Archive for April, 2005


Apr
12
2005

Hip Hop & Profanity

My 10-year old cousin knows all the “cuss words” in existence yet he’ll pee on himself before letting any one of those s-words, or n-words crawl out of his mouth. He listens to Hip Hop diligently (well, the urban radio’s version of Hip Hop). Forget the political arm of this intense debate. FCC apart, is it morally correct to expose children to raw rap songs? Would you, as a die-hard Hip Hop fan, play the unedited version of Cypress Hill’s “How I Could Just Kill A Man” to your 8 year-old’s hearing?
There’s no right way to do the wrong thing. Children under 15 years of age are in the most fragile period of their life. That’s what I like to call the “Grooming Phase” usually characterized by habit-forming. Like a sponge, most kids in that age range would absorb the most dominant nutrients you have to offer, unfiltered. So, it would be absolutely detrimental to their psyche to expose kids to music, and movies containing strong images, visual or verbal.
Of course they’ll later find out for themselves that their most adorable favorites like Ice Cube and Dr. Dre once made violent songs filled with descriptions of misogyny and death threats. Later, when they’re probably old enough to understand. Notice my choice of words:”descriptions of…”. In other words, I’m not arguing that such songs were portrayed actual lifestyles of these hardcore rappers. I’m merely saying that such details should be left for the older audience.
Most adults are mature enough to sift the truth from the reality, while very few ‘youngsters’ even understand the difference. If video games are carnal enough to corrupt young minds, then there’s no arguing the fact that violent music is sure to dissensitize a frail mind after much exposure.


Apr
9
2005

50 Most Influential Hip Hop Heads

50. Onyx
49.Ras Kass
48.DPG/Snoop Doggy Dogg
47.Arrested Development
46.Black Star
45.Da Beatminerz/Black Moon
44.Jay-Z
43.Whodini
42.The Roots
41.Fugees
40.MC Lyte
39.Schooly D
38.Big L
37.Leaders of The New School
36.Big Daddy Kane
35.Melle Mel
34.Geto Boys (Scarface)
33.LL Cool J
32.Big Pun
31.Wu-Tang Clan
30.Main Source/Large Professor
29.Run-DMC
28.Public Enemy/Chuck D
27.De La Soul/Digable Planets
26.Common Sense
25.The Notorious B.I.G.
24.N.W.A.
23.OutKast
22.House of Pain
21.Bahamadia/Roxanne Shante
20.Biz Markie/Grandmaster Flash
19.EPMD
18.Pete Rock & CL Smooth
17.The Sugarhill Gang
16.Grandmaster Caz
15.DJ Marley Marl/Juice Crew
14.Kool G. Rap
13.A Tribe Called Quest
12.NaS
11.GangStarr
10.Kool Moe Dee
09.Slick Rick
08.KRS-One/BDP/Scott LaRock
07.Tupac Shakur
06.Rocksteady Crew(Crazy Legs)
05.Rick Rubin/Russel Simmons
04.Doug E. Fresh
03.Rakim (Eric B. & Rakim)
02.Afrikaa Bambataa (Zulu Nation)
01.Kool Herc


Apr
9
2005

The Game Vs 50: Did We Fall For Yet Another Hoax?

The beef between 50 Cent and his protege, Chuck Taylor aka The Game may have been another attempt to coy Rap fans. Obviously, the so-called fracas materialized into record sales for the G-Unit General (The Massacre was certified platinum in its first week).
50 Cent blazed through the doors of Hip Hop by taking corny shots at Hip Hop heavyweights and celebrities in general, his first major tutorial in “Publicity Stunt 101″. He then went ahead to publicize his near-irrelevant brouhaha with Ja-Rule and Irv Gotti before scoring another one with the Game recently.
Perhaps the most memorable part of the friction is symbolized in this picture of Game and 50 making out. Image hosted by Photobucket.com

Apr
8
2005

Welcome to The Rap Up

Thanks for stopping by The Rap Up. I’m Rizoh, and I’ll be your host for today.


Apr
8
2005

The Resurrection

Like the similarly titled song by Common, the resurrection of Hip Hop is here. Many have lamented over the death of this hugely exploited culture but I beg to differ.
Stay tuned into this site for more!


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