295 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
295 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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_____________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ _____________
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| ___________ _/_/ | | \ \ _/_/ ___________ |
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| | c o m m u n i c a t i o n s | |
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| |________________________________________________________________| |
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|____________________________________________________________________|
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...presents... Hip-Hop Primer #2
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Part 2 of 2 by Mark Dery
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>>> a cDc publication.......1991 <<<
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-cDc- CULT OF THE DEAD COW -cDc-
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______________________________________________________________________________
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RUBIN: "Rap records are really black rock and roll records, the antithesis
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of disco. The rap records which were being made in the beginning, like the
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ones on the Sugar Hill label, were disco records with a guy rappin' on top of
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'em. That's because these were companies who, before rap became popular, were
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making disco records. What I tried to do was make records that had more to do
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with what the rap scene was about in the clubs, where the kinds of beats they
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were rapping over weren't disco beats; they were Billy Squier and Aerosmith -
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rock and roll beats! So I thought what needed to happen was to make the beats
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on these records more oriented toward rock."
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ADLER: "Rappers make rock and roll. My notion of rock and roll isn't
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pegged to a big, noisy guitar. I think rock and roll has always been about
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attitude and rhythm; it's about aggression, rebellion, sex, and a big beat.
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It's also about intelligence and wit. And if those are the qualities that you
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look for in rock and roll, you're gonna come to rap."
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RUBIN: "A Run-D.M.C. concert, which, two or three years ago, would draw
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maybe a 70 or 80 percent black audience, is now drawing a 70 or 80 percent
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white audience. I'd say that's a crossover. Things are definitely changing
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in rap."
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McDANIELS: "When we did 'Rock Box' and 'King Of Rock,' these headbangers
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couldn't believe the tracks we made. They like, 'Yo, man, that's really bad!'
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It definitely brought them in, and now, they still with it. Even if Run-D.M.C.
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don't put a metal track, they gonna buy the album and they'll wind up liking a
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hip-hop jam, they'll end up liking a cut like 'Run's House' or 'Beats To The
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Rhyme.' Now they understand it. They followed the guitar in there, and then
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they found out there was a whole other side to it."
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ADLER: "Can I tell you why this music wins? Because it is intrinsically
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powerful. This is some of the most exciting popular music being made by anyone
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anywhere on the planet. I've always said, 'Please let us play on a bill with
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Bruce Springsteen or whoever most white people think is an exciting rock and
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roller. We'll go on first!' Let me put Public Enemy on before Bruce
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Springsteen; that would be it for brother Brucie; he'd be finished! He'd have
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to go and take an early shower! Public Enemy would get off the stage and the
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crowd would head for the exits!"
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SILVERMAN: "Is rap rock and roll? Rap is what rock and roll should be.
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When rock went to sleep, rap rose from its ashes."
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_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
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The chapter on rap in the late '80s will have to be written when
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historical distance affords a little objectivity. It's safe to make several
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predictions, though, based on the words and music of some of the more
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innovative rappers. For example, it seems clear that we'll be seeing a return
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to the use of live musicians in the studio and onstage.
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SILVERMAN: "Stetsasonic is the first rap group to tour with a live
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drummer. It's sort of a retro movement, because all the sampling that's
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done is James Brown stuff, which was live drums to begin with. Stetsasonic
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have three emcees, two deejays, a guy named D.B.C. ['Dynamic Beat Creator']
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who plays synthesizers, a live drummer, and a guy who makes scratch sounds
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and beats with his mouth. It's sort of like a hip-hop orchestra."
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McDANIELS: "People are startin' to put basslines in it, and pianos and
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horns. A lot of the records you hear on the radio now got good tracks behind
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'em. The music is maturing, progressing, and as it does, the rap scene does.
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The rappers and the deejays go into the studio and put a beat down and rap over
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it and then they say, 'Hey, I know a bass line that would go great with that!'
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So I would say the scene is getting more musical. Or at least, people are
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utilizing more musical sounds. Musicians play an important role; they add the
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flavor to the beats. We always have a lot of real instruments on our tracks.
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But people are still sampling. We're still dropping in beats from James Brown
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or Billy Squier or the Meters."
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The tug of war over the ethical and legal aspects of sampling will
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continue as rappers go on painting remarkable pastiches in sound.
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GEHR: "So far, the big case involves the Beastie Boys, and the group
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they ripped off for their tune 'Brass Monkey,' off of LICENSE TO ILL.
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I suspect that will be settled out of court, because everyone's afraid of
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setting a legal precedent for this stuff. If record companies were smarter,
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they'd say, 'Sure, anybody can do it,' because people from their record
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companies are going to want to rip off people from other companies. But
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they're so concerned with keeping their turf that that's probably not going
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to happen. There will probably be these dippy little court cases that get
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settled out of court without setting any legal precedent. I don't think it's
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going to be etched in stone."
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ROBINSON: "We've never really used bits and pieces of other peoples' stuff
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too much, because a lot of groups are getting involved in lawsuits over that.
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We just take ordinary sounds, like if I hear a noisy car outside, I'll grab the
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little sampler and sample that. Or if I hear people talking, I'll sample that
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too. Or if I'm watchin' TV and I hear somethin' from a commercial, like where
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they say, 'Parkay... Butter!,' I'll sample that."
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DADDY-O, from Stetsasonic: "Our latest single and video, 'Talkin' All
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That Jazz,' is pro-sampling. It's almost like an anti-James Brown nowadays
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record, now that's he's coming back with this static about sampling. I'm
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just establishing what we intend to do with sampling. We sometimes use the
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words 'recontextualization' or 'revivification,' but it means the same
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thing, which is to take something old and make it new again. The strong
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point of what sampling does for us, as a music form, is to establish some
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soul groove and some old funk that's lost with today's R&B in the name of
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crossover, in the name of pop charts, in the name of Whitney Houston,
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whatever. You know what I'm saying?"
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STEVE ETT, engineer and co-owner, Chung King House Of Metal studios:
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"I'm with everybody who steals stuff to make new stuff, because in my book,
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one plus one equals three. If you take one thing and add it to something
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else, you get two in mathematics. But in the real world, when you take one
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sound and add it to a second sound, you create a third sound. By stealing a
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bass line from one old record and sticking it into a drumbeat, you create a
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whole new song."
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McDANIELS: "If you use somebody's material, just give 'em their royalties
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and everybody will be happy and merry. That's something you should do right
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away instead of waitin' until your records sell, because if your record does
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good, the person will be like, 'Yo, I want mine.' Then you can't put the album
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out 'cause you be goin' to court and then you sittin' there mad, you know?"
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Rap is travelling beyond its old neighborhoods, and adapting to diverse
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climates throughout the world. In the U.S. strong growth pockets in Los
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Angeles and Miami are creating new sub-styles of rap.
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SILVERMAN: "There's a Miami sound called 'bass music,' with modulating
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bass and a heavy 808 sound. And there's a California sound, which is totally
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different, typified by artists such as Ice-T, people who are selling a quarter
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of a million or more records in L.A. and don't ever get played in New York.
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All of the California stuff and a lot of the Miami music is high-speed rap of
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120 beats per minute or more. It all sounds like 'Planet Rock.'
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BAMBAATAA: "It's spreadin' from country to country. You have Jovanotti,
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this white Italian guy who had a Number One rap album in Italy. You have
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rappers in Holland. You have a couple of groups comin' out of Belgium and
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Germany. A lot of the European rappin' is mixed, where you have blacks and
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whites doin' it together. I'd say France, besides England, has the funkiest
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acts. France is the only place that had a syndicated TV show called HIP HOP
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that was on for two to three years."
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SILVERMAN: "A British school of rap is beginning to rear its head.
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Derek B., Cookie Crew, and a whole new level of rappers are starting to
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emerge from there, with very strong Jamaican roots. If anything, they're a
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lot more knowledgeable about reggae, which sells a lot more in that country
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per capita than it does here. So I think that they're going to have a leg
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up on us when they do get into rap."
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RUBIN: "I think the British scene might be the future of rap. Much
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like Led Zeppelin taking the American blues and doing a white boy bastardized
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version if it, the British might do the same thing with rap. I don't
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necessarily like what they've done to it, but I think that's the only
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chance it has."
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GEHR: "The interesting thing about the British rap phenomenon is that what
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most hipsters seem to be into in England isn't rap at all; it's hip-hop.
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They're not into rap as an American derivative of Jamaican toasting, so much as
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they're into the idea of hip-hop being a larcenous kind of music that borrows
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from a lot of other sources, reorganizing them in interesting ways. They're
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into rap more as radical music than as social commentary."
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McDANIELS: "I like them English guys. They seem to be with it. They're
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just as enthusiastic as the people over here in the States; I think they want
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it more, even, 'cause they're not from here, you know what I'm sayin'? A lot
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of rappers do good over there, get a lot of radio play, do successful tours.
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It's very, very easy to get on TV over there, they got so many music shows.
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The scene over there is very good for this music, and I like the rappers that
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are comin' outta there. I think, right now, they just wanna see who's the best
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rapper, who got the best beats and stuff like that. But eventually, you'll
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have some of 'em comin' out, discussin' what's goin' on in the streets, givin'
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a message, making a strong social statement."
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Rap, it seems, is everywhere. But despite its escalating sales, and
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despite the push given it by respected critics in THE NEW YORK TIMES, THE
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VILLAGE VOICE, and other publications, it continues to receive little or no
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airplay on white or black radio.
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ADLER: "There's a kind of paradox build into our success. At the same
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time that we've achieved enormous critical and commercial recognition, we've
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also had to face an awful lot of resistance in the form of bans on radio.
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If Public Enemy got airplay commensurate with their true popularity, they'd
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sell ten times as many records as they're already selling. They've already
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sold 750,000 records in six weeks without any airplay! Everybody in the music
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industry understands that radio is the chief sales medium and yet we find
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ourselves banned. Why is this happening? Because rock radio doesn't play rap.
