Are You a Hip Hop Apologist? by Paris

Young Berg

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Are You a Hip Hop Apologist? by Paris


Since the Imus controversy recently erupted there has been a lot of finger-pointing and blame-placing as to what the root of the problem really is. Of course, we all know that racism and sexism existed before hip-hop -- that's a given. But it's completely beside the point when our (black) culture is dictated to us by white corporations. Follow me...

For the record, most folks in our communities didn't even know Don Imus before he made headlines with his slurs (and many still don't). For the most part, we remain oblivious to the tirades of him, Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity and others who constantly malign us and foster a climate of intolerance simply because these talking heads don't speak to US. For Imus to blame black culture as being the reason for his ignorance is both sad and backwards. He's a racist and a sexist, pure and simple, and he can't blame an art form or a culture that I'm certain he has little knowledge of for his actions. The fact that he named hip-hop "culture" as a culprit is telling, however.

If you haven't noticed by now, life imitates art -- it's not the other way around. There is no stronger cultural influence on people now than popular media, and hip-hop is at the forefront. Ask almost any child about the lyrics to a popular song or a scene from a video or movie and more often then not they will know the details better than they know their school lessons. Entertainers and the culture of celebrity that we find ourselves living in often hold more weight with kids then parents, educators, preachers politicians or even sports heroes. Can we blame some rappers for selling completely out? Of course. Be we have to look at the entire picture.

The argument is often made by Russell Simmons and others that rappers are poets who simply report on what we feel and our surroundings, and that we shouldn't be censored. On that point we partially agree -- we shouldn't be censored. But balance between the negative and positive needs to be provided, and it currently isn't. Most artistic integrity is questionable at best. My understanding is that artists are supposed to express what they believe in at all costs (if not, there's work at the post office). But most don't, and they mold their approaches to making music based on what they perceive major labels wanting. If Def Jam or Interscope or any of these other large culture-defining companies issued a blanket decree that they would only support material and artists with positive messages then 99% of those making music now would switch up to accommodate. That's real talk. I'm not saying these labels should (or would), but if they did, gangstas would stop being gangstas and misogynists would stop being misogynists at the drop of a DIME.

Many artists are like children, and most will say and do what is expected of them in order to benefit financially. And although there is definite self-examination that needs to take place within the artist community, the lion's share of the blame falls on the enablers who only empower voices of negativity. Record labels and commercial radio often use the excuse that they are "responding to the streets" and that they are "giving the people what they want." BULLSHIT. They dictate the taste of the streets, and people can't miss what they never knew. The fact is that there are conscious decisions made by the big business and entertainment elite daily about what to present to the masses -- and it is from those choices that we are allowed to decide what we do and do not like. Who presents the music that callers are invited to "make or break" on the radio? That callers are invited to "! vote on" on T.V.? Who decides on what makes it to the stores! helves or the airwaves at all? Like I said, life imitates art, and pseudo-black culture is determined by those other than us every day. Walk into any rap label or urban radio station and you can count the number of black employees on one hand.

The argument in response could be made in defense of labels that if they don't respond to the streets then the music will just go underground. Huh? WHAT underground? Do you know how much good material is marginalized because it doesn't fit white cooperate America's ideals of acceptability? Independents can't get radio or video play anymore, at least not through commercial outlets, and most listeners don't acknowledge material that they don't see or hear regularly on the radio or on T.V. Very few of us are willing to actually seek out material and messages to identify with. As with anything in our fast food culture, we want our entertainment choices fast and in our collective face. For most listeners, all the rest need not apply.

What I want to know is, when did the worst in us become normal and accepted? When did it become par for the corporate course that "black man as thug" and "black woman as slut" be business as usual? Major companies now line up to profit from the buffoonery of a few...at the expense of us all. MTV, Viacom, Clear Channel, Boost Mobile, Amp mobile, Chevy, all major record labels and most video games come readily to mind, but there are many others.

I'm not a hater...although I do hate the imbalance in the industry right now and the negativity it fosters. I'm not calling for censorship. You can't lump me in with the Jesse Lee Petersons and the Armstrong Williamses of the world...bourgeois self-hating black men who demean other black people and profit at our expense. And nobody can say that I'm unqualified to speak on it, since I've contributed to the sale of just under 4 million albums independently, still run my own successful counter-establishment label (www.guerrillafunk.com) and have been embracing messages of self-esteem and self-sufficiency for years.

Like I said, I'm not calling for censorship, but I am calling for balance. I'm calling for more representation of points of view other than gangsta rap and escapism. More revolutionary voices. More voices of women. Where is the diversity? Music can only be kept artificially young and artificially dumb for so long before an inevitable backlash ensues, and that's what we're seeing take place now. Overall album sales for the January 1-April 2 period are down 16.6% -- with a 20.5% decline in CD album sales since last year -- and an even greater decline in hip-hop. Since LAST YEAR (and it was already raggedy last year, believe me). We're seeing the industry implode before our eyes. I heard somebody say recently that in this current era of style over substance Stevie Wonder, Parliament/Funkadelic, Earth, Wind Fire, Curtis Mayfield and others would never have been signed. Let that sink in for a second. They would never have been signed. Some of the very architects of black music as we know it would have been sidelined too, just as countless others are now, because they wouldn't have fit into white corporate America's cookie-cutter feel-good box of acceptable black behavior and appearance. Same goes for me, Public Enemy (they'll take the Flav, but not the Chuck), Kam, X-Clan, BDP, Wise Intelligent, dead prez, Zion-I, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, The Roots, Blackalicious, Immortal Technique, The Coup, T-K.A.S.H., Michael Franti and a host of others.

So how many half-naked women sipping Cris draped in blood diamonds poolside will it take before we collectively agree that shit is tired now? How many backward-ass coons with tats and plated grills and pimp cups etc. in the strip club before we all agree that enough is enough and that we need balance? When did the bar get set so low? When will we demand more? And as for Simmons' argument that "rappers are reporting what they see" etc, how are cocaine-kingpin rhymes or poolside pimp-nigga fantasies anyone's reality? Miss me with that bullshit argument. Yes, there should be room for all voices to be heard, but we have to be treated and presented equally. Now we have bitches and hos, players and pimps, gangstas and dealers -- but no kings and queens, no revolutionaries, no dissent, no political commentary and no anger -- how is that? In an era where EVERYTHING is political and people are more disgusted with the way things are more than ever? It's no mistake. Yes! I can say that we have failed, that we have allowed black culture to once again be co-opted, diluted and prostituted. Commercial rap culture is now to hip-hop is what disco was to funk. No wonder Nas is saying it's dead.

And who's to blame? Definitely not artists like the ones mentioned above. Not most artists at all, actually, because we don't control whether or not we're seen and heard by the masses. No, the blame needs to squarely sit on the shoulders of those who run the labels, the commercial radio stations, the television studios and the large corporate sponsors who reward only the worst in us and seem hell-bent on pursuing (with little success) the most fleeting, fickle demographic of all -- 12-16 year old adolescent females. You know, the demo that's the most impressionable, with the least amount of loyalty or disposable income. Brilliant.

Know that it's okay to call shit like it is and quit being cowards worrying about who we'll offend. It's okay to blame Simmons, Lyor Cohen, Jimmy Iovine, Kevin Liles, Bob Johnson, Debra Lee, Michael Martin and others of their ilk because the blood is on their hands. They are the gatekeepers of popular culture and they are the ones who determine what you see and hear. They can't say that their decisions are based on economics when they exclude voices of reason because there are literally hundreds of millions of people globally who feel the same way. What about that consumer base? I guess that money is no good, huh? Fuck outta here... Remember, part of the strategy of mind control is to fool the public into thinking that they have choice. We do, but the playing field is so skewed in the favor of mega-corps that the contributions of the alternatives are often viewed by most as insignificant.

So yes, there is a problem, but the fake "Kumbaya" moment on Oprah yesterday won't solve it. Are we really going to look to those individuals who have made a killing off of pushing poison to us to fix the problem? We shouldn't. Instead, we should vote with our dollars and continue the campaign of public shame until we see some concrete change. The music industry as we know it is on its death bed. People are now more tired than ever of 'music business as usual' and style over substance.

Imus was an insignificant part of a much greater problem. Sure, his incident open up national discourse regarding issues of race and sex. And yes, it is now more apparent than ever that whites have a hard time acknowledging racist and sexist behavior in other whites as being solely their fault. Most black artists are not to blame, as we often can't been seen or heard without white help. But it's important to note that many of us can and should know better when saying and doing the things we say and do. It's easy to despise the indefensible, and media outlets like Fox News have made good money demonizing those with little real power.

But will we champion the good among us?

Paris is a successful independent hip-hop artist and founder of Guerrilla Funk Recordings, a musical organization that counters the corporate stranglehold of censorship currently plaguing the entertainment industry. Visit Guerrilla Funk.
 
Good post YoungBerg.

I've been saying this for a while, Imus didn't start this bullshit nor did rappers but both are symptomatic of and the result of a few in power choosing what kinds of shit to promote to the masses. Imus thought he could get away with calling women nappy headed hoes like he has so many other times saying other racially sensitive shit. It may have taken a while for folk to wise the fuck up to what these degenerates are actually doing when they say what they say but this discussion has been coming for a long time. And I'm still not so sure the conversation has actually started yet. Since this asshole shooting spree at VT, the Imus discussion has been muted yet again. Lets face it, if the media isn't talking about it, you won't either.

Somehow, either because of political correctness or people misinterpreting the biblical concept of "not judging others" or as I've heard it called the slow drip of liberalism of a combination of the three, many in this society seems to have devolved from the standard set by our parents to something akin to the chaos that happens in a flash in many a elementary school classroom when the teacher leaves the room. No standards, no respect. Period.

Bottom line, if the power brokers didn't sell this profane, sexually explicit bullshit, it wouldn't be there to buy. That includes everything from Rap to Rush Limbaugh. I think its high time to quit pretending we can co-exist as a society with demeaning concepts everywhere 24/7. We can't. That shit cuts deep and it hurts even though no one wants to admit it.

-VG
 
fuck all the bullshit,,, i'm waiting for hip~hop to get political again (like it was in the P.E, BDP, X~Clan days) that's the only thing was i see hip~hop being salvaged,,, otherwise, it's about to go out like disco did in the 70's,,,
 
gameboy said:
fuck all the bullshit,,, i'm waiting for hip~hop to get political again (like it was in the P.E, BDP, X~Clan days) that's the only thing was i see hip~hop being salvaged,,, otherwise, it's about to go out like disco did in the 70's,,,
Listen to Dead Prez.
 
applause.gif
 
Let's see which coon will post the Colin Powell pic with the "whoa I ain't reading all that shit" quote first...Non-reading shuffling ass negroes. Good Post. Paris has always been one of my favorite MCs.
 
Damn... that's powerful. I always felt that way. Rap doesn't represent me you (figuratively) wanna blame somebody go out to the suburbs and ask them cuz they run that shit. We would wash our hands of that shit but there's no sinks around here dig me?
 
VegasGuy said:
Good post YoungBerg.

I've been saying this for a while, Imus didn't start this bullshit nor did rappers but both are symptomatic of and the result of a few in power choosing what kinds of shit to promote to the masses.

Imus thought he could get away with calling women nappy headed hoes like he has so many other times saying other racially sensitive shit.

It may have taken a while for folk to wise the fuck up to what these degenerates are actually doing when they say what they say but this discussion has been coming for a long time. And I'm still not so sure the conversation has actually started yet.


Bottom line, if the power brokers didn't sell this profane, sexually explicit bullshit, it wouldn't be there to buy. That includes everything from Rap to Rush Limbaugh. I think its high time to quit pretending we can co-exist as a society with demeaning concepts everywhere 24/7. We can't. That shit cuts deep and it hurts even though no one wants to admit it.

-VG


I agree with most of your points....

There is more than enough blame to go around.... from the artists to the producers, the radio stations and finally the "buyers" of the stuff.

This public dialogue was a long time in the making... I remember hearing "rappers" saying years ago that if you don't like it then turn it off...the truth is some of us turned it off years ago but we could not control its proliferation through other devices like BET and young kids who watched it after school.

I have a simple way of making sense of this kind of foul languaged environment.... Children "imitate" what they hear and see their parents do... if you curse in front of them, it will be a matter of time before they start "repeating" the same garbage talk they hear from you.... so if you don't wanna hear your kid cussin you out... then don't cuss him out... thats why we call it respect.
 
they had paris and brother j from x clan talkin about this on the radio this morning

i agree 100%, that imus drama had nothin to do with hiphop, they have been coming down hard on hiphop all year with those TV specials on CNN (hiphop is poison) and the one on PBS

this is just another excuse to down the culture, there is plenty of good hiphop out there but nowadays its just harder to find because they dont get no play on the radio or BET.
 
GULLAH JACK said:
Let's see which coon will post the Colin Powell pic with the "whoa I ain't reading all that shit" quote first...Non-reading shuffling ass negroes.

Co-sign with all of this thread, but especially the funny comment above.
 
Wow...I'm so glad I read this, Paris nails it head on. Commercial Rap artist are such an easy target when arguing "whos the blame" for society's woe's.They are certainly "part" of the misogynistic-pimp-bling-get money at all cost parading, but in the bigger scheme of things why isnt anyone mentioning the big corporations, radio stations, record companies....the real "enablers"

"Commercial rap culture is now to hip-hop is what disco was to funk" -beautiful analogy
 
Angry Black Man said:

:angry: :angry: First one that does, needs to get singled out and lynched for bein a ignorant ass. Used to be "hide somethin' from a brother in a book, now its a long paragraph :smh: :smh: Jack, you from the Land of Shrimp & Grits?

Yup...From Charleston, SC
 
Pitchdogg said:
I agree 100 percent. I asked my mom who Don Imus was and she was like, hell if I know. Paris still makes good music, I got into him back in '93 when public enemy was fading away. There a cut called the "days of old" thats appropriate theme music for this thread.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMD6oE-IOVs


Yeah, I 1st got into Paris back then too,,,PE was fading in mainstream popularity, but, they never faded artistically, their catalogue of albums and constant touring even to this day speaks for itself,,longevity-wise, PE(and a few others) are the rolling stones of hip hop
 
Many artists are like children, and most will say and do what is expected of them in order to benefit financially. And although there is definite self-examination that needs to take place within the artist community, the lion's share of the blame falls on the enablers who only empower voices of negativity. Record labels and commercial radio often use the excuse that they are "responding to the streets" and that they are "giving the people what they want." BULLSHIT. They dictate the taste of the streets, and people can't miss what they never knew. The fact is that there are conscious decisions made by the big business and entertainment elite daily about what to present to the masses -- and it is from those choices that we are allowed to decide what we do and do not like. Who presents the music that callers are invited to "make or break" on the radio? That callers are invited to "! vote on" on T.V.? Who decides on what makes it to the stores! helves or the airwaves at all? Like I said, life imitates art, and pseudo-black culture is determined by those other than us every day. Walk into any rap label or urban radio station and you can count the number of black employees on one hand.

So True! I've been saying this for years! Bullshit gets fed to the public and we eat it up. Mind Control, Brainwashing, Setups and Traps!
 
I was saying the same thing in a post About Imus i posted a couple days ago...but nice drop,atleast muhfuckas read THIS
 
gameboy said:
fuck all the bullshit,,, i'm waiting for hip~hop to get political again (like it was in the P.E, BDP, X~Clan days) that's the only thing was i see hip~hop being salvaged,,, otherwise, it's about to go out like disco did in the 70's,,,

I agree, I still listen to them every now & then. I think it will be salvaged because there's a lot of rappers still makin some of that real shit it's just a hip hop sub culture became The Culture. Political and consciousness rap was big before gangsta rap blew up, Ice Cube mixed the two. Ludacris's grew up a little and put some social in his songs maybe some of the more popular rappers will do the same as the get older or maybe I'm Gettin Older!!!!

I still listen though!!!! Not a Apologist!!!
 
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