Crunk: Hip-Hop's Got a New Accent
Southern musicians aren't used to being on the tail end of any genre. After all, the South is where jazz and blues were invented. Where Robert Johnson supposedly sold his soul to the devil so he could play the licks that would become rock 'n' roll. Where Ray Charles realized that gospel sounded just as good outside of church. So the past 25 years must have been painful for Southern rappers, having to stand by while New York City and Los Angeles rhymers got all the respect and most of the record sales.
Not anymore. The South is finally where hip-hop's at. These days, the biggest acts on Billboard's urban charts and on MTV are Southerners like the Ying Yang Twins, Ludacris, Mike Jones and, of course, Atlanta duo Outkast, which last year became the first hip-hop act to win a Grammy for Album of the Year. The cutting edge of Southern music: a danceable, rapid-fire, bass-heavy rap (frequently blended with R&B) called crunk, fine-tuned and marketed by loud, gold-toothed former DJ Lil Jon and popularized partly through his massive and spectacularly vulgar hit Get Low. His music--along with the crunk (Southern shorthand for "cranked up," as in increased volume; it also alludes to getting crazy drunk) label--has made its way through every city block to the hip-hop mainstream.
Just how Southern has the urban-music scene become? Four of the 10 rap artists who got the most airplay last year were from the South. These days, the rappers from the lower states have clothing lines, accessories, even branded beverages (Lil Jon's energy drink is called Crunk Juice), not to mention alliances with the biggest pop artists. The Ying Yang Twins have collaborated with Britney Spears, and Destiny's Child commissioned Atlanta rapper T.I. on a recent single. Lil Jon has produced big crunk hits for Atlantans Usher (Yeah!) and Ciara (Goodies).
No self-respecting rap neighborhood would be without its mogul. The South has New Orleans' Master P., who only 12 years ago was selling discs out of the back of his car. Today he is one of the most successful independent rappers in the business--the self-proclaimed "ghetto Bill Gates"--with a clothing line, a movie-production company, an acting career in film and on TV (he plays dad to his real-life son on Nickelodeon's Romeo) and 11 albums, the latest of which, Ghetto Bill: The Best Hustler in the Game, came out last week. His theory is that people are attracted to the sort of levity Southern rappers provide. "It's like Southern hospitality. People can party together. When you bring a Southern artist to your town, it's not about Crips or Bloods," he says. "We're able to get money from everybody."
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- How Medicated Was Michael Jackson?
- Why Sarah Palin Quit as Governor
- Searching for Palin's 'Hot Photos'
- Behind North Korea's Missile Launch
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- Asian Film Fireworks for the Fourth
- What Michael Jackson Did on His Last Day
- U.S. and Russia: The Talk Starts Here
- When Benedict Meets Barack
- Director Sydney Pollack Dies
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- How Medicated Was Michael Jackson?
- Asian Film Fireworks for the Fourth
- Schwarzenegger's Failure in California
- Goldman Sachs vs. Rolling Stone: A Wall Street Smackdown
- TV for Babies: Does It Help or Hurt?
- Why He's a Thriller
- What Happened to the Stimulus?
- Why Marriage Matters
- Amazing Births







RSS