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  #1  
Old 02-24-2007, 02:03 PM
MzDoctaKay MzDoctaKay is offline
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Question Hip Hop: Poison or Art?

A product of New York's early hip hop days, my first impulse was to be offended by CNN's coverage of hip hop, since they represent a population that did not take us seriously (in the beginning), with assertions that hip hop would not last. However, if I had to be honest, I'd say that the rapping aspect certainly isn't what it used to be. In fact, I find myself purposely avoiding most of the frequently-played rap songs on the radio. My feelings have to do with being called out of my name, constant references to sex, alcohol, and other spirtually-conflictive messages.....BUT....be that as it may, I am not sure I'd call hip hop "POISON". While I personally do not agree with a lot of the lyrics, I won't condemn all of rap music or hip hop's culture.

Furthermore, there's the fact that the older I become, the more I embrace other genres, such as Jazz, Classical, Gospel, NeoSoul, and Old School R&B. So it could be that I'm a bit outdated and am not in a '"fair position" to judge.......

What are your feelings. Is Hip Hop POISON or ART?
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Old 03-05-2007, 06:09 PM
acedawg00-02 acedawg00-02 is offline
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My 11 cents

Quote:
Originally Posted by MzDoctaKay View Post
A product of New York's early hip hop days, my first impulse was to be offended by CNN's coverage of hip hop, since they represent a population that did not take us seriously (in the beginning), with assertions that hip hop would not last. However, if I had to be honest, I'd say that the rapping aspect certainly isn't what it used to be. In fact, I find myself purposely avoiding most of the frequently-played rap songs on the radio. My feelings have to do with being called out of my name, constant references to sex, alcohol, and other spirtually-conflictive messages.....BUT....be that as it may, I am not sure I'd call hip hop "POISON". While I personally do not agree with a lot of the lyrics, I won't condemn all of rap music or hip hop's culture.

Furthermore, there's the fact that the older I become, the more I embrace other genres, such as Jazz, Classical, Gospel, NeoSoul, and Old School R&B. So it could be that I'm a bit outdated and am not in a '"fair position" to judge.......

What are your feelings. Is Hip Hop POISON or ART?
I couldn't help but notice that a such a thought prokoking thread as this was sittin' by, collectin' a lil' dust!

*pops open a cold Heineken...prepares to write*

Although I'm not sure where to began, I can remember movin' my head to the sounds of The Rappin' Duke, or being up in Foot Locker trying to convince momz to get me a pair of shell-top Addidas b/c of some Run DMC lyrics..and I told her, "black and white, or white with black stripes"...I had to have a pair!! DAMMIT! (well, I didn't say dammit...LOL...but you get my point)

Just the other day, I was listening to some old M.C. Shy D, "I gott be tough"...and the brotha said, "I'm cold gettin' paid...I gotta credit card". LOL!
It's sad, but kinda funny now when I look back at it. Back then, to those yourng artist, those were major accomplishments...you know, being a able to sample from a life that the majority of Americans have had (and didn't want to share) for many years.

For those artist, being able to surround themselves with some of the new "things" that money, and what a newfound "entertainer" status could afford them...and not having a mentor to guide them...well, they were bound to lose focus, and move from rappin' about social issues, encouraging those in challenging situations to make better lives for themselves, or just the simple things like, "A teenage love"....

All b/c they didn't have a base by which to define their identity...and we as Blacks are still in search of who we are today!! Modern day rap/hip-hop (if wish to call it that), is a direct reflection of our state of being...how some of us see ourselves.

This new wave of music has become an "eyebrow raiser"...or...*clears throat*....an "item of interest" in the white community, only b/c a large number of their children purchase it, and listen to it - religiously. It's almost like the epidemic of drugs or AIDs...these two "poisons" only became a problem once they landed on the front porches and doorsteps of surbania!

So, let's delete white America and CNN from the equation....

Is this music a direct reflection of how we see ourselves...?

Music that perpuates the stereotypes of: 1) the thuggish, intellectually inept black male who is supposedly defined by the number of gold teeth in his mouth, his car/rims and chains, or the number of baby mammas he may have 2) the promiscuous young black woman (many of whom are mothers), who think that her image is supposedly defined by size (and elasticity) of her ass...or how much their vagina they can get to hang out of their shorts or dresses.

I know that as a people, we are moved by the beat of the drum...but if you listen to the lyrics, how can we still wiggle and shake when our mothers, daughters, and sisters are being called bitches, hoes...names that so disrespectful and degrading. Names that they almost reduce their existence to a level total insignificance.

There was a time when white slave owners would treat our women in this same manner...name calling...raping them....beating them...even murder. But then, we had no choice but to sit by silently...now, we do it voluntarily....

We have no base by which to define our identity...and we're still blindly in search of who we are today b/c we do not know our history!!

We still wiggle and shake when our young men, some whom can't even spell their names...add, subtract or multiply...rap about a life of drugs...thuggin'...ballin'...smokin'...disrepectfu lly asking the ladies..."can I hit it?"...all with not even an ounce of sense in their heads. We sit by silently as they glorify this buffoonery...

Again...

We have no base by which to define our identity...and we're still blindly in search of who we are today b/c we do not know our history!!

And it's sad to say, but most of us embrace this foolishnes as our "new" black image, and we seem to care less that this is the measuring rod by which America and the rest of the world seems to want to judge us. Yet, we get upset, and we call it "keepin' it real"!!

- What's real if you don't know that Clarence Thomas is a fake...and there once was a true black man named Justice Thurgood Marshall?

- What's real if you believe that a life of selling dope, or playing basketball or football is the only way to make it, and you don't know about that there once was a black physician by the name of Charles Drew...or world-renowned black educator by the name of Dr. W.E.B. Dubois?

- What's real when we as Colored folk do not see about each other the way we used to...we have ceased to show love and respect for one another - as if there is another race of people who are so concerned for our well-being? LOL!

We need to wake up, and realize that we need to GO BACK to the days when we were keepin' it...and we all could probably spell it!

Personally, I think that some forms of rap and hip-hop are a new poison that has entered our veins...and a good majority of us have yet to awaken...still unaware...perhaps unconcerned...
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Old 03-06-2007, 10:07 AM
treblk treblk is offline
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^^^Very well said!
I must say that I for one don't find rap or hip hop poison but a form of art, to be interpreted as one sees fit! It's about your own perception of what good music is. I hate that society uses these art forms as a way to judge a race of people, maybe because it's more mainstream, making more money then 20 years ago. I remember getting flack by older family members because I of how much I liked the song where Uncle Luke and his boys talked about their sexual exploits or how Naughty by Nature explained what OPP was..I mean, though the sounds have changed..a lot of the messages in the songs are similar if not the same..
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Old 03-06-2007, 04:46 PM
mulattogyrl mulattogyrl is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by treblk View Post
^^^Very well said!
I must say that I for one don't find rap or hip hop poison but a form of art, to be interpreted as one sees fit! It's about your own perception of what good music is. I hate that society uses these art forms as a way to judge a race of people, maybe because it's more mainstream, making more money then 20 years ago. I remember getting flack by older family members because I of how much I liked the song where Uncle Luke and his boys talked about their sexual exploits or how Naughty by Nature explained what OPP was..I mean, though the sounds have changed..a lot of the messages in the songs are similar if not the same..
Agreed.

The thing is, music talked about drugs, sex, and violence long before hip hop came along.
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  #5  
Old 03-07-2007, 09:02 AM
MzDoctaKay MzDoctaKay is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by treblk View Post
I mean, though the sounds have changed..a lot of the messages in the songs are similar if not the same..
I believe the same holds true for Old School music (Soul/R&B)......many of the songs from the 60s and 70s had "adult content" - however, it was delivered a little more carefully....or at least as a child, you didn't fully understand the message being conveyed. Earlier days in hip hop may have had the same messages in some of the songs....however, most of them were conveyed much more delicately....or you were so concerned about the party (or the story), you missed the fact that the song was about he and his girl.....

In my opinion, the tide turned during the NWA years for the West.....and the Luke years for the South. I welcome your comments.
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Old 03-07-2007, 10:48 AM
mulattogyrl mulattogyrl is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MzDoctaKay View Post
I believe the same holds true for Old School music (Soul/R&B)......many of the songs from the 60s and 70s had "adult content" - however, it was delivered a little more carefully....or at least as a child, you didn't fully understand the message being conveyed. Earlier days in hip hop may have had the same messages in some of the songs....however, most of them were conveyed much more delicately....or you were so concerned about the party (or the story), you missed the fact that the song was about he and his girl.....

In my opinion, the tide turned during the NWA years for the West.....and the Luke years for the South. I welcome your comments.

I agree, the messages were delivered more carefully. But then again, I'm all grown up now and don't always understand what the gangster rappers are referring to in their songs. Like somewhere in another thread, one of us didn't know what 'Ds' were in a song. My question is this: As far as the negativity in rap music today, is it the fault of the rappers, music industry, etc., or is it really a reflection of what is going on in the streets? The reason I ask this is because like I said, I don't understand some references, but these younger kids sure do, and just like Ms Docta Kay said, when we were young, we didn't understand. So, is that a reflection of how the younger generation is different/growing up too fast, etc., or are lyrics really that much worse? Or maybe a little bit of both?
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Old 03-07-2007, 12:25 PM
StarFish106 StarFish106 is offline
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Originally Posted by mulattogyrl View Post
I agree, the messages were delivered more carefully. But then again, I'm all grown up now and don't always understand what the gangster rappers are referring to in their songs. Like somewhere in another thread, one of us didn't know what 'Ds' were in a song. My question is this: As far as the negativity in rap music today, is it the fault of the rappers, music industry, etc., or is it really a reflection of what is going on in the streets? The reason I ask this is because like I said, I don't understand some references, but these younger kids sure do, and just like Ms Docta Kay said, when we were young, we didn't understand. So, is that a reflection of how the younger generation is different/growing up too fast, etc., or are lyrics really that much worse? Or maybe a little bit of both?
Sometimes I think it is a little of both..Back in the day when they were talking about 'killin' it was mainly killin on the mike and that was it. Your ego was crushed and you picked it up, went home and came up with a new rhyme to battle them with next week and regain your title or claim a new one. Today they mean it as in taking your life and meaning exactly that. Sometimes I wonder if the whole thing of what begat what is the million dollar question. There was always violence on the streets but no one ever talked about it the way rap did. Violence and Sex is all around the children today & in some instances there is nothing to balance it out so it is all one sided. Those that remember back in the day we had different genres (battle rap, conscious rap, fun rap and gangster rap) going on at the same time or at least overlapping. Today you don't have those choices as prevalent and popular as they were in the past and what sells is the violent, sexual rap.

It seems right when gangsta rap took off, all the older indie labels that had the other types of rap got bought out by the bigger labels (Big Beat, Sleeping Bag, Rawkus et.al) So there is the gap in the rap industry because all the big boys want to make $$$. In turn that's what the audience gravitates to. Since everybody and their momma has a record label nowadays it would be nice to see some alternate forms of rap emerge again.

But it all reminds me of a quote from the movie Brown Sugar; "Here at Millenium Records we keep it profitable, if you want to keep it real go to Rawkus" .

And that's the double truth Ruth!!
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Old 03-07-2007, 12:36 PM
MzDoctaKay MzDoctaKay is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mulattogyrl View Post
I agree, the messages were delivered more carefully. But then again, I'm all grown up now and don't always understand what the gangster rappers are referring to in their songs. Like somewhere in another thread, one of us didn't know what 'Ds' were in a song. My question is this: As far as the negativity in rap music today, is it the fault of the rappers, music industry, etc., or is it really a reflection of what is going on in the streets? The reason I ask this is because like I said, I don't understand some references, but these younger kids sure do, and just like Ms Docta Kay said, when we were young, we didn't understand. So, is that a reflection of how the younger generation is different/growing up too fast, etc., or are lyrics really that much worse? Or maybe a little bit of both?
Uhmmm soror.... very thought-provoking.

I think for the most part, the older generations were always left in the dark about the street vernacular or the terminology of that day. I was born in 1971, so my teenage years were the 80s. We'd say stuff like, "Def", and "Fresh", and my moms would always ask: What does that mean?? But here's the thing.... you always had two areas of hip hop. You had the UNDERGROUND, that wasn't accepted, endorsed, or ever heard by the mainstream .... and obviously, the MAINSTREAM, that was played on the radio, and some times, managed to cross over. [Today, mainstream isn't defined by crossing over, because all cultures embrace hip hop - only being played on the radio makes it mainstream]. In those days, the FCC would go crazy if certain things were allowed over the airwaves. However, with the relaxing of "rules", and the censorship crusade led by Luke, songs we would've NEVER heard on the radio (back then) and was relegated solely to the Underground, made their way over to the mainstream.....

On the other hand, you tackled another interested point that I had to seriously ponder. ..if you're not a product of the streets, you may not always have a clue about what's going on... I don't know if that's ALWAYS the case... I was raised in suburbia....however, we always knew and understood what was going on in the music of our day. Maybe that's because back in our day, there weren't REAL gang members in the game... who had their own code and vernacular. Now don't get it confused with Gangsta Rap - not all who are involved in gangsta rap are REALLY in gangs.......Again...when I speak of back in the day, I'm speaking about New York.....

I would really like to know what others think...

Last edited by MzDoctaKay; 03-07-2007 at 12:49 PM.
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Old 03-06-2007, 10:12 AM
StarFish106 StarFish106 is offline
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Good question

In reading this post it made me re-read an interview done with Wynton Marsalis in the Sunday Inquirer regarding his newest work From the Plantation to the Penitentiary. Although he has no love for Hip-hop, there is a part of the interview that actually makes sense in today's music world.

an excerpt:

"Q: The title song on From the Plantation to the Penitentiary paints a grim picture. "From the yassuh boss to the ghetto minstrelsy... from the stock in slaves, to the booming prison trade." Do you think that American culture - and black culture - is at a crisis point?

A: Yes. But if you asked me that in 1985, when we recorded Black Codes (From the Underground), I would have said yeah then, too.
I can remember being on the bandstand with my brother [Branford] when I was 15 and he was 16, playing some song like "Shake Your Booty," or "Play That Funky Music." And I said to him, "This is the dumbest [stuff] ever. I don't think it can get any stupider than this!"
He looked at me, and deadpanned: "It can, and it will." He was like: "This [stuff] is nothing. You only think this is dumb. Just wait." I'll never forget how he told me that. Ha!
If you asked anybody who was black in the 1970s that was listening to Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye, if there was going to be a type of music coming along that calls people n*****s - we would never have believed it. No way. After the Civil Rights movement? C'mon! So what he said was truly prophetic. We saw it happen.

Q: Why do you think it happened?

A: I think there are a myriad of reasons. First, there's a belief in the generation gap. Second is the exploitation of kids. When you're exploiting people, and exploiting their sexuality, you have to find new ways to continue to do that...
The third thing is the traditional American relationship with the minstrel show. Black people acting the fool. Always, there's some money to be made off of that. It's comfortable to the national psyche. And also black people's enjoyment of that - for taking what is serious and reducing it to entertainment, which is the same thing that happened with religious music. And it starts with the whole belief in youth music, and the separation of the 14-year-old from their parents."

I grew up listening to Stevie and Marvin and can understand what he meant by this statement. Even though it is reflective of today's culture to say these things rap music nowadays seems to have no point/purpose. Artists want to get paid and this mess that is on the radio is what sells nowadays. Big labels don't want to promote the positive rap (a la De La, Common, etc). They don't care. Now that they have finally seen the the #'s and the influence that rap has, it's about making as much out of it as possible. So the alternative rap artists remain somewhat 'underground' if you will.

In watching the Independent Lens show a few weeks ago there was a group of men outside the Hip Hop Summit in NY freestyling. One of them did 18 bars and it wasn't about killing, booty shaking or any of what is out there. It was good but even he knew that is not what folks want to hear and what sells.

There are still small pockets of resistance (as I call them) and I do try to listen to their music more (if it's good). But I do listen to Jazz, classical and other genres of music more nowadays. I am getting older so my tastes are changing and that is a good thing because it means I am growing within myself. But I look at lot of today's music as disposable-it won't last for the long haul.

I wouldn't call all of it poison just as i wouldn't call it all art either. Most of it is nonsense and I just choose not to waste my money or time on it.

Long Live the Kane!
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Old 03-06-2007, 02:44 PM
delph998 delph998 is offline
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Thumbs up

Acedawg, you hit it on the nail. I enjoyed reading that post.
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Old 03-06-2007, 02:49 PM
DSTCHAOS DSTCHAOS is offline
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Art.
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Always my fav LL song. Sorry, T La Rock, LL killed it. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5NCQ...eature=related
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Deele "Two Occasions" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUvaB...eature=related
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Old 03-06-2007, 03:36 PM
dzdst796 dzdst796 is offline
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Hip Hop is ART!!
All of this disecting going on about the culture and its music is just people with too much time on their hands.
People make conscious decisions to do the things that they do. To blame any genre of music for someone's illegal activities is just using it as a scape goat. If someone commits a crime they were more than likely going to do it regardless of any lyrics they heard in a song.
Just my thoughts. I am from the hip hop generation and I love it.
"Let's Take It Back To The Old School, Let's Take It To Union Square...."
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Old 03-13-2007, 10:15 AM
DST4A00 DST4A00 is offline
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Acedawg, you hit it on the nail. I enjoyed reading that post.
Your siggy speaks volumes.
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Old 03-06-2007, 04:42 PM
Little32 Little32 is offline
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Originally Posted by StarFish106 View Post
Q: Why do you think it happened?

A: I think there are a myriad of reasons. First, there's a belief in the generation gap. Second is the exploitation of kids. When you're exploiting people, and exploiting their sexuality, you have to find new ways to continue to do that...
The third thing is the traditional American relationship with the minstrel show. Black people acting the fool. Always, there's some money to be made off of that. It's comfortable to the national psyche. And also black people's enjoyment of that - for taking what is serious and reducing it to entertainment, which is the same thing that happened with religious music. And it starts with the whole belief in youth music, and the separation of the 14-year-old from their parents."
This is a provocative thought, hip hop as modern minstrelsy. I hadn't thought of it that way before.

I think that hip hop could be art, but at this point it has become stagnant--this is particularly the case with mainstream stuff that we hear on the radio. Can art emerge from the static, I don't know?
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Old 03-07-2007, 09:19 AM
MzDoctaKay MzDoctaKay is offline
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Can art emerge from the static, I don't know?
If so, who would be responsible? The rapper? Or the industry machine?
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