Hip Hop is dead. Yes Nas said it...But how many of you actually understand what he said? If you understand what he is saying by saying that, then you would agree.
Allow me to explain.
When hip hop was born, it was the voice of the people who didn't have a voice. Hip Hop was born of struggle, of sadness, of misfortune. It's is entirely the music of the ghetto. And the ghetto (the projects, the hood, whatever you wanna call it) is nothing nice...
But at the same time, however desolate the hood may be, it is a bright and vibrant place. In the hood you have to make a way out of no way. In the hood, you have to do very creative things just to survive. No lights? Run an extensioin cord over to your neighbors house. No heat? Turn on the oven. No dryer? Put your clothes in front of that hot oven. No air conditioner/pool? Bust open that fire hydrant and make it rain.
The hood was VERY creative...so hip hop began to embody that creativity, along with it's misery.
In hip hop's infantcy, it thrived off it's diversity. You couldn't get no respect by being like the next man. In hip hop, it was damn cool to be different. Hell, it was damn near a REQUIREMENT!! If you stole someone elses style of dress, their lines, their dance moves, etc, you were a SUCKA MC!!! Forever labeled as WACK!!! Biting used to be a MORTAL SIN in hip hop.
In the 80's, you had all kinds of groups. You had the hardcore Kool G Rap and Schooly D. You had the feel good and dance sounds of Young MC, Kid N Play and MC Hammer. You had the political bravado of Public Enemy, BDP and X Clan. You had all these different types of things, but they all coexisted.
In the 80's you could turn on the radio and hear Public Enemy, Kid N Play, Run DMC, LL Cool J, Salt N Pepa, Beastie Boys, X Clan, Kool G Rap, Cool C, and J.J Fad all back to back! AND IN PRIME TIME!!!!
You had east coast artists like Run DMC and LL Cool J. West Coast artists like Ice-T, J.J Fad and MC Hammer. Down South artists like Geto Boys and 2 Live Crew. You even had midwest artists like MC Breed, and they could ALL get airplay.
Back when hip hop was ALIVE AND THRIVING, there was room for everybody. Whatever kind of hip hop you liked, it was there. You could turn on the radio and within about 5 or 6 songs, hear the kind of hip hop you liked. You could turn on TV and see a Young MC video played right before a NWA video. EVERYBODY got a spot. It wasn't about who killed the most people or who paid the most for the radio spot...it was about GOOD MUSIC. GOOD MUSIC got shine.
Now in 2006?? There is ONE type of music out there. If it ain't hardcore, then there isn't a very good chance that it's even gonna get any exposure. If you turn on the radio, they will play 8 songs back to back, and they ALL SOUND THE EXACT SAME!!! Same instruments. Same flow. Same tempo. And the same damn voice telling some chick what to do with her big ole ass.
The spirit of hip hop IS DEAD. The spirit of variety, of creativity, of being different, and of comroderary. It's all dead. There's only room for ONE thing in hip hop right now. And if you sound anything like that ONE THING, then you can get a spot. But if you sound any different?? Then you better hope that you can get a crossover audience, cuz hip hop doesn't want you.
So there you have it. That's what Nas is saying. And I don't give a f*ck what Jeezy, Lil Wayne, or anybody else says. HIP HOP IS DEAD. And it's gonna take more than Nas to bring it back.
This isn't about an East vs South vs West vs whatever thing. It's about HIP HOP vs BIG BUSINESS. Big business is what killed hip hop. And every single one of us has been paying them to do so.
If you're over 25, then you know what i'm talking about, and you were THERE during the times i'm talking about. If you're under 25, then chances are your very first memories of hip hop as it was actually happening is Puffy's Shiny Suit takeover.
Allow me to explain.
When hip hop was born, it was the voice of the people who didn't have a voice. Hip Hop was born of struggle, of sadness, of misfortune. It's is entirely the music of the ghetto. And the ghetto (the projects, the hood, whatever you wanna call it) is nothing nice...
But at the same time, however desolate the hood may be, it is a bright and vibrant place. In the hood you have to make a way out of no way. In the hood, you have to do very creative things just to survive. No lights? Run an extensioin cord over to your neighbors house. No heat? Turn on the oven. No dryer? Put your clothes in front of that hot oven. No air conditioner/pool? Bust open that fire hydrant and make it rain.
The hood was VERY creative...so hip hop began to embody that creativity, along with it's misery.
In hip hop's infantcy, it thrived off it's diversity. You couldn't get no respect by being like the next man. In hip hop, it was damn cool to be different. Hell, it was damn near a REQUIREMENT!! If you stole someone elses style of dress, their lines, their dance moves, etc, you were a SUCKA MC!!! Forever labeled as WACK!!! Biting used to be a MORTAL SIN in hip hop.
In the 80's, you had all kinds of groups. You had the hardcore Kool G Rap and Schooly D. You had the feel good and dance sounds of Young MC, Kid N Play and MC Hammer. You had the political bravado of Public Enemy, BDP and X Clan. You had all these different types of things, but they all coexisted.
In the 80's you could turn on the radio and hear Public Enemy, Kid N Play, Run DMC, LL Cool J, Salt N Pepa, Beastie Boys, X Clan, Kool G Rap, Cool C, and J.J Fad all back to back! AND IN PRIME TIME!!!!
You had east coast artists like Run DMC and LL Cool J. West Coast artists like Ice-T, J.J Fad and MC Hammer. Down South artists like Geto Boys and 2 Live Crew. You even had midwest artists like MC Breed, and they could ALL get airplay.
Back when hip hop was ALIVE AND THRIVING, there was room for everybody. Whatever kind of hip hop you liked, it was there. You could turn on the radio and within about 5 or 6 songs, hear the kind of hip hop you liked. You could turn on TV and see a Young MC video played right before a NWA video. EVERYBODY got a spot. It wasn't about who killed the most people or who paid the most for the radio spot...it was about GOOD MUSIC. GOOD MUSIC got shine.
Now in 2006?? There is ONE type of music out there. If it ain't hardcore, then there isn't a very good chance that it's even gonna get any exposure. If you turn on the radio, they will play 8 songs back to back, and they ALL SOUND THE EXACT SAME!!! Same instruments. Same flow. Same tempo. And the same damn voice telling some chick what to do with her big ole ass.
The spirit of hip hop IS DEAD. The spirit of variety, of creativity, of being different, and of comroderary. It's all dead. There's only room for ONE thing in hip hop right now. And if you sound anything like that ONE THING, then you can get a spot. But if you sound any different?? Then you better hope that you can get a crossover audience, cuz hip hop doesn't want you.
So there you have it. That's what Nas is saying. And I don't give a f*ck what Jeezy, Lil Wayne, or anybody else says. HIP HOP IS DEAD. And it's gonna take more than Nas to bring it back.
This isn't about an East vs South vs West vs whatever thing. It's about HIP HOP vs BIG BUSINESS. Big business is what killed hip hop. And every single one of us has been paying them to do so.
If you're over 25, then you know what i'm talking about, and you were THERE during the times i'm talking about. If you're under 25, then chances are your very first memories of hip hop as it was actually happening is Puffy's Shiny Suit takeover.