This is Part 1 of a series of posts discussing my search for a particular style of hip-hop music. It isn’t intended to exhaustively cover the genre, so if anyone is inclined to deconstruct what I don’t know from these posts about what I think I know—feel free to educate me via a comment below or tweet @Gleaming_Sword.
“If Jay-Z is Jehovah, I’m the Antichrist.” --Speech
The history of hip-hop music begins much earlier, but my
history of hip-hop begins at Lollapalooza in the summer of 1993. When Arrested
Development took the stage, a standard was set that I would find unmatched
during the years of hip-hop’s ascendancy, leaving me to ask: What happened to
hip-hop? And thus began my search for “real” hip-hop--hip-hop with a rare
quality I couldn’t have defined at the time.
In 1993, I was a recent high school graduate who had been
raised on Sixties rock, grown up watching New Wave on MTV, and developed a love
of interesting rock, but I immediately loved Arrested Development. After seeing
the party they brought to the stage with their boom, bap, scratching, African-inspired
outfits, dancing, and arm-waving elder Baba Oje, I had to check out their only
album at the time: 3 Years, 5 Months & 2 Days in the Life Of...(1992).
To this day, it is my gold standard in hip-hop.
Always positive and bouncing along to some new surprise, it
isn’t above controversy or harsh language, as in the hit song “People Everyday,”
in which Speech, Arrested Development’s MC, spins a tale of falling out with
some catcallers:
In part, this may be because by 1994, the newly christened “alternative”
music genre was increasingly focused on rock, especially grunge. When hip-hop
did begin to dominate MTV some years later, it was the antithesis of what Arrested
Development represented and would spur me to set out in search of the
ultimate sound in hip-hop.
Other posts in this series:
Hip-Hop Was Dead (2/4)
Mo' Meta Playlist (3/4)
Expanding Horizons (4/4)
Other posts in this series:
Hip-Hop Was Dead (2/4)
Mo' Meta Playlist (3/4)
Expanding Horizons (4/4)
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