Thursday, September 2, 2010 1:47pm EST
Make this your Home Page | RSS 
With President Obama, Will Hip Hop Be Forced To Change Its Tune?
Sitafa Harden | Posted November 20, 2008 9:39 AMThe Obama Movement has without a doubt left an indelible imprint on American society and culture that will last for decades to come, and both during the presidential campaign and since the election the hip-hop community has been one of its most vocal and visible advocates.
In an article published in The Daily Voice last week, Justin LeGrande described how some very prominent rappers have begun to change their tones in response to President-elect Barack Obama's historic nomination and victory.
"This movement was bigger than hip-hop, bigger than the black community, it was even bigger than the United States. People across the globe were pulling for Obama, and the hope that he represented." LeGrande wrote.
"Rappers like Young Jeezy, Rick Ross, T.I., and other 'dope boy' rappers, have seemingly put aside their musical message of drugs and guns in favor of a more political one."
Will.I.Am of the Black Eyed Peas is another example. He created the "Yes We Can" tribute, a star-studded music video based on Barack Obama's stirring New Hampshire primary speech, as well as a single entitled "It's a New Day" celebrating the election. Jay-Z, Kanye West, Common, and Nas are also among the rap stars who donned their political hats to support and write rhymes praising Obama.
Do these rappers' politically-conscious musical efforts mean that sexually explicit, gangster aggrandizing, misogynistic hip hop will soon become a thing of the past?
Greg Kot, a critic for the Chicago Tribune, recently interviewed the Reverend Al Sharpton and hip hop mogul Russell Simmons on the subject.
Sharpton told Kot, "You can't be using the 'b' word, the 'n' word, the 'h' word when you have Barack Obama redefining overnight the image that black people want to have. Here's the greatest political victory in the history of black America, and the thug rappers can't come near it. They will have to change or become irrelevant."
Simmons disagreed. "Young people will use their language the way they want," he said. "If it's in their heart, they will express it."
And, certainly the tenuous phenomena of hip hop's budding transformation has not been without controversy. During the presidential campaign it was widely publicized that Obama's camp issued a statement denouncing rapper Ludicrous for what it termed "outrageously offensive" lyrics in his song "Politics As Usual."
Similarly, Young Jeezy's recently released song "My President is Black" has become a sort of anthem for some, while spawning anger and embarrassment in others.
The appropriateness of the song's choice of verbiage and subject matter is arguable. But remove the expletives and the explosive "n" word from the lyrics and what remains is a life story strongly afflicted by poverty, drugs, and imprisonment, and rife with political distrust and economic frustration. What is left is a saga that has sadly become the reality for too many of our youth.
For them, maybe Barack Obama's presidency can be a starting point, a foundation on which to restore the hope, dreams, and self-esteem of a both a musical genre and a generation.
And in the end, perhaps Young Jeezy's final revelation as the music fades will prove to be the most enduring to hip hop's youngest, most impressionable fans: I'm important, too.
Sitafa Harden is a writer in Atlanta, Georgia.
-
NEWS UPDATES
Warning: array_multisort() [function.array-multisort]: Argument #1 is expected to be an array or a sort flag in /home/content/t/h/e/thedailyvoice/html/voice/comments.php on line 6
-
Spirit commented on What's gotten into Donnie McClurkin?:
All I want to know is why everybody worry about what he is doing. You don't have a heaven or hell t...
-
gene willis commented on Angry white man snatches 'Rosa Parks' sign from black woman at town hall meeting:
watching what transpired didnt make any sense.did this woman raise the poster even after she was a...
-
Capow commented on Sarah Kruzan: 16-Year-Old sentenced to life for killing pimp:
I just don't understand the system. This young lady was fighting for her life. The system are col...
-
KHADIJAH commented on Sarah Kruzan: 16-Year-Old sentenced to life for killing pimp:
I FEEL LIKE HE ABUSE HER CHILD HOOD TOOK SOMETHING FROM THAT GIRL AND I KNOW THAT MEN TAKE ADVAN...
-
KHADIJAH commented on Sarah Kruzan: 16-Year-Old sentenced to life for killing pimp:
I FEEL LIKE HE ABUSE HER CHILD HOOD TOOK SOMETHING FROM THAT GIRL AND I KNOW THAT MEN TAKE ADVAN...
Mark Allen
John Amaechi
Maya Angelou
Crystal McCrary Anthony
Patricia Arnold
Algernon Austin
Randall Bailey
Rick Blalock
Kola Boof
Keith Boykin
Mario Brossard
Michael Brown
Theresa Caldwell
Clay Cane
Jasmyne Cannick
Charisse Carney-Nunes
Audrey Chapman
Gordon Chambers
Staceyann Chin
Mark Corece
Gilda Daniels
Yvonne R. Davis
Terrance Dean
Marcia Dyson
Damon Evans
M. Franklin
Lenora Fulani
Ron Glover
Keli Goff
Peter Gomes
Deondray Gossett
Kia Gregory
Zulema Griffin
Malcolm Harris
Marc Lamont Hill
Alicia Hines
Dennis R. Holmes, M.D
Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Jessica Ingram-Bellamy
Jacqueline Jackson
Avis Jones-DeWeever
Quincy Lenear
Carl Lewis
Rae Lewis-Thornton
Shannon J. Love
Rod McCullom
Terry McMillan
M.W. Moore
Alphonso Morgan
Nicholas Nelson
Clarence Nero
Charles Ogletree
Spencer Overton
Shirley Parker
Deval Patrick
Charles Pugh
Anwar Robinson
Eugene S. Robinson
Rashad Robinson
Mark Sawyer
Tara Setmayer
Rev. William Sinkford
Alexander Smalls
Basil Smikle
Nadine Smith
Doug Spearman
John Stanley
Jamal Story
Ronald Sullivan
David Dante Troutt
Omar Tyree
Linda Villarosa
Dorian Warren
Isaiah Washington
Robin Washington
Diane Weathers
Reg Weaver
Marcia J. Williams
Nathan Hale Williams
Jeff Winbush
Kai Wright



MySpace
flickr
YouTube

2008-11-20 11:20:23
2008-11-20 13:51:30
2008-11-20 15:18:11
2008-11-20 16:58:25
Obama is a representation of blacks just as those in the hip-hop industry are. We should shy away from convincing ourselves that Barack Obama is THE standard for black men. There are fed-ex workers who are great examples for black men.
Some of the artists within the hip-hop industry need to clean up their acts irrespective of who the president is. But then again, so do those who support them--which includes millions of people. Will america change it's tune because Obama was elected?
2008-11-20 17:23:39
2008-11-20 18:16:53
2008-11-20 22:39:23
There needs to be a concerted COLLABORATIVE, effort. Some give and take on both sides. Until that happens, the problem will continue.
2008-11-22 19:48:37
2008-11-24 19:23:29
2008-12-17 03:35:34
To see your comment, wait approximately two minutes, then simply refresh the page.
Report issues/abuses to suggestions@thedailyvoice.com