-
ADD TIME NEWS
- MOBILE APPS
- NEWSLETTERS

'Hip-Hop Nation' Is Exhibit A for America's Latest Cultural Revolution
That quirky Anheuser-Busch
commercial may be simply an oblique way to sell more Bud, but its use of a salutation
once confined to the black suburbs of Los Angeles is also a sign that all of
America has been conquered by the hip-hop nation. And if nationhood is established
by a community of territory, language, culture, economy and historic experience,
then the hip-hop nation has truly come of age.
The shared historic
experience of the hip-hop nation is rich, complex and storied, replete with
triumphs and tragedies; heroes and villains; martyrs and charlatans; trials
and tribulations (a lot more trials, actually), and even a civil war that threatened
to destroy it. Charting the culture's ascent from those heady first days to
its dominant place today is the focus of the Brooklyn Museum's ambitious "Hip-Hop
Nation: Roots, Rhymes and Rage" exhibit.
Curated by hip-hop
journalist Kevin Powell, the show marks the cultural phenomenon's first appearance on this
scale in a major museum on a par with the Met's recent rock 'n' roll exhibit
and it's necessarily, as its curator insists, an introductory tour rather than the last word.
BUT EVEN AS AN
INTRODUCTION,
it's a breathtaking journey. The exhibit charts the story of hip-hop's evolution
from a party culture into a massive music phenomenon, starting when Kurtis Blow's
"The Breaks" went all the way to No. 1 hard on the heels of "Rapper's Delight."
Acts such as Eric B. and Rakim took the art of rhyming to a new level of profundity,
their trickster lyrical gymnastics cutting up and reordering the world, while
others, such as Public Enemy, used the format as a platform for social criticism
and a revival of the nationalist politics of Malcolm X. De La Soul and Tribe Called Quest were among the leaders of an imaginative school of abstract poetics
that stretched the envelope of the hip-hop form and sought to connect it with
earlier musical traditions such as bebop, but elsewhere 2 Live Crew were appropriating
the frenetic Miami drum-and-bass sound to weave lascivious sexual fantasies
that got local authorities screaming to shut them down.
Where 2 Live Crew's
potty-mouth lyrics may have sparked hip-hop's first sustained confrontation
with the law, the rise of gangsta rap opened the floodgates. N.W.A. (Niggas
With Attitude) pioneered the new form with an in-your-face contempt for authority
in tales of murder and mayhem set on the streets of Compton, Calif. "F---
tha Police" shocked mainstream America, but it resonated with the youth of the
hip-hop nation. And it proved frighteningly prophetic when L.A. erupted
in riots that shocked the world two years later. N.W.A. spawned a new breed
of rapper, styled as gun-toting hoodlum supposedly giving suburban America a
frightening peek into ghetto life the group knew from pretty early on
that about 80 percent of the people buying their albums were white, middle-class
kids. Although the industry was happy to cash in, pressure by conservative advocacy
groups on major corporations such as Time Warner (parent company of TIME.com)
resulted in the industry backing away from promoting gangsta rap. "Hip-Hop Nation"
includes original correspondence detailing efforts by Ice-T to be released from
his Warner Brothers contract after the corporation had sought to curb certain
lyrics. Gangsta rap, with
its narrative tales and its cinematic funk-driven sound, offered a distinct
alternative to the tricky bebop gymnastics of the freestyling East Coast. But
hip-hop came close to destroying itself in the mid-'90s when that bicoastal
rivalry almost turned into a shooting war, as Tupac Shakur between surviving
shootings and spells in prison threatened the life of Brooklyn rapper
the Notorious B.I.G. and both men, former friends, were by the end of 1997 dead
in as-yet-unsolved drive-by shootings.
But while most hip-hop fans today may be well versed in the
tale of Tupac and Biggie, the show
transports them back to an era they may find hard to imagine. After all, the
almost pharaonic fantasy world of a Puffy Combs video is light-years away from
the hand-stenciled mimeographs with crude sketches advertising an around-the-way
appearance of Kurtis Blow or a block party featuring Grandmaster Flash. This
was a do-it yourself movement in the outer boroughs, a culture being built
by hand, brick by brick one to which the suits running the music industry
in the glass towers across the river were mostly impervious for more
than a decade.
And for kids
grown accustomed to hip-hop as the bearer of grim tales of death and destruction,
"Hip-Hop Nation" offers a glimpse of a reminder that the cultural roots were
in joyous block parties and people having getting together to have a good time
no matter how grim their circumstances. That much is summed up in the words
of one pioneering DJ carried in a video installation: "If there was negativity
and fights breaking out at your party, that means your DJ was whack."
IT
WAS AT THOSE PARTIES in the "Boogie Down" South
Bronx where hip-hop's founding fathers Kool Herc, Afrika Bambaata and
Grandmaster Flash first began delivering spoken rhymes over the break beats on funk and disco records
sometime in the mid-'70s. Today the signature beats-and-rhymes combination
of the musical art form they created is as ubiquitous in America's tony suburbs
as in its forgotten housing projects, and has kids in distant parts of the world
whose first language may be French or Japanese or Wolof chanting choruses inviting
their friends to "get at me, dawg."
Hip-hop's language not simply its slang, which is as likely to be heard in Yale dorm rooms as on inner-city street
corners, but its idiom, which involves combining the spoken (or screamed)
word with a pastiche of musical elements drawn from previous songs and styles
reassembled in new and unique combinations is not only the preeminent musical
genre of a generation, it's also a complex, ever-evolving organism that has spawned
countless dialects that are constantly in conversation with one another.
HIP-HOP CULTURE
may be difficult to define, but it is pervasive nonetheless. It began simply
as a combination of four art forms deejaying, rapping, break dancing
and graffiti tagging but it quickly evolved into a cultural revolution
in which young African-Americans literally remade their America. In the spirit
of Malcolm X and the Black Panthers, they didn't simply demand to be admitted
as an equal in Whitey's world; they created their own popular culture grounded
in the lived reality and aspirations of black life in America. Far from demanding
to join the club, the hip-hop kids created their own. And once they'd built
it, Whitey came, desperately seeking access to the "cool" that, as Norman Mailer
famously noted, has in postwar urban America been inexorably associated with
blackness. What had started out simply as a joyous culture of black self-expression
for a new generation eventually came to dominate the American cultural landscape.
Will Smith may today be one of Hollywood's most sought-after leading men, but
a few short years ago he was simply Philadelphia's ranking rapper, aka The
Fresh Prince. And could Chris Rock have emerged as America's preeminent standup
comic making audiences laugh nervously as he rants on about hating "niggers"
without two decades of hip-hop having passed under the bridge?
And the fortunes
of the likes of Ralph Lauren, Tommy Hilfiger and Timberland over the past decade
are testimony to the power of hip-hop as American taste-maker. Initially, the
effect is achieved by unsolicited appropriation Ralph Lauren's ads were
full of white preppies, but that didn't stop the hip-hop generation from buying his
wares. Lauren's ad agency acknowledged that much by inserting Tyson Beckwith
into the preppy mix, launching the career of the first black male supermodel.
Hip-hop's power to direct tastes in everything from malt liquor to SUVs is today
assiduously courted by the advertising industry.
It is not surprisingly
given that this is America after all in the sphere of its economy that the
hip-hop nation is most evolved. Where hip-hop artists once built a following
through word of mouth at block parties and tiny clubs in New York's outer boroughs,
today they're part of a multibillion-dollar industry that invents new careers
week after week and launches them in million-dollar videos. In terms of sales,
hip-hop, together with the R&B genre that it counts as a cousin, is the largest
and the fastest-growing musical format. When the Fugees swept five awards at
the 1999 Grammys, it was simply confirmation of a trend with which the music
industry's accountants are well acquainted.
CONTROVERSIES
WITHIN HIP-HOP
the "civil war" between the coasts; the issues of corporate control
and censorship; issues of gender and the struggle of
women rappers to challenge
the negative stereotypes of black women reinforced by some of their male colleagues
are alluded to in passing, but receive scant attention in "Hip-Hop Nation."
Still other questions, such as the obvious tension between artists who still
see themselves as community activists and those who simply head for the Hamptons
are scarcely raised. But as the organizers emphasize, the show is an introduction
rather than the last word, and the deeper questions can't be explored until
a wider community is familiarized with the history. "Hopefully people will come
away from this and realize that we need colleges to be teaching courses in hip-hop
studies," says Powell. "Hopefully this show will stimulate a lot more people
to do their own exploration of the culture." And for the single most important
cultural phenomenon of the past quarter-century, such exploration is long overdue.
Most Popular »
- The Fort Hood Killer: Terrified ... or Terrorist?
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- Another Cause of Obesity: The Bacteria in Your Gut?
- Rape and the Plight of the Female Migrant Worker
- Why Did the Iraq Surge Work?
- Star Soccer Player's Suicide Leaves Germany Stunned
- Renting Your House Back: A Solution to Foreclosures?
- Recession Sparks Global Shoplifting Spree
- The Rogue Returns: On the Road with Sarah Palin
- Can the Dems Keep Putting Up with Joe Lieberman?
- Another Cause of Obesity: The Bacteria in Your Gut?
- The Fort Hood Killer: Terrified ... or Terrorist?
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- Renting Your House Back: A Solution to Foreclosures?
- Recession Sparks Global Shoplifting Spree
- Rape and the Plight of the Female Migrant Worker
- Star Soccer Player's Suicide Leaves Germany Stunned
- Are You Getting Scammed by Facebook Games?
- Why Did the Iraq Surge Work?







RSS