640 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
640 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
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"Dub"
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Monitor of Hip Hop Culture In Mainstream Media
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Volume One, Issue One
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07.01.94
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-=> Editor's Note <=-
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The Dub Project complies and makes available this monitor of hip hop culture
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in the mainstream media. The goal of this guide is to increase the visibility
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of the hip hop community worldwide. While this guide is an not an exhaustive
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resource, it is a useful compendium of many resources and can be a helpful
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reference for a true hip hopper surfing cyberspace. This resource contains
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articles from other sources for analysis and discussion.
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The Dub Project is now involved in building a place for hip hop within the
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emerging information infrastructure. If you are interested in becoming a
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member of the Dub Project, which is involved in the creation of this extensive
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public-access hip hop database, please inform us.
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R.O. King,
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Director of the Dub Project.
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rawlson.king@ablelink.org
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-=> Contents <=-
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Ruling on Rap Song, High Court Frees Parody From Copyright Law
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And The Winner Is...Not The Real Hip-Hop That We Know
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The Last Days Of Rap
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Jeru The Damaja Interview
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-=> Ruling on Rap Song, High Court Frees Parody From Copyright Law <=-
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By Linda Greenhouse
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Special To The New York Times
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March 7, 1994
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* Inset states: A 'fair use' case has ramifications: Mad Magazine take note *
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WASHINGTON, March 7 - The Supreme Court, carving out a safety zone for parody
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with the constraints of Federal copyright law, today unanimously overturned a
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lower court's judgement that the rap group 2 Live Crew had infringed the
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copyright on the rock classic "Oh, Pretty Woman" by recording its own rap
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version of the Roy Orbison original.
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The Justices ruled that 2 Live Crew was entitled to a trial to show that its
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bawdy recasting of the 1964 song was a "fair use" of the original, exempt from
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a copyright infringement claim.
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A Federal appeals court ruled in 1992 that 2 Live Crew's "blatantly commercial
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purpose" in recording its version, which the group described as a parody of
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the original, deprived it of all protection under the copyright law.
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What Constitutes 'Fair Use'?
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That broad ruling alarmed many who make a living through parody and made the
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case an important test of the doctrine of fair use, which is the one exception
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in Federal copyright law to copyright owners' exclusive right to control their
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works. Under the doctrine, a portion of a copyright work may be used without
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permission "for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching,
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scholarship or research."
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There is no explicit mention of parody in the law, however. The Supreme Court
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had never addressed the issue, although lower courts have considered numerous
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song parodies in the context of fair use. One appeals court gave fair use
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protection to a parody of "When Sunny Get Blue" called "When Sonny Sniffs
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Glue." Another court deemed a Mad Magazine parody of Irving Berlin's "A
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Pretty Girl is Like a Melody," entitled "Louella Schwartz Describes Her
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Malady," to be fair use.
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Writing for the Court today, Justice David H. Souter said that "like less
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ostensibly humorous forms of criticism," parody "can provide social benefit by
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shedding light on an earlier work, and, in the process, creating a new one."
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As such, he said, parody was entitled to consideration as fair use on the same
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terms as other commentary.
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While noting that "we might not assign a high rank" to the element of parody
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in the 2 Live Crew song, Justice Souter accepted the group's assertion that
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the song, "Pretty Women," included on a 1989 album, "As Clean as They Wanna
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Be," was intended as parody.
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The original version, written by Roy Orbison and William Dees and copyrighted
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by Acuff-Rose Music Inc., was a upbeat tale of a man who sees, longs for and
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eventually captures the attention of a women as she walks down the street. In
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the 2 Live Crew version, the pretty women of the first verse becomes "big
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hairy woman," "bald headed woman" and "two timin' woman."
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The Court's opinion printed both versions, with Justice Souter commenting on
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the rap group's: "The later words can be taken as a comment on the naivete of
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the original of an earlier day, as a rejection of its sentiment that ignores
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the ugliness of street life and the debasement that it signifies."
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The humour of parody, Justice Souter said, "necessarily spring from
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recognizable allusion to its object through distorted imitation." He said
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that because parody's "art lies in the tension between a known original and
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its parodic twin," a parody has to be able to use enough of the original to be
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recognizable to the audience.
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He said that woks like parody, which take the original and effect a creative
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transformation, "lie at the heart of the fair use doctrine's guarantee of
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breathing space within the confines of copyright."
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Justice Souter stressed that courts must make a case-by-case determination of
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whether a parody, or any other form of borrowing copyright material, qualifies
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as fair use.
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While the copyright law lists "commercial purpose" as one element in the fair
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use determination, the appeals court in this case mistakenly treated 2 Live
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Crew's profit motive as the only element, Justice Souter said. Noting that
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the concept of fair use comes from English common law and dates back
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centuries, he quoted Samuel Johnson's admonition that "no man but a blockhead
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ever wrote, except for money" as evidence that commercial writing should not
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be stripped automatically of fair use protection.
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Group Asked Permission
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2 Live Crew had requested permission to record its version of the song, which
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Acuff-Rose denied. On its album, the group gave credit for "Pretty Women" to
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Roy Orbison, William Dees and Acuff-Rose. After Acuff-Rose sued for copyright
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infringement, the Federal District Court in Nashville ruled for 2 Live Crew, a
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ruling that was overturned by the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
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Circuit, in Cincinnati.
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The opinion today, Campbell v. Acuff-Rose, No. 92-1292, was not a final
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victory for 2 Live Crew. Justice Souter said the group had to persuade the
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lower courts of two elements essential to the fair use defense: that it had
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not taken any more of the original that necessary to make the point of the
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parody, and that the parody had not harmed the market for the original song or
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the potential market for the original song or the potential market for the
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original versions that Acuff-Rose may license.
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While joining the opinion, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote a separate,
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concurring opinion in which he expressed doubt that 2 Live Crew's song was a
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"legitimate parody" as opposed to a "commercial take-off."
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The Court received "friends of the court" briefs on 2 Live Crew's behalf from
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Mad Magazine, the Harvard Lampoon and the political satirist Mark Russell.
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The Capitol Steps, a musical group here that performs topical political
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parodies, sent the Justices a cassette tape on which the group performs a
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musical history of parody in America dating to the Revolution.
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Acuff-Rose was supported by many briefs, including those from the Songwriters'
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Guild, the entertainer Michael Jackson, who owns the rights to many of the
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Beatles' song, and the estates of a number of renowned composers, including
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Leonard Bernstein and George and Ira Gershwin.
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-=> And The Winner Is...Not The Real Hip-Hop That We Know <=-
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by Michael L. Sapps
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From The Art Form
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Why do the majority of Black people always feel that they have to measure up
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to white standards? Similarly, why do a lot of rappers dream of winning the
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prestigious (Yeah right!) Grammy award? Is it because it's the end-all-be-all
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award in the music industry today, I don't think so. If you ask any person
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who knows what's really up, they are aware that this is the recipients
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acceptance to the powers-that-be society. It usually gives the winner a
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license to put whatever type of bullshit out on the market that they want.
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In other words the performers music will never be the same unless the street
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is truly in their heart and we all know what fat ends can do to one's heart.
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To those who know what's really up, the Grammy don't mean a damn thing.
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What really matters is that your community gives you the props that you
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deserve. It is the respect of your peers and homies that really matters.
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To most that win the Grammy it is a representation to them that they have
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finally made it. But you know what? When one thinks that they have made
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it, they really haven't. Every performer should know that once they think
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that they have made it, it really means that they have lost their edge and
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are prone to failure. One would have to wonder if the artists stop to think
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about who's nominating them for the Grammy in the rap category. Basically,
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it's the same people who are nominating the other categories and they are
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probably rich, white, know-nothing-about-hip-hop, biased, probably racist,
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looking for their new nigga people. People who rejected hip-hop as long as
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they could, deeming it as a fad. Making it out to be something that was
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going to fade into the same black hole that 70's disco music and 80's break
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dancing disappeared into. However, hip-hop hasn't disappeared yet, and you
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know what, hip-hop is a force to be dealt with now and as long as there is
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music playing on the airwaves.
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Now, back to the artists themselves. Getting that big pay day may mean that
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the money will start to roll in, which is good for the artist, but there is
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a flip side to every coin. In the music industry large contracts sometime
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equate to a level or state of selling out, whether it be in the music,
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lifestyle, friendships, or beliefs. In most instances it is the music which
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suffers, ultimately the change in the music affects the fans, who are the
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people that make the hip-hop artist all that in the first place. Because of
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this selling out of new artist and old artist alike, one could say that
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hip-hop is in a state of emergency, even though hip-hop has never seen days
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as prosperous as this in the past. It is also in a state of emergency
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because of the fact that some artists, while stretching their artistic
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creativity, are forgetting about what put them on the map in the first place.
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What they've forgotten about is the booming old school beats that used to
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rock BLS and KISS in New York, the old Power 99 in Philly, and similar
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stations that could be found around the country. The beats that were rocking
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the radio stations mentioned previously were the same beats that used to rock
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the parks in New York as the posses used juice from the overhead lamplights
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to carry out their battling with hyped-up, hip-hop lyrics as their only
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weapons. That's the stuff that made rap what it is today, not the
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prestigious Grammy. Grammys don't make the beats any better. In the past
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this so called recognition has made the beats and lyrics wack, bugged out and
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strictly booty. If you don't think so, think about the artists who have won
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the Grammy in the past for the rap category, a few of them have slipped
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haven't they? More importantly, many of them should not have been nominated
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in the first place because the nominees were not true representatives of real
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hip-hop that tine hip-hop junkies have become addicted to over the years.
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If we, the hip-hop community, need to have the awards, the rewards, the
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recognition, and the props, then let it come from you, the hip-hop community.
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Instead of complaining about your lack of recognition, respect and
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representation in the Grammy ceremonies the collective hip-hop community
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should start it's own awards ceremony. That's right, start your own ceremony
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where the nominees are elected and awarded by designated representatives of
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the hip-hop community. The representatives could be rappers (Legit rappers
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that have a track record). They could be deejays from radio stations that
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bust real hip-hop rhymes and lyrics. They could be from publications that
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write about the hip-hop scene, or the nominees could be nominated and awarded
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by the sector of the public that listens to the real hip-hop.
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Now, we've already established the fact that we need our own hip-hop awards
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ceremonies. We know there are people who could nominate and pick the
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recipients of the awards. Now, the next logical thing to do is to pick a
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name for the award. But before we address the name issue, did you know that
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the black actors in Hollywood have their own awards ceremonies? Yeah, that's
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right, the black actors have decided to give the recognition and respect to
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their own, just like the hip-hop community should do. However, there is one
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crucial mistake that we would hope the hip-hop community would not make like
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the black actors have made. You wonder what that is don't you? Well it's
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the fact that the black actors decided to call their award the Black Oscar
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Award, named after silent film maker Oscar Micheaux.
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That's right, the black actors initiated their own awards ceremony because
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the committees of the Oscars, Cannes Film Festival and other institutions
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like them did not recognize the contributions that black actors and
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film-makers have made to the motion picture industry. So why would the Black
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actors name their award after the Oscar which is a representation of
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virtually every entity which snubbed the black actors and film makers in the
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first place. Whatever the reason is, it was kind of stupid to do, wasn't it?
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The black actors and film makers could have easily called it the Micheaux,
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which would have alleviated any confusion with their counterpart's Oscar
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award. It seems as if they compromised themselves by associating their
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award with the standard of the original Oscar. It's almost as if they took
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one step forward only to take two steps backwards. That one step forward and
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two steps backwards could have easily been three steps in the positive
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direction. How could they have done that you ask? They could have named the
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award after someone who epitomizes what being a black actor or film maker is
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all about.
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Not that Oscar Micheaux does not epitomize those characteristics. He was the
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first black man to direct movies in the silent film era. He was a pioneer.
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The award could have easily been named after Paul Robeson, a great, actor,
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scholar, political activist and just a plain, descent human being. A man
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who represented an all around role model for all people of African and
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non-African descent. More importantly, by naming the award after Robeson
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there would be no association made with other institutions. Having their own
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awards ceremony is a good thing, but black film makers and actors should feel
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confident that they can stand on their own merit as artists.
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Naming their award after Oscar Micheals was not a bad act. Associating their
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award with the standards and notoriety of the original Oscar award was a foul
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act. We, as African-Americans have to set new standards and go above and
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beyond the standards which have been set for us in the past.
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It's been said that there are two things that one can do when one observes
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someone else. One can either learn what to do or what not to do. Hip-hop
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community you know what not to do, and that would be naming your award the
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Black Grammy.
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If any name is picked it should be the name of someone who has made a
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positive impact on the hip-hop beats, rhymes, and lyrics that you are putting
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on CD, wax, and cassette. You could call it the Bambatta, after Afrika
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Bambatta, leader of the Zulu nation and one of the few godfathers of hip-hop
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as we know it. It could be called the Clinton, after George Clinton, the
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great one who helped to define what Funk is all about. But what it should
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really be called is the JB after James Brown, the Godfather of Soul. The
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man's music that has influenced everyone, in the hip-hop community in some
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way, shape, form or fashion. As the Hip-hop community, you have just been
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given a few suggestions for a name for your award. Point blank, just name
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the award after someone or something that gives props to the real hip-hop
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community. If you name it after someone or something the expresses our proud
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African heritage you will not go wrong.
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Today we live in a problem oriented society, however brothers and sisters you
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have just been handed a solution to the problem of getting the props that you
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rightfully deserve. Just Do It.
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-=> The Last Days Of Rap <=-
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By David Samuels
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The New Republic
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November 16, 1991
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* Inset states: The way in which rap has been consumed and popularized speaks
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not of cross-cultural understanding, musical or otherwise, but of a voyeurism
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and a tolerance of racism *
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SOUNDSCAN, a computerized scanning system, changed Billboard magazine's method
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of counting record sales in the United States this summer. Replacing a
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haphazard system that relied on big-city record stores, it instead measured
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the number of records by scanning the bar codes at chain-store cash registers
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across the nation. Within weeks the number of computed record sales leapt, as
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demographics shifted from minority-focused urban centres to white, suburban,
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middle-class malls.
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And so it was that America awoke on June 22, 1991, to find that its favourite
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record was not "Out of Time", by aging college-boy rockers R.E.M., but
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"Niggaz4life", a musical celebration of gang rape and other violence by N.W.A.
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(or Niggers With Attitude), a rap group from a Los Angeles ghetto whose
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records had never before risen above No. 27 on the Billboard charts.
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From "Niggaz4life" to "Boyz N the Hood", young black men committing acts of
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violence were available this summer in a wide variety of entertainment
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formats. Of these none in more popular than rap. And none had received quite
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the level of critical attention and concern.
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Writers on the left have long viewed rap as the heartbeat of urban America --
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its authors, in Arthur Kempton's words, "the pre-eminent young dramaturgists
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in the clamorous theatre of the street. On the right, this assumption has
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been shared, but greeted with predictable disdain.
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Neither side of the debate has been prepared, however, to confront what the
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entertainment industry's receipts from this summer proved beyond doubt:
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Although rap is still proportionally more popular among blacks, its primary
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audience is white and lives in the suburbs. And the history of rap's
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degeneration from insurgent black-street music to mainstream pop points to
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another dispiriting conclusion: that the more rappers were packaged as violent
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black criminals, the bigger their white audiences became.
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If the racial makeup of rap's audience has been largely misunderstood, so have
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the origins of its authors. Since the early 1980s, a tightly knit group of
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mostly young, middle-class, black New Yorkers, in close concert with white
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record producers, executives and publicists, has been making rap music for an
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audience that industry executives concede is primarily composed of white
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suburban males.
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Rap's appeal to whites rested in its evocation of an age-old image of
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blackness: a foreign, sexually charged and criminal underworld against which
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the norms of white society are defined and, by extension, through which they
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may be defied. It was the truth of this latter proposition that rap would
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test in its journey into the mainstream.
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"Hip-hop," the music behind the lyrics, which are "rapped," is a form of sonic
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bricolage with roots in "toasting," a style of making music by speaking over
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records. Toasting first took hold in Jamaica in the mid-1960s, a response,
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legend has it, to the limited availability of expensive Western instruments
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and the concurrent proliferation of cheap R & B instrumental singles.
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Cool DJ Herc, a Jamaican who settled in the South Bronx, is widely credited
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with having brought toasting to New York City. Rap spread quickly through New
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York's poor black neighbourhoods in the mid- and late 1970s.
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Although much is made of rap as a kind of urban streetgeist, early rap had a
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more basic function: dance music. The first rap record to make it big was
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"Rapper's Delight," released in 1979 by the Sugar Hill Gang. Its first 30
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seconds were indistinguishable from the disco records of the day: light
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guitars, high-hat drumming and hand-claps over a deep funk bass line.
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Like disco music and jumpsuits, the social commentaries of early rappers like
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Grandmaster Flash and Mellie Mel were for the most part transparent attempts
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to sell records to white by any means necessary. Songs like "White Lines"
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(with its anti-drug theme) and "The Message" (about ghetto life) had the
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desired effect, drawing fulsome praise from white rock critics raised on the
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protest ballads of Bob Dylan and Phil Ochs. The reaction on the street was
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less favourable.
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It was not until 1984 that rap broke through to a mass white audience. The
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first group to do this was Run-DMC. Bill Adler, a former rock critic and
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rap's best-known publicist, explains: "They were the first group that came on
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stage as if they had just come off the street corner. But unlike the first
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generation of rappers, they were solidly middle class. Both of Run's parents
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were college-educated. DMC was a good Catholic school kid, a mama's boy.
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Neither of them was deprived and neither of them ever ran with a gang, but on
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stage they became the biggest, baddest, streetest guys in the world."
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Rap's new mass audience was in large part the brainchild of Rick Rubin, a
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Jewish punk rocker from suburban Long Island who produced the music behind
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many of rap's biggest acts. Like many New Yorkers his age, Mr. Rubin grew up
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listening to "Mr. Magic's Rap Attack," a rap radio show. In 1983, at the age
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of 19, Mr. Rubin founded Def Jam Records in his New York University dorm room.
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The appearance of white groups in a black musical form has historically
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prefigured the mainstreaming of the form, the growth of the white audience and
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the resulting dominance of white performers. With rap, however, this process
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took an unexpected turn: White demand indeed began to determine the direction
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of the genre, but what it wanted was music more defiantly black. The result
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was Public Enemy, produced and marketed by Mr. Rubin.
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Public Enemy's now familiar melange of polemic and dance music was formed not
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on inner-city streets but in the suburban Long Island towns in which the
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group's members grew up. The children of successful black middle-class
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professionals, they gave voice to the feeling that, despite progress toward
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equality, blacks still did not quite belong in white America. They complained
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of unequal treatment by the police, of never quite overcoming the colour of
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their skin: "We were suburban college kids doing what we were supposed to do,
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but were always made to feel like something else," explains Bill Stephney, the
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groups's executive producer.
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Public Enemy's abrasive and highly politicized style made it a fast favourite
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of the white avant-garde, which like the English punk-rock band The Clash 10
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years before. Public Enemy's music was faster, harder and more abrasive than
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the rap of the day, music that moved behind the vocals like a full-scale band.
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But the root of Public Enemy's success was a highly charged theatre of race in
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which white listeners became guilty eavesdroppers on the putative private
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conversation of the inner city. Public Enemy's member Chuck D denounced his
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enemies (the media, some radio stations), proclaimed himself "Public Enemy No.
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1" and, flanked onstage by black-clad security guards from the Nation of
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Islam, praised Louis Farrakhan, the Nation's leader. Flavour Flaw, Chuck's
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homeboy sidekick, parodied street style: over-size sunglasses, baseball cap
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cocked to one side, a clock the size of a silver plate draped around his neck,
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going off on wild verbal riffs that often meant nothing at all.
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|
The closer rap moved to the white mainstream, the more it became like rock 'n'
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roll, a celebration of posturing over rhythm. The back catalogues of such
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artists as James Brown and George Clinton were relentlessly plundered for
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catch hooks, then overlaid with dance beats and social commentary.
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At the very heart of rap is its aural cartoons. "Whites have always liked
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black music," says Hank Shocklee. "That part is hardly new. The difference
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with rap was that the imagery of black artists, for the first time, reached
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|
the level of black music. The sheer number of words in a rap song allows for
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the creation of full characters impossible in R&B. Rappers become like
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superheroes; Captain America or the Fantastic Four."
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By 1988 the conscious manipulation of racial stereotypes had become rap's
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leading edge, a trend best exemplified by the rise of stardom of Schooly D, a
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Philadelphia rapper on the Jive label who sold more than 500,000 records with
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|
little mainstream notice.
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|
It was not that the media had never heard of Schooly D: white critics and
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|
fans, for the first time, were simply at a loss for words. His voice, fierce
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|
and deeply textured, could alone frighten listeners. He used it as a rhythmic
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|
device that made no concessions to pop-song form, talking evenly about smoking
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|
crack and using women for sex, proclaiming his blackness, accusing other
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rappers of not being black enough.
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What Schooly D meant by blackness was abundantly clear: Schooly D was a
|
|
misogynist and a thug. If listening to Public Enemy was like eavesdropping on
|
|
a conversation, Schooly D was like getting mugged. This, aficionados agreed,
|
|
was what they had been waiting for: a rapper from whom you would flee in
|
|
abject terror if you saw him walking toward you late at night.
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|
It remained for N.W.A., a more convention group, to adapt Schooly D's
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|
stylistic advance for the mass white market with its first album-length
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|
release, Straight Out of Compton, in 1989. The much-quoted rap from that
|
|
album was the target of an FBI warning to police departments across the
|
|
country and a constant presence at certain college parties, white and black,
|
|
with its songs that spoke of trading oral sex for crack and shooting strangers
|
|
for fun. After that release, N.W.A.'s lead rapper and chief lyricist, Ice
|
|
Cube, left the group. Billing himself as "the nigger you love to hate," Ice
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|
Cube released a solo album, "Amerikkka's Most Wanted," which gleefully pushed
|
|
the limits of rap's ability to give offence.
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|
|
|
Ice Cube took his act to the big screen this summer in "Boyz N the Hood",
|
|
drawing rave reviews for his portrayal of a young black drug dealer who life
|
|
of crime leads him to an untimely end. The crime-don't-pay message, an
|
|
inheritance from the grade-B gangster film, is the stock-in-trade of another
|
|
L.A. rapper-turned-actor, Ice T of "New Jack City" fame, a favourite of
|
|
socially conscious rock critics. Tacking unhappy endings onto glorifications
|
|
of drug dealing and gang warfare, Ice-T offers all the thrills of the form
|
|
while alleviating any guilt listeners may have felt about enjoying drive-by
|
|
shootings along with their popcorn.
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|
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|
With "Yo! MTV Raps," rap became for the first time music of choice in the
|
|
white suburbs of middle America. From the beginning, says Doug Herzog, MTV's
|
|
vice-president for programming, the show's audience was primarily white, male,
|
|
suburban and between the ages of 16 and 24, a demographic profile that Yo!'s
|
|
success help set in stone. For its daytime audience, MTV spawned an ethnic
|
|
rainbow of well-scrubbed pop rappers from MC Hammer to Vanilla Ice to Gerardo,
|
|
a Hispanic actor turned rap star. For Yo! itself, rap became more overtly
|
|
politicized as it expanded its audience. Sound bites from the speeches of
|
|
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King became de rigueur introductions to formulaic
|
|
assaults on white America mixed with hymns to gang violence and crude sexual
|
|
caricature.
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|
|
|
Holding such polyglot together is what Village Voice critic Nelson George has
|
|
labelled "ghettocentrism," a style-driven cult of blackness defined by crude
|
|
stereotypes. P.R. releases, like a recent one for Los Angeles rapper DJ Quik,
|
|
take special care to mention artist's police records, often enhanced to
|
|
provide extra street credibility. When Def Jam star Slick Rick was arrested
|
|
for attempted homicide, Def Jam incorporated the arrest into its publicity
|
|
campaign for Slick Rick's new album, bartering exclusive rights to the story
|
|
to Vanity Fair in exchange for the promise of a lengthy profile.
|
|
|
|
Muslim groups such as Brand Nubian proclaim their hatred for white devils,
|
|
especially those who plot to poison black babies. That Brand Nubian believes
|
|
the things said on its records is unlikely: The group seems to get along quite
|
|
well with its white Jewish publicist, Beth Jacobson of Electra Records.
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|
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|
Anti-white and, in this case, anti-Semitic, rhymes are a shorthand way of
|
|
defining one's opposition to the mainstream. Racism is reduced ti fashion, by
|
|
the rappers who use it and by the white audiences to whom such images appeal.
|
|
What's significant here are not so much the intentions of artist and audience
|
|
as a dynamic in which anti-Semitic slurs and black criminality correspond to
|
|
"authenticity," and "authenticity" sells records.
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|
|
|
The selling of this authenticity to a young white audience is the stock-in-
|
|
trade of The Source, a full-colour monthly magazine devoted exclusively to rap
|
|
music, founded by Jon Shecter while still an undergraduate at Havard. Mr.
|
|
Shecter is what is known in the rap business as a Young Black Teen-ager. He
|
|
wears a Brooklyn Dodgers baseball cap, like Spike Lee, and a Source T-shirt.
|
|
An upper-middle-class white, Mr. Shecter has come in for his share of
|
|
criticism.
|
|
|
|
In part because of young white like him, rap's influence in the black
|
|
community continues to decline. Says Bill Stephney: "Kids in my neighbourhood
|
|
pump dancehall reggae on their systems all night long, because that's where
|
|
the rhythm is...People complain about how white kids stole black culture. The
|
|
truth of the matter is that no one can steal a culture."
|
|
|
|
Whatever its continuing significance in the realm of racial politics, rap's
|
|
hour as innovative popular music has come and gone. Rap forfeited whatever
|
|
claim it may have had to particularity by acquiring a mainstream white
|
|
audience who tastes increasingly determined the nature of the form. What
|
|
whites wanted was not music, but black music, which was a result stopped
|
|
really being either.
|
|
|
|
White fascination with rap sprang from a particular kind of cultural tourism
|
|
pioneered by the Jazz Age novelist Carl Van Vechten, whose 1926 best seller
|
|
"Nigger Heaven" imagined a masculine, criminal, yet friendly black ghetto
|
|
world that functioned, for Mr. Van Vechten and for his readers, as a refuge
|
|
from white middle-class boredom.
|
|
|
|
The moral inversion of racist stereotypes as entertainment has lost whatever
|
|
transformative power it may arguable have had 50 years ago. MC Serch of 3rd
|
|
Bass, a white rap traditionalist with short-cropped hair and thick-rimmed
|
|
Buddy Holly glasses, formed his style in the uptown hip-hop clubs like the
|
|
L.Q. in the early 1980s. "Ten or 11 years ago," he remarks, "when I was
|
|
wearing my permanent-press Lee's with a beige campus shirt and matching Adidas
|
|
sneakers, kids I went to school were called me a 'wigger', 'black wanna-be,'
|
|
all kind of racist names. Now those same kids are driving Jeeps with MCM
|
|
leather interiors and pumping Public Enemy."
|
|
|
|
The ways in which rap has been consumed and popularized speak not of cross-
|
|
cultural understanding, musical or otherwise, but of a voyeurism and tolerance
|
|
of racism in which black and white are both complicit. "Both the rappers and
|
|
their fans affect and commodify their own visions of street culture," argues
|
|
Henry Louis Gates Jr. of Harvard University, "like buying Navajo blankets at a
|
|
reservation road-stop. A lot of what you see in rap is the guilt of the black
|
|
middle class about its economic success, its inability to put forth a culture
|
|
of its own. Instead they do the worst possible thing, falling back on
|
|
fantasies of street life. In turn, white college students with impeccable
|
|
gender credentials buy nasty sex lyrics under the cover of getting at some
|
|
kind of authentic black experience."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Gates goes on to make the more worrying point: "What is potentially very
|
|
dangerous about this is the feeling that by buying records they have made some
|
|
kind of valid social commitment." Where the assimilation of black street
|
|
culture by whites once required a degree of human contact between races, the
|
|
street is now available at the flick of a cable channel -- to black and white
|
|
alike.
|
|
|
|
People want to consume and they want to consume easy," Hank Shocklee says. "if
|
|
you're a suburban white kid and you want to find out what life is like for a
|
|
black city teen-ager, you buy a record by N.W.A. It's like going to an
|
|
amusement park and getting a roller-coaster ride. Records are safe, they're
|
|
controlled fear, and you always have the choice of turning it off. That why
|
|
nobody ever takes a train up to 125th Street and gets out and starts walking
|
|
around. Because then you're not in control any more; it a whole other ball
|
|
game."
|
|
|
|
This kind of consumption -- of racist stereotypes, of brutality toward women
|
|
or even uplifting tributes to Dr. Martin Luther King -- is of a particularly
|
|
corrupting kind. The values it instills find their ultimate expression in the
|
|
case with which we watch young black men killing each other: in movies, on
|
|
records and on the streets of cities and towns across the country.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-=> Jeru The Damaja Interview <=-
|
|
|
|
From Tribe Magazine, taken on January 15 after the Toronto pre-album show.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tribe. Were does the name Jeru come from?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. It is a name based on ancient European prophets, but in the future
|
|
I will be changing my last name to Jeru Neberther (Lord of all worlds)
|
|
|
|
Tribe. Have you always lived in Brooklyn and how long have you been
|
|
rhymin'?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. I've been rhyming for 15 years and I was born, raised and have been
|
|
living in Brooklyn all my life.
|
|
|
|
Tribe. Tell me about the production of "Come Clean"
|
|
|
|
Jeru. There's not much to tell. When Premier and I came up with the beat,
|
|
we looked at each other like two people who have just fallen in love.
|
|
We knew it was the hit.
|
|
|
|
Tribe. What is the whole Dirty Rotten Scoundrel ideology?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. It is about me. If people tell me their business, I don't get in-
|
|
volved. I stay on the down low and mind my own, which makes me a
|
|
Dirty Rotten Scoundrel. Also Little Dap and Group Home are part of
|
|
the Dirty Rotten Scoundrel crew.
|
|
|
|
Tribe. When did you know you were going to rhyme for a living?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. My mother told me when I was young I wasn't like any other kid. At
|
|
two years old, I knew I was going to make lots of money and be
|
|
famous.
|
|
|
|
Tribe. What do you intend to do with the money you've made?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. I intend to give it back to my community.
|
|
|
|
Tribe. What are you're views on gangsta rap?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. I like Snoop and other gangsta rappers as long as it's real...I hate
|
|
fake gangsta rap.
|
|
|
|
Tribe. What should we expect from the album?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. I can't tell you what to expect, you just have to listen to it for
|
|
yourself.
|
|
|
|
Tribe. What would like to see for Hip-Hop in '94?
|
|
|
|
Jeru. I'd like to see the rise of Jeru and the Dirty Rotten Scoundrels crew.
|
|
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[Complied by _The Dub Project_ dedicated to the liberation of all information]
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