Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Hip Hop Culture - History and Trajectory

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 33

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

OpenSIUC
Research Papers Graduate School

2005

Hip Hop Culture: History and Trajectory


R J. Riesch
Southern Illinois University Carbondale, jonriesch@yahoo.com

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/gs_rp

Recommended Citation
Riesch, R J., "Hip Hop Culture: History and Trajectory" (2005). Research Papers. Paper 32.
http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/gs_rp/32

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Research Papers by
an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact opensiuc@lib.siu.edu.
Hip Hop Culture: History and Trajectory

by

R. Jonathan Riesch
B.A., Southern Illinois University, 2002

A Research Paper

Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the

Master of Arts Degree

Department of History

in the Graduate School


Southern Illinois University Carbondale

December, 2010
RESEARCH PAPER APPROVAL

HIP HOP CULTURE: HISTORY AND TRAJECTORY

By

R. Jonathan Riesch

A Research Paper Submitted in Partial

Fulfillment of the Requirements

for the Degree of

Master of Arts

in the field of History

Approved by:

Dr. Robbie Lieberman, Chair

Graduate School
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
November 12, 2010
TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE

TEXT .................................................................................................................. 1

BIBLIOGRAPHY ............................................................................................. 27

VITA ................................................................................................................. 29

iii
1

While trying to find common ground, my sixty-year-old father-in-law and I began

talking about his new job as a speech communications instructor at Eastern Illinois

University and my position as a teaching assistant in Southern Illinois University’s

history department. As he spoke about the speeches that he had assigned to his classes he

stopped to ask me what “hip hop” is.1 He explained further that two of his students had

asked to do speeches on hip hop and he was not sure if it would be “an appropriate

topic.” Not knowing exactly how to bridge this generational (and cultural) divide, I tried

to explain what I knew of hip hop. I quickly realized that my understanding of hip hop

was hard to express. Having recently become interested in the HBO series Russell

Simmons’ Presents Def Poetry, I played a video tape of one of the episodes, somehow

thinking that thirty minutes of hip hop poetry could fill my father-in-law in on a

subculture with a thirty year history.2

Since hip hop’s origins during the mid-1970s it has grown from a localized urban-

arts pastime to a multi-billion dollar a year industry. Its effects have spread from the

urban streets to classrooms and boardrooms. The impoverished youths of African and

Latin ancestry that once comprised the entire cast and audience of this subculture are now

amid a rainbow of economic, generational, and ethnic diversity. How did a subculture

that was, in large part, the most overlooked and unappreciated segment of society come

to dominate a large segment of modern popular culture? The objective of this project is

to determine what hip hop culture is, how it is being defined by the artist creating it, and

how it will continue to gain significance by examining its history and its evolution as a

1
“Hip hop” is used as both an adjective and a noun throughout this paper. When used as an adjective it will include a hyphen.
According to Microsoft Word 2000, ‘hip hop” requires a hyphen regardless of its use in written language. Some authors include the
hyphen when “hip hop” is used as a noun, but most do not.
2
My father-in-law, Jim Coleman, is used here as a representative of typical American middle-class values and cultural
awareness. He married his wife at relatively young age, had three daughters, is a regularly attending Catholic (“for the community
aspect, not for the dogma”) and is tolerant of my, sometime, extremely liberal views of society.
2

topic of academic and popular interest.

The roots of hip hop lay at the intersection of the political protest movements of

Black Nationalism of the early 1970s and the impoverished ghettoes of urban America.3

How to define hip hop is somewhat problematic.4 Hip hop is used as a noun or an

adjective. It is often used interchangeably with the word “rap” to describe urban spoken-

word music. It is also used to describe clothing, language, attitude, and customs. In short,

hip hop is a culture. However, hip hop was not always such a broadly defined term.

Originally, hip hop referred to the culture of the Latin and African-American youths

centered around the Bronx, New York who were graffiti artists, break-dancers,

turntablists, and emcees.5 In the early years of hip hop, the actual participants (or

creators) of the arts were referred to by the medium in which they were involved (i.e.

taggers, DJs, break-dancers, breakers, or b-boys, and rappers or MCs). As these arts

became more and more popular around New York, the term hip hop came to define the

overall culture related to all four of the mediums.6 One of the most important aspects of

hip-hop culture is being authentic. There are three main ways in which hip hop artist

establish authenticity: being true to themselves (i.e. being original and not trying to fit

in), reflecting the community from which they are coming, and having an understanding

and respect for the styles and origins of early hip hop.

3
Errol A. Henderson, “Black Nationalism and Rap Music,” Journal of Black Studies 26, no. 3 (1996): 2-3.
4
“Hip hop”’s usage has changed over time. From the beginnings of the urban styles that came to be known as hip hop in the
early 1970s until the first commercially successful musical recordings, “b-boy” was more commonly used to describe the people of the
urban community that identified with the break-beat driven DJ music and dance styles. Once the verbalization of “toasts” (discussed
later) evolved into MCs (discussed later), improvisational scat-type sounds produced by performers often included the combinations
of the words “hip” and “hop.” DJ Lovebug Starski is credited with coining the term “hip hop” to describe this style of music. As the
most recognizable aspect of this urban culture, hip hop started to be used to describe all aspects of this urban culture according to
“And You Don’t Stop: 30 Years of Hip Hop” (part 1), VH1 television channel mini-series, 2005.
5
These elements of hip hop are colloquially known as taggers, DJs, b-boys and b-girl or breakers, and MCs or rappers, Nelson
George et al., Fresh Hip Hop Don’t Stop (New York: Random House, 1985), XIX; Cookie Lommel, The History of Rap Music
(Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers, 2001), 18-20.
6
George, XIX; Lommel, 20.
3

The analysis in this paper will focus on the auditory mediums, DJing and rapping.

These two forms of hip hop have had an increasing impact on the larger society, whereas

graffiti artists have been vilified as vandals for their tagging of subway trains and public

buildings,7 and break-dancing gave way to new styles of dance by the mid-1980s. DJing

and rapping have had much more consistent developments over the last thirty years.8

While innovations in sound production and lyrical content have driven rap music’s9

evolution, the key to the impact of hip hop on the larger society has come from the

financial successes that rap music have yielded for the business world. The visual arts

form that was once associated with hip-hop culture has been co-opted by the business

world as ad campaigns and slogans.10 Hip hop dance, although evolving away from

break-dancing, still exists but has very little detectable impact on the larger society. By

focusing on the auditory forms of hip hop culture one can understand its growth from an

organic mix of art and entertainment to an economically driven industry.

Hip hop’s newness makes it difficult to contextualize. Hip-hop culture is defined, in

part, by the creators of the arts. However, it is also defined by the society around it. The

tricky part is that to be hip hop (i.e. to represent hip hop culture) only requires that an

individual self-associates with this culture. Anyone of any age or birthplace who listens

to rap music, dresses in the styles of hip hop, or speaks in a contemporary urban dialect is

considered by both the general public and the hip hop community (for the most part) as

7
As stated by graffiti artist Wisk One Wca in an interview with Mystic for the online website, guerillaone.com, 2 Nov 1989,
http://www.guerillaone.com/interviews_11_99/wisk.htm (accessed January 16, 2004).
8
Tricia Rose, Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America (Hanover: University Press of New
England, 1994), 58.
9
Rap music is generally the combination of spoken-word lyrics created by the MC or rapper articulated in the rapper’s
particular style, tempo, and/or tone to the sounds created by the DJ using a variety of prerecorded sounds and sometimes sounds
created for a live audience using turntables employing various techniques that have come to be associated with DJing.
10
An argument can be made that music videos, movies, and the spread of graffiti-inspired marketing are the descendants of
taggers. However, graffiti artists have come to be a smaller and smaller part of modern hip hop culture.
4

representing the culture. If the criteria to be part of hip hop culture is simply self-

identification or the presumption by the society that an individual embodies any one (or

more) of a variety of characteristics or preferences to hip hop culture, then there are

millions of primary sources to analyze. As a history student examining hip-hop culture,

this project can be seen as representing hip hop. Ultimately, researchers have to be aware

of the overlapping of sources as both primary and secondary. The writings of Michael

Eric Dyson11 and Nelson George12 are academic examinations of hip hop culture;

however, these authors are also greatly informed on this topic by their backgrounds living

in urban centers.

This is not to say that all people who represent hip hop have equal standing. Hip hop

is greatly about image. As a white thirtysomething male, I do not embody a typical

member of the hip-hop community. Upon further inspection I do fit the overall definition

for authenticity. To a twelve-year-old African-American kid I might be the furthest thing

from hip hop, but to the people who have been part of the community since its birth, it is

less about image and more about substance. By examining the writings of true hip hop

icons (Chuck D, Ice-T, KRS-One) it becomes clear that image is much less important

with age. Chuck D chides emerging rap star Kayne West for giving the youth the wrong

impression when he writes songs about how college is for suckers.13 So why does image

play such a vital role in modern hip-hop culture? The most obvious answer is that hip-

hop culture and the hip-hop industry are two distinctly separate things. Academic

discussions regarding hip hop look at how this subculture formed, what the connecting

11
Michael Eric Dyson has written several books on modern African-American culture and the role and value of hip hop in
contemporary society.
12
Nelson George has written three books on hip hop culture. Each book has expanded his analysis of hip hop as the culture
has intersected with the dominant culture.
13
Chuck D: Spoken Word Tour, Shryock Auditorium, 26 April 2004.
5

points are between different communities of hip hop, and how contemporary society

looks at hip hop, not how to sell more records. Young hip-hop artists are looking for

ways to sell records and make money. By the time they have earned enough money14 or

have found that they are being used by the industry,15 many rap stars refocus their efforts

on making hip hop a positive force for its community.

The novelty of hip hop as an academic pursuit can be viewed both positively and

negatively. There are a host of sources on this topic, but many of these sources come

from an insider’s perspective. It is not uncommon to find statements such as, “I grew up

in a world…”16 or “the plot we’re living right now…”17 from academic sources on hip

hop. While it is important to recognize that some members of the academic community

who are writing about hip hop culture are part of this culture, it would be completely

unfair to this field to hold reservations about these individuals’ objectivity when dealing

with the subject, just as it would be ludicrous to deny the significance of Todd Gitlin’s

personal narrative to a discussion of the1960s, or to hold reservations about Elie Wiesel’s

ability to effectively examine WWII. Secondarily, it would be absurd to consider the

cultural background of every author who is considered as a source in this project.

Academic authors such as Nelson George, Robin Kelley, and Michael Eric Dyson may be

informed by personal association or identification with the hip hop community, yet this

fact is openly addressed by the these authors. Other authors on hip hop might have

14
Ice-T talked about his experiences related to his heavy metal band Body Count. He released a song entitled Cop Killer that
started a media frenzy that ultimately resulted in President Bush making a statement to television in which, as Ice-T stated, he said Ice-
T’s name in anger. Ice-T said he found it very disconcerting that the next day and for two weeks after this there was an “ice cream”
truck parked outside his home in the middle of winter. Ice-T went on to say the President’s speech helped record sales, but after he
made enough money to be secure he picked his projects more judiciously, Ice-T: Spoken Word Tour, Shryock Auditorium, 22
February, 2002.
15
Chuck D.
16
Robin D. G. Kelley, Yo’ Mama’s Disfunktional!: Fighting the Culture Wars in Urban America (Boston: Beacon Press,
1997), 1.
17
Emphasis added, Nelson George, Hip Hop America (New York: Viking Publishing, 1998), 1.
6

similar insider positions yet feel the need to distance themselves from this associate

specifically because of the fear of questions of objectivity.

Some of the most active and significant critics and theoreticians of hip-hop culture

are distinguished members of the community. Rappers such as Chuck D (frontman/MC

of the rap group Public Enemy), KRS-One (frontman/MC of the group Boogie Down

Productions, and Ice-T have come from the urban environs that spawned hip hop, become

legendary within the hip hop community for their skills as MCs, and found financial

success in doing so. All of these artists have chosen to use their positions as hip-hop stars

to critique the dominant culture as well as the culture they represent. In these cases there

is no question that they are working as primary sources. However, there is no scale to

determine how hip hop an individual is. The hip-hop culture’s focus on being “fresh”

allows for continual expansion of hip hop’s boundaries.18 Therefore, to say Chuck D is a

more accurate embodiment of hip hop culture than Dyson simply because the former was

a rapper and the latter is a professor is problematic for academic purposes.19 However,

for the image-driven hip hop youth, Chuck D’s is more authentic because you can buy his

albums and see his videos. Yet, many younger fans of hip hop might find Nelly or 50

Cent even more authentic. There is no hip-hop review board. The diversity within hip hop

has allowed for its longevity. This diversity and continual invention and innovation

within hip hop has allowed for the culture’s exponential growth.20 Yet, the same

amorphousness that has fueled the growth of hip hop has resulted in ardent attacks on the

18
George, Hip Hop America, XVII-XVIII.
19
The expansion of hip hop into mainstream society has changed the way hip hop culture can be represented. Before hip
hop’s crossover success into the dominate culture, hip hop was related to the culture of the urban centers. In today’s world, hip hop
still represents the culture of the urban centers, but an individual does not need to speak, act, or look hip hop at all times to be a
member of the culture.
20
Articles from jstor on hip hop in other nations.
7

culture.

Uninformed outsiders to the hip hop community have used marginal issues within

hip hop as representative of the whole. Starting with the violence associated with the

gang members who were the earliest audience, and often time creators21 of hip hop,

mainstream society sees what it wants to see in this subculture. The devastating effects of

the crack cocaine epidemic since the 1980s plagued the communities from which rap

stars were born and where its audience resided. Some of these marginal issues have come

to define hip hop. The misogynistic and violent nature of “gangsta rap” became the lens

through which outsiders viewed hip hop (particularly rap music) during the early 1990s.22

The East Coast/West Coast rivalries that resulted in the deaths of hip-hop superstars

Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur have greatly overshadowed all positive images of the

hip hop community in the mass media during the mid and late 1990s.23 And most

recently, Eminem’s meteoric rise to the top of hip hop and popular music charts has

brought a second wave of discussions of misogyny within hip hop as well as claims of

rampant homophobia throughout the rap industry. Whether or not these controversies

were appropriate challenges to hip hop, they helped this culture grow from being one

community to becoming a world-wide movement.

The influences of hip hop come in a variety of forms. From the storytelling tradition

of the griots24 of West Africa, to the poetry of Langston Hughes,25 to the urban decay of

21
Afrika Bambaataa was one of the first popular DJs and had formerly been a member of the Black Spades in the Bronx,
NY. Bambaataa defused potentially violent interactions between gang members by having rival gangs compete against each other in
break-dance, DJ, and rap competitions, George 18.
22
Ronin Ro, Gangsta: Merchandizing the Rhymes of Violence (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996), 4.
23
Joy Bennett Kinnon, “Does a Rap Have a Future?,” Ebony 52, no. 8 (1997): 76-77.

24
Griots are a part of West African musical tradition as storytellers who discuss culture through song, Catherine Lavender,
American Frontiers and Borderlands on-line website, City University of New York,
http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/griotimages.html (accessed 21 April 2005).
8

1970s inner cities, to the music traditions of Jamaica DJs26, hip hop has been shaped by

disparate forces. Due to the variety of players and the culture’s reverence for “freshness,”

analyzing early hip-hop culture requires historians to use oral histories and collective

memories. While there are undoubtedly individual challengers to the narrative, the

majority of all sources have come to share the base line of the story of hip hop.

The elements of hip hop developed at different times, but came together during the

mid 1970s in South Bronx, New York. Graffiti has been around since it adorned cave

walls.27 Eventually it found its way onto subway cars and into decaying inner-city slums

as a way to mark territory, and, in some people’s eyes, decorate the barren urban

landscape. Forms of urban dance had always existed, but the specific style of “break-

dancing” was created to match the break-beats28 of early hip hop music. Jamaican

immigrant Clive Campbell (DJ Kool Herc) is credited with being one of the first DJs to

bring the Jamaican tradition of “toasting” to the New York clubs.29 Herc added an

emphasis on replaying the break-beat or the “hook” of song repeatedly by using two

turntables to excite the crowd at dance clubs.30 He is also credited with coining the term

“b-boy,” which generally refers to a break-dancer or someone who enjoys the break-

25
During the opening of each Def Poetry episode a writing selection is read by the MC, Mos Def, to spotlight historical
writers that have laid the foundation for modern hip hop culture. The very first Def Poetry Jam’s opening was a poem by Langston
Hughes entitled “Harlem Sweeties.” It has become a type of trademark by Def Poetry to have Mos Def end the opening by giving the
name of the author of the poem and identifying the author as a Def Poet, Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry: Episode 1, Home Box
Office Inc., 2005.
26
DJ Kool Herc is identified as one of the earliest DJs to introduce hip hop music. Herc’s musical style was greatly informed
by the musical traditions of his birthplace, Jamaica. “Toasting” was a tradition among Jamaican DJs as a way to talk to the crowd at a
party over the music being provided by the records. Boasting about one’s musical talents was a common theme among the Jamaican
DJs during their toasts, a tradition that is said to have been brought to hip hop music by Herc which has been a staple of hip hop music
throughout its existence, Steve Jones, “Reggae’s Dancehall Style Hits Mainland,” USA Today, 26 August 2002, Life (D4).
27
George, Fresh Hip Hop Don’t Stop, 11.
28
The break-beat refers to the rhythmic portion of a musical passage that provides a hook to grab listeners, attention. Break-
beats are often only five to fifteen seconds long, but DJs “loop,” or repeat this portion of a song repeatedly to provide a catchy
background rhythm over which other sounds and lyrics are laid to create a song. Rap artist have often been chided for taking the best
portions of other songs and incorporating them into a new song, or sampling. The sampled portion is most commonly the break-beat.
29
Lommel, 20; George, Hip Hop America, 17.
30
Nelson George discusses the evolution of the Jamaican toasting to DJs regularly adding lyrics over the music they are
playing, which came to be known as rapping. The earliest rappers were the DJs, a trend that has long passed, Fresh Hip Hop Don’t
Stop, 4.
9

beats.31 From the mid 1970s until 1979 several other innovations occurred in DJing. A

toggle switch was added to the double turntable by early pioneering DJ Grandmaster

Flash (Joseph Sadler), which allowed a single turntable to provide all the sounds

necessary for mixing.32 Flash also discovered that he could manipulate the speed of the

record, even stopping and playing a small segment of the record backward.33 This

technique became known as scratching. The final innovation that came before rap music

broke out of the ghettos and onto radio stations was the usage of an electronic drum

machine called the beat box. Africa Bambaataa (Kevin Donovan) is given credit for

popularizing the beat box to create textured percussion sounds.34

As these new techniques built on each other, DJs had to spend more time focusing

on the creation of sound and had less time to “toast” the crowds.35 By the end of the

1970s duos and groups became the norm of the hip-hop music world. The DJ would

match his talents with an MC or several MCs to create what became rap music. The MCs

continual barrage of rhymed phrases to the beat of the music became known as rapping.

Some of the pioneering rap groups were Run-DMC, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious

31
DJ Kool Herc looked beyond the traditional recordings of Black urban America to find break-beats. The ability of a DJ to
find new songs to sample break-beats from was vital to their popularity. Herc valued the albums he sampled so much that he would
soak the record label off of the album that he used to DJ so that other DJs could not figure out what albums were being used to create
themusic, George, 6.
32
The toggle switch allowed DJs to play two different records at once and switch back and forth between the two to create
textures using only one turntable. It also allowed a DJ to play one record and find the next song that was to be played or sampled by
listening through headphones so the music would be continually playing, George, 8.
33
Grandmaster Flash’s protégé Grand Wizard Theodore is said to have accidentally discovered the technique of stopping a
record with his hand so he could hear his mother talking to him as he was practicing DJing, but Flash is given credit for mastering the
technique and bringing it to the wider hip hop audience, Henderson, 3; George, Hip Hop America, 17.
34
As part of Bambaataa’s effort to be a positive force through music he began focusing on Black Nationalism, converted to
Islam, and changed his name. Bambaataa also founded an organization called the Zulu Nation to try to help inner-city youth avoid the
problems of gang-warfare, Henderson, 31; George, Hip Hop America, 18.
35
Robin Kelley discusses the tradition of the “dozens” in Black America. The dozens is basically a school yard game where
competitors use their verbal skills to insult each other. Kelley suggests that the dozens has carried over from the playgrounds to the rap
industry as a way to verbally “dis” (disrespect) competing rappers, Robin Kelley, Yo’ Mama’s Disfunktional!: Fighting the Culture
Wars in Urban America (Boston: Beacon Press, 1997): 1-2.
10

Five, Treacherous Three, and Eric B. & Rakim.36 The Sugarhill Gang’s “Rapper’s

Delight” (1979) was the first commercially successful rap recording.37 Kurtis Blow’s

“Christmas Rappin’” followed in 1980.38 The upbeat tempo and jovial tone of these

crossover singles presented rap music to the public with sounds more akin to disco than

modern hip hop. The first commercial hit that spoke directly about the conditions in the

ghettoes was Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Fives’ “The Message” (1982).39 The

group also recorded a video for the song which features the group’s front man, Melle

Mel, rapping in the streets of the South Bronx about the urban pressures of living in what

looks to be a war-torn environment. Melle Mel captures the daily conflicts of many inner-

city residents with his lyrics:

