i can’t tell if i don’t like the game or if kendrick lamar’s verse at the end just renders him obsolete
Quote reblogged from Postcards from Space with 5,563 notes
Disliking hip-hop doesn’t make you a racist any more than liking hip-hop makes you not a racist, and I’m sure there are plenty of Stormfront enthusiasts with Rick Ross in their iTunes. If you don’t like Jay-Z because you just don’t like the way he sounds, or you’re sick of his cloying ubiquity, or you wish he’d talk about something other than where he’s from for five seconds—hey, I’m not mad, I don’t like Bruce Springsteen for the same reasons. But if you don’t like rap music—a genre that contains multitudes—because of a self-satisfied moralism, or because you’re scared of it, or because you wish those people would stop talking about their problems and get out of your television and radio and kids’ bedrooms: well.
And I’m not just talking about the American right, I’m talking about all the well-meaning white folks who’ve told me how they want to like Lil Wayne but lo, the misogyny, the violence, the drugs. But, but, I’ll say: Bob Dylan aced misogyny; the Rolling Stones sang about violence; the Velvet Underground knew their way around some drugs. Yeeeah, but it’s different, they’ll say, elongating that “yeah” with conspiratorial inflection: you know what I mean. Yeah, I know exactly what you mean.
Rap music doesn’t get unarmed kids shot to death, “it’s different” does. “It’s different” infuses “these assholes always get away” and gives solace to people who hear that sound bite and nod their empty heads in agreement. “It’s different” is the same logic that suggests a teenager’s skin color combined with the music he listened to means he had it coming, and it’s the same logic that lets a bunch of people feign outrage over a teenager’s use of the n-word to describe himself when they’re really just outraged that he beat them to the punch.
“It’s different” makes me shake with anger because it turns music into a dog-whistle to justify the murder of a kid who doesn’t seem all that “different” from me was when I was his age, not that different at all. I liked Skittles and hoodies and weed, too. And yeah, I’m white and never worried about getting shot for any of it, which is only the most loathsome excuse for not identifying with someone that I can possibly think of.
Jack Hamilton, “America Is Dying Slowly: Talking About Hip-Hop After Trayvon Martin” (Good)
but for real: read this.
(via champagnecandy)
Source: thediscography
Link reblogged from nehru jackets with 142 notes
he had the badge ID covered in black tape,irish dude, spends his weekends in black facesmackin immigrants askin em the how crack tastesmushed his pregnant wife face while she lactateoverseeing the rat race,goes to cape cod when manhattan feel too fast paced…
i love this track and how fun to listen to it is until you pay attention to how tragic and awful it is
Video with 1 note
Video reblogged from bigbigtruck with 6 notes
Naughty By Nature, “Everything’s Gonna Be Alright” (1991)
so good
Video reblogged from bigbigtruck with 7 notes
Goodie Mob, “Soul Food” (1995)
Oh my gosh super young Cee-lo aaaaaahhhh
Actually you know what, I’m gonna set up a queue of these so y’all don’t get flooded.
Photo reblogged from How To Talk To Girls At Parties with 64,914 notes
look at how fucking cool jay z is all the time holy shit
Photo reblogged from Hacking Qualia with 188 notes
“What’s 50 grand to a muhfucka like me. Can you please remind me?”
From @WattsMR via Twitter.
Source: hiphopgov.org
Video reblogged from nehru jackets with 115 notes
das racist brand new dance official video
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