Doesn’t it seem nowadays that you can’t be a successful Hip-Hop artist unless you’re rapping about being deep in the drug game? Now, for those musicians who have been in the drug game and clawed their way out… this blog is not about you. (Just diversify your topics every now and again.) This blog is about those aspiring MC’s that think they’ll only get a reputation in the game if they can say they made more money trappin’ than rapping.
Since the dawn of Hip-Hop, there have been lyricists who wrote about the harsh realities of their lives and the lives of the people they grew up with. Sometimes those rhymes would include graphic, detailed imagery about life in the ‘hood and threatening circumstances they found themselves in. Other times it would reflect the positive side of our communities and give inspiration to the millions of other people in those neighborhoods that have no other beacon of hope. Then there are those times when young, talented MC’s pick up a pen to honestly write about what they lived but wind up concocting a fantasy world that resembles a sh*tty imitation of “Scarface”.
Maybe it’s the appeal of sex and violence that captures the imagination of so many young people in Hip-Hop, but there has to be a balance. For example, when you go to a movie theater there are a number of different screens that usually that number of different kinds of movies. Now imagine if they played one original movie and the rest, cheap imitations. Not too fly is it?
I’m not trying to imply that every new rapper is all about gun play and drug references--'cuz that’s clearly not the case. All I’m saying is between the artists, their A&R’s, the labels and radio stations; there should be some sort of collective consciousness that breaks through the typical mindset of what “Hip-Hop” is about. It's alright to reconnect to expressing peace, love, unity, and having fun. But again… that’s just Tyson’s Take. What do you think?
- Steve Tyson Jr.