Broken glass everywhere People pissing on the stairs, you know they just
Don’t care I can’t take the smell, I can’t take the noise Got no money to move out,
I guess I got no choice rats in the front room, roaches in the back
Junkie’s in the alley with a baseball bat I tried to get away, but I couldn’t get far Cause
the man with the tow-truck repossessed my car
Chorus: Don’t push me, cause I’m close to the edge I’m trying not to loose my head
It’s like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder How I keep from going under
Standing on the front stoop, hangin’ out the window Watching all the cars go by,
roaring as the breezes BlowCrazy lady, livin’ in a bag Eating out of garbage piles,
used to be a fag-hag search and test a tango, skips the life and then go to search a prince
to see the last of senses down at the peepshow, watching all the creeps
So she can tell the stories to the girls back home She went to the city and got so ditty
She had to get a pimp, she couldn’t make it on her own
Chorus: It’s like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder How I keep from goin’ under
My brother’s doing fast on my mother’s t.v. Says she watches to much, is just not healthy
All my children in the daytime, dallas at night Can’t even see the game or the sugar ray
fight
Bill collectors they ring my phone And scare my wife when I’m not home Got a bum
education, double-digit inflation
Can’t take the train to the job, there’s a strike At the station Me on king kong standin’ on
my back
Can’t stop to turn around, broke my sacroiliac Midrange, migraine, cancered membrane
Sometimes I think I’m going insane,
I swear I might Hijack a plane! My son said daddy I don’t wanna go to school Cause the
teacher’s a jerk, he must think I’m a fool And all the kids smoke reefer, I think it’d be
cheaper If I just got a job, learned to be a street sweeper dance to the beat,

36
Chuck D lists what he sees as the most important rap duos and groups, Chuck D, 28.
37
George, Fresh Hip Hop Don’t Stop, 18.
38
Lommel, 31.
39
Ibid., 26.
11

shuffle my feet Wear a shirt and tie and run with the creeps Cause it’s all about money,
ain’t a damn thing funny
You got to have a con in this land of milk and honey They push that girl in front of a
trainTook her to a doctor,
sowed the arm on again Stabbed that man, right in his heart Gave him a transplant before
a brand new start
I can’t walk through the park, cause it’s crazy after the dark Keep my hand on the gun,
cause they got me on the run
I feel like an outlaw, broke my last fast jaw Hear them say you want some more, livin’ on
a seesaw a child was born, with no state of mind Blind to the ways of mankind God is
smiling on you but he’s frowning too
Cause only God knows what you go through You grow in the ghetto, living second rate
And your eyes will sing a song of deep hate The places you play and where you stay
Looks like one great big alley way You’ll admire all the number book takers
Thugs, pimps, pushers and the big money makers Driving big cars, spending twenties and
tens And you wanna grow up to be just like them Smugglers, scrambles, burglars,
gamblers Pickpockets, peddlers and even pan-handlers
You say I’m cool, I’m no fool But then you wind up dropping out of high school Now
you’re unemployed, all null ’n’ void Walking around like you’re pretty boy floyd Turned
stickup kid, look what you done did got send up for a eight year bid Now your man is
took and you’re a maytag Spend the next two years as an undercover fag
Being used and abused, and served like hell Till one day you was find hung dead in a cell
It was plain to see that your life was lost You was cold and your body swung back and
forth
But now your eyes sing the sad sad song Of how you lived so fast and died so young40

Hip hop did have something to say and would continue to reflect the lives of the artists

and audience. “The Message” united urban Black America as a hip-hop community

because it reflected what many people dealt with day to day and how they felt. It also

allowed people, unfamiliar with the conditions of urban ghettoes, to hear first-person

accounts of what it was like to live in that environment. Hip hop had the ability to bridge

cultural gaps and make outsiders to the community empathize with urban Black America.

However, hip hop’s past and near-future would be based in entertainment and escape.

The evolution of hip-hop music from DJs in clubs toasting to mixing on turntables to

rapping by MCs with DJ accompaniment within the first decade of hip hop’s musical

existence foretold the rapid changes that would shape the hip-hop music and culture as a

whole. As these first radio hits widened the audience, the music industry took note and

the entrepreneurial spirit of hip hop was formed. One of the first to recognize the
40
Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, “The Message,” The Message (Sugarhill Records), 1981.
12

financial value of this new music was Russell “Rush” Simmons. Rush grew up in (Hollis)

Queens, New York and graduated high school in 1975 during the early days of hip-hop

musical culture. His proximity to the new youth culture of hip hop fed his pre-existing

interest in music. In 1977, Simmons saw MC Eddie Cheeba perform at the Charles

Gallery in Harlem and witnessed people crowding into the venue. The excitement of this

one show fueled Simmons to consider the financial opportunities that existed as a party

organizer.41 Soon Simmons was managing performers under the name Rush

Management. Kurtis Blow was Rush’s first MC. Blow’s DJ ended up being Russell’s

thirteen-year-old brother Joey42 Run did not stay behind the turntable for long. He soon

started rapping with childhood friend Darryl McDaniels (DMC). While polishing their

rapping style they added Jason Mizell (Jam Master J) as DJ and formed Run-DMC under

Rush Management.

During this same period of time a white Jewish kid from Long Island, Rick Rubin,

produced an album with DJ Jazzy Jay that sold 90,000 copies.43 Rubin named his label

Def Jam Records and included his New York University dorm room number on the logo.

He soon met Russell Simmons, whose Rush Management now carried Run-DMC, Kurtis

Blow and several other rap and R&B artists. Russell’s energetic personality and

promoting ability were a perfect match for Rubin’s dedication to making music in the

studio and finding talent. Shortly after Rubin and Simmons joined forces Rubin was

filtering through the hundreds of tapes that had been dropped off at his dorm since DJ

Jazzy Jay’s record had been released. This new pool of talent resulted in Rubin’s

41
Journeys in Black: Russell Simmons, Black Biograghy Productions, DVD, 2002; Lommel, 29-30.
42
Joey Simmons soon took the stage name “Run,” based on his constant “running of his mouth,” Journeys in Black.
43
Rubin produced the records that were printed and distributed by a small record company, Streetwise/Partytime Records,
Journeys in Black.
13

discovery of Lady’s Love Cool Jay (LL Cool J). Def Jam chose to produce its first totally

independent record in November 1984 with LL Cool J’s “I Need a Beat,” which sold

100,000 units.44 The Beastie Boys were the next to sign and release a series of successful

records for Def Jam/Rush Management.45 These new artists, added to the collection of

(historically less known) artists who had already been selling records, resulted in Def Jam

having seven different releases selling 250,000 or more copies. In light of Def Jam/Rush

Management’s success as a completely independent label, CBS’s new “hip hop division”

offered to buy the rights to simply distribute Def Jam releases without any creative

control over Simmons and Rubin.46

Up to this point in hip hop history very few fans came from outside the urban

communities that spawned the majority of the artists. The Beastie Boys were the first

recognizable white rappers. They mixed a punk-rock sound with hip-hop beats and style

to create a very new and different form of hip hop. Rick Rubin continued to push the

boundaries of hip hop by suggesting to Run-DMC that they cover the 1970s Aerosmith

spoken-word single “Walk this Way” for their upcoming, Raising Hell, album. This

became one of the most influential moments in hip hop history, if not music history.

Run-DMC was at the top of the hip-hop industry with fellow label mates The Beastie

Boys. The rock/hip hop cover became a smash hit and reintroduced Aerosmith to the

world. This cross-over hit reached number three on the pop single charts and became the

bridge for a new hybrid of hip hop music.

44
Lommel, 35.
45
The Beastie Boys consists of Adam Yauch (MCA), Adam Horovitz (AD-Rock), and Mike Diamond (Mike D). All three are
from moderately affluent Jewish-American New York families. Originally The Beastie Boys played punk music, but had always been
interested in hip hop and decided to focus more on it by the early-mid 1980s, “Beastie Boy,” MTV.com,
http://www.mtv.com/bands/az/beastie_boys/bio.jhtml (accessed May 4, 2004).
46
Journeys in Black.
14

Def Jam/Rush Management collected another star attraction during the mid 1980s. In

1986, after graduating from Adelphia University in Long Island, NY and finding a job

processing film for a living, bored and tired, Carlton Ridenhour (Chuck D) turned his

youthful pastime of DJing and rapping into a contract to create an album with Rick Rubin

at Def Jam with his rap group Public Enemy.47 As Rush and Rubin were having

unimaginable success, a financial dispute with The Beastie Boys resulted in their

departure for another label. However, Public Enemy’s Yo! Bum Rush the Show album

was another relative success for Def Jam/Rush Management. Chuck Ds booming voice

and politically driven lyrics about the plight of black urban America would spawn a new

generation of hip hop. Rubin’s interest in expanding musical horizons with groups like

Public Enemy came in conflict with Simmons preference for R & B styled hip hop.

Rubin’s 1988 departure from Def Jam records freed Rubin to pursue projects from movie

soundtracks to producing death-metal albums.48 In 1990, Simmons renegotiated Def

Jam/Rush Management’s contract with CBS making Simmons an equal partner with

CBS.49

By the late 1980s rap was making strong strides at crossover success. The rock-

infused rap of Run-DMC (via “Walk this Way”) and The Beastie Boys had become a hit

with white audiences, while artists such as Eric B. and Rakim, Big Daddy Kane, DJ Jazzy

Jeff and the Fresh Prince, LL Cool J, and Cool Moe D were continuing the dance friendly

beat driven style of hip hop music that was descended from Afrika Bambaataa and Kurtis

Blow. Greatly impacted by MTV’s decision to create a show specifically designed to

47
“Public Enemy,” MTV.com, http://www.mtv.com/bands/az/public_ enemy/bio.jhtml (accessed May 4, 2005).
48
Journeys in Black.
49
Lommel, 38; Journeys in Black.
15

bring new crossover success, hip hop’s first real visual introduction into white America

came in the form of Yo MTV Raps.50 Hip hop’s influence continued to grow, now in

visual arts, videos, and clothing. At the same time that rap was finding crossover popular

success the next major shift in hip-hop history occurred.

Rap artists began to reflect the atmosphere that existed in the ghettoes. Boogie Down

Production’s (BDP) 1987 release “9mm Goes Bang” is one of the first rap songs to

address gun violence:

Me knew a crack dealer by the name of Peter


Had to buck him down with my 9 millimeter
He said I had his girl I said "Now what are you? Stupid?"
But he tried to play me out and KRS-One knew it
He reached for his pistol but it was just a waste
Cos my 9 millimeter was up against his face
He pulled his pistol anyway and I filled him full of lead
(Boogie Down Productions “9mm Goes Bang” Criminal Minded)

However, Boogie Down Production’s MC, KRS-One (Kris Parker), is known for his

positive attitude and messages. He had previously penned a song entitled “Stop the

Violence” with fellow Boogie Down Production member Scott La Rock who

subsequently died from a gunshot wound inflicted when he tried to break up a street

fight.51 After La Rock’s death, KRS-One recorded a second album which included “Stop

the Violence.” After his hip-hop partner died, KRS-One’s message became more

important to the MC.52

BDP’s violence laden Criminal Minded album hit at the same time as Public

Enemy’s Yo! Bum Rush the Show. However, Public Enemy was not trying to reflect

50
J. Malanowski, “Top Hip-Hop,” Rolling Stone 556/557, 77-78; Greg Dimitriadis, “Hip Hop: From Live Performance to
Mediated Narrative,” Popular Music 15, no. 2 (1996): 188.
51
Mos Def discusses how KRS-One has established himself as a positive force in the hip hop community as “the Teacher,”
and has continually been outspoken regarding ways for success for black urban audiences, Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry:
Season 4, Home Box Office Inc, 2005; KRS-One has also been honored for his work in the Stop the Violence campaign by the
Billboard/American Urban Radio R&B/Hip Hop Award (2004), Rashuan Hall, “KRS-One Helped Create Hip-Hop Culture,”
Billboard 116, no. 32 (2004): R-4-5.
52
In an interview with Rolling Stone Magazine, KRS-One reflected on refocusing his efforts on being a positive force for his
listeners after Scott La Rock’s death, A. Light, “Wisdom From the Street,” Rolling Stone 605 (30 May 1991):
16

urban culture; they were trying to challenge it as well as mainstream America. Chuck D’s

bellowing voice rapped about crack cocaine’s impact on the urban centers and was

willing to attack any and all of the dominant culture:

Elvis was a hero to most


But he never meant shit to me you see
Straight up racist that sucker was
Simple and plain
Mother fuck him and John Wayne
Cause I'm Black and I'm proud
I'm ready and hyped plus I'm amped
Most of my heroes don't appear on no stamps
Sample a look back you look and find
Nothing but rednecks for 400 years if you check 53

Public Enemy also included a group of backup dancers dressed in Black Panther military

style attire, S1W (Security of the First World), that “danced” while holding fake Uzis and

performing martial arts style movements. DJ Terminator X, following in the musical

footsteps of Jam Master J with harder edged background tracks, mixed in sirens and

various urban noises to the already full sound of the group. Chuck D’s allegiance with the

Nation of Islam in addition to his voice, the lyrical content, and the look of the group

provided a frightening image to many outsiders to hip hop and even some people who

had come to accept the much more accessible dance tracks that were being played on

MTV and popular radio.54

The most frightening form of hip hop to most people during this era was West Coast

“gangsta rap.” Just as East Coast rappers could not be expected to write rhymes about

the violence of the gangs of Southern California and Oakland, West Coast rappers had

little in common with New York-based b-boy culture. The commonality was both parties’

willingness to address what they saw as the biggest problems in their community. As

53
“Fight the Power,” PublicEnemy.com lyric search, http://www.publicenemy.com (accessed May 4, 2005).
54
On the liner notes of Public Enemy records the traditional information such as lead singer, bassist, etc. is replaced with
politically motivated titles akin to the Black Panther Party. Chuck D’s title is lyrical assassin.
17

Public Enemy and BDP were writing about the exploitation of and self-destructive

aspects of urban African-American society, rapper Eazy-E, a former drug-dealer, was

trying to create his own record label (Ruthless Records) with a different focus.55

Ultimately, Eazy-E teamed up with Dr. Dre (Andre Young), Ice Cube (O’Shea Jackson),

and DJ Yella (Antione Carraby) under the name N.W.A.56 (Niggaz with Attitude) and

released N.W.A. and the Posse in 1987.57 N.W.A.’s second release, 1988s Straight Outta

Compton (with the addition of MC Ren) became the band’s ticket to stardom. Openly

rapping, “Fuck the Police,” and discussing the brutality of the Los Angeles Police

Department, Straight Outta Compton struck a loud chord with gang members up and

down the West Coast. This version of rap that openly discussed the violence in South Los

Angeles related to gang-warfare and crack-laden streets came to be known as “gangsta

rap.”

Another source of gangsta rap came from Ice-T (Tracy Morrow). As a high school

student in South Central Los Angeles’ Crenshaw High with no familial role model58, Ice-

T came to idealize the men of the streets who had lots of money and girls always around.

Ice-T found community in the gangs of Crenshaw. One particular pimp that Ice-T

identified with was Iceberg Slim.59 Slim had been an urban hustler60 who eventually

went on to write poetry and novels about pimp life which Ice-T began memorizing. As

Ice-T was idealizing pimp/hustler lifestyles and listening to early rap music he found

himself an expectant parent. Realizing he needed to do something to assure financial

55
N.W.A., MTV.com, http://www.mtv.com/bands/az/nwa/bio.jhtml (accessed May 4, 2005).

56
Ibid.
57
Ibid.
58
Ice-T’s parents both died early in the rapper’s life, Ice-T: Spoken Word Tour, Shryock Auditorium 22 February, 2002.
59
All subsequent information on Ice-T was obtained from, Ice-T: Spoken Word Tour.
60
The term “hustler” refers to someone who is resourceful and will do anything to make money, whether legal or illegal.
18

stability for his unborn child, Ice-T joined the military. Very little of Ice-T’s military

service is known other than what he has told audiences in his spoken word tours. His

advice to potential volunteers, “Don’t do it.” After serving two years in the military and

coming home with no any financial resources61 and a child to support, he did whatever

he could to make money. Teaming up with fellow gang members, one of his first “jobs”

was robbing a bank. Robbing the homes of Palm Springs, California residents was also

one of Ice-T’s hustles. His military experience did come in handy, although surely not in

the way Uncle Sam imaged it. By 1987, Ice-T, who had kept up with his musical talents,

signed with a label and released his first album, appropriately titled Rhyme Pays. Ice-T

has dedicated his life to financial success. Gangsta rap was an easy way to make money

for the burgeoning crossover star. He wrote about his life as a hustler and pimp. He wrote

rhymes in the vernacular of the streets in which he grew up and reflected a West Coast

gang culture that was authentic to his audience. He no longer had to hustle in the streets;

he found a new hustle.

As West Coast gangsta rap exploded onto the scene with Ice-T and N.W.A., the

general public began to take notice of the violence centered around the rap industry.

Gangsta rap did not preach to its audience about clean living and making good choices

the way Public Enemy or BDP did, nor did it continue with the break-beat legacy of early

hip-hop music. This new style of hip hop would continue to be authentic music for gang

members and hustlers in the inner-cities. However, the hip-hop music scene was now part

of American popular culture. MTV and popular radio became the vehicle for white

America to accept hip-hop culture. Gangsta rap to Generation Xers was similar to what

61
Ice-T does not mention the exact situation that resulted in his returning home from the military. He does say that he had no
money and only served two years. The assumption that can be made is he did not complete his service or was asked to leave the
service due to the lack of financial resources when he returned home.
19

rock ‘n roll was to early baby-boomers. It challenged the former generation’s concept of

the world around them and its values. The pundits’, politicians’, and parents’ shouts

deriding hip hop worked like a magnet for these people’s youthful congregations,

constituents, and children.

While the debates began taking place in the mass culture about the impact of such

violent images, hip hop kept producing financially successful albums. N.W.A. had

broken up by the early 1990s, but spawned a solo artist who would continue in gangsta

rap’s model. Dr. Dre polished his well-rounded skills as a DJ/producer and MC with his

first solo project, The Chronic.62 Dre would become a force in gangsta rap as the

producer of records for a company that he founded with Suge Knight in 1992, Death Row

Records. Other West Coast rappers signed and began producing albums for Death Row,

including Snoop Dogg (Calvin Broadus) and Tupac Shakur. Knight’s violent nature as a

manager of artists and his continued interaction with the gang scene of South Los

Angeles would eventually lead to Dre’s departure from the label in 1996.

The other star of N.W.A. (and first to leave the band in 1989 over financial conflicts

with management) was Ice Cube. Ice Cube, the most politically driven and gifted MC of

the group, joined forces with Public Enemy’s production team, The Bomb Squad, in New

York with his new group, da Lench Mob.63 Ice Cube’s brand of gangsta rap was

influenced by the raw sounds of the East Coast (i.e. Public Enemy) with a continued

dedication to representing authentic West Coast rap. Ice Cube’s music continued to be

laced with misogynistic language and extremely violent imagery. This whole subgenre of

rap music came under immense pressure from outside forces when members of the clergy

62
“The Chronic” refers to very high quality marijuana.
63
N.W.A., MTV.com.
20

and politicians began to press the industry to clean up.

From notions that gangsta rap was directly (or indirectly) a cause of the Los Angeles

riots following the Rodney King verdict to blaming the music for causing people to shoot

police officers, gangsta rap has been cited for causing a variety of social ills.64 As the

media began to pay more and more attention to the political and social debates that were

taking place in society, the popularity and record sales of gangsta rap artists also

increased. Ice Cube became a crossover movie star by portraying the gangsta older

brother in Boyz in the Hood. The movie effectively portrayed the senseless violence that

has been associated with life in South Los Angeles. As the debate surrounding gangsta

rap swirled, violence within the hip hop community forced the rap world to address the

issue directly when in a six month period in 1996 and 1997 two of the most popular

rappers were murdered.

The most infamous of all hip-hop violence are the murders of Christopher Wallace

(Notorious B.I.G. or Biggie Smalls) and Tupac Shakur. The two, both from New York,

had been friends until Shakur was ambushed in the lobby of a building that Small’s posse

coincidentally was at.65 Shakur suffered five gunshot wounds and two other men with

Shakur were uninjured. In the months that followed, Shakur was unable to obtain any

information from Small’s posse regarding who the assailants may have been. This,

coupled with Small’s rising stardom and unwillingness to help Shakur during his trial for

rape, caused a great rift between the two.66 Shakur suggested that Smalls used Shakur’s

rapping style to gain fame and then turned away from him when Tupac needed his

64
Greg Beets, “Trial Witness Ties Rap to Violent Act,” Billboard 105, no. 28 (1993): 71-72.
65
All subsequent information regarding this shooting is taken from an interview in which Tupac Shakur explains the series of
events that led him to the situation where he was shot five times and the unwillingness of his former friends to look him in the eye or
help him locate the assailants, Kevin Powell, “Ready to Live,” Vibe Magazine 18 (1995).
66
Editors of Vibe Magazine, “Inside the Mind of Shakur,” Vibe Magazine 32.
21

friendship.67 By 1996, Shakur distanced himself from his former East Coast friends and

signed with Death Row Records.68 Shakur was shot and killed in Las Vegas later that

year after attending a Mike Tyson fight. Less than six months later Smalls was shot and

killed in his car outside a nightclub in Los Angeles.69

The death of these two superstars of hip hop had resounding effects on the entire

community. No arrests have been made in the killings. Several books and documentaries

have been made regarding the events surrounding the murders. Virtually no one with any

interest in hip hop music believes that the killings are random or unrelated. Yet eight

years after the events no strong leads exist, and the hip hop community regards the

rappers’ race and style of musical presentation as a direct link to this fact. The

competition that existed between East Coast and West Coast rappers has become

unacceptable for most within the industry. True fans of hip hop have no interest in the

violence that such rivalries have brought (whether directly or indirectly). The popularity

of gangsta rap has declined, but the overall tone of rap music continues to be about

boasting. In the early years of rap, boasting was about a performer’s talent in putting

rhymes together and sounding good. In modern hip hop music it is not enough just to

sound good; rappers have to be able to out earn competitors.

