Stylesfree

On Rap Bashing

June 14, 2007 · 1 Comment

At the near midpoint of Black Music month, rap bashing seems to be back in season. Certainly no one has to like everything, and there’s plenty of rap that doesn’t catch my ear, but then there’s also plenty of things in every other genre from jazz to reggae and gospel that also don’t do much for me. But so much ire directed at rap is coming from uninformed, misguided and in some cases elitist types like Washington Post columnist Thomas Chatterton Williams who weighed in with this nonsense. “African-Americans have seen intellectual cultivation, education and self-expression through the arts as the “key to equality.” Hip-hop culture is a denial of that history: it evolved in the streets, as a “cool pose” by young, uneducated black men filled with anger, violent impulses, and misogyny. Over the last two decades, that pose has come to define blackness: for middle-class black teens, “Keeping it real” means imitating thuggish hip-hop stars, while doing well in school and treating people respectfully are “acting white.” It’s crazy, really; of all of America’s ethnic and racial cultures, only Blacks have adopted the values of the lowest rung on their hierarchy.”

There’s so many historical falsehoods, dubious claims and outright lies in that screed we could spend a decade exposing them, but let’s just look at a few. Where does Williams think jazz and blues came from? They didn’t spring up out of the seminary or the academy, but in nightclubs, bars, on farms, in prisons, on people riding trains to Chicago, and in some cases houses of prostitution. Does that make them any less relevant or any less a part of African-American history? I also hate to inform him, but the anti-learning attitudes he decries (rightly) were around back in the ‘50s and ‘60s, long before anyone ever heard of hip-hop and rap. There’s a long and sad tradition of anti-intellectualism in America that you can see in everything from reruns of televised westerns to attempts at censorship in the schools. Blaming them solely on hip-hop is absurd. There’s no singular anything that defines “blackness” except how you feel about yourself, what you know about your heritage, how you interact with others and what you do with your life. The whole issue of authenticity is a dicey one, but in my view there are plenty of rappers who embody the best elements of blackness just like there are doctors, lawyers, athletes, classical musicians, scholars and many others across the board. Only those whose own self-esteem is shaky can be bullied by anyone spewing out blacker-than-thou rhetoric. Finally, I’d like him to tell people like Chuck D or KRS-One that they aren’t interested in helping uplift African-Americans through the arts. I’d love to see and hear their reaction to that type of drivel.

But disagreeing with those who’d dismiss all rap with a broad brush doesn’t mean that there aren’t some serious issues with what’s happened within the music. Here’s some justifiable and accurate criticism expressed by someone who’s been a lover of rap since the ‘80s. Brian Coleman’s new book Check The Technique – Liner Notes for Hip-Hop Junkies (Villard) continues the tradition he established with Rakim Told Me in 2005, giving hip-hop fans the same type of insider interviews, session details, studio breakdowns and production tips and expertise that are regular staples of jazz, blues, R&B, rock, country, classical and world music journalism. Here are some criticisms he voiced of current rap as part of a wide-ranging interview, some of which was included in an article for the Nashville City Paper. Here’s material that wasn’t published there due to a lack of space.

StylesFree: Who would be your favorite rappers
Coleman: Public Enemy, De La Soul and Boogie Down Productions (KRS-One).

StylesFree: How do you respond to the array of criticism that rap currently gets about issues of content and language?
Coleman: That’s a tough question. I’ve never viewed myself as a cultural critic, but more as a fan of people who were making positive statements about their lives and their experiences. What I would say is that in the ‘80s, which is where a lot of the rap albums that are in the book were done, the sessions were really collaborations between the performers and the producers. A Tribe Called Quest talks about all-night sleepovers. Today there may be an album where you’ll have 14 or 15 different producers and I’ll bet you that most of them weren’t there in the studio with the rappers. You can really hear the difference there. There was a sense of camaraderie on these albums, whereas now everything seems more calculated.

But consumers need to demand more from the artists as well. These big labels are putting out these albums where there’s only maybe five good cuts out of 16-20 songs. I would urge people not to buy some of these records, but everyone has a right to listen to what they want to hear. For me, there’s far more interesting music being made on the indie rap scene than at the major labels. Just because you don’t see these people on MTV or on BET, that doesn’t mean they aren’t making great music.
Stylesfree: Still, the controversy is raging, and rap is regularly being denigrated, attacked and dismissed.
Coleman: On one side, I’m a staunch defender of rap. I love hip-hop so much that I’ll always stand up and defend it against attacks from people who don’t know anything about it, but feel empowered to attack it anyway.

But what I don’t stand up and support is music coming from people that I don’t think are making positive, constructive music. I won’t buy it. That doesn’t mean that I hate it, or that I think anyone who’s not doing what I think is positive music should be banned from recording. I admire Snoop Dogg greatly as a stylist. But I’m not running out to get the next Snoop Dogg record. I think that Byron’s documentary (Byron Hunt’s Beyond Beats and Rhymes: A Hip-Hop Head Weights in on Manhood in Hip-Hop Culture that was shown at last year’s Nashville Film Festival and later on PBS) laid out a lot of the problems perfectly. It’s not a case that I’m necessarily right and someone else is wrong, it’s just the way that I see the issue.

I’ve never bought a Young Jeezy album, and probably never will. I think if you go back in this book and look at all the great albums from the ‘80s and play them, they still hold up very well today. I don’t think that will be the case with Young Jeezy, and that’s nothing against him.”
(Ron Wynn)

Categories: Music · Rap · Reflections with Ron Wynn

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