nelson’s comments).
Young Jeezy and Pharaohe Monch were the first two rappers
out the gate with post verdict songs last Monday. I’m not concerned with underground
artists following the latter’s lead, it’s the mainstream acts keeping up with
Jeezy that concerns me. They need to stop rapping about strip clubs, pill
popping, and cars and they need to start addressing the ills of the black
community and work with bona fide leaders to provide logical solutions.
I am tired of the hip hop community refusing to either give or
receive constructive criticism while making excuses for the way things are in
today’s rap scene because it is a disgrace that there is no more originality on
commercial radio today. Rather than defending the status quo, these people need
to listen for themselves. While the worst features of black America continue to
be exported to Africa, Africans—for the time being anyways—continue to reject
materialistic rap music while using rap to address various issues in their
countries and on the continent. Speaking of which, it’s a telling sign that
even artists from the motherland have called out their much richer American counterparts.
Given hip hop culture’s short attention span, it has to seize the
opportunity that it has to reshape how other races should look at us as a race.
If the Trayvon tributes/Zimmerman dissing songs are forgotten a year from now
rather than being a catalyst for change, then rap music will deserve to go the
way of jazz (once prevalent but now treated as a novelty) or disco (its original
form long dormant).
Saturday, June 15, 2013
How Hip Hop Culture Lives Up to Anti-Black Stereotypes
"Everything old is new again"
Peter Allen
The above quote can most certainly be applied to hip hop culture because it has moved backwards in the last two decades. I will now dissect the modern comparisons that were once used by bigots to denigrate blacks from the 19th century to the Civil Rights Movement.
Here are the four most common stereotypes being replicated today:
1. Blackface. Racists don't need to lampoon black people when rappers are experts at doing it. Countless songs and videos feature these artists cooning it up. Flavor Flav's VH-1 show was just the tip of the iceberg.
2. Sambo. Portrayals of lazy, irresponsible, and carefree people are very common on songs and in videos.
3. Mandingo Negro. Rappers endlessly brag about how many women that they have slept with, exhibit sexual bravado in the form of being a "player," and love using phallic (about themselves) or gluteal (about their conquests) descriptions.
4. Sapphire. Online videos on YouTube and websites like World Star Hip Hop show loud-mouthed women cutting men down to size.
My response: What is the black community going to do to combat these horrible stereotypes?
Peter Allen
The above quote can most certainly be applied to hip hop culture because it has moved backwards in the last two decades. I will now dissect the modern comparisons that were once used by bigots to denigrate blacks from the 19th century to the Civil Rights Movement.
Here are the four most common stereotypes being replicated today:
1. Blackface. Racists don't need to lampoon black people when rappers are experts at doing it. Countless songs and videos feature these artists cooning it up. Flavor Flav's VH-1 show was just the tip of the iceberg.
2. Sambo. Portrayals of lazy, irresponsible, and carefree people are very common on songs and in videos.
3. Mandingo Negro. Rappers endlessly brag about how many women that they have slept with, exhibit sexual bravado in the form of being a "player," and love using phallic (about themselves) or gluteal (about their conquests) descriptions.
4. Sapphire. Online videos on YouTube and websites like World Star Hip Hop show loud-mouthed women cutting men down to size.
My response: What is the black community going to do to combat these horrible stereotypes?
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