Thursday, August 13, 2015

What happened to substance in Hip-Hop?



Y'all remember when hip hop was about more than just making money. I do. I can remember hanging out as a small kid new to a small town where everyone was family except my family. Being a former military kid I had grown up with lot of people and wasn't used to the community or the way things were in small town America. The one thing we all had in common I found was the love of this thing called rap and the substance that a lot of it provided. Of course there were some songs that were just party tracks and I got to hear a lot of that via my neighbors. Their father was a Dj in the area and had a show on the radio and hosted parties. I cam up on tracks like this.

I did not realize what an effect Hip -Hop would have on my life at the time. It was just something to break the ice and to help me fit in at the time. For some time I was just in awe of the way the words meshed with the tracks and would spend hours listening to music trying to decode all of the lyrics. I figured since I couldn't dance I could at least know all of the words to the songs while I was hoping for a dance. This however turned to me focusing on poetry and eventually getting on stage as a performer in a rap group, and producing my own music. The substance in the songs I grew up with influenced me to embrace the art. It wasn't about the money ever in those days we did it for free and loved it. This got me thinking what was the point where hip hop lost it's substance, it's soul. When did we trade the ability to impact and inform our communities for dollars, or more like cents on the dollar. Up until recently I could count on at least one or two good albums a year with some kind of value to them. A concept album or an album that had something to say other than pop molly, shoot a nigga, drop something twerk something, and bust it open if ya real. Where did all of this come from? Is it just laziness? This new school is missing the message literally, and I blame the artist of yesterday for the decline. Has everyone lost their minds for a little bit of money? Do we not realize what a force we have and how powerful the voice of an artist is? This is what we have left for our children to help keep the revolutionary spirit alive, and seek out injustice and social inequality.

Let's keep it 100 there are a handful of artist out there still making music with some substance but they are fare and few between mainly because the support for that type of music is sparse at best. This is another reason the blame for our youth emulating what they see lays on the older generation as well as the consumers of such garbage music. I know everyone has a right to express themselves and that is only fair, however the practices of the industry to pander to the cheapest and most useless, and soulless forms of entertainment have only become more popular recently because first, we who know better sit in silence and accept it. Hiding behind the rhetoric that they are just making money; it's a business. Second we don't want to acknowledge the effect that music has, because that makes us accountable for what we put out there. That's the real problem people, artist, consumers no one wants to take any responsibility for the footprint they are leaving, because rather you actively make a choice to do something or you passively let it fly because it's not your concern you have to live with that choice. We are living with the choices of inaction now. So the next time you hear some subpar ish on the radio or on a show remember the good ole days, and make a choice. Me I'm turning nonsense music off.



1 comment: