Sunday 27 November 2016

'Gone Too Far' Film Review and Debate

Film Review

Witty, whimsical and utterly wondrous. The first time script-writer, Bola Agbaje, deserves a high praise for her satirical ‘fish out of water’ comedy drama. The film explores unconventional themes, reflecting interesting stereotypes and different ethnic communities. The most iconic aspect of ‘Gone Too Far’ is the fact that violence is explored as a minimal, which is typically unconventional in films when exploring the black community.

Not only were the themes iconic to the black community but to all ethnic backgrounds through personal identification with particular themes such as friendship and betrayal. In a Q&A with Agbaje at the Southbank BFI, she mentioned her motives for writing this script and how she was personally able to identify with a white protagonist in other films, therefore having a black protagonist or any other ethnic minority, should not stray away from this. Building on stereotypes axiomatically creates humour, therefore the witty way in which Agbaje was able to communicate the racial stereotypes tastefully, made the film furthermore interesting.


Due to the targeted audience being youths, the inclusion of colloquialisms and stereotypical dress sense causes the audience to identify with characters, especially the protagonist Yemi (Malachi Kirby), who contrasts completely to brother Iku (O.C. Ukeje). The cross-cultural merging reveals the identity of the West Indian ‘socks and sandals’ wearer with the Peckham ‘socks and Nikes’ wearer. The contrast creates a whimsical, comical aspect, whilst more importantly exploring the cultural differences. Bola Agbaje’s portrayal of her characters birthed a mirror for audience members and placed the most important roles in the hands off a marginalised group. 

"This house believes that films featuring ethnic minorities should only be produced by those who have the ethnic identity being represented."

I disagree with the motion that the producer should strictly be the same ethnic minority in order to perfectly portray the theme. I think what you have to take into consideration is external factors and more particularly how well you are aware of situations in order to portray them from a first hand perspective. I think certain individuals are able to understand things better than others despite their race or the colour of their skin, in perspective the main thing that matters is how much you, yourself, are connected to the issue as an individual. The exploration of ethnic minorities is something that potentially needs to be reflected on screen, therefore if the producer was of the same ethnicity then potentially they may be able to more validly reflect themselves within the screen, however I do not think that this is always the case as individuals are able to learn from their surroundings and therefore pick up on aspects of the marginalised group to therefore understand themselves. 

Furthermore, I think it is definitely important to reflect ethnic minorities and I think if a highly acclaimed white film producer wanted to produce a film about the Asian community I see this as a potentially positive thing rather than negative as the amount of recognition the film would get would be higher than that of an unknown director. I think it is important that any producer should be able to produce what they feel they can reflect best and create best, therefore it should not be down to their race, if this was the case then this idea of discrimination would never end and the constant cycle of groups staying separated will continue. The dichotomy between races needs to end and the only way to do this is understand every minority group in whatever way suits the individual.

Although I do agree that the only way to truly understand a race or ethnic minority group is to be part of it, I think it becomes more of an issue of emotional attachment to the film and although I think it is definitely important for the producer to be connected with the film, it is also important to have a little bit of a detachment to therefore have a new outlook on the situation, therefore if a white producer was to understand the situation of a particular ethnic minority and then produce a film whilst constantly having feedback from that group, it would be more powerful than that of the actual individual creating this as it becomes something individual to solely them. A good example of this, unrelated to ethnic groups, is the portrayal of Heath Ledger's Joker. Although he was an actor and not a producer this example is able to reflect the same idea as Ledger was able to put himself into the position of a psychopath and essentially get into a role which is completely unconventional to him, therefore a producer who is of a complete different race could essentially surround himself within the ethnic group, understanding the essential struggles and therefore is able to empathise from a third person perspective. 

Tuesday 22 November 2016

Essay Plan

To what extent are rap/hip-hop music videos, like Kendrick Lamar's "Alright," able to provide political/social commentary and how does this impact upon different audiences?

Introduction

Hip-hop is a genre that revolves around fruitful themes and complex social and political commentary, dating as a far back as the 1970s, focusing on the main idea of Libertarianism and the emancipation of the black man; this is particularly evident in Kendrick Lamar's extended music video 'Alright.' His music essentially provides a platform, not only for young African-Americans and the black youth to self-identify with the music but also a wider audience through the universal themes discussed by particular revolutionary hip-hop artists, like Kendrick Lamar and bands like Public Enemy and N.W.A, however the stereotypes associated with the genre provide a negative platform for the genre due to the glamorisation and the fetishising of the materialistic aspects such as 'gangster life' and violence, therefore elder audiences especially negatively associate the genre with the three ignorant foundation words, 'drugs, sex and violence.' 

Quotes 

Dyson, M. E. (2004). The Michael Eric Dyson reader. New York: Basic Civitas Books.
“a shallow understanding of rap, which in many cases results from people’s unwillingness to listen to rap lyrics, many of which counsel antiviolent and antidrug behaviour among the youths who are their avid audience”

Chang, J. (2005). Can't stop, won't stop: A history of the hip-hop generation. New York: St. Martin's Press.
“’Keeping it real’ has become just another fad word. It sounds cute. But it has been pimped and perverted. It ain’t about keeping it real. It’s about keeping it right” 
  • Chang focuses on the fact that the hip-hop genre is glamorised by the negative music and the fact that this music gets the most recognition shows that the media is not the problem but audiences themselves as negative music is what they essentially want to hear
  • Artists that socially comment on their music and have a positive influence essentially target a more niche market 
#1 
Axiomatically, Kendrick Lamar's extended music video 'Alright,' is a clear representation of black lives and comments on social and political themes throughout the video stylistically through the iconography and cinematography, impacting audiences through this empathetic idea of self-identification and the sympathetic theme of personal relationships. 
  • Black Lives Matter is an international activist movement, initiated in America - 2013 Trayvon Martin case HISTORICAL 
  • Not limited to African Americans, you don't have to be black to care, it's a universal issue - The Guardian Article - Thousands of people of all different races and ages, coming from a variety of different backgrounds, peacefully protested through Manchester. The group chanted Lamar's "Alright" alongside other songs such as "Don't Worry, Be Happy" and "Hand's Up/Don't Shoot." https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/jul/11/black-lives-matter-solidarity-march-protest-manchester HISTORICAL
  • The alternative hip-hop genre focuses on originality and creativity – monochrome – style could be seen as an avant-garde (attracted criticism from mainstream due to the stylistic elements) GENRE
  • Blumler + Katz; personal identity, personal relationships AUDIENCE 
  • Subverts stereotypes; deception and Barthes action codes REPRESENTATION 
  • Stuart Hall - dominant readings AUDIENCE 
  • Binary oppositions - Levi Strauss REPRESENTATION 
  • Post-modernism SOCIAL 
  • The iconography of the lamp-post may relate to how lamp-posts provide artificial light in the dark – chiaroscuro lighting MEDIA LANG
  • iconography of the police officer MEDIA LANG
  • Propps theory - stock characters AUDIENCE 
  • Marxist - Gramsci's theory of Hegemony AUDIENCE
  • Frantz Fanon - Black Skin, White Mask AUDIENCE 
  • Innoculation and desensitisation AUDIENCE 

Quotes 

Gilroy, P. (1991). 'There ain't no black in the Union Jack': The cultural politics of race and nation. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
"the social movements which have sprung up in different parts of the world as evidence of African dispersal, imperialism and colonialism have done more than appeal to blacks everywhere in a language which could invite their universal identificated (Sheppard et al 1975)"
  • essentially social movements have become something that has created a universal interest for black people and things like hip-hop music and rap music has allowed black people to come together to address the issues that they face
"The back-to-Africa movements in America, the Caribbean and now Europe, Negritude and the birth of the New Negro in the Harlem Renaissance (Perry, 1976, Berghan, 1977) during the 1920s all provide further illustrations of a multi-faceted desire to overcome the sclerotic confines of the nation state as a precondition of the liberation of blacks everywhere (Padmore, 1956)"
  • These are the movements that enabled blacks to be liberated and therefore overcome their constraints as anything less than human. This is how the liberation of black people started, essentially from these movements

Dates, J., Barlow, W. (1993). Split Image: African Americans in the Mass Media. Howard University Press

“The dominant culture must constantly strive to expand its hegemony while fending off challenges and interventions from the very classes and groups it seeks to subjugate” 

“Hall also argues that there are a range of possible responses to mediated images that allow for negotiated as well as oppositional readings, hence a decoding of media messages that differs from what the sender encoded for transmission” 

“Mikhail Bakhtin’s notion of heteroglassia – unpredictable multiple voices that that interact with one another to form a new totality – focuses attention on the dialogic nature of cultural message” 

“Historian Robert Toll ably summarised the social dynamics of antebellum minstrelsy: ‘Black face performers were like puppets operated by a white puppet master’”

Kendrick Lamar. (2012). Swimming Pools
·         At the close of ‘Alright,’ Lamar recites his lyrical poem as he falls and it could potentially reference Swimming Pools as he falls in this video and he falls into this endless loop because things cannot change easily and Lamar is aware that he is only one person who is unable to adapt a whole world - symbolism

Tupac. (1991). Trapped. Shock, G.
·         focuses on police brutality
"They got me trapped" 
·         the black male is trapped within a society where there is a social divide between the white and black community, the main idea of a moral panic within the black community

J Cole. (2014). Be Free. 
·         mourning over the Michael Brown case
"All we wanna do is take the chains off, all we wanna do is break the chains off, all we wanna do is be free" 
·         psychological binding of slavery in the world today between the problems of police brutality
·         the chains of brutality and injustice on a whole ethnicity of people
Dreamvillian Website - "I'm tired of being desensitised to the murder of black men"


#2 
Lamar also adopts a nostalgic tone within the extended video and references influential artists such as Tupac and Eazy E, who were similarly socially and politically charged; this emphasises the zeitgeist and rebirths traditional political hip-hop to impact contemporary audiences.

·         mise-en-scene; STD’s Fuck You! Sticker MEDIA LANG 
·         independent record label artists INSTITUTION 
·         subtle iconography, ‘R.I.P Pac Doe’ – post-production sound MEDIA LANG 
·         Ghetto lullaby and Ghetto Gospel (Tupac) HISTORICAL 
·         Kendrick as offspring of N.W.A 
·         Traditional literary texts focusing on black power, discrimination, representation of African-Americans HISTORICAL
·         New and Digital media offering the cultivation of hip-hop genre ECONOMICAL 
·         Constant referral to historical context of slavery and the emancipation of the black man HISTORICAL 
·         Blaxploitation film –Shaft, Gordon Parks 1971 HISTORICAL
·         Intertextuality – ‘Cartoon + Cereal,’ ‘Ghetto Gospel, ‘U’ MEDIA LANG 
·         Pastiche – deliberate homage to his other works HISTORICAL 
·         Post-colonialism HISTORICAL 

Quotes 

Rose, T. (2008). The Hip Hop Wars: What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop--and Why It Matters. Basic Civitas Books.
“if the late Tupac Shakur were a newly signed artist today, I believe he’d likely be considered a socially conscious rapper and thus relegated to the margins of the commercial hip-hop field”
  • Rose believes that artists today are producing music that meets societal expectations, however Lamar arguably subverts this as he socially comments through his music on a similar level to Tupac, or perhaps even further

Osumare, H. (2007). The Africanist aesthetic in global hip-hop: Power moves. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

“Connective Marginalities: Hip Hop Around the World From global street culture to the World Wide Web, hip hop culture is not difficult to locate. The Internet provides copious sites across the map where one can travel to diverse international hip hop scenes at the click of a computer mouse in the comfort of one's own home”

·         the effects of new and digital media makes it easier for audiences to be involved with political music and to locate and even be part of it

Morrison, T. (1987). Beloved. United States. Alfred Knopf.

·         this novel revolves around the theme of slavery and reveals similarities between Kendrick’s speech and hers. This novel is fragmented and split into 3 parts at the beginning of each, the house 124 Bluestone Road is analysed. 

“124 was spiteful” 

“124 was loud”

“124 was quiet” 

“This is not a story to pass on”

Straight Outta Compton. (2015, USA, Gray. G. F)

·         focuses on how N.W.A were a controversial rap group that were not swayed by the media but by themselves as individuals revealing how the social commentary in rap was something that started from the individual rather than the institution

Tupac Interview at 17 years old, 1988. (1988, HisLifeAsTupac) 
KRS-One. (1993). Sound of da Police. Showbiz.
·         the lyrics refer to police, in places like the Bronx: they’re a protest against institutionalized racism, oppression and violence against the black community
"Be an officer? You wicked overseer!" 
"Take the word overseer, like a sample Repeat it very quickly in a crew, for example Overseer, overseer, overseer, overseer. Officer, officer, officer, officer. Yeah, officer from overseer"

Ab-Soul. (2016). Huey Knew. 
·         references Black Panther Party co-founder Huey P. Newton - the rapper immortalizes the iconic photo of Newton sitting in a wicker chair, wearing a leather jacket with guns in hand
·         throughout the video, the screens surrounding Ab-Soul flash images of San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, instances of police brutality and Donald Trump, whose race-baiting rhetoric has dominated headlines for months
"Pale white horse when I black out" 
·         pale white horse is a metaphor for the Armageddon 
"Even white lives matter when I black out"

 

Kendrick Lamar. (2015). To Pimp A Butterfly.

Ahmed. I., Drake. D., Callahan, N., Werthman. C., Baker. E., Kenner. R,, Tharpe. F,. Scott. D,. (2016). The Best Rapper Alive, Every Year Since 1979
“The rhymes on ‘AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted’ went beyond gangster life and dug into the underbelly of American apartheid.”

 

1996 – “Tupac – 1996 is a case study for every aspect of why 2Pac is so celebrated. He was a viable, competent artist in multiple arenas, and he had the discipline to incorporate his varied and conflicted missions into a single mantra

2013 – “Kendrick Lamar – the release of ‘good kid’ cemented Kendrick’s status as the Best Rapper Alive and earned comparisons to other legends who jump-started their careers with unforgettable major-label debuts”
“As the critical praise poured in and K-Dot fans supported their artist – a music-biz mantra that’s more often said than followed – a mainstream audience slowly started to appreciate this West Coast rapper with left-field sensibilities to the point where hip-hop as a whole started looking at him differently”

Ide. D,. (2013)- How Capitalism Underdeveloped Hip Hop: A People's History of Political Rap

http://www.hamptoninstitution.org/capitalismhiphoppartone.html#.WAUmWeArLIV

“New School Hip Hop was defined by its seminal, independent spirit of artists' attempts to manoeuvre within the confines of an ever-increasing hierarchal, corporate, top-down structure”

Kendrick Lamar sits down with N.W.A. (2015, Billboard)
Lamar considers himself an offspring off N.W.A and that rap generation, he believes that “everything [he’s] done comes from [them.]” Dre says that “your shit is top of my playlist – your attention to detail, how precise you are” – Dre praises Lamar for being a lyrical genius and being able to create the masterpieces that he does.
With N.W.A’s records “you could visit Compton from a safe distance” Cube believes that you could always be controversial “they could always say it but they were scared or their companies wouldn’t let them”
The legacy of N.W.A – Cube wants them to be remembered as “the most dangerous group, a group that made it okay for artists to be themselves” 
Dre wants to inspire “you can go against the grain, you can do something outside the box and be big”
“We were constructive not destructive” – Ice Cube 
·         Although being criticised for being so controversial they were able to influence and able to empower other artists such as Lamar


#3
Following on from this idea of the ‘zeitgeist,’ Public Enemy’s ‘Fight The Power’ music video perfectly demonstrates social and political commentary through their lyrics; their style being somewhat different from Lamar yet conveying the similar message, audiences are therefore able to become impacted by the themes explored within the video, such as racial discrimination.

