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Published: 2014-04-27 06:20:53 +0000 UTC; Views: 6846; Favourites: 200; Downloads: 0
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Description
“What?”A mix of skeptical, bewildered, mildly impressed
And sometimes a little disgusted.
“You listen to rap?”
Behold, a specimen of middle-class suburbia
Spectacled, pimpled, messy-haired
Painfully awkward, unquestionably nerdy
Oh, and female, let’s not forget about that.
“Haydn and Beethoven; yup, that’s definitely your jam
During your late-night chemistry revision sessions
On your wild nights, maybe some Katy Perr – wait, what?
You listen to rap?”
Yes, I listen to rap
(Although I do still listen to Haydn
Toting Bach and Biggie together
Gets you strange looks from HMV cashiers, let me tell you)
And yes, I do actually enjoy it;
I’m not that kind of ironic listener.
After the initial double-take,
The curious follow up with “Why do you listen to rap?”
Like Victorians questioning a returning anthropologist
Who’s been in among the natives
(For the record, I find this more funny than annoying
So please don’t think I’m being spiteful)
Whereas those who also listen to rap
Go “Do you want a listen? There’s this guy you really need to hear...”
These are good questions, and I’m happy to answer them.
Where it turns sour
Is when the curious “Why?” is instead a “How?”
As in “How do you listen to rap?”
As in “How do you even listen to that garbage?
It’s not even music.”
Guys, you’re breaking my heart here.
The thing is, you don’t have to love rap, or even like it
But if you tell me rap isn’t music, I will say
You haven’t
Truly
Listened to it.
Go listen to it. Do it now.
Really listen.
By which I mean don’t dismiss this genre
As the domain of the incoherent Sosas –
Zero rhythmic creativity
Incapable of rhyming without ending everything with “boy” or “yeah”
And ignorant lyrics not a millimetre deep
(Granted, those sadly do exist
And make me cringe and cry and wash out my ears
With the tears of my lost faith in humanity)
Don’t zone out and let the words become blank noise
Because you think they’re all trash, or too fast to understand.
This is rap
This is poetry with the power of a beat
This is music made to be felt at the bottom of your chest and the highest centres of your brain
Meant to be scribbled on a notepad and spat into a mic by the end of the day
Meant to be listened to with headphones, because your parents probably shouldