Author Topic: Another Hip hop paper thread  (Read 225 times)

NotoriousTDA

  • Guest
Another Hip hop paper thread
« on: October 11, 2007, 03:32:56 PM »
Im doing an essay in english class, and i chose 90's vs today's rap music as my topic. My arguement is that I feel music quality in the 90's was much better then todays.

Does anybody who feels the same as I do, list some possible directions I can go with this statement? Any ideas would help.


Cheers
 

Now_Im_Not_Banned

  • Guest
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #1 on: October 11, 2007, 03:59:16 PM »
"Why rap/hip-hop in the 90's was so much better than rap/hip-hop today"

I think the title would be good enough for an A.
 

Dubz

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 1571
  • Karma: -8
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #2 on: October 11, 2007, 08:46:35 PM »
^LOL


just compare shit. word up. like, make comparisons of not only song quality, but creativity of concepts/innovation, skills (flowing, writing, freestyling, shit... even beatboxing), passion, etc.
 

smegma

  • Guest
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #3 on: October 11, 2007, 10:26:07 PM »
Compare the creative control of the artists and you'll pass this easily.
 

Tanjential

  • Hip Hop Hippie
  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 6901
  • Thanked: 13 times
  • Karma: 1647
  • California Livin' - Murs and Me
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #4 on: October 12, 2007, 10:31:45 AM »
Im doing an essay in english class, and i chose 90's vs today's rap music as my topic. My arguement is that I feel music quality in the 90's was much better then todays.

Does anybody who feels the same as I do, list some possible directions I can go with this statement? Any ideas would help.


Cheers

Basically this. It's not that the 90's shit was better but the trajectory of hip hop/mainstream music was that so that the good shit was the popular shit.

There's hip hop as good now as it was then but that shit is not mainstream succesful like the good shit was back then.

Hip hop was so young in the 80s, so by the 90s it had not only blown up but many artists had sophisticated it. It blew up so fast so sophisticated that corporations didn't have a chance to water it down before it got to us. and upstart labels like ruthless and death row were able to cash the fuck in.

but because hip hop artists/community were not able to leave the gang roots out of it/work for and with each other they all split up to do their own labels instead of making a few really strong labels. daz had a label, nate had a label, warren g had a label, snoop had a label, dre had a label, etc. imagine if all those dudes STAYED on the SAME label and worked TOGETHER to make that ONE label STRONGER? But they didn't because of egos and money and corporate executives took advantage of the disarray of hip hop artists on the business side. They took the product, dumbed it down for the lowest common denominator and the genre reaches a wider and wider spectrum of people all the time.

The more people you want to spread a product to, the more you have to dumb it down to the lowest common denominator. you have to break it down to really simple concepts that anyone can understand.

in the 80s the mainstream was about many aspects of life from art, to sneakers, to food, to street life, gangs, drugs, dancing. 10 years later alot of it was simplified to women and gang life. 10 years later it's even more simplified: women/money. 10 years from now the mainstream will be even simpler to reach and get the money of an even wider audience.

our only hope is for the market to become so oversaturated(and trust, it is happening. look at record sales) with hip hop that the bubble pops and only the people who care about the art and not just those who care about the latest trend are the ones producing the product.

-T

 
Fee Fie Foe Fum; somethin' stank and I want some.

My hip-hop group The West Coast Avengers @

westcoastavengers.com

@tanjintwiggy and @westcoastavengers on Instagram
 

Tanjential

  • Hip Hop Hippie
  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 6901
  • Thanked: 13 times
  • Karma: 1647
  • California Livin' - Murs and Me
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #5 on: October 12, 2007, 10:34:48 AM »
there's your paper man^

give some historical context, add more references to east and west, take out the cuss words and bam.

done

-T

 
Fee Fie Foe Fum; somethin' stank and I want some.

My hip-hop group The West Coast Avengers @

westcoastavengers.com

@tanjintwiggy and @westcoastavengers on Instagram
 

NotoriousTDA

  • Guest
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #6 on: October 12, 2007, 12:05:06 PM »
Tanj you always seem to impress me
 

Tanjential

  • Hip Hop Hippie
  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 6901
  • Thanked: 13 times
  • Karma: 1647
  • California Livin' - Murs and Me
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #7 on: October 12, 2007, 12:26:39 PM »
+1 man

too bad the rest of these cats don't agree, thanks man

-T

 
Fee Fie Foe Fum; somethin' stank and I want some.

My hip-hop group The West Coast Avengers @

westcoastavengers.com

@tanjintwiggy and @westcoastavengers on Instagram
 

.:TimeLock:.

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 1429
  • Karma: 159
  • Da Time Keepa!
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #8 on: October 12, 2007, 02:26:43 PM »
Im doing an essay in english class, and i chose 90's vs today's rap music as my topic. My arguement is that I feel music quality in the 90's was much better then todays.

Does anybody who feels the same as I do, list some possible directions I can go with this statement? Any ideas would help.


Cheers

Basically this. It's not that the 90's shit was better but the trajectory of hip hop/mainstream music was that so that the good shit was the popular shit.

There's hip hop as good now as it was then but that shit is not mainstream succesful like the good shit was back then.

Hip hop was so young in the 80s, so by the 90s it had not only blown up but many artists had sophisticated it. It blew up so fast so sophisticated that corporations didn't have a chance to water it down before it got to us. and upstart labels like ruthless and death row were able to cash the fuck in.

but because hip hop artists/community were not able to leave the gang roots out of it/work for and with each other they all split up to do their own labels instead of making a few really strong labels. daz had a label, nate had a label, warren g had a label, snoop had a label, dre had a label, etc. imagine if all those dudes STAYED on the SAME label and worked TOGETHER to make that ONE label STRONGER? But they didn't because of egos and money and corporate executives took advantage of the disarray of hip hop artists on the business side. They took the product, dumbed it down for the lowest common denominator and the genre reaches a wider and wider spectrum of people all the time.

The more people you want to spread a product to, the more you have to dumb it down to the lowest common denominator. you have to break it down to really simple concepts that anyone can understand.

in the 80s the mainstream was about many aspects of life from art, to sneakers, to food, to street life, gangs, drugs, dancing. 10 years later alot of it was simplified to women and gang life. 10 years later it's even more simplified: women/money. 10 years from now the mainstream will be even simpler to reach and get the money of an even wider audience.

our only hope is for the market to become so oversaturated(and trust, it is happening. look at record sales) with hip hop that the bubble pops and only the people who care about the art and not just those who care about the latest trend are the ones producing the product.

-T

damn u did all the work pretty much for the kid lol

that's some real shit u spoke on though i argee with u

peace


 

Tanjential

  • Hip Hop Hippie
  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 6901
  • Thanked: 13 times
  • Karma: 1647
  • California Livin' - Murs and Me
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #9 on: October 12, 2007, 04:00:17 PM »
+1

-T

 
Fee Fie Foe Fum; somethin' stank and I want some.

My hip-hop group The West Coast Avengers @

westcoastavengers.com

@tanjintwiggy and @westcoastavengers on Instagram
 

Cheese

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 2183
  • Karma: 755
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #10 on: October 14, 2007, 11:40:27 AM »
maybe you should give a definition of what you consider "better quality" first. From that you can measure 90's and tday's rap music.
 

K.Dub

  • Magic
  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 12676
  • Karma: 1119
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #11 on: October 14, 2007, 12:14:20 PM »
Sounds like a good paper

kemizt
 

TraceOneInfinite Flat Earther 96'

  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 13916
  • Thanked: 460 times
  • Karma: -1652
  • Permanent Resident Flat Erth 1996 Pre-Sept. 13th
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #12 on: October 14, 2007, 01:45:14 PM »
Im doing an essay in english class, and i chose 90's vs today's rap music as my topic. My arguement is that I feel music quality in the 90's was much better then todays.

Does anybody who feels the same as I do, list some possible directions I can go with this statement? Any ideas would help.


Cheers

Nice paper, can you post it here when your finished?  I would like to see how it comes out.

1rst things 1rst, hip-hop is dead.  And it died on September 13th, 1996.  2pac described himself as "the realest rapper out there".  2pac kept hiphop real in the 90's, and soon after he died the shiny suit, puffy and mase bubble gum pop era gained greater popularity.   There was nobody left to step to fake artists in the game like Jay-Z and Bad Boy Records as Pac did in his last testament, Mackevelli the Don Kulluminati.

However, it wasn't a sudden death, but rather a slow decay.  The 90's managed to finish strong, as Eminem brought hiphop lyricism back to its roots, by rising up through the underground and battle scene, and then connecting with the greatest producer and legend of the past, Dr. Dre.

The underground gained the spotlight in the late 90's piggybacking off Eminem's sucess, websites such as hiphopsite.com connected with Em's website and gave exposure to dozens of diverse underground artists.  Also, just as in the late 80's you had the rise of Islamic consciousness, once more in the late 90's conscious artists were going gold.  Dead Prez dropped the greatest hiphop album ever, "Lets get free" and Mos Def and Kweli put together a quality set of duo and solo albums.

The 90's also saw the rise of the West Coast and gangsta rap.  But since the 90's, hiphop has lost its focus, intensity, and lost its way.  Rappers like Eazy E and his protege's Bone were organic, the dressed in regular street clothes and acted like the brothers around the way.

In the new millineium everything is fake, every artists has to pretend they are a hustler, making millions off crack and rap and fucking 100's of women and makin bubble gum love pop rap tracks like Nelly and Ja Rule.

Also, digital media has wrecked hihop in the new millinieum.  The most obvious example of this Rass Kass.  He's an artist that in the 90's could manage to sell about 2 to 300,000, which is just enough for the label to recoup and turn a profit.  Rass Kass was not a popular artist with 14 year old teenage girls, but he was one of the most respected artists amongst online hiphopheads.  So once these fans could now download the album for free, his 3rd album Van Gogh kept getting leaked before its release date, and subsequently it was never worth it for the label to release the album.  It got caught up in red tape, never came out, Rass was dropped from his label, and we still have yet to see an album in this millinium from one of the greatest lyricists hiphop has ever seen.

But what we do see is a tireless output of tracks like "walk it out" or "Lean With It Rock With" that have no substance or critical acclaim, but 14 year old girls purchase these songs for their ring tones.  Ring tones have provided lables with a loophole to make up aquire some of the money they've lost on record sales.

HipHop is dead, just ask Nas... peace.
Givin' respect to 2pac September 7th-13th The Day Hip-Hop Died

(btw, Earth 🌎 is not a spinning water ball)
 

Al Bundy

Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #13 on: October 14, 2007, 03:02:48 PM »
Im doing an essay in english class, and i chose 90's vs today's rap music as my topic. My arguement is that I feel music quality in the 90's was much better then todays.

Does anybody who feels the same as I do, list some possible directions I can go with this statement? Any ideas would help.


Cheers

Nice paper, can you post it here when your finished?  I would like to see how it comes out.

1rst things 1rst, hip-hop is dead.  And it died on September 13th, 1996.  2pac described himself as "the realest rapper out there".  2pac kept hiphop real in the 90's, and soon after he died the shiny suit, puffy and mase bubble gum pop era gained greater popularity.   There was nobody left to step to fake artists in the game like Jay-Z and Bad Boy Records as Pac did in his last testament, Mackevelli the Don Kulluminati.

However, it wasn't a sudden death, but rather a slow decay.  The 90's managed to finish strong, as Eminem brought hiphop lyricism back to its roots, by rising up through the underground and battle scene, and then connecting with the greatest producer and legend of the past, Dr. Dre.

The underground gained the spotlight in the late 90's piggybacking off Eminem's sucess, websites such as hiphopsite.com connected with Em's website and gave exposure to dozens of diverse underground artists.  Also, just as in the late 80's you had the rise of Islamic consciousness, once more in the late 90's conscious artists were going gold.  Dead Prez dropped the greatest hiphop album ever, "Lets get free" and Mos Def and Kweli put together a quality set of duo and solo albums.

The 90's also saw the rise of the West Coast and gangsta rap.  But since the 90's, hiphop has lost its focus, intensity, and lost its way.  Rappers like Eazy E and his protege's Bone were organic, the dressed in regular street clothes and acted like the brothers around the way.

In the new millineium everything is fake, every artists has to pretend they are a hustler, making millions off crack and rap and fucking 100's of women and makin bubble gum love pop rap tracks like Nelly and Ja Rule.

Also, digital media has wrecked hihop in the new millinieum.  The most obvious example of this Rass Kass.  He's an artist that in the 90's could manage to sell about 2 to 300,000, which is just enough for the label to recoup and turn a profit.  Rass Kass was not a popular artist with 14 year old teenage girls, but he was one of the most respected artists amongst online hiphopheads.  So once these fans could now download the album for free, his 3rd album Van Gogh kept getting leaked before its release date, and subsequently it was never worth it for the label to release the album.  It got caught up in red tape, never came out, Rass was dropped from his label, and we still have yet to see an album in this millinium from one of the greatest lyricists hiphop has ever seen.

But what we do see is a tireless output of tracks like "walk it out" or "Lean With It Rock With" that have no substance or critical acclaim, but 14 year old girls purchase these songs for their ring tones.  Ring tones have provided lables with a loophole to make up aquire some of the money they've lost on record sales.

HipHop is dead, just ask Nas... peace.

LOL @ it died when 2Pac did. What kind of groupie shit is that? Hip-hop started before 2Pac and it's not going to end anytime soon.
 

Tanjential

  • Hip Hop Hippie
  • Muthafuckin' Don!
  • *****
  • Posts: 6901
  • Thanked: 13 times
  • Karma: 1647
  • California Livin' - Murs and Me
Re: Another Hip hop paper thread
« Reply #14 on: October 14, 2007, 03:22:51 PM »
2pac was symbolic of the rise and fall of west coast gangsta rap. I'll give you that, but to say that that whole genre rested on him is rather ridiculous in my opinion.

he was a symbolic martyr and possibly to an extent interdependent with the genre but to act like he was the alpha and the omega is, once more my opinion, rather ridiculous.

-T

 
Fee Fie Foe Fum; somethin' stank and I want some.

My hip-hop group The West Coast Avengers @

westcoastavengers.com

@tanjintwiggy and @westcoastavengers on Instagram