·         Political movements, Martin Luther King – The American Dream POLITICAL/HISTORICAL 
·         Malcolm X and The American Nightmare
·         Representations within this video and Lamar’s; similarities and differences REPRESENTATIONS 
·         Stanley Cohen – moral panics AUDIENCE 
·         Polysemic themes and ideas
·         Wilbur Schramm - Two step flow model AUDIENCE 
·         Verisimilitude – beginning extract

Quotes 

Gray, J., Sandvoss, C., & Harrington, C. L. (2007). Fandom: Identities and communities in a mediated world. New York: New York University Press.
"One could love [music], but its embededness in social functions made more likely that one loved that which the music enabled. But commodification encouraged an attachment to music's own singular effects"
  • Commodification was the thing that made music worth something, this could be argued as something that has made music less valuable - example Immortal Technique and underground rap - institutionalisation - Kendrick Lamar's TPAB song, Institutionalised explains the effects of institutions on the rap industry
Terkourafi, M. (2010). The Languages of Global Hip-hop (Advances in Sociolinguistics). Continuum International Publishing Group.
“globally hip-hop artists offer incisive critiques of dominant cultures, engage with local issues of ethnicity and power, and address in different ways the legitimacy of their appropriation of what is traditionally deemed to be a Black genre”
  • Lamar's 'Fuck Your Ethnicity' 

(2015). Modern Blackface: The Cultural Appropriation of Rap. Standford University 

“Being considered “too white” to rap was not an issue in the rap genre until the dual emergence of the prevalence of white rapper appropriation and the alternative rapper”

·         the media discriminated against black rappers for the content of their songs and the social commentary discussed within their lyrics, however this idea of cultural appropriation is something that makes the rap industry seems spoiled. They were targeted and now they are doing the targeting. ‘F*** your ethnicity’ – Kendrick Lamar is able to socially comment through his music and realise that your ethnicity doesn’t define you

 

Osumare, H. (2007). The Africanist aesthetic in global hip-hop: Power moves. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

https://youthcultureandprotest.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/osumare_hip-hop-globe.pdf

“rap music and the entire expressive culture of hip hop resonate not only with the anxiety of youthful social rebellion, but extant global socio-political inequities as well.”

Chuck, D., Jah, Y. (1998). Fight the Power: Rap, Race and Reality. Delta.

“For too long I’ve felt that this art form is tossed aside as a Ghetto game for black youth and that limited opinion is ignorant” 

“Tupac had a plan to bring everybody to the table with the ‘thug for life’ image, and then he was going to flip the tables at the last minute”

“Once I realised that I’m a voice that people listen to, I realised I had to fill my voice with something of substance” 

“My goal is to be used as a viaduct, as a dispatcher of information. Television is the last plateau. We need programs representing our voice and interpretation, which come out and say the things that need to be said, and can be challenging and entertaining at the same time”

“It’s such a serious issue because the derogatory programming leads to a point where life imitates art, and a blur develops between fantasy and reality. I believe that television is one of the main reasons for the criminal mindedness of Black youth”

Kendrick Lamar talks about u, Depression, and Suicidal Thoughts. (2015, MTV)
“With money and being a celebrity how can I use it, how can I pimp it, can I pimp it negatively or can I pimp it in a positive way. Positive for me is showing what I go through and showing what I’ve been through with you and coming all the way back to I and saying that I still love myself at the end of the day”
‘Institutionalised’ – “how can I use my influence”

Angelou, M. (1969). I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. United States. Random House. 
·         metaphor, that of a bird struggling to escape its cage, is a central image throughout the work, which consists of a sequence of lessons about resisting racist oppression

J Cole, Omen. (2015). Caged Bird.
"freedom is just an illusion"
·         the idea of not being free and the whole race being targeted, can you ever truly be free in a society where the ruling elites are running

N.W.A. (1988). Fuck The Police.
·         Violence, guns and gangs. The video being shot through the scope of a gun makes the video embody violence in a more prevalent way. The video shows police officers attacking the group, revealing discrimination, police brutality

Ide. D,. (2013)- How Capitalism Underdeveloped Hip Hop: A People's History of Political Rap
http://www.hamptoninstitution.org/capitalismhiphoppartone.html#.WAUmWeArLIV

“Public Enemy undoubtedly pushed political hip-hop to a new level. Their intense, in-your-face rhymes promoted a historical revival amongst black youth previously separated from prior cultural developments and struggles of the past”

“political hip-hop took the form of cathartic, impulsive depictions of violence stemming from the wrath manifested within oppressed black communities. One example, Oakland rapper Paris, who adhered early in his career to a form of Black Nationalism similar to Public Enemy's, would seek a sort of lyrical revenge against individuals and institutions he found oppressive and exploitative. Through songs like "Bush Killa," where he fantasized about assassinating then President George H. Bush, he would decisively embrace a black militancy that challenged the past legacy of King's non-violence: ‘So don't be tellin' me to get the non-violent spirit, 'cause when I'm violent is the only time you devils hear it!’”

Williams. S. (2016). Hip-Hop’s History with Police Brutality: Why We Should Live in the Now

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/07/11/hip-hop-s-history-with-police-brutality-why-we-shouldn-t-romanticize-the-ogs-and-live-in-the-now.html

 

“We decided that rappers like Chuck D and 2Pac had the preapproved pedigree to offer criticism and insight; they’d earned a certain amount of cultural real estate, in that regard, because they’d always embraced commentary in their music”

“Many of us don’t feel that contemporary rap artists have the resume, so to speak, to truly affect change”

“Celebrities speaking out doesn't solve problems but it does make it harder for consumers of all colors to ignore those problems when their favorite is calling for it to be addressed”

·         this essentially reveals the influence that music has on audiences; this also relates to the two step flow model and how the more celebrities talking about a particular topic the more likely it is for the work to be seen and heard, showing the influence and impact that artists have

“This generation of hip-hop stars is more topical and outspoken than perhaps they get credit for”

·         the subtlety of most rappers and artists makes it more difficult to define them as political rappers or controversial rappers for that matter – rappers like Lamar are more explicit in their approach with lyrics much harsh than perhaps Coles for example, yet the same message is being portrayed

#4 
There are arguments to suggest that not all hip-hop music has positive effects and instead has a negative influence on audiences through the glamorisation of the lifestyle and the artists being simply slaves to the industry, however artists like Lamar who belongs to an independent record label, reveals the negative effects of institutionalisation and how fruitless artists are merely corrupted by the idea of capitalism.
  • The idea of institutionalisation and the music industry being the controllers – Capitalism, Institutionalisation ECONOMICAL/INSTITUTION/HISTORICAL/POLITICAL 
  • Emergence of underground rap and Immortal Technique POLITICAL 
  • Music industry and organisations – this Marxist idea of alienation, no responsibility for their work anymore INSTITUTION 
  • Bricolage, media representations, journalism – black people on the news REPRESENTATION 
  • Stuart Hall – dominant readings AUDIENCE 
  • Dyer – Stereotypes REPRESENTATION 
  • Counterculture HISTORICAL 
  • Cultural effects theory
  • Eminem
  • Mass culture and mass communication
  • Postmodernism

Quotes 

Rose, T. (1994). Black noise: Rap music and black culture in contemporary America. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England.
·         she speaks from a “pro-black, biracial, ex-working-class, New York based feminist, left cultural critic” point of view 
“Rap’s contradictory articulations are not signs of absent intellectual clarity; they are a common feature of community and popular culture dialogues that always offer more than one cultural, social or political viewpoint” 
  • this idea of rap holding polyvocal conversations is an extremely valid point made by Rose, however her basis of saying that rap as a whole is an embodiment of empowerment is an over emphasised statement that almost commodifies all rap being able to hold positive social expression. 
Charnas, D. (2010). The big payback: The history of the business of hip-hop. New York, NY: New American Library.
“When America desegregated, the music business itself remained one of the most segregated industries in the country.”
Rose, T. (2008). The Hip Hop Wars: What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop--and Why It Matters. Basic Civitas Books.
“The gangsta life and all its attendant violence, criminality, sexual deviance, and misogyny have, over the last decade especially, stood at the heart of what appeared to be ever-increasing hip hop record sales” 
“Between 1990 and 1998, the Record Industry Association of America (RIAA) reported that rap captured on average, 9-10 percent of music sales in the United States”
“Hip hop came of age at the beginning of a new technological revolution. After the late 1970s, when hip hop emerged onto the public scene, all forms of media technology exponentially expanded”
“Mass media consolidation was rendered even more profound for the record industry after the Telecommunications Act of 1966”

Chuck, D., Jah, Y. (1998). Fight the Power: Rap, Race and Reality. Delta.

“Many in the world of hip-hop have begun to believe that the only way to blow up and become megastars is by presenting themselves in a negative light” 

Dates, J., Barlow, W. (1993). Split Image: African Americans in the Mass Media. Howard University Press.

