Monday, July 21, 2008
Is Hip Hop Sexist?
In light of the Don Imus controversy and Oprah Winfrey, BET and others weighing in on the subject of Hip Hop lyrics and videos as a result, I wanted to chime in with some observations of my own on the subject. I believe first and formost that the lyrics and images we're seeing now have actually existed for some time, it's just that they have become more overt. A Few years back Too Short, 2 Live Crew, Ict T, N.W.A and The Geto Boys were the artists who pushed the envelop in terms of explictness. Now it seems everyone's trying to see how far they can go. I believe the problem is not that we're being bombarded with these lyrics and images. It's that that's all the record labels are promoting. I think you'd be hard pressed to find a video where women of color are not objectified and lyrics that don't refer to them as just oversexed, money grubbing opportunists. I think with the recent attention given to the subject, everyone tried to connect the dots between Don Imus' remarks and Hip Hop. I firmly believe that they are two entirely different matters. Don Imus is in my opinion, a racist male chavenist who stated what he truly felt and remarkbly still had the wherewithall to know what to say to deflect attention from himself and his remarks. What's going on with Hip Hop now is a matter of those who run the industry taking responsibilty for marketing and promoting more that what they have thus far. No human being is one demensional so why continue promoting one demensional images of our men and women? Just a little food for thought.
Monday, June 9, 2008
In The Know
Oscar nominated actress Angela Bassett will scrub up to join the cast of the Emmy award winning drama ER for its fifteenth and final season. She'll play a tough attending physician with a troubled past who returns to Chicago after tsunami refief in Indonesia. This after it was announced that actor Mekhi Phifer will exit the series. Disturbed and Radiohead each have new releases on store shelves today. Black Music Month Tribute of the day: Mahalia Jackson. Born in one of the poorest sections of New Orleans in 1911, Mahalia Jackson, with the grit and passion of Bessie Smith became known worldwide as the queen of Gospel. Her sound and style helped take Gospel to heights it had not been taken to before. May she rest in peace. Happy 50th birthday to the one and only Prince!
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Hip Hop At A Crossroads
At 41 years of age, I can remember when Hip Hop was just underground music heard and performed in and around New York City and when it finally went mainstream and became a billion dollar a year industry. Record lables that would'nt touch the music and culture with a ten foot pole suddenly wanted a piece of the pie. Then Hip Hop was fun, entertaining, educational, enlighting and whatever else it wanted to be. Today corportate America runs the industry and markets and promotes guns, drugs and sex because it believes that's what sells. The diversity of lyrical content and imagery that existed years ago no longer exist. It is a travesty. It is a travesty because consumers are hungry for options that are not being offered. Artists like Common, Talib Kwali and Lupe Fiasco are not marketed and promoted as well as they should be. There is a market for what these artist do and record labels need to understand that. It is time for a change.