Rap music is not dead.
It's evolving. Some say it's devolving, however, it evolved from how it was in the 80s.....
Take battling for instance:
It used to be who could rock a crowd more......it then became one rapper dissin another...
There are very few rap "groups" these days. There's more "all about me" going on now. There's labels with a bunch of dudes, but never calling themselves a group. I can't even think of new rap groups these days...just individual artists with shitloads of features.
I'm not mad for rap straying away from the 90s sound, although I miss it terribly.
If reggaeton changed it's sound, would it be still be as popular as it was 6-8 years ago? Probably so, but since it never really changed, it died (in the US) pretty damn quickly. I think this would've definitely happened with rap music....and rather it die altogether, I'd rather it change into something where the next generation of listeners could enjoy and keep the culture and music alive.
When I speak of all this, I'm referring to the mainstream.
I really agree with the "all about me" mentality, and I dont think its just reserved for the mainstream anymore.
That mentality is seeping throughout all society and not just music, let alone hip hop.
The number of issues that have arisen over the past few weeks with Frienz Konnection, because of artist selfishness, or not playing for the team, it really makes grown men look and act like children, its pathetic.
I think we are going to have to trim some fat.
As for keeping the culture alive, Im in two minds about that, a lot of the kids on the come up dont even know what the culture was, or even is. The people that taught us about the culture are considered irrelevant and past it, bitter old bastards clinging on to the past.
To be fair, when I was 14-15 and just started out listening to rap, I didnt give a fuck about the culture, it was only after hearing so much "music with a message" that I started to love the culture too. But that sort of appreciation comes with time, and actually getting taught it in the first place.
I say, its not so much the past we are clinging onto, its more the culture, the tool for expression for the downtrodden, a way to say no to the machine or the status quo and to get equal and fair treatment for minorities(or anyone now, for that matter). It was a tool to bring races together under the banner of having a good time.
Now it seems its just become a tool for kids to tell fairy tales, imaginary tales of their drug lord lives, community kingpins, or porno stars/pimps, with dough to burn, but yet the hoods stay hoods.
No, rap music is still alive, I heard some really good shit yesterday, it is definitly dying out though.