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Like the cowbell, the Nate Doggs of the game can only be used sparingly.
If 6 Was '06...Call and Response[6 February 2006] With the ritualistic deluge of year-end music lists barely behind us, Nishimoto offers up a different kind of list to help hip-hop's 2006 future learn from its 2005 mistakes. by Dan NishimotoI actually loathe year-end lists. Not for particularly unique reasons: I find them reductive, unimaginative, and to be a conflict of interest (for anyone that reads lists like a suggested shopping list, please note that many of the endorsed products were not paid for by the endorsers). I am also aware of the counterpoints: lists can be convenient, imaginative, and valid purchasing suggestions, depending on how the writer approaches the assignment. To each his/her own, right? So, chalk up my displeasure to the pleasure I take in preferring to speak specifically rather than broadly when writing about music. So, how is it that I manage to contradict myself every year when I draw up lists, anyway? In defense, my lists are a little different. I like to think of them as a compromise between standard best-of lists and the point-counterpoint debate constantly being waged upstairs. For example, a current thread I am running is a list of songs with sample clearance lawsuits (both settled in or outside of court), all for the purpose of building a nerdtastic mix of litigious hip-hop history. Yes, it is myopic in scope and mostly indulgent in the greater scheme of things. But it is a great exercise for my sense of history. And, more important, it’s FUN. Which brings us to our topic today: how to have fun with hip-hop. I say that not in the sense of, “Rappers need to learn to have fun” (although he could stand to lighten up), but rather in how to have an entertaining yet substantive discussion about hip-hop. And while I enjoy wading through the deluge of hip-hop ‘scholarship’ out there (ha!), at the end of the day I try to find digestible and engaging ways to approach such a broad topic. So, at year’s end I did what a lot of other folks did: I reflected. And, like a lot of other folks, I found myself mulling over things that I liked about hip-hop’s accomplishments in 2005, other things that I did not like so much about hip-hop’s accomplishments in 2005, and a random smattering of things that sounded funny in the context of hip-hop in 2005. With the goal of presenting ideas that pertain specifically to 2005/2006, I filtered them down. Now, I present to you a list of six points that hip-hop artists should leave behind in 2005 and six points that they should continue in 2006. Some of it is serious, some of it is silly, some of it may even be inaccurate, but all of it is sincere and about as on-point as I can be. Just like this hip-hop thing we love so much, right? Leave That Noise in ‘05:
1. Don’t Believe the Hype. The media often singles out hip-hop for using such disagreement and suspicion to justify violence and make commercial gains, yet conveniently forgets that no history remains immune from such irrationality. To hip-hop’s credit, it is one of the few arenas where conflict has its own genre and DVD series. Out of such competition, some artists have even produced exceptional work (e.g., BDP’s “Bridge Is Over” v. Shan’s “The Bridge"). However, the vast bulk of beef has been relatively Grade D. UTFO’s “Roxanne, Roxanne” inspired a number of responses, the majority of which few remember. Backpackers love to regale each other with tales of Casual/Hiero butting heads with Saafir/Hobo on KMEL, but anyone that actually heard that battle surely remembers better instances of freestyling from each party involved. Craig G and Supernatural’s feud brought out the worst of their personalities as the unquestionable freestyle champs resorted to sneak attacks on the other. And to call “Takeover” or “Ether” the apices of Jay’s and Nas’s careers, respectively, is simply ludicrous. Yet 2005 may go down as the year that hip-hop bathed itself in this unglamorous reputation. Taking a quick lead from the Eminem v. Benzino Sauce and G-Unit v. G-Unot campaigns, the attention-hungry took it to the low road and racked up headlines: The Lox v. P. Diddy; B.G. v. the Hot Boys; Lil’ Flip v. T.I.; Lil’ Flip v. Paul Wall; Lil’ Flip v. Slim Thug; Mobb Deep v. Nas (again); Benzino v. Ozone; Funk Flex v. Spinbad; Bow Wow v. Will Smith; the Game v. Some Dude; and a Soccer Mom v. Chamillionaire. Oh, and 50 Cent v. the World. In one of the most ig’nant developments for both the artist (for submitting to it) and the audience (for stoking it), beef has reached its logical conclusion as a marketing tool. Unfortunately, 2006 has started with a disappointing bang. As Spine so eloquently wrote on 19 January, “Apparently unaware it’s a trend that was played out nearly five years ago, a publicity-hungry Cam’ron makes a record dissing Jay-Z.” While kids wonder whether Jay will respond or what Cam’s next move will be, simple perspective proves more productive. Keep the beef in ‘05, no one here is looking for it. (Postscript: Leaking a track on satellite radio is dumb, dumb, dumb, dumb....)
2. Odd Couples. I actually don’t have a solution for this besides using better judgment and straightening priorities. I mean, what’s it going to take to get certain artists (you know who you are) to challenge themselves? Do you want a moratorium placed on Luda guest spots or Fatman Scoop drops? Like a cowbell, these Nate Doggs of the game can only be used sparingly. That said, maybe the answer lies in life experience. What better source for intrigue than the human memory? In the words of Chris Rock, “Why don’t you go out and get kidnapped, have some new shit happen to you?’’
3. Kidz Hop.
4. Hip-Hop. Literally. Like, I Mean It. Which is precisely why this safe isht needs to stop. To suggest that a parody song ("Mack on some cupcakes?” Maybe I’ll go pimp some pumpernickel next) fulfills some supposed void ("Maybe ["Chronic(les)"] points up what’s missing in mainstream rap an awareness that it’s OK to be goofy") is uninformed at best. What? Hip-hop doesn’t have a sense of humor? What were the catch phrases of the year? “What??” “Yeah!!!” “Bye, N*a!” Oh, I’m sorry, I thought Kurt Cobain said that. For this supposedly downtrodden populace, I submit David Banner’s “F*kin’” (err...I mean, “Touchin’"): Pure evidence that hip-hop loves to have fun. The beat turns you out in all the right ways while Banner sings with isht-eating glee. But, to paraphrase Louis Armstrong, “If I have to explain it to you, you will never understand it.” Perhaps a better illustration of this “cognitive dissonance” is the year’s Mantan show, R. Kelly’s Trapped in the Closet. From rockist send-ups to a Cliff’s Notes summary, countless decided the best way to interpret Kelly was to transcribe his work in a manner that everyone (...) could understand. I suppose this point flew over my head because Robert Kelly has been funny and deranged for the duration of his decade-plus career. And apparently it takes a child rape acquittal and a midget crapping his pants for the rest of the nation to figure out there may be something funny in that brownie. I hate to be a censor, but I am also a hater. Until you understand the humor of the situation, please leave the safe spins in the garbage bin. Same place where your Weird Al discs wound up. Of course, for every idiot outside of hip-hop that needs to shut the eff up is an idiot inside hip-hop that needs to shut the eff up…
5. Trap-Hop. In a sign of hip-hop’s newest level of ig’nance, documentaries were needed to remind folks of the ravages of concentrated cocaine hydrochloride (1 More Hit) and blood diamonds (Bling: Consequences and Repercussions). Hua Hsu posits an interesting theory for this latest surge in hedonism: “It’s the 1980s again in the streets, all me-first, get-rich-quick flash.” Which is an unfortunate delusion, because that is far from the case (links via Notes and Poplicks). 6. Stop Ig’nance.
Keep Keepin’ on in ‘06:
1. Give the Drum Machine Some.
2. Steady Mobbin’.
3. Body Rock Versus Bothered Rock.
4. Take That, Rewind It Back.
5. Ask Not What Your Label Can Do for You, Ask What You Can Dew fo’ Sef’.
6. Believe the Hyphy. Once again, consider these as suggestions and opinions. As my yoga instructor says, “Don’t think of goals, because goals are either met with success or failure.” And I am not trying to make or break hip-hop in any given year just trying to see it move along. So, here’s to 2006: keep diggin’, y’all. Call and ResponseBack in the DayDan Nishimoto11.Aug.08 Heat and beats make for a good combination. No surprise then that most of my memorable experiences related to hip-hop happened during the summer. Yes We Can CanDan Nishimoto05.Jun.08 The recent "censure" of The Boondocks demonstrates the difficulty art faces in raising a critical converation in a corporate setting. Considering hip-hop's deep embedding into corporate culture, how can radical change happen? It Ain't No JokeDan Nishimoto01.Apr.08 Hip-hop, like most other arts, intentionally pays humor less mind because, hey, it's not supposed to be taken seriously! But seriously.
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