Spirits in the Material World

The soul in rap music

BY: Robert A. George

Since slave days and the creation of the spiritual, American black music has encompassed body, mind and spirit, used to entertain, uplift, and inform. Today's rap, and the hip-hop culture from which it springs, fits well within that tradition.

Rap traces its roots to Jamaica, where, in the late 1960s, party DJs would often "toast" or speak in a sing-song over a rhythm dance track. Hip-hop became, and is still, the preferred staple for partying, from Tone Loc's "Wild Thing" in the '80s to Will Smith's recent hit, "Getting Jiggy Wit It." But from its introduction, rap wove itself into American black culture. The first huge rap anthem, 1979's "Rapper's Delight," celebrated both the art form itself and the easy pleasure of hanging on the corner, trading rhymes.

Soon, alongside the partying, other strains developed. In the early '70s, with the rise of radical groups like The Last Poets, rap became a rapid-fire mechanism for communication in the information age. The 1982 hit Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five's "The Message" portrayed the starkness of inner-city life: "It's like a jungle sometime/It's a wonder I keep from going under." Public Enemy's Chuck D has called rap the "black people's CNN"--the place where the folks get their information. In 1988, N.W.A.'s profane "[Expletive] Tha Police" was considered appalling. Three years later, after the Rodney King verdict, it seemed prophetic, and suddenly rap became more credible in the wider culture as a political, spiritual, even a journalistic voice.

Meanwhile, the competing, and often contradictory, building blocks of contemporary rap were being put into place. KRS-ONE and his Boogie Down Productions offered philosophy; Public Enemy preached its radical form of politics; and, on the West Coast, N.W.A. (Niggaz With Attitude) offered a raw, cynical nihilism, sneering, "Life ain't nuthin' but b**ches and money."

The latter, sad to say, seems to have come to dominate. The popular white rapper Eminem, who was discovered by N.W.A. founding member Dr. Dre, has received negative attention for lyrics that insult gays and express violence to women (including, in one song, the mother of his child).

Though rap's core audience now is young whites, it has been spared the fate of jazz and rock and roll: It is still overwhelmingly produced and performed by African-Americans. Eminems are still somewhat rare. However, more and more white rockers, like Limp Bizkit, Kid Rock, and Rage Against the Machine, are incorporating rap rhythms and style into the traditional rock structure. As the sound is annexed by white groups, the cultural-political aspect has accordingly become more derivative. Public Enemy and N.W.A. correctly identified some of the troubles of urban America that produced the L.A. riots--but what's next?

That may depend on the genre's more hopeful, but limited, spiritual strain. "Hiphop is not Rap!" declares KRS-One on his new release, "A Retrospective." "Rap is something you do, Hiphop is something you live." KRS, the former Chris Parker, has lived it. He has been in the game for nearly 14 years. Following the release of his first album, "Criminal-Minded," KRS-ONE's producer/partner/mentor Scott LaRock was gunned down. Since then, he has been the leading proponent of a form of rap that is philosophical in both content and tone. An early hit was even called "My Philosophy." Another was an exhortation, "You Must Learn." Parker perceives himself as a teacher. Appropriately, he sprinkles much of his work with various Afrocentric themes and "lessons."

Today, Parker speaks of a "Temple of Hiphop," and while no one doubts his sincerity, his hold on the truth is questionable. Hip-hop may be a culture, but that doesn't make it a religion. Or rather, Parker confuses a religious culture with a culture that can lead to religion. Is hip-hop a very creative culture? Most definitely. Can it be an informing culture? At times, yes. But KRS-ONE himself has predicted what bedevils the art form most. On his album, "EDUTAINMENT," Parker warns, "Love's Gonna Getcha (Material Love)," a fable about a young boy who gets caught up in the gangsta life. As of today, hip-hop seems to have become "caught up." It worships most the mighty dollar, and can do so in the most bracing, appalling manner.

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