Yet a contradiction still exists within hip-hop culture. As a result of gangsta rap, a

large segment of hip-hop fans identify strong masculine images with hip hop. Somewhere

along the line rappers who were not embodying gangsta style and lyrics were looked at as

outsiders trying to prove themselves in the industry. Granted, rappers such as Vanilla Ice,

67
Ibid.
68
Shakur states that Suge Knight, CEO of Death Row Records, was very generous financially and was willing to help with
Shakur’s legal problems regardless of whether he signed with Death Row, “In His Own Words,” Interview with Tupac Shakur for
KMEL Radio, as sited on Tupacfans.com, http://www.tupacfans.com/words.php (accessed May 9, 2005).
69
Steve Dougherty and Jeff Schnaufer, “A Sad Refrain,” People 47, no. 11 (1996): 69-70.
22

beyond his race, were looked down upon for their soft image as well as their limited

skills. Popular culture trends greatly impact how a rapper will be received. MC Lyte was

one of the first successful female rappers. Lyte found success as a hard-edged female

rapper openly accepting the challenge of the misogynistic male culture around rap. Yet,

when the bottom fell out on gangsta rap, her success plummeted as the trend of hard edge

changed.70 The way around this might be to simply wait for the trend to come back

around.

The biggest story surrounding hip-hop culture over the last five years has been the

emergence of the first white solo rap superstar. While The Beastie Boys found success on

the fringes of hip hop and expanded the genre, Eminem tried the direct route and scored

big. Eminem (Marshall Mathers) was “discovered” by former N.W.A. member Dr. Dre at

a rap competition. Dr. Dre was struck by Eminem’s verbal skills.71 He was also intrigued

that these lyrics were coming from a white rapper. Dr. Dre signed Eminem to a record

deal and produced his first album, Slim Shady. Eminem quickly became a superstar after

the release of his first single “My Name Is.” This single was a very lighthearted song that

poked fun at many aspects of popular culture with a very catchy popular music/top forty

sound (versus hip hop). This would be the last instance in which Eminem would be

looked at as simply a funny rapper. Much of the remainder of the album was laced with

extremely violent images that made Dr. Dre’s early music sound tame. While the debate

began to rage about Eminem’s woman-bashing, gay-bashing, and explicitly violent

content, his record sales soared.

Eminem wanted to be an authentic member of the hip hop community. He

70
Mc Lyte, “I Was Born,” Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry: Season 2, Home Box Office Inc., 2004.
71
“The Marshall Mathers LP”, VH1’s Ultimate Albums, television program.
23

represented himself by using his music to exorcise all of his past demons, including

writing passages about killing the mother of his child. He represented the community

from which he came, a predominantly black section of Detroit. He was also quick to

thank Dr. Dre, and after winning the 2003 Grammy Award for Best Rap Album (The

Eminem Show) he chose to say thank you to a who’s who list of hip hop’s most

important MCs. Eminem has been vilified by gay and women’s rights organizations for

his lyrics.72 Yet, Eminem neither attacks back nor apologizes for his lyrical content. He

simply keeps making and selling records. He also states that he is not homophobic, and as

an act of contrition he performed with Elton John at the 2001 Grammy Award show as

protesters marched and chanted outside. The odd thing about Eminem’s situation is that

homophobic, misogynistic, and violent lyrical content is not new. Hip-hop music has

been inundated with this type of imagery for at least half of its existence. So, is it that

Eminem is just selling more albums, which has made human rights groups more aware of

the problem, or is it that he is a blonde haired, blue eyed misogynistic homophobe (in the

eyes of some) that makes the difference. According to Eminem it is the latter:

(Prelude) America! We love you! How many people are proud to be citizens of this
beautiful country of ours? The stripes and the stars for the rights that men have died for to
protect / The women and men who have broke their necks for the freedom of speech the
United States government has sworn to uphold. (Yo I want everybody to listen to the
words of this song) or so we're told... I never would've dreamed in a million years I'd see,
so many motherfuckin' people who feel like me/who share the same views and the same
exact beliefs, it's like a fuckin' army marchin' in back of me/So many lives I touch, so
much anger aimed in no particular direction, just sprays and sprays and straight through
your radio waves it plays and plays, till it stays stuck in your head for days and days/who
woulda thought, standing in this mirror bleachin' my hair, with some peroxide, reachin
for a t-shirt to wear/that I would catapult to the forefront of rap like this? How could I
predict my words would have an impact like this/I must've struck a chord, with somebody
up in the office, cuz Congress keeps telling me I ain't causin' nuthin' but problems/and
now they're sayin' I'm in trouble with the government, I'm lovin' it, I shoveled shit all my
life/and now I'm dumping it on... White America!I could be one of your kidsWhite
America!Little Eric looks just like thisWhite America!Erica loves my shitI go to TRL,
look how many hugs I getLook at these eyes, baby blue, baby just like yourself, if they

72
Gay and Lesbian Humanist Association on-line website, http://www.galha.org/ press/2001/02_23.html; National
Organization for Women on-line website http://www.now.org/press/02-01/02-05-01.html (accessed May 9, 2005).
24

were brown Shady lose, Shady sits on the shelf/but Shady's cute, Shady knew Shady's
dimples would help, make ladies swoon baby, ooh baby! Look at my sales/Lets do the
math, If I was black I would've sold half, I ain't have to graduate from Lincoln High
School to know that/but I could rap, so fuck school, I'm too cool to go back, gimme the
mic, show me where the fuckin' studio's at/When I was underground, no one gave a fuck
I was white, no labels wanted to sign me almost gave up, I was like/Fuck it, until I met
Dre, the only one to look past, gave me a chance, and I lit a fire up under his ass/helped
him get back to the top, every fan black that I got was probably his in exchange for every
white fan that he's got/Like damn, we just swapped. Sittin' back lookin' at shit, wow, I'm
like my skin is it starting to work to my benefit now? See the problem is I speak to
suburban kids who otherwise would of never knew these words exist/whose moms
probably woulda never gave two squirts of piss, till I created so much motherfuckin'
turbulence/straight out the tube, right into your living room I came, and kids flipped when
they knew I was produced by Dre/That's all it took, and they were instantly hooked right
in, and they connected with me too because I looked like them/that's why they put my
lyrics up under this microscope, searchin' with a fine tooth comb, its like this rope/waitin'
to choke, tightening around my throat, watching me while I write this, like I don't like
this (Nope)/All I hear is: lyrics, lyrics, constant controversy, sponsors working round the
clock, to try to stop my concerts early/surely hip hop was never a problem in Harlem only
in Boston, after it bothered the fathers of daughters starting to blossom/so now I'm
catchin' the flack from these activists when they raggin', actin' like I'm the first rapper to
smack a bitch, or say faggot/shit, just look at me like I'm your closest pal, the posterchild,
the mother fuckin' spokesman now for... So to the parents of America / I am the derringer
aimed at little Erica, to attack her character / The ringleader of this circus of worthless
pawns / Sent to lead the march right up to the steps of Congress / And piss on the lawns
of the White House and replace it with a Parental Advisory sticker / To spit liquor in the
faces of in this democracy of hypocrisy / Fuck you Ms. Cheney! Fuck you Tipper Gore!
Fuck you with the freest of speech this divided states of embarrassment will allow me to
have, Fuck you! I'm just kiddin' America, you know I love you.73

Regardless of what a rapper has to say, hip hop fans are at the mercy of the industry.

