Eminem
Social Impact
Social impact
Hip hop music is a part of
hip hop, a
cultural movement that includes the activities of breakdancing and graffiti art,
as well as associated slang, fashion and other elements. The popularity of music has helped to popularize
hip hop culture, both in the United States and to a lesser degree abroad.
Contemporary
hip hop fashion includes the wearing of baggy jeans slung low around the waist,
gold or platinum chains and boots or a fresh pair of kicks (sneakers), and
bandanas or doo rags tied around the head (often worn with a baseball cap on
top) ; these elements are more typical of men than women. In addition, there are
and have been more transitory fads associated with hip hop, such as rolling up
one leg of one's pants, jogging suits and sweatshirts. Other hip hop fashions
that have long since died out include the late-1980s trend for
African-influenced clothing styles in accordance with the Afrocentric stylings
of much hip hop music of the time (from bands such as X-Clan), and the "high top
fade" hairstyle popularized by Will Smith (The Fresh Prince) and Christopher
"Kid" Reid of Kid 'n Play, among others. Though hip hop fashion was associated almost exclusively
with African Americans in urban areas in the 1970s and 1980s, it has since
spread to mainstream listeners throughout the world.
Since the late 1990s, many hip hop songs have focused on the "bling bling"
lifestyle, which is a focus on expensive jewelry, cars, and clothing that
symbolize wealth and status. "Bling bling" has its roots in the enormously
commercially successful late-to-mid nineties work (specifically, music videos)
of Puff Daddy and Bad Boy Records as well as Master P's No Limit Records.
However, the term was coined in 1999 (see 1999 in music) by Cash Money Records
artist B.G. on his single Bling Bling, and the Cash Money roster were perhaps
the epitome of the "bling bling" lifestyle and attitude. Though many rappers,
mostly gangsta rappers, unapologetically pursue and celebrate bling bling,
others, mostly artists outside of the hip hop mainstream, have expressly
criticized the idealized pursuit of bling bling as being materialistic.
All Eyez on Me (1996) was the most successful album of West Coast rapper
2Pac's career.
The widespread success of hip hop - specifically gangsta rap - has also had a
significant social impact on the demeanor of modern youth. The sometimes
egotistic and degenerate attitudes often portrayed in the lyrics and videos of
certain hip hop artists have shown negative effects on some of their idolizing
fans. While the attitudes of specific artists certainly do not represent the
rest of the hip hop community, and the effect of lyrical content on youths who
are part of the hip hop culture is debatable, very often such youths adopt the
much glamourized "gangsta" persona while not being members of any gang. Often
these personas incite anti-social behavior such as peer harassment, neglect
towards education, rejection of authority, and petty crimes such as vandalism.
While the majority of listeners are able to distinguish entertainment from
lessons in social conduct, an evident pseudo-gangsta sub-culture has risen
amongst North American youth.
Because hip hop music almost always puts an emphasis on hyper-masculinity,
its lyrics often reflect a homophobic mindset. There has been little to no room
in hip hop music for openly gay or lesbian artists. It is often suspected that
there are a great number of gay or lesbian hip hop musicians who do not come out
of the closet for fear of the decline of their career. Rumors of such have
involved hip hop artists such as
Queen
Latifah, Da Brat, and several others. In 2003 the first openly gay hip hop and
rap artist, Caushun, was
signed to a major label; his record and career were not successful.
As with most insular musical-cultural movements such as
jazz and the hippie counterculture of the 1960s, hip hop has a distinctive
slang, that includes words like yo, flow and phat. Due to hip hop's
extraordinary commercial success in the late nineties and early 21st century,
many of these words have been assimilated into many different dialects across
America and the world and even to non-hip hop fans (the word dis for example is
remarkably prolific). There are also words like homie which predate hip hop but
are often associated with it because of the close connection between recorded
hip hop and the dialect used by many performers, African American Vernacular
English. Sometimes, terms like what the dilly, yo are popularized by a single
song (in this case, "Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See" by Busta Rhymes)
and are only used briefly. Of special importance is the rule-based slang of
Snoop Dogg, who adds -izz to the middle of words so that shit becomes shizznit
(the addition of the n occurs occasionally as well). This practice, with origins
in Frankie Smith's non-sensical language from his 1982 single "Double
Dutch Bus," has spread to even non-hip hop fans, who may be unaware of its
derivation.
