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Old 05-14-06, 04:32 PM   #1
Mentor
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the diffrence between hip hop back then from today

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damn i know im practicaly tellin u sumthin u already know but it never loses it's effect on me everytime this subject is brought up so i'll share it wit rv
just thought this shit was really true and mos def was really speaking the truth


Hip-Hop will never be what it once was, there's no getting around that. It began as a form of expression that was of us, for us, and by us in many ways that it will never be again. We watched it grow and bloom within our community, then saw it shift into the American mainstream, who now leases it to us with no option to buy (as a friend once put it). For those of us who saw this evolution and experienced both sides of it, Hip-Hop will never again mean to us what it once did.

From its birth in the 70's through much of the 80's, Hip-Hop was basically a self-contained entity within the community that created it. If you were an emcee stepping into the studio to make a record, your target audience was basically your own community.. you were one of us talking to us, and the value of your music came from how it resonated with our own shared experiences. There was no possibility of your song getting regular rotation on any radio station, or your video getting played anywhere but Ralph Mcdaniels' Video Music Box and local public access shows. No chance of your work being acknowledged by any such mainstream outlet, so you had no concern for making music to please those outside ears. All the criteria, all the parameters set for the expression came from within the community that created it. It was a means for us to communicate with ourselves.

But nowadays the playing field is completely different, and we have a completely different relationship with the music, both as producers and consumers. When someone steps into the studio now their success hinges on pleasing MTV, Clear Channel Radio, and the mainstream american consumers that these outlets have made hip-hop's primary audience. This audience is kids from outside of the community the music came from, who do not share the experiences that drive the music. As Mos Def says:




"The difference between '88 and '98 is that most of the people who were fans were also active in the culture in some way. In '88 you'd have kids watching Video Music Box in their living room, working out dance routines. That might seem real trivial, but that is a fan watching these videos to learn these dances created by people in their community, more likely than not, somebody that probably lived on their block. It was interactive. Now the average hip-hop fan is into hip-hop because they like watching somebody else live."

It's become much more of a spectator sport than a participant sport?

"Definitely. I mean, let's be real -- these white kids in the suburbs that buy their first Wu Tang record and lose their damn mind -- they could play an active part in the culture if they wanted to, but that's not why they bought that Wu Tang record. They bought that Wu Tang record to live out their fantasy of themselves as Raekwon or Ghost or Method or whoever. A lot of hip-hop nowadays seems like the primitive prototype for what virtual reality is going to be in the next few years -- live somebody else's life, feel somebody else's pain and frustration."




I don't feel the need to be as judgmental about those suburban white kids as Mos seems here, but the dynamic he describes is undeniably at play. In today's world the ideal hip-hop product is not one that rings true for those who shares the artists' experiences, but one that provides a vivid, cinematic fantasy for those who will never share the experiences conveyed. This has radically changed the creative process, or should I say the manufacturing process of hip-hop, much more than I think even most artists realize. We also touched on these issues in my interview with Q-Tip (click part 6).
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Old 05-14-06, 04:38 PM   #2
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Shut the fuck up faggot ass bitch I hope you die. Omfg I'ma pray to every religion that you do. Fuck you zach.
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Old 05-14-06, 04:40 PM   #3
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Originally Posted by Indeph
Shut the fuck up faggot ass bitch I hope you die. Omfg I'ma pray to every religion that you do. Fuck you zach.

calm down indeph
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Old 05-14-06, 04:44 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Indeph
Shut the fuck up faggot ass bitch I hope you die. Omfg I'ma pray to every religion that you do. Fuck you zach.


did i say sumthin wrong
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Old 05-14-06, 04:50 PM   #5
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You sunk my battleship.
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Old 05-14-06, 05:22 PM   #6
Shear Kaughn
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i ddin't read it...i have a phobia for long threads........

i'm imporiving with my rehab sessions though......
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Old 05-14-06, 05:31 PM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mentor

Hip-Hop will never be what it once was, there's no getting around that. It began as a form of expression that was of us, for us, and by us in many ways that it will never be again.

I read up to here and relised this is a fucking waste of my time.
Hip hop for SOME has lost its esence, but for alot of us, we still cherish and use the music aswell as the art forms for what they were orginally for.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Mentor
interview with Q-Tip (click part 6) .


^proof you copy'd and pasted this entire thing, nice one.

Last edited by Poetic Artist : 05-14-06 at 05:34 PM.
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Old 05-14-06, 05:40 PM   #8
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LOL ^

I wasnt gonna read this shit anyway, but lol @ biting interviews...
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Old 05-14-06, 05:53 PM   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mentor
damn i know im practicaly tellin u sumthin u already know but it never loses it's effect on me everytime this subject is brought up so i'll share it wit rvjust thought this shit was really true and mos def was really speaking the truth



yea nice attempt at makin it look like i tried makin this my own interview if u dumbasses werent blind im obviously not gonna bite a interview wit mos def in it or anybody wit celebrity satus DUH...whoever fuckin said i tried makin this off as my own...u think ima just try ta bite an interview that has mod def in it??? obviously i copyied and pasted it..i didnt think i'd fuckin have ta tell u that ta get the picture
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Old 05-14-06, 05:54 PM   #10
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yeh my bad.

but um, calling me a dumbass? you sure you want to continue?
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Old 05-14-06, 05:56 PM   #11
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naww i didnt mean that just getting sick of people tryin ta downplay everything i do thats all.. no beef
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Old 05-15-06, 04:44 PM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mentor
naww i didnt mean that just getting sick of people tryin ta downplay everything i do thats all.. no beef


lmao. that was a bitch move .
espescially the little 'sad' face you put on there.

lol,classic .
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Old 05-15-06, 05:34 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mR iKiLL.
lmao. that was a bitch move .
espescially the little 'sad' face you put on there.

lol,classic .


im down wit him so i aint gon start nuthin wit him....so why the fuck are u so concerned that i rather not start shit when its sompletely unnecassary and who gives a fuck bout the sad face aint like im actually sad bustin down in tears...damn some people are so fucked up
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Old 05-14-06, 06:01 PM   #14
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yeh. But for real. One person feelings towards hip hop wont be another.

If your seriously feeling that hip hop is dead or about to be, then thats a problem within your own heart.

If your easily going to follow the trend of "raps dead" then thats on you, but if its alive in your soul, then how the fuck can it be dead?
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Old 05-14-06, 06:49 PM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Poetic Artist
yeh. But for real. One person feelings towards hip hop wont be another.

If your seriously feeling that hip hop is dead or about to be, then thats a problem within your own heart.

If your easily going to follow the trend of "raps dead" then thats on you, but if its alive in your soul, then how the fuck can it be dead?


im just sayin like not the art but the industry is dead, shit on mtv and thats coming out on cd and all these new artists thats coming out recently has all been wack, all the old emcees from the past is either dead or sold out
i mean the actual art of hip hop/rap will always be alive to the people who stay true to it but the rap industry is dead, the shit wont ever be the same anymore....come on now can u really compare rappers like mike jones and slim thug to the old eminem or old dr dre..can u really compare rappers like young jeezy and rick ross to biggie and pac??? or mobb deep's let's party to the days where they put out shook ones and all that....can u really compare em's just lose it to the way i am..or snoop's recent shit wit "whats my name"??? nawww the industry now days is dead literrally
some people might disagree but those the same kids that like rick ross and 50 cent and all of them

Last edited by Mentor : 05-14-06 at 06:53 PM.
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