THE RAP ON 'RAP' : Yo, where's the melody?In his article, "Yo Comma Dog" (New Yorker, March 12), about the illegal gun possession trial of Sean "Puffy" Combs, Adam Gopnik Adam Gopnik, (born August 24, 1956) a writer, essayist and commentator, is primarily known for his work published by The New Yorker, for which he has written since 1986. He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but was raised in Montreal, Quebec. makes a statement that is both indelibly phrased and indisputably true: "Hip-hop remains the pig in the python of American culture--the indisputably new thing that refuses to get digested." But in speculating about why this is so, Gopnick can only advance a theory that he himself finds inadequate: "Rap and its artists just can't get a break from the watchdogs of the white middle classes: the cops and the critics both take them too literally." Gopnik rightly dismisses this idea, because the police can't help paying attention Noun 1. paying attention - paying particular notice (as to children or helpless people); "his attentiveness to her wishes"; "he spends without heed to the consequences" attentiveness, heed, regard to "guns going off in people's faces." As for the critics, "highbrow high·brow adj. also high·browed Of, relating to, or being highly cultured or intellectual: They only attend highbrow events such as the ballet or the opera. n. resistance to rap long ago crumbled--the Times is much kinder to Eminem than it ever was to Billy Joel." But if it's not a matter of irrational cops or finger-wagging critics, why don't the python's digestive juices work? Why is the pig still protruding pro·trude v. pro·trud·ed, pro·trud·ing, pro·trudes v.tr. To push or thrust outward. v.intr. To jut out; project. See Synonyms at bulge. ? Is it because of the hoodlum lifestyles of the rappers? Though only the hard-core gangsta Noun 1. gangsta - (Black English) a member of a youth gang AAVE, African American English, African American Vernacular English, Black English, Black English Vernacular, Black Vernacular, Black Vernacular English, Ebonics - a nonstandard form of American English rappers get into the big, homicidal hom·i·cid·al adj. 1. Of or relating to homicide. 2. Capable of or conducive to homicide: a homicidal rage. messes, it's hard not to be leery of a subculture in which a West Coast-East Coast feud produces the dead bodies of Tupac Shakur and Christopher Wallace There are several notable individuals named Christopher Wallace:
adj. Difficult or impossible to digest: an indigestible meal. in lump" in our culture. No, we'll have to look elsewhere than in police files to discover why an entire entertainment genre remains suspect. Is it the sheer obscenity of rap lyrics? Again, we are mostly talking about gangsta rap gang·sta rap also gangster rap n. A style of rap music associated with urban street gangs and characterized by violent, tough-talking, often misogynistic lyrics. , with its ethos of urban despair, greed, misogyny misogyny /mi·sog·y·ny/ (mi-soj´i-ne) hatred of women. mi·sog·y·ny n. Hatred of women. mi·sog , and vengefulness. Gangsta obscenity certainly prevents it from being piped into nice restaurants and business-building elevators and, to that extent, does quarantine itself from the middle class. But do cuss words and depicted bloodbaths keep the action-film genre from being absorbed by the general filmgoing audience? And, since a lot of non-gangsta rap lyrics are surprisingly benign, why are all rappers still kept at a certain distance from the mainstream audience despite enormous popularity and financial success? Is it because rap is so firmly embedded in black culture while American culture, on the whole, is white, middle-class in its orientation? But is the first half of that statement still true? The most reviled (as well as one of the most successful) of rappers is Eminem, the avatar of strictly white trailer-trash culture. Furthermore, white middle-class boys in their teens are the main consumers of rap. But, given that fact, how strange it is that more movies and television ads don't feature rap on their soundtracks. In the 1950s, the Tin Pan Alley Tin Pan Alley Genre of U.S. popular music that arose in New York in the late 19th century. The name was coined by the songwriter Monroe Rosenfeld as the byname of the street on which the industry was based—28th Street between Fifth Avenue and Broadway in the early style of songs sung by the likes of Frank Sinatra and Patty Paige was used in any ad that needed music, and in the 1960s through the 1990s, rock was the sound of choice. Rap has made certain inroads inroads Noun, pl make inroads into to start affecting or reducing: my gambling has made great inroads into my savings inroads npl to make inroads into [+ in advertising and onto movie soundtracks by now, of course, but it by no means achieves the ubiquity that rock and Tin Pan Alley used to enjoy. Maybe the reason for rap's ambiguous place in our culture--wildly successful yet definitely suspect--can be found in facts so obvious, so close to the surface of things, that we ignore them because of their very obviousness. What is the most striking thing about popular culture? Its inescapability. It invades our lives even when we want to keep it out. I never watched the TV show "Welcome Back, Kotter “Sweathog” redirects here. For the band, see Sweathog (band). Welcome Back, Kotter (sometimes shortened to Welcome Back or Kotter " but couldn't escape its characters, the "sweathogs," because their faces were printed on the lunch boxes held by the little kids who shared a bus with me every morning as I went to teach drama classes in downtown Washington, D.C. Similarly, I didn't see Star Wars when it first came out but, within three months of its release, I knew the names of all the main characters, their relationships and motivations, and the overall plot. How did I come by this knowledge? I'm not sure, but I did. Movie characters and sequences don't stay on the big screen. "Seinfeld" wisecracks were repeated at workplaces the morning after each episode. Comic strip characters don't remain within their panels but become thirty feet high on billboards and one inch small on postage stamps. Rock 'n' roll rock 'n' roll: see rock music. songs that were played on jukeboxes in the 1950s sold cars on TV advertisements in the 1980s and 1990s. If high culture is a quiet place you go to, pop culture is the air you breathe and the microscopic insects in that air that dig under your skin. Now, what is the single feature of pop music that launches it, unbidden un·bid·den also un·bid adj. Not invited, asked, or requested; unasked: unbidden guests; comments unbid and unwelcome. , into your unconscious? The tune. You are walking down the street and suddenly find yourself humming or whistling a tune. You don't decide to do this, it happens to you. Melody isn't necessarily an indispensable feature of all music, for no one whistles a tune from La Mer or Pierrot Lunaire, and currents and countercurrents of rhythm and tempo that are the driving forces of jazz. But, as far as pop music goes, the unforgettable tune (whether you want to forget it or not) is the hypodermic needle hypodermic needle n. 1. A hollow needle used with a hypodermic syringe. 2. A hypodermic syringe including the needle. that injects the song into your consciousness. Rap is the first popular music in the history of popular culture to forgo the pop tune. Oh, rap uses tunes all right, but these "samples" are often fragments of previously recorded hits from jazz, rock, soul, whatever, that are borrowed ("sampled") to form the background of the rapper's rap. Melody dances attendance on the spiel spiel Informal n. A lengthy or extravagant speech or argument usually intended to persuade. intr. & tr.v. spieled, spiel·ing, spiels To talk or say (something) at length or extravagantly. . Therefore, rap--whatever the artistic quality of the individual number--is closer to poetry than to music. It is poetry underpinned by music but, remember, the earliest poetry was always supported by music. That rap numbers (I hesitate to call them songs) don't lodge themselves--as music--in the memory and, therefore, don't spring unbidden to the lips, is probably a point in their favor for rebellious kids who don't want to share their sound with the world. It is, after all, the huge enclave of youth that has made rap's huge popularity. No enclave, even if it's international, however, can propel entertainment into the sort of intergenerational in·ter·gen·er·a·tion·al adj. Being or occurring between generations: "These social-insurance programs are intergenerational and all acceptance that has, up to now at least, allowed popular entertainment eventually to become classic entertainment (Dickens, Italian opera, Chaplin, a lot of rock). Then again, isn't it just a matter of today's kids growing older and carrying rap with them into their adulthood? Isn't this just a case of the "trash" of today becoming the gold of tomorrow? No. Not as rap now exists. We always forget how much of yesterday's roughhouse rough·house n. Rowdy, uproarious behavior or play. v. also rough·housed, rough·hous·ing, rough·hous·es v.intr. To engage in rowdy, uproarious behavior or play. v.tr. entertainment lived down to the low expectations of disapproving oldsters and really did fall by the wayside just as they said it would, even as some other entertainments, equally rambunctious and equally castigated, transcended the initial controversies and became classics. Chaplin lives but not Ben Turpin, perhaps because Ben and his bug-eyed specialty were tiresome to begin with but it took time for the tiresomeness to become evident. The Beatles are now being listened to (with rapture) by my ten-year-old daughter, but she sure isn't grooving to Fabian or Frankie Avalon. Those two boys were plastic dolls and, like most toys, were soon flung on the rubbish heap of pop culture. Rap, a quasi-musical form created not by composers but by disc jockeys like Kool Herc and Grandmaster Flash, may be particularly vulnerable to the inroads of time because so many rap numbers--chaste or obscene, frivolous or political--tend to be formulaic concoctions instead of outpourings from the heart. And verbal concoctions turn to dust faster than melodic ones. That said, I must now admit that I'm surprisingly sanguine about the future of rap (surprising to myself!) because I now see rap quickly changing, with the desire of its fans for real music beginning to break loose. The simple need to have a song in your head is unquenchable, and kids may just possibly be coming to feel that the in-your-face didactic hectoring of an L.L.Cool J isn't much different from the hectoring of their teachers and parents, even when the rap preachment is done with four-letter words. The huge success of Shaggy's version of the old rock number, "Angel," may be a weather vane. Here, melody returns to the foreground, sharing it with Shaggy's rap, which laces itself about the tune like a vine spreading over a trellis 1. Trellis - An object-oriented language from the University of Karlsruhe(?) with static type-checking and encapsulation. 2. Trellis - An object-oriented application development system from DEC, based on the Trellis language. (Formerly named Owl). . The melody isn't "sampled" but allowed its full arc, with the rap providing genuine counterpoint and taking on a catchiness all its own. Counterpoint! The backbone of Western music!? In rap!?!?!?!?!? |
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