Thursday, February 14, 2008

Dart’s Rant Of The Day: I Still Love H.E.R.

I’m well aware that most cats my age or slightly older that grew up with Hip Hop no longer love it like they did in the past. I talk to some of my old friends that used to be die hard Hip Hop fans back just 10 years ago and they totally don’t care about the music anymore.

I guess part of the reason I never immersed myself in the professional world too much or tried to get a job in certain environments was because I was afraid of becoming that kind of person...I now know that could never happen to me. If you have genuine love of the music and culture of Hip Hop it doesn’t matter what you’re profession is, you’ll still wanna cop/hear that newness.

It doesn’t matter if you’re a college professor or if you’re married with kids and have a house with a mortgage. Back when I was a 21 year old Hip Hop fiend destroying cats in ciphers and rocking a backpack all the time I never thought my feelings for Hip Hop would ever change. Then that damn piece of paper got signed and the world turned upside down.

All of a sudden, most of the cats I used to hear on the radio (the Wu included!) couldn‘t get spins to save their lives. Groups that were on top of the world for years were now getting dropped from their labels because of low sales. The entire face of the rap game changed seemingly overnight and I among other Hip Hop fans were completely turned off by the new shit coming out commercially.

We retreated to college radio stations and the internet where we found out that the fresh “next shit” that we were craving did, in fact exist after all. We were going on 88HipHop.com regularly and frequenting Sandbox Automatic every week to listen to Real Audio clips of 12” singles from labels like Hydra, Fortress, Dolo, Bukarance, Makin, Rawshack, Solesides, Eastern Conference and Brick Records.

We were buying Ego Trip, On The Go and Stress Magazine instead of The Source. Whereas before the Def Jam logo was seen as a guaranteed quality seal, it now was the Rawkus razor logo and the Fondle ‘Em logo. The former underground Hip Hop fan had now morphed into a new breed of Hip Hop fan known as the “backpacker” and between 1997-2000 it was known as the Backpack Era to many.

Once the dot com explosion happened and several key Hip Hop sites died (R.I.P. Platform.net) and some Hip Hop publications folded (R.I.P. Blaze) it looked like the end of yet another era. Rawkus had become a shell of its former self and the underground was now a completely separate entity from the major label Rap music industry.

This was a complete shift in the Hip Hop scene from before. Artists below and above ground used to meet and test their skills against each other at different venues and engage in ciphers. The underground scene began to die off little by little as the business and money began to creep in and take priority over the art. Even with all of these changes I was still on board.

As the years went on, the Rap industry seemed to get more and more stale and it became more and more of a chore to find that “next shit” that excited me the way it did when I first heard The Arsonists spitting on “The Session” or MHz on “World Premiere”. Would I ever have that same sensation I had when I first played Scaramanga’s “Special Efx/Cash Flow/Holdin’ New Cards” on my Gemini XL 500’s?

Would I become one of those cats that talk about how Hip Hop died back in 1996/7/8/9, 2000 or after 9/11? Would I still love Hip Hop or will I abandon it and blame it for all of the ills that plague Blacks and Latinos in America? Me? Dart Adams? Nah...fuck no! Never.

How long has Hip Hop been “in trouble” anyways? Was it 1979 when I first remember people telling me that Hip Hop was gonna die because someone went and made a record. Was it 1984 when it broke nationally and “Beat Street” and “Breakin’” came out and Fred and Barney were rappin’ in a fuckin’ Fruity Pebbles commercial?



Was it in 1985 when record stores all across the nation decided to have Rap sections and put them in the back of the store? Was it 1988 when the music world had come to grip with the fact that Rap had been around for close to 10 years and was going Platinum so now they should begin to acknowledge it as a genre of music?

How about 1990 when both MC Hammer and Vanilla Ice both sold 10 million copies of their albums and “Ice Ice Baby” became the first Rap single to reach #1 on the Billboard charts?

I can remember Doug E. Fresh saying that he thought “Hip Hop is on the verge of becoming extinct to me” in his 1993 comeback single “A-Ight”. He wasn’t the only one who felt that way, either. Chubb Rock made “Beef” to address issues he thought could potentially destroy Hip Hop back in 1997.

If I think about it, 1993 was right at the beginning of what Hip Hop heads consider the 2nd Golden Age Of Hip Hop (1992-1996) and 1997 was the beginning of Rap records actually charting high on Billboard and outselling Country music so was it really all that bad after all?

It’s hard as hell to find new Hip Hop that would excite an old head. If you factor in shifts in priority and their lifestyle changes they aren’t really motivated to frequent all of the blogs and websites that I do regularly just to discover music the overwhelming majority of listeners don’t even know exists. I still haven’t lost that same thirst or hunger for that “next shit” that I had back in the days.

I also understand that everything changes. Pete Rock and DJ Premier’s beats in 2008 can’t sound the same as their beats did back in 1993. Jay-Z can’t be the same Jigga from “Reasonable Doubt” on “American Gangster”. For that same token, we can’t ask Little Brother to be our new A Tribe Called Quest or put all of our hope in Lupe Fiasco to “bring Hip Hop back”.

Who remembers back when we thought that “Mos Def and Talib Kweli Are Black Star” was gonna “bring Hip Hop back” in 1998? How did that end up turning out?


Either way, I never stopped loving Hip Hop and I don’t see myself falling out of love with it or “outgrowing” it. What can I say?...I still love H.E.R. and I have since 1978 when I first became aware of Hip Hop’s existence.

One.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great post. Even though I only started loving Hip Hop somewhere at the end of 2005 I understand what you feel. Peace

What It Is said...

Being in my mid 30's, married with a kid, I have now become everything that exeplified corn in my youthful days. I even kind of fell out of love with mcs for a while. But recently, I realized my love for hip hop never ended it just switched majors for a minute. I studied beats instead of rhymes. I can't take myself as seriously reciting spit for spit what the next big thing does but I can hear Blu and know how much my younger self would have enjoyed riding trains with my big ass headphones on listening to him and writing rhymes.
I just feel you on this and have nothing really to contribute apparently.
Pace.

Mike Evans said...

"Was it 1984 when it broke nationally and “Beat Street” and “Breakin’” came out and Fred and Barney were rappin’ in a fuckin’ Fruity Pebbles commercial?"

Haha, I love going back and finding these old commerecials. Like Burger King in the 80's when Breakin' was the hottest "new" thing.

and by 1984 they tried to kill it..

Hip hop in essence and real.
Nice post.

peace

Wade Word said...

I felt like I would never love H.E.R. again after so many years of trash/bubblegum rap taking over the main stream, but Hip-Hop is like that old girlfriend you never get over...
Thanks for hitting this topic in a real way,
Wade Word

Unknown said...

I'm in my 30's now, and a professional as well. Only a few of my really good friends know that I'm still a 'head. The rest of the people around me, at work or otherwise, probably wouldn't understand or would make fun of me for it (f_ck them).

It's a fine line, between being yourself and becoming on of "them". I'm friendly with the people at work, even go out with them time to time. But for the most part I keep my personal and work life separate. It's becoming more and more difficult as my career goes on, but I feel it's essential to keep on being me.

Keeping a core group of friends that keep you grounded is essential in this day and age. Otherwise it's too easy to get sucked into the corporate void.
-Blacktop

Anonymous said...

Nice drop Dart,
It does become difficult for us to justify our love with the music since it became so overly commodified.

You want to see where the spirit of Hip-Hop now rests on the regulack? Just refresh your homepage.

weblogs in 2008 = Hip-Hop in 1978

Don said...

That Bedrock commercial really was some bull ish. But thats how they play it.

I got mad love for hip hop music. Being knowing it too long, not to have mad love for it.

elgringocolombiano said...

Hip Hop is like jazz now. Lots of good new albums get released, but of this group, most get little or no promotion. In other words, a "head" has to "dig" to find the good shyt

Thank God for the 4 Horsemen of the Rap Reviews Internets, including Dart Adams homie! Fock with the Horsemen to stay up on new good releases:

http://rateyourmusic.com/list/diction/2007_hip_hop_best_to_worst

http://poisonousparagraphs.blogspot.com/2007/12/dart-adams-presents-top-50-hip-hop.html

http://wakeyourdaughterup.blogspot.com/2008/01/year-end-list-to-end-all-year-end-lists.html

http://whentheyreminisce.wordpress.com/2008/01/24/picks-of-the-litter-top-100-tracks-of-079-1-top-30-albums/

Travis said...

I think that is probably my favorite write up of yours Dart. It hit home. I've never gotten away from Hip Hop, but my tastes have changed in leaps and bounds the last 5-6 years.

I remember back in '94, I was dating this lily white chick. We were planning on getting married, and she would ask me if I was going to be listening to hip hop in my 30's when I had kids and I said "Yup"....Fourteen years later, I'm still coping all the new music I can, still listen to all my classics (listened to DOC just last night while playing Madden) and love the music more than I ever had. It will always be a part of my life.

Great write up dude.

Blaine Clay said...

Dart,
I just got refered to your site by my man.

You got a lot of time on your hands brotha, but you are definately a expert when it comes to this hip-hop thing!

The rankings are on point and even knowing all those artist and groups astounds me but to also be able to rank them is incredible...

um let me stop riding your jock now...my bad...

I have a request...put together a list of songs that are "odes to hip-hop"...ie "I used to love her" and make sort of a mixtape...that would be bangin!

Peace

donnie said...

great post.