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There's a more or less blanket ban on music by artists of color. They don't
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think that black musicians play rock and roll. That's why we think AOR means
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'Apartheid-Oriented Radio.'
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"The thing to understand is the difference in the cultural climate today
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vis a' vis the '60s. Take Woodstock, for example: There was an even balance of
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white and black artists there. Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone were the heroes of
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that event in a lot of ways, but there was Crosby, Still, Nash & Young for
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people who liked folk rock, Joan Baez was on the bill, The Who were there, and
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they were all mixed up together. And that wasn't unusual because that's the
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way radio was at that time. When Sly Stone had a hit and The Beatles had a
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hit, you heard them back-to-back on the radio. What happened, in the early
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'70s, was that the once-monolithic rock audience was demographed by radio
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programmers. Now, there's so-called 'rock radio' for white kids in the suburbs
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and so-called 'urban radio' for black kids in the cities and there's very
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little actual crossover in terms of day-to-day programming. So rock radio
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plays virtually no black artists, even though there are musicological links
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between the staple music of AOR and our music. An artful programmer could
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program Run-D.M.C., Public Enemy, and Eric B., along with Van Halen and the
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rest of those bands. Why aren't they doing it? It's racism! They're afraid
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of black people! It's all-white staffs and all-white deejays playing all-white
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artists for an all-white audience.
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"Now, black radio is fucked up on the basis, not of racism, but of class.
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To put it in current cultural terms, it's a war between the buppies and the
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B-boys; buppies are black yuppies and the B-boys are our guys. Black radio is
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run by upwardly mobile black men who, even if they come from a background like
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Chuck's, don't want anybody to know about it. Rap music pulls them right back
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to the streetcorner, which is distasteful to them, even terrorizing. It's
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black, aggressive, loud, sexual music, and it has very little to do with Luther
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Vandross, who's a staple of black radio at this point."
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Rap, according to Adler and others, has also been virtually ignored by
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the technically oriented music press. The problem, it seems, is that
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hip-hoppers simply don't fit the white, middle-class definition of a musician.
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A musician, according to that definition, is someone who toils over manuscript
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paper in an age where the studio has become the standard notational tool. A
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musician is someone who values manual dexterity above all else, in an age where
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computers may soon circumvent that aspect of music-making altogether. A
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musician-the subtext reads-is a lanky-limbed Briton with a mid-'70s shag
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haircut playing florid, high-register arpeggios that are equal parts Liszt and
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Liberace. What a musician is not, and could never be, is a black kid from the
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Bronx making whukka-whukka sounds with a record needle.
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SILVERMAN: "To me, hip-hop deejays are musicians. The technique that's
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necessary to be one is at a level of sophistication similar to what it would
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take to play an instrument. It's really difficult to do what they do, playing
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three seconds of a beat, in rhythm, and locking it so that it loops and they
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can play it back and forth without missing a beat. They're taking platters,
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throwing them on, cueing them up, and going back and forth between two
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turntables so that it sounds like it was recorded that way. Making new music
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from seven or eight other records is an incredibly difficult thing to do. I've
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heard people cut as little as one beat back and forth, from one turntable to
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the other, left, right, left, right, without headphones or anything!"
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"Current hip-hop represents the use of synthesizers and drum machines by
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people who are musically illiterate but could be musical geniuses. I believe
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that there could be Beethovens and Mozarts in the ghettoes of the United States
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who never surface because they can't get access to the tools of music. As the
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prices have come down on synthesizers and drum machines, they now have access
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to instruments which they don't need manual dexterity to be able to play,
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because of sequencing. They're able to put down musical ideas which they can't
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express on an instrument that takes some type of musical articulation."
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"Without any airplay, rap sells more concert tickets and more records
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than any of this. Anything that can sell more than 30 million albums a year
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without any airplay-more than Marillion or most of these groups that you read
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about in technical music magazines-is a legitimate art form that people are
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appreciating. Rap music is real. Rap isn't a bunch of middle-class guys with
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money going out and putting on makeup and talking about throwing their parents
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out the window [Twisted Sister]. It's about people who are living in ghettoes
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and have no way out. And it's also a mega-business, practically an industry
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unto itself. I mean, how long can you ignore it?"
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D.B.C. ["Dynamic Beat Creator"], sampler/synthesist for Stetsasonic:
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"Who's to say what music is? As we move further toward the future, music is
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gonna change even more drastically, and then what you gonna say?"
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_ _ ____________________________________________________________________
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/((___))\|Demon Roach Undrgrnd.806/794-4362|Kingdom of Shit.......806/794-1842|
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[ x x ] |NIHILISM.............517/546-0585|Paisley Pasture.......916/673-8412|
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\ / |Polka AE {PW:KILL}...806/794-4362|Ripco.................312/528-5020|
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(' ') |Tequila Willy's GSC..209/526-3194|The Works.............617/861-8976|
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(U) |====================================================================|
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.ooM |1991 cDc communications by Mark Dery 08/31/91-#187|
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\_______/|All Rights Pissed Away. FIVE YEARS of cDc|
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