Historian Joseph Boskins statement – “To make the black man into an object of laughter, and conversely, to force him to devise laughter, was to strip him from masculinity, dignity and self-respect”

Ghansah, R. (2013). When the Lights Shut Off: Kendrick Lamar and the Decline of the Black Blues Narrative. LARB

“What makes him important is the way in which the autobiographical ‘good kid m.a.a.d city’ is so novelistic and so eloquently anchored in the literary blues tradition of which Ellison wrote”

“Lamar is equal parts oral historian and authorial presence”


8 Mile. (2002, USA, Hanson. C) 
·         this film focuses on discrimination within the hip-hop genre and predominantly revolves around the cultural appropriation within rap music. Eminem is a white rapper and although his social commentary is most relatable to his life and his own suffering, he is a great example of how artists have power as Eminem was able to make something out of nothing

Kendrick Lamar. (2015). God Is Gangsta
·         Lamar combines ‘U’ and ‘For Sale?’ in this video and confronts his demons and temptations within the video, revealing the harsh reality of suicidal thoughts and temptations and also the effects of the evilness within life – “the evils of Lucy was all around me”

Find Your Words. (2016, Kaiser Permanente Thrive)

·         This video was released for the Find Your Words Campaign focusing on mental health and depression. In the video a young black male is seen walking through a rather conventional urban setting whilst reciting Lamar’s lyrics from ‘i.’ 
·         This clearly reveals the significance of Lamar’s lyrics and how powerful they are to inspire an organisation to include his lyrics – proving that hip-hop music can have positive influences on an audience

Benjamin. M. (2016). Kendrick Lamar’s Music Has Become the Soundtrack for Battling Depression

http://uproxx.com/realtalk/kendrick-lamar-kaiser-commercial/

“’To Pimp A Butterfly is essentially his couch while we the listeners play therapists; pens in hand while observing his every word choice”


Kendrick Lamar – How to Clique a Butterfly. (2015, Clique) 
“Not smoking or drinking doesn’t put down my manhood or coolness”
·         Lamar discusses how he doesn’t smoke or drink that much and he believes that it doesn’t make you any cooler or any less of a man if you do or don’t

Immortal Technique. (2003). Point of No Return.
"This is the point from which I could never return, And if I back down now then forever I burn"

 

Ide. D,. (2013)- How Capitalism Underdeveloped Hip Hop: A People's History of Political Rap

http://www.hamptoninstitution.org/capitalismhiphoppartone.html#.WAUmWeArLIV
“Within a few years the schism between the dominant, mainstream rap spewed across the synchronized, consolidated radio waves and the dissident, political, and revolutionary lyrics expressed throughout the underground network would develop, separating hip-hop into two worlds”
“Rapper Immortal Technique frames this dichotomy in a political context emphasizing the opposition between the major label ‘super powers of the industry’ and the ‘underground third world of the street’”
“Meanwhile, hip-hop activists who advocate for social change, formulate political dissent, and fight for economic redistribution have been systematically marginalized and excluded from the mainstream discourse. Corporate capitalism, aided by neoliberal deregulation and privatization, have stolen the culture, sterilized its content, and reformatted its image to reflect the dominant ideology. Independent, political rap containing valuable social commentary has been replaced with shallow, corporate images of thugs, drugs, and racial and gender prejudices filled with both implicitly and explicitly hegemonic undertones and socially constructed stereotypes”

J Cole. (2013). Chaining Day.
·         rappers are slaves to the materialistic lifestyle, the idea of the hip-hop industry revolving around affluence and materialism rather purpose

Dr. Dre, Anderson .Paak. (2015). Animals.
·         reveals how African-Americans in Compton and America in general are being mistreated, with police resorting to inflict ruthless violence and other inhumane acts. This song also illustrates how the media always pays more attention on the wrong doings instead of the peaceful acts the African-American community commit
"And the old folks tell me it's been going on since back in the day, But that don't make it okay, And the white folks tell me all the looting and the shooting's insane, But you don't know our pain"

Dre. Dre, Anderson .Paak, Justus, Kendrick Lamar. (2015). Deep Water.
·         mention Eric Garners death and focus on the unforeseen difficulties within the rap game
·         the metaphor of life being 'deep water' and like an aquarium where some people sink and some swim is an interesting idea that focuses on how hip-hop artists flourish and some sink by becoming slaves to the materialistic lifestyle

Kendrick Lamar. (2015). Institutionalized.
·         wealth's corruptive powers and how people are brainwashed by becoming rich. The poor and disenfranchised are institutionalized by prison, racism, classism, and the rich and the powerful are institutionalized by fear, dogma, and the almighty dollar. Everyone is a loser in this game, perspective is the only answer.

Ide. D,. (2013)- How Capitalism Underdeveloped Hip Hop: A People's History of Political Rap

http://www.hamptoninstitution.org/capitalismhiphoppartone.html#.WAUmWeArLIV
“Many people mistakenly narrowly define hip-hop as a particular style of music. The reality, however, is that Hip-hop is an extremely multifaceted cultural phenomenon.

Dyas. P. Media Magazine MM42. Dunraven School, South London
“Kanye West; admittedly a polarising figure notorious for his own self-aggrandisement, arrogance and lack of self-awareness, but often vulnerable, emotional and conflicted in his lyrics” 
·         the success of Kanye West reveals not only lyrics that represent his life as something of a struggle but expresses the effects he faces through his own self-aggrandisement
“Childish Gambino rejects the violence and gang associations of hip-hop culture, demonstrating a social progressiveness and willingness to challenge conventional models of masculinity”

Aidoo. D. Media Magazine MM45. Bristol
“Hip-hop, grime, urban, rap, spoken word – the success of artists within this multifaceted genre depends on how easy it is for everybody to understand their lyrics and relate to their content.”
“The elder generation have an inclination of blaming rap for much of the violence that goes on within the younger world. I see this as a misinterpretation. It begs the ongoing question of whether the media create and reinforce violent stereotypes, or whether media producers simply construct a reflection of society’s ills” 


Davey. D. (2006). Is Rap Actually Music or is it a Bad Influence?http://hiphopandpolitics.com/2006/08/23/is-rap-actually-music-or-is-it-a-bad-influence/

“Rap music also glorifies drinking, and sex. Two things which happen to be a major problem among many children today.”

·         this statement is an abomination, most increasingly because there are no statistics to back up this statement, this is not a major problem as according to ONS figures show that teenage pregnancy rates continue to fall 


Giovacchini. A. M. (1999). The Negative Influence of Gangster Rap and What Can Be Done About It

https://web.stanford.edu/class/e297c/poverty_prejudice/mediarace/negative.htm

“It is not moral to preach and advertise some of the topics discussed in the lyrics, yet they are all present in the world. It is also not considered moral to take away the rights of the individuals to express themselves through music, as observed in the rulings of the court cases dealing with these subjects. On the other hand, it is not considered moral to degrade women, threaten to kill people, or fire vicious insults, all of which are common in gangster rap”


(2016). Why Rap Music is a Bad Influence – Yes. Pitlane Magazine.

http://www.pitlanemagazine.com/morals-values-and-norms/why-rap-music-is-a-bad-influence-yes.html

·         blog posts and website articles slating rap for being a bad influence are simply words on a page, backed up with no respectable online statistics or facts 



#5
Artists who are able to socially and politically comment through their music axiomatically receive controversy and Lamar is no exception to this; however the bricolage associated with the genre is formed from media representations and the definitive two perspectives of the black man that is seen throughout the media industry; the good and the bad.
  • Journalism 
  • Levi-Strauss – Binary oppositions AUDIENCE 
  • Gramsci’s idea of ‘common sense’ 
  • Dependency theory AUDIENCE 
  • Logic – black and white rapper POLITICAL/SOCIAL 
  • Stanley Cohen – Moral Panics AUDIENCE 
  • Reception theory AUDIENCE 
  • TPAB seen as a syntagm HISTORICAL/SOCIAL 
Quotes 

Hall, S., Evans, J., & Nixon, S. (2013). Representation. London: Sage.
"Stuart Hall (1982) has underlined this splitting in the 'imperial eye' by suggesting that for every threatening image of the black subject as a marauding narrative, menacing savage or rebellious slave, there is a comforting image of the black as a doule servant, amusing down and happy entertainer"
  • two sides of a black person are seen in the media, especially within journalism. A black athlete is seen as a positive and praised elitist and the black criminal is seen as the stereotype that most conform too
Bloom, L. (2014). Suspicion nation: The inside story of the Trayvon Martin injustice and why we continue to repeat it. Berkeley, CA: Counterpoint.
“And yet Trayvon, somehow, on that wet, black, low-visibility night, saw through the bulk of Zimmerman’s body, through Zimmerman’s shirt, through his jacket to a matte black gun concealed in a matte black holster clipped inside his waistband. Can anyone possibly believe this story?”
  • this ironic statement commented by Bloom exaggerates the situation and creates this hyperbole of the truth
  • the exaggeration almost adds more depth to the story and reveals the harsh reality of the Trayvon Martin case 
Lee, H. (1960). To Kill A Mockingbird. United States. J. B. Lippincott & Co.

·         this novel focuses on the discrimination of black people in America – from a white author this makes this novel interesting as a white man defends a black man, something that was seen as ‘wrong’ 

“Shoot all the blue jays you want, if you can hit ‘em, but remember it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird” 

Rome, D. (2004). Black demons: The media's depiction of the African American male criminal stereotype. Westport, CT: Praeger.
“we do not come to the experience of mass media and popular culture as blank slates waiting to be written upon or voids waiting to be filled” 
  • the media cannot be to blame for their influence as it is always down to the individual in terms of what they want to be influenced by 
“The public perception of African Americans as inferior provides the basis of acceptability for the most outrageous lies” 
  • we conform to the idea that African Americans are at the heart of all criminal activities due to the stereotype, therefore Rome suggests that this has become the basis and is what society is built to believe now; this links to the Marxist theory of Hegemony, Gramsci believes that individuals of a higher status are able to create an influence of social conformity and therefore the mass media and the representation of black people has been stereotyped and commodified to be socially accepted – it paces back to the 1619 and the history of slavery 
Russell, K. (1999). The Color of Crime: Racial Hoaxes, White Fear, Black Protectionism, Police Harassment and Other Macroagressions. NYU Press.
“black success stories do not counterbalance images of black deviance [...] In many instances Black superstars are not perceived in terms of their blackness”
“become colourless, while those blacks who conform to the criminal stereotype remain ‘black’”
  • this highlights the problems within society and how status controls most. It relates to the Marxist term of the bourgeoisie and how the higher classes and the ruling status’ hold dominant power and change conventions 
David Cameron, bbc.com, June 7th, 2006 “I would say to Radio 1, do you realise that some of the stuff that you play on Saturday nights encourages people to carry guns and knives?” 
  • rap artists being advocates of violence - clearly ignorant 
Kendrick Lamar does not want to surpass Michael Jackson. (2016, The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon)  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pypMiMf9C0
·         Lamar was nominated for 11 awards this year and Michael Jackson holds the record with 12 – Fallon informs Lamar that he almost beat Michael where Lamar’s reply is simply no; “I cannot fathom being as great as Michael” he doesn’t want to be greater than Michael without putting in the work 
·         This reveals how humble Lamar is as an individual rather than a rapper, it subverts that orthodox stereotype of rappers being money minded and fame seeking celebrities, making Lamar the pariah of rap.

Kendrick Lamar Discusses Tupac. (2015, Kendrick Vs Pac)
“When are we gon’ understand that we are put on earth to love, that’s all it’s about. Everyone wanna figure out how complicated life is and break it down […] it’s gon’ keep going on. War gon’ keep going on, frustration gon’ keep going on, anger gon’ keep going on until we go back to this one word.. love.” 
·         Lamar almost mirrors Tupac’s 1988 interview as he discusses that things should not be seen as complicated and everything isn’t meant to be analysed, everything shouldn’t be so difficult as it is – it is as though Lamar is a reincarnation of Pac

Kendrick says Macklemore went too far + who “i” is for the state of HipHop. (2014, Hot 97)
·         Lamar believes that what is not being said in music is “making a connection with people and showing that music is life” 
“It ain’t all entertainment at the end of the day, it sells music but at the same time it affects people”
“I could sit here talking slick on records all day but who’s gonna relate to it when they gotta go back to this crazy world” 
·         This shows that Lamar makes music for the people and not for the industry; he wants people to relate to him and make that meaningful connection with his music to understand him and understand the world around them 
“Me being who I am and not being somewhat fearful of what the world think or what the industry standard is, I’m gonna do it the way I wanna do it, the way I’ve always been doing” 
·         This reveals the institutional power and how Lamar holds his own power making him part of this independent record label

Drake or Kendrick? Obama quizzed on rap battles, Star Wars. (2016, Pal Tube)
“I have to go with Kendrick […] His lyrics are outstanding, his last album was outstanding, best album of the year”
·         To get such high acclaim off Obama really emphasises how much Lamar is respected as a rapper and an artist

Ahmed. I., Drake. D., Callahan, N., Werthman. C., Baker. E., Kenner. R,, Tharpe. F,. Scott. D,. (2016). The Best Rapper Alive, Every Year Since 1979

2015 “If TPAB wasn’t the best rap album of the year, it’s tough to argue that it wasn’t the most important. It’s perhaps the most ambitious rap album of the past half-decade. No other album this year made us look into ourselves as deeply or as far outwardly. It questioned nearly everything (blackness, whiteness, religion, social responsibility), which in turn made us question everything: the role of rappers, the role of rap music, respectability politics, the role of music press, the idea that art can be at once great and distasteful. The album cast a shadow over the entire year, out of which came one of 2015’s brightest gems ‘Alright.’”

Williams. S. (2016). Hip-Hop’s History with Police Brutality: Why We Should Live in the Now

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/07/11/hip-hop-s-history-with-police-brutality-why-we-shouldn-t-romanticize-the-ogs-and-live-in-the-now.html

“Hip-hop is no longer black people’s CNN, but perhaps it’s become something different: more of a town hall for the culture, a sounding board, a place to vent as opposed to a source of information. And maybe that’s still enough to help galvanize a generation”

-Chuck D’s famous quote 

 

Platon. A. (2016). Kendrick Lamar opens up about meeting president Obama

http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/magazine-feature/6866105/kendrick-lamar-meeting-president-obama

“No matter how high-ranking you get, you’re human”

“No matter how high the pedestal you reach, we all still like a beat”

·         The truth behind situations, the respect that Lamar has earned to be respected by the President 

·         The National Mentoring Partnership – “mentoring saves lives”

·         The influence of Lamar, having a positive effect on the youth as a mentor as a guide to reach somewhere far in life

 

Jones. J. (2014). Georgia Students Study Kendrick Lamar for Class

http://college.usatoday.com/2014/09/01/georgia-students-study-kendrick-lamar-for-class/

·         The university professor Adam Diehl thinks that “Hip-hop is about immediate feedback to the world people observe around them”

In the comments section: 

- Michael Younger · Clayton, North Carolina “College courses named after a thug.... Brilliant. This would lead a career in stealing cars.”
“I happen to be black and seem THUGS like Lamar way too many times. He is another reason society is going backward AND blacks are viewed negatively. And also the reason why Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner and Michael Brown are dead.”
·         What happens to be most interesting about this is the fact that this black male doesn’t support Lamar’s music and it is exactly what he says in his Hot 97 interview where he says that “black people do not support us” instead they have no respect for the music when it is the very reason why the music is being produced