The original hip hop music stars were innovators in musical technology. They broke

musical tradition and created a new music out of disco, R & B, soul, funk, and the

traditions of African-American culture. These innovators were artists who looked to

music to provide entertainment to distract them and their communities away from the

horrible conditions of the urban ghettoes. Hip hop existed in a virtual vacuum from the

early 1970s until 1979 when Sugarhill Gang’s Rapper’s Delight hit the radio waves.

Once there became a market for this music many things changed. Capitalism took hold.

In a positive sense, hip-hop culture reflected the tragic conditions of the urban America to

73
Eminem, “White America,” The Eminem Show (Aftermath/Interscope, 2002).
25

the dominant culture. It presented some of the most important problems with society to

anyone that was listening. In a negative sense, capitalism changed the art form. It was no

longer simply about entertainment. Hip hop began to be about sales and image. Rappers

were no longer respected for having something important to say or for entertaining

people at parties. It became a question of which artists could sell. Simple math shows that

if the majority of the people of this country are white, then it is important to try and sell

to this market.

As the impact of hip hop (as an industry) began to take hold, the music began to

spread to a wider cultural audience. MTV was certainly one of the most important

disseminators of hip-hop culture. The crosspollination of “freshness” in hip hop and the

youth base of MTV connected to make hip-hop culture part of the learning processor for

children growing up in the 1980s (and thereafter). This evolution, coupled with the

emergence of the gangsta rap media spotlight forced many parents to pay attention to

what their children were listening to. As adults started attacking hip hop as solely a

violence- based form of music, it attracted the interest of their children. Yet, the angrier

reactionary America got about this subgenre of hip hop, the more media attention was

focused on it and the more records N.W.A., Ice-T, and 2Live Crew sold. The attention

paid to gangsta rap has occupied far too much of the discussion of hip-hop culture.

During this same period of time, hip-hop groups such as Tribe Called Quest74 and

Arrested Development75 went unnoticed by parents and the groups virtually disbanded.

Hip hop is not going away, but often times the music that does not make the news does.

74
Tribe Called Quest is a New York based rap group that intentionally focused on being positive and rarely, if ever, used
profanity, derogatory references, or discussed violence.
75
Arrested Development is a group dedicated to providing a positive message such as their song “People Everyday” is a song
about trying to deal peacefully with a violent world.
26

Hip hop is a youth culture. It changes often. Not all of hip hop is positive. However,

what subculture is completely positive? The comparisons between hip hop and rock ‘n

roll are striking. Was there really a problem with children going to an integrated concert,

where black and white children were dancing together? Talking about hip hop requires

dealing with unfamiliar and often politically controversial topics. Talking about

controversial issues such as gang violence is important to understanding the society as a

whole. I would not want my children listening to N.W.A. without my involvement. I

would like to talk about the issues that N.W.A. raises in their music though. Another

problem with the dominate culture’s impression of hip-hop culture is its unwillingness to

pay attention until a “problem” arises. Public Enemy was rapping about black people

getting off all drugs, working for the betterment of their community, and challenging

others in the hip-hop community to do the same. Yet, Public Enemy was lumped into the

broad definition of gangsta rap by the media and politicians. Appearances are often

deceiving, and Chuck D is trying to sound scary. There is a method to some of the

madness.
27

BIBLIOGRAPHY

“And You Don’t Stop: 30 Years of Hip Hop: Part 1.” VH1 Television Channel
Mini-series (2005).

Beets, Greg. “Trial Witness Ties Rap to Violent Act.” Billboard 105, no. 28 (1993):
70-77.

Chuck D: Spoken Word Tour. Shryock Auditorium. 26 April 2004.

Dimitriadis, Greg. “Hip Hop: From Live Performance to Mediated Narrative.”


Popular Music 15, no. 2 (1996): 178-192.

Dougherty, Steve, and Jeff Schnaufer. “A Sad Refrain.” People 47, no. 11 (1996): 69-70.

Eminem. “White America.” The Eminem Show. Aftermath/Interscope Records, 2002.

Gay and Lesbian Humanist Association. On-line website.


http://www.galha.org.press/2001/02_23.html (Accessed May 9, 2005).

George, Nelson, et al. Fresh Hip Hop Don’t Stop. New York: Random House, 1985.

George, Nelson. Hip Hop America. New York: Viking Publishing, 1998.

Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. “The Message.” The Message. Sugarhill
Records, 1981.

Hall, Rashaun. “KRS-One Helped Create Hip-Hop Culture.” Billboard 116, no. 32
(2004): R4-5.

Henderson, Errol A. “Black Nationalism and Rap Music.” Journal of Black Studies 26,
no. 3 (1996): 33.

Ice-T: Spoken Word Tour. Shryock Auditorium. 22 February 2002.

“In His Own Words.” Interview with Tupac Shakur for KMEL Radio. As cited by
Tupacfans.com. ttp://www.tupacfans.com/words.php (Accessd May 9, 2005).

Jones, Steve. “Reggae’s Dancehall Style Hits Mainland.” USA Today, 26 August 2002,
Life (D4).

Journeys in Black: Russell Simmons. Black Biography Productions. DVD, 2002.

Kelley, Robin D.G. Yo’ Mama’s Disfunktional!: Fighting the Culture Wars in Urban
America. Boston: Beacon Press, 1997.
Kinnon, Joy B. “Does a Rap Have a Future?” Ebony 52, no. 8 (1997): 76-77.
28

Lavender, Catherine. “Griot Images.” American Frontiers and Borderlands on-line


website. City University of New York.
http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/griotimages.html (Accessed
April 21, 2005).

Light, A. “Wisdom From the Street.” Rolling Stone 605 (30 May 1991).

Lommel, Cookie. The History of Rap Music. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers,
2001.

Malanowski, J. “Top Hip-Hop.” Rolling Stone 556-557, 77-78.

“The Marshall Mathers LP.” VH1 Ultimate Albums. Television Program, 2003.

MTV.com. Band Directory. http://www.mtv.com/band/az (Accessed May 4, 2005).

National Organization For Women. On-line website,


http://www.now.org/press/02-01/02-05-01.html (Acessed May 5, 2005).

Powell, Kevin. “Inside the Mind of Shakur.” Interview with Tupac Shakur. Vibe 32,
1995.

PublicEnemy.com. “Fight the Power.” Lyric Search.


http://www.publicenemy.com/index.php?page=page5&item=3&num=74 (Accessed
April 20, 2005)

Ro, Ronin. Gangsta: Merchandizing the Rhymes of Violence. New York: St.
Martin’s Press, 1996.

Rose, Tricia. Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary
America. Hanover: University Press of New England, 1994.

Simmons. Russell. Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry. Television Series. Home Box
Office Inc., 2005.

Wisk One Wca. Interviewed by Mystic, 2 Nov 1989. Guerillaone.com on-line website,
http://www.guerillaone.com/interviews_11_99/wisk.htm (Accessed April 20,
2005).
29

VITA

Graduate School
Southern Illinois University

R. Jonathan Riesch Date of Birth: January 31, 1973

812 North Woodland Court, Carbondale, IL 62901

jonriesch@yahoo.com

Southern Illinois University


Bachelor of Arts, History, August 2003

Research Paper:
Hip Hop Culture: History and Trajectory

Major Professor: Dr. Robbie Lieberman

You might also like