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Is Hip Hop Dead? - The Past, Present, and Future of America's Most Wanted Music (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,659
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Is Hip Hop Dead? - The Past, Present, and Future of America's Most Wanted Music (Hardcover)
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Hip hop is remarkably self-critical as a genre. In lyrics, rappers
continue to debate the definition of hip hop and question where the
line between underground artist and mainstream crossover is drawn,
who owns the culture and who runs the industry, and most
importantly, how to remain true to the culture's roots while also
seeking fame and fortune. The tension between the desires to
preserve hip hop's original culture and to create commercially
successful music promotes a lyrical war of words between mainstream
and underground artists that keeps hip hop very much alive today.
In response to criticisms that hip hop has suffered or died in its
transition to the mainstream, this book seeks to highlight and
examine the ongoing dialogue among rap artists whose work describes
their own careers. Proclamations of hip hop's death have flooded
the airwaves. The issue may have reached its boiling point in Nas's
2006 album Hip Hop is Dead. Nas's album is driven by nostalgia for
a mythically pure moment in hip hop's history, when the music was
motivated by artistic passion, instead of base commercialism. In
the course of this same album, however, Nas himself brags about
making money for his particular record label. These and similar
contradictions are emblematic of the complex forces underlying the
dialogue that keeps hip hop a vital element of our culture. Is Hip
Hop Dead? seeks to illuminate the origins of hip hop nostalgia and
examine how artists maintain control of their music and culture in
the face of corporate record companies, government censorship, and
the standardization of the rap image. Many hip hop artists, both
mainstream and underground, use their lyrics to engage in a complex
dialogue about rhyme skills versus record sales, and commercialism
versus culture. This ongoing dialogue invigorates hip hop and
provides a common ground upon which we can reconsider many of the
developments in the industry over the past 20 years. Building from
black traditions that value knowledge gained from personal
experience, rappers emphasize the importance of street knowledge
and its role in forging a career in the music business. Lyrics
adopt models of the self-made man narrative, yet reject the
trajectories of white Americans like Benjamin Franklin who espoused
values of prudence, diligence, and delayed gratification. Hip hop's
narratives instead promote a more immediately viable gratification
through crime and extend this criminal mentality to their work in
the music business. Through the lens of hip hop, and the threats to
hip hop culture, author Mickey Hess is able to confront a range of
important issues, including race, class, criminality, authenticity,
the media, and personal identity.
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