Musical impact
Aside from hip hop's great popularity, the genre has had an impact on most
varieties of
popular music. There are performers that combine either hip hop beats or rapping
with rock and roll, heavy metal, punk rock, merengue, salsa, cumbia, funk, jazz,
house, taarab, reggae, highlife, mbalax and soul. Teen pop singers and boy bands
like the Backstreet Boys, *NSYNC, Christina Aguilera, Jessica Simpson, and
Britney Spears utilize hip hop beats in many of their most popular singles.
Hip hop has had an especially close relationship with soul music since the
early 1990s. Indeed, today there is little recorded soul that does not feature
some element of hip hop. This fusion, called nu soul, can be traced back to the
late 1980s New Jack Swing groups, though it did not reach its modern form until
the rise of performers like Mary J. Blige. In the late 1990s and early 2000s,
the hip hop influence grew more prominent in singers like D'Angelo, Lauryn Hill,
Jill Scott and Alicia Keys.
During the 80's, popular acts like
Run-D.M.C. used both hard rock and hip hop, especially in their genre-crossing,
unprecedented smash hit "Walk This Way", performed with Aerosmith. Other
performers, like Ice-T and his band Body Count used hip hop, punk rock and
metal, though the first band to combine metal with rap vocal techniques is said
to be Anthrax (others early adopters include Faith No More, Biohazard, Rage
Against The Machine and Red Hot Chili Peppers). By the end of the 1990s,
rap-metal grew both more popular and more derided by fans of both genres, with
the rise of bands like Linkin Park, Limp Bizkit and KoЯn, who were called nu
metal.
Odaymara Cuesta, member of Krudas.
In Latin America, rapping was already known in the 1980s, in the form of
toasting, a part of Jamaican ragga music. Rapped lyrics were already a part of
soca music, for example. The growth of hip hop in the area, however, led to more
pronounced fusions like reggaeton and timba. Similarly, in Africa, rapping-like
vocals (such as Senegalese tassou) were already a part of popular music, and hip
hop was easily adapted to popular styles like taarab and mbalax. hip hop has
also grown outstandingly in Cuba, with groups such as Anonimo Consejo, Doble
Filo, Papa Umbertico, and the unique feminist lesbian duo Krudas.
One cannot underestimate the influence the genre has had over the numerous
styles of
electronic music. Hip hop's influence is well noticed in genres such as
trip-hop, jungle, UK garage, grime and more.
Censorship issues
Hip hop has probably encountered more problems with censorship than any other
form of popular music in recent years, due to the use of sexually and violently
explicit lyrics. The pervasive use of
curse words in many songs has created challenges in the broadcast of such
material both on television stations such as MTV, in music video form, and on radio. As a result, many hip hop recordings are broadcast
in censored form, with offending language blanked out of the soundtrack (though
usually leaving the backing music intact). The result – which quite often
renders the remaining lyrics unintelligible – has become almost as widely
identified with the genre as any other aspect of the music, and has been
parodied in films such as
Austin Powers in Goldmember, in which a character – performing in a
parody of a hip hop music video – performs an entire verse that is blanked out.
Media
Hip hop has major American magazines devoted to it, including
The Source,
XXL and
Vibe. For a
long time,
BET was the only television channel likely to play much hip hop, but in recent
years the mainstream channels VH1 and MTV have played hip
hop more than any other genre. Many individual cities have produced their own
local hip hop newsletters, while hip hop magazines with national distribution
are found in a few other countries.
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