Dissident Voice - 18.Dec.2002

Flo' Dolo

New member
A Eulogy to Hip Hop
by Pierre Bennu
Dissident Voice
December 18, 2002

I know you’ve been thinking it. And if you haven’t, you probably haven’t been paying attention. The art we once called hip hop has been dead for some time now. But because its rotting carcass has been draped in platinum and propped against a Gucci print car, many of us have missed its demise.
I think the time has come to bid a farewell to the last black arts movement. It’s had a good run but it no longer serves the community that spawned it. Innovation has been replaced with mediocrity and originality replaced with recycled nostalgia for the ghost of hip hop past, leaving nothing to look forward to. Honestly when was the last time you heard something (mainstream) that made you want to run around in circles and write down every word. When was the last time you didn’t feel guilty nodding your head to a song that had a ‘hot beat’ after realizing the lyrical content made you cringe.

When I heard Jam Master Jay had been murdered, it was the icing on the cake. A friend and I spoke for hours after he’d turned on the radio looking for solace and instead heard a member of the label Murder, Inc. about to give testimony about the slain DJ’s legacy. My friend found the irony too great to even hear what the rapper had to say. After we got off the phone, I dug through my crates and played the single “Self Destruction.” The needle fell on the lyrics:

“They call us animals
I don’t agree with them
Let’s prove em wrong
But right is what were proving em”

The only thing that kept me from crying was my anger trying to imagine today’s top hip hop artists getting together to do a song that urged disarmament in African American communities, or promoted literacy, or involved anything bigger than themselves for that matter. I couldn’t picture it.
All I could picture were the myriad of hip hop conferences where the moguls and figureheads go through the motions and say the things that people want to hear but at the end of the day nothing changes. No new innovative artists are hired to balance out a roster of the pornographic genocide MC’s.
In their place, we’re presented with yet more examples of arrested development – the portrayal of grown men and women acting and dressing like 15 year olds. Balding insecure men in their mid 30’s making entire songs about their sexual prowess and what shiny toys they have and you don’t. The only hate I see is self-hate. The only love I see is self-love.
All one needs to do is watch Cribs and notice none of these people showing off their heated indoor pools or the PlayStation Two consoles installed in all twelve of their luxury cars have a library in their home. Or display a bookshelf, for that matter. No rapper on cribs has ever been quoted saying: “Yeah, this is the room where I do all my reading, nahmean?”

To quote Puffy in Vogue magazine Nov, 2002: “Diamonds are a great investment… They’re not only a girl’s best friend, they are my best friend. I like the way diamonds make me feel. I can’t really explain it, its like: that’s a rock, something sent to me from nature, from God, it makes me feel good… It’s almost like my security cape.” If rappers read, they might know about the decades of near-slavery endured by South African diamond miners. Or the rebels in Sierra Leone whose bloody diamond-fueled anti-voting rampages leave thousands of innocent men, women and children with amputated limbs.
Often, hip hop’s blatant excess is rationalized with, “We came from nothing.” That statement rings hollow given even a little bit of context. African Americans have been “coming from nothing” for 400 years. That didn’t stop previous generations of artists, activists, and ancestors from working toward a better situation for the whole, not just themselves. It’s grotesque to see such selfish materialism celebrated by a generation who are literally the children of apartheid.

The time has come to re-define the street and what it means to come from the street. Yes, criminals & violence come from the streets, but so do men and women who live their lives with kindness, and within the realm of the law. The problem with making ‘street’ or ‘realness’ synonymous with criminality is that poor black children are demonized. You never see the image of middle class white children killing each other promoted as entertainment.
I respect the ability of an artist to explore the darker side or extremities of their personality but when that’s all there is, there is no balance. In previous years, NWA existed simultaneously with Native Tongues, Cypress Hill and Digable Planets, Gangstar and 2 Live Crew.

There’s room for thugz, playaz, gangstas, and what have you. My issue (aside from the fact that rappers spell everything phonetically) is that they have no heart. Rappers reflect what has become a new image of success where money is its own validation and caring is soft unless you’re dropping a single about your dead homie.
Question:
Why haven’t these so-called “ballers” gotten together and bought a farm, a prison, a super market chain, or chartered a school? But they all have clothing lines. Smells like a sucker to me. The lack of social responsibility from people who claim to ‘rep the streets’ is stunning. Yet we still have had the hearts and minds of most of the world. We negate this power if we don’t step up to the plate. Our perspective needs to change; our whole idea of power needs to globalize. Gangsta shouldn’t be shooting someone you grew up with in the face. “Gangsta” is calling the United States to task for not attending the World Summit on Racism in South Africa. “Balling” shouldn’t be renting a mansion; it should be owning your own distribution company or starting a union. Bill Cosby’s bid to buy NBC was more threatening than any screwface jewelry clad MC in a video could ever be.

As a DJ, it’s hard: I pick up the instrumental version of records that people nod their head to… and mix it with the a cappella version of artists with something to say. It is expensive and frustrating. But I feel like the alternative is the musical equivalent to selling crack: spinning hits because it’s easy, ignoring the fact that it’s got us dancing to genocide.
There are plenty of alternatives today but you’d never know it through the mass media. Hip hop has become Steven Seagal in a do-rag. Meanwhile, media radar rarely registers artists like Cannibal Ox, Madlib and the whole Stones Throw crew, Bless, Saul Williams, Bus Driver, Del, Gorillaz, anything from Def Jux, Freestyle Fellowship, Anti Pop Consortium, Kool Keith, Prince Paul, **** Public Enemy… the list goes on for ever. I get some solace from knowing and supporting these artists, and from the fact that around the world from Germany to Cuba to Brazil to South Africa, hip hop’s accessibility and capacity for genius is still vital, thriving, and relevant.

And yes, even amongst the bleak landscape in this country, wonderful things do happen. Like Camp Cool J and various artists donating money to research AIDS and even lend their faces to voting campaigns. Russell Simmons, among other socially conscious endeavors, led a rally to stop NYC’s mayor from cutting the school budget and donates part of the proceeds from his sneaker sales to the reparations movement. The lack of coverage of efforts like this is as much to blame as any wack MC with a platinum record.

I’m not dissing the innovators of the art form, or those of us who got it where it is today. I will always play and support what I feel is good work. I guess this rant came more out of what Chuck D said at the end of Self Destruction: “We’ve got to keep ourselves in check,” and no one has checked hip hop for some time.

I’ve entertained the idea that I might just be getting old. But if it’s a function of my age that I remember hip hop as the people’s champ, so be it. I was raised on a vital art form that has now become a computer-generated character doing the cabbage patch in a commercial, or a comedian ‘raising the roof.’ That’s not influence to me, that’s mockery.

Hip hop my friend, it’s been a great 30 years filled with great memories, and it’s been fun to watch you grow. We’ve got dozens of broke innovators and plenty of mediocre millionaires out of the deal, but I really need my space now and we’ve got to go our separate ways. I will always love you, but it’s time for me to move on. "Yo, what happened to peace?"

Peace.
 
I can't believe no one responded to this

Yo,

This was one of the most inspirational things i've read in awhile.
I feel the exact same way that you do....I'm prob not as old as you but i've followed the game for such a long time. Since i was in 3rd grade to be exact. I'm now 21 and it has totally gone to shit.
I used to love Public Enemy and all those other groups you had mentioned. It pisses anyone off who really knows what this thing is about...i was pissed when i heard the "prince paul w/ dan the automater album" and i couldn't find it at any local stores all the stores are filled with is CRAP. YEs there are always exceptions to the rule but for me now to give my 14-20$ that i've worked for you have to earn it. That's why it would be funny to me when cat's would always talk about this one and that one and i would say yo you heard "blackstar"(when it first came out) they we're like "what's that underground?" i was shooked that there are so many people out there that won't pick up an album unless someone else said it was good or they'll say "yo may man said that shit wack" so they don't bother. Then you have everyone who sapposively loves hip hop and they don't give shit back!
Then when an artist does do something for his/her community they are a pussy,chump,clown etc. I don't see where the love is at. Then with all the deaths of artists in the recent years the main ones we talk about are "biggie and PAC" yes i love both of them to death but how about "freeky Tah" how about the Big L's the Big pun's ...yes there mentioned but not like they should be.
ON the subject of "gangsters showin love" yeah the think it's gonna hurt there fan base if they cry about something besides a dead homeboy and the other ones do records(i'm sorry) not for the lost but for THEMSElves. As i said before there are exceptions to the rule but not normally. As far as the CRiB's that show is the biggest bunch of shit i've seen in awhile. All shows like that do is make cat's want to go out and rob more shoot more sell more drugs not work hard and achieve success that way. Then rappers say "well i came from this that and the other and you can to" but in the midst of all that shit they tell how they got there "i sold drugs to get label money , i had to do this, do that" that's crazy to me. I was never influenced by any of that shit. But i have made stupid mistakes in my past...but i can honestly say that i learned from them. I will never glorify drugs,guns,beatin women on my album...if i do you have to listen to the end because i'm tellin a story...on how it fuck me up totally. I don't know who made it cool to "go to jail" or brag about felonies that shit is lame man. I am so ashamed that i went to jail. Because 9/10 when you go to jail U LIED. In some way shape or form and i can't see how that is cool or something that anyone would want to be apart of.
As for the jewelery....it's gotten out of hand...i was so happy to see Raekwon from the WU talk about how that shit is in the past and he doesn't wear that shit no more because it's corny. That to me was really respectful. Most Cat's will take shot's at him for that because then they have some shit to rap about but to me and anyone else who knows what this shit is about ....it takes a bigger man to talk about shit everyelse wants to say but they can't. Well this shits gettin mad long but i'll holla back at cha
Peace Love Respect,


ya Boy Kevlar
 
I am so tired...

...of self professed "hip hop purists" saying that everything was so much better back in the day. Yeah life was perfect in Africa, but then they put us on the boats. When we get to America, we didn't complain about how great is was in the motherland, WE GOT FREE!
When are ya'll gonna understand that this is a capitalist society. That means: The dollar over the people! The only reason we had a such a variety of artists before was because the labels didn't know what would sell. They were willing to try different things. Now they know it doesn't matter what you say on the beat as long as women will dance to it. It's supply and demand. If people wanted all that positivity, it would be coming en masse. that's not the case. People are not going to get out of the hood waiting for some successful rappers to build a school that their goverment should be building. That's foolish.
People will only pick the best of what is offered to them. I didn't vote for bush or gore, but I'll be damned if anyone else was gonna win. if the market doesn't demand a change in products, the marketers will begin to tell them what they can have.
Read an economics book.
Remember: Nothing that is good will stay good, if it can be sold for a profit.
get over it.
Besides, hip hop is in a good place. Think about it. You don't need a record deal to make money doing music, your home rec'd songs could make it on the radio, and you still have the freedom to say what the ---- you wanna say. I say: get this money.

my kids gotta eat, and puffy aint bought the damn farm.

get yours.
-L
 
a hip hop a hippit to the hippity hip hip hop and u dont stop
now what you hear is not a test im dancin to the beat

yeah where a lot worse off now
come on cuz hip hop is like anything else it grows and evolves and when there is no where else t go it circles back around and starts again

yall ol school heads will get your run again its still young ands almost to that bend u want it to be at. but when it gets there this time there will also be
a new side and expierience to it.u dont like the bling bling shit th eplatinum an all that it will run its tur and be done just like the shiny suits the excessive blky gold chains (like rics eiric b's,etc)dookie earings,or the tight ass jeans with the 1 glove and the black leather captain and tenilles hat. somethin new is comin
instead of hate on wus crackin now try to invent that and give us somethin else

look at ceelo hes a prime example that hip hop is experiening growth
the scared stagnate ,the brave make moves
what will u do
 
i feel you, but the difference is black rappers today have to get shot at, stabbed, or do a bid in order to get 'street cred' and without 'street cred' they don't sell records.

previously, having a 'street look' was enough.

so styles p. sits in jail while justin timberlake makes money, just like slick rick sat in jail while new kids on the block made money.

no difference in the reality of life, but a difference in the language they put forward on wax.

i got nothing but love for hip-hop old and new school my problem is with the radio stations.

why is it that white radio stations censure everything they play so that white children don't hear certain things, while black radio stations allow all kinds of R-rated language over the airwaves. why doesn't the FCC regulate them equally?

that's like putting an R rating on a white movie, while giving the same movie with black actors a G rating.

there are certain things i don't want my youth to hear. as a result i can't allow my youth to listen to black radio unsupervised.
 
@crosstudio...

I feel you. I believe the FCC does regulate all commercial stations the same, further censoring comes from the stations themselves. No FCC conspiracy, but maybe station owners, PDs, and so on. Wonder if the money behind the stations with such a huge dichotomy in programming values is intentionally so strict on one end and so lenient on the other. There's the conspiracy.


@ whoever cares to keep reading & leonardjammar...

I too love all forms of rap music, I just hate that so many people think it's so cool to listen to cats rhyme ALL THE TIME about bullshit. Generally speaking, if you're a black person in this country, regardless of whether or not you live in or come from the hood, you still can relate to all that gunplay shit. We all got it in us as a result of our history as a people in America. After all, when did slavery really end in this country, 1965?!?!? Just cuz I got the capacity to get ill, and just cuz I may have done some ill shit in my lifetime don't mean I gotta spit about it all the damn time. If I'm gonna spit about some shit i'm always into or trying to get into, it'd lean more towards pussy & politics than poppin' caps and shit. But that's just me...

"...of self professed "hip hop purists" saying that everything was so much better back in the day. Yeah life was perfect in Africa, but then they put us on the boats. When we get to America, we didn't complain about how great is was in the motherland, WE GOT FREE!"


off topic, but...
Sure people complained about being enslaved, dog. Whether it was in speech (and they had to endure the whip as a result), or in a song (some of which have become Gospel staples). And no, we didn't "get free." I hope you don't really believe that shit. We're just entering the 2nd stage of the civil rights movement in this country - maybe more difficult than changing laws on the books, changing people's hearts can't be legislated. But I digress...


"When are ya'll gonna understand that this is a capitalist society. That means: The dollar over the people! The only reason we had a such a variety of artists before was because the labels didn't know what would sell. They were willing to try different things. Now they know it doesn't matter what you say on the beat as long as women will dance to it. It's supply and demand. If people wanted all that positivity, it would be coming en masse. that's not the case. People are not going to get out of the hood waiting for some successful rappers to build a school that their goverment should be building. That's foolish."

People aren't going to better themselves in any way [bold]waiting[/bold] on shit. I think a lot of people do want more variety in commerical artists' lyrics. The reason it doesn't appear that way is because suburbia bought into the grimey season years ago and won't let go. That's part of what makes shit so damn ironic. I mean, we all know that mega-star status didn't even visit black rap artists until white consumers started dropping loot that black america simply doesn't have. Thing is, if even the current major pop star rappers flipped to some ol' "love everybody" shit, the masses would follow, including aspiring artists. Always the case from fashion to art to music to fad foods to car fetishes to the public's idea of what makes a guy or girl look hot. Long shorts for basketball and fashion came mainstream courtesy of some Detroit hood rats who could really ball (The Fab Five), and collagen injections in white women's asses and lips came courtesy of black women's rightfully admired full lips and shapely onions. As soon as someone of mixed heritage who looked more white than black (by american standards) became a model or moviestar, "everybody" had to have those "sexy lips." Capitalism in entertainment doesn't mean anything except shit gets beat way into the ground and milked for every nickel it can generate. Plenty of labels push varied shit, but the stations are all owned by the same abusive dragons...


People will only pick the best of what is offered to them.

That's bullshit. Most people aren't even in a position to determine what's "best for them," or "the best of what's out there." People are more apt to pick stuff that someone else has already endorsed, we are a nation of co-signers...

"I didn't vote for bush or gore, but I'll be damned if anyone else was gonna win."

You didn't have a choice, fuck whether or not you willing to be damned or not. Those guys were the majority party leaders. One of them HAD to win (uh, I mean STEAL. What's that have to do with anything, anyway?

"if the market doesn't demand a change in products, the marketers will begin to tell them what they can have."

Music consumers aren't gonna change that shit, the creators of the music are the ones with the power. That would be people like you and me. We need to demand that shit FROM OURSELVES...

"Read an economics book.

To peep what?

Remember: Nothing that is good will stay good, if it can be sold for a profit.
get over it.

Fatalist attitudes contribute to general purpose blandness, believe it or not.

Besides, hip hop is in a good place. Think about it. You don't need a record deal to make money doing music, your home rec'd songs could make it on the radio, and you still have the freedom to say what the ---- you wanna say. I say: get this money.

I agree. Hip-hop isn't in a really bad place anymore, though it could be better. The winds of change are blowing, though. And, not that I don't wanna keep making loot doing music for a living, but personally I choose to get my money in a different way than those who spit about what I consider to be bullshit. Hell, even MCs say 90% of what they and everybody else rhymes about is fucking bogus. Cool for entertainment and artistic purposes, things are just soooo damn lacking in dynamics, now.

my kids gotta eat, and puffy aint bought the damn farm.

Mine, too. But they don't necessarily have to eat offa hella expensive plates in a 7 million dollar home. I'm not knockin' it, but I don't gotta be a multimillionaire to be rich, smart, trendsetting, groundbreaking, or a good provider to my fam...

get yours.

No doubt. The "how" does matter, though.

Oh, and you know what was better "back in the day?" Heads gave a shit about what cats was saying as a rule, not the exception...


diendolo

"My issue...is that...rappers reflect what has become a new image of success where money is its own validation and caring is soft unless you’re dropping a single about your dead homie."

That being said, I still bump Mobb Deep's "Survival of the Fittest" LP (and other stuff with similar lyrics) on the regular.
:rolleyes:
 
yeah, i started to rant off topic...

...but my point was basically this. Black people, ---- that, poor people in general shouldn't have to look to musicians (for whom music is a job) for guidance. Nobody should have to expect anyone who is an entertainer to educate the people. Don't wait on rap to change its course so our kids can learn. People want to hear different things discussed in songs, while I think we should focus on discussing new things in schools. Just like Salt and Pepa said, "pick up the needle, press pause, or turn the radio off."
And reading up on economics was simply to get folks to understand that entertainers (suppliers) are at the mercy of their audience (demand/ market). You do have a choice in what you listen to. Don't complain about not having a choice; you have a microphone just like anyone else.

You are free. Don't bury yourself thinking otherwise.

one.
-L
 
Everyone who thinks there's a problem should complain.
As long as they themselves are willing to do something about it.

"Free" from/of what, dog? Like I said, the 2nd wave is just getting fired up.

No, I'm not in chains, and no, I don't pick cotton, but yes, double standards do exist, "glass ceilings" do exist, judicial and legislative racism does exist, and so on...

I'm not waiting on rap to change its' course. I'd like to think , at least, that I'm part of the guiding force.

Like Pierre Bennu wrote in his article, "there is no balance."

diendolo
 
Everyone who thinks there's a problem should complain.
As long as they themselves are willing to do something about it

That really just about sums up my view on it...
 
I agree 100%...

...my only beef is with those who break out their soapbox and start preaching to the folks about what hip hop could have done for them and their children had it not been sold out. These are the same folks who never do a damn thang about it. I agree that hip hop could have been more than what it is today, but complaints without action are useless.
we're all on the same side, you just made the argument more clearly than I did.

one.
-L
 
If you want the game to change become a player and take ova the shit. Hip Hop is not a business venture it's a culture. So IMO hip hop has ever and will never die. Yall cats must be watch'n to many videos and listen'n to the radio too much to come at us with this. There are plenty cats doing there thang in the underground seen and that's what I listen too. Like the phrase says" Out of sight out of mind" Yall need to concetrate on ya art and stop worring about what other cats are doing to eat. As much energy u put into your posting you could have wrote a song..... created a beat or somethin.
 
chill...

...I'ma come at you on the peace tip.
I see your point. I do my thing, and I'm not too worried with what other cats are doing to eat. But still, I'm a grown ass man. Don't ever tell me what I should and shouldn't be doing with my time.

"I got a right ta..."

one.
-L
 
Yo it's all peace GOD. I just rather hear the song then read the convo ya feel me. And I was speaking to everyone not just you.
 
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