Formant024
Digital Smokerings
ill o.g.
classic said:Thats cool. But i doubt a japnoise person can really grasp the significanee of 2 pacs lyrics.
I know this sounds kinda racist and i dont intended it to.
But sometimes i really worry if people outside the African american or urban american culture really understand the context of hip hop.
Imagnie me getting real hevey into irish music. I mean i can love it and cheris it but no matter how much i listen to it i doubt i could have the same apperication for it as someone from ireland. Thats becasue it was created for irish people in that context.
Its just strange to go differnt places in the world and seeing people trying to dress, look, and talk like me.
But on the other hand i understand where u guys are coming from too. Casue I myself am a classical pianist and I LOVE classical music just as much as hip hop. I still think that its a little differnt though casue classical music(as well as other types of music) do not have a culture attached to it. You dont have to appericate German culture to understand and appericate am aria by bach. Where as i feel u do have to understand black american culture to really grasp the meaning of 2pac or public emeny.
class...
P.S(again im not trying to offend anyone just stateing my opionion)
I personaly dont care for colour, everythings grey to me. The context of hiphop to me has nothing to do with the history of the afro american culture, but with progression. If hiphop would emphasize on the history of the afro american culture we'd all be pessimists cuz it's a sad history. I can't be bothered or to take the black history in my consideration simply because I didn't live it to judge it. In my idealogy of hiphop there's no emphasizing on race indeed, but with the perspective that black dont even rap about blacks but refer a person instead. It's different today though, it's typical to ridicule white people in hiphop videos while I believe that it's a reaction to a damage given. There's the right to it but there's also a point where the same perspectives cross and deliver the same result, seperation.
To give an example, I dont live in the us but overhere it's pretty common to walk the street and seeing/meeting a lot of different ethnics on the street. If I was to go to an airport chances are doubled seeing/meeting different ethnics. ( now just to point out how much I care about chart music hehe ) There's this video by Kanye West on which he drops this girl at the airport or she drops him at the airport, whatever. I dont know the chorus or tracktitle because I compulsivly swap channles or mute the noise but...There's no other race to be found in the videoclip except for the white security @ the metal detector, which is being stereotyped by a typical black case of stereotypicing. A white man, portaited as a donut eating, coffee drinking, low IQ having, unschooled asshole taking a pick on black at the airport. This can be reality, these people excist and the certainly did a decade ago but...
Point 1. Black people can be customs security too.
Point 2. Why arent there any races to be seen throughout the whole video or @ the airport.
Maybe its his ideal to live in a completly black world but it's for from the reality.
I took an extreme example here, I'm definitly not saying that the whole black community within hiphop intents to profile their perspective ( if! they're pointing out a message or moral ) with such negative aspects. But it does happen a lot, less obvious than the Kanye West example when at these times you wont find any videoclips displaying any discrimination since it would not be tolerated by Mtv or other media broadcast available.
Now back to the subject
They make Irish music all around the globe, the appreciation is just as big. My father plays classical gipsy flamenco but he's far from spanish, it's not appreciation. If you like music than it's an obsession or hobby. It's up to the person. But Class, Ima call you conservative from here hehe, because you look at things from a historical point of view, its retrospective. You're right but we live now, if you take out the thought that result goes with original than you're progressive.
Its just strange to go differnt places in the world and seeing people trying to dress, look, and talk like me.
You are an african american living the hiphop in the US. A lot of people are not but are still into hiphop. Then there's the same difference outside the US as in the US, mainstream and underground. The difference is that they're not all black or even talk english/american, but the cats into the mainstream hiphop will live it the same way the black community does in the US. That is stupid, but hell, it's their life Im not the fool in this. That's the underground concensus, people knowing what real life is about, but we're talking kids here in the mainstream or people that never really grew up along the process. The people I know and are credible for what they do/know dont really dress like this, just casual or professional, highly educated or not. Hiphop influences their life, but not their opinion which makes them ech an individual. We do wear the brands at times but as far as I know it the brand that determins if a person's biased underground or mainstream, co-ordinated by fashion trends. I wouldn't be wearing FUBU, SBM etc. I got some Ecko though, but besides that it's aem kei, mecca, dub and survival/outdoor clothing. Pretty casual stuff.
Last thing I'd like to add, any non US talking slang is a fool. That shit is so rediculous, I mean, I've had a lot of american collegues and after some time you adapt to their vocabulary, intonation and accent. That can happen, but a foreign kid/dude that could barely have a reasonable conversation in english shouldn't start slanging away, not outside the US or even in the US.
I mean tjeez what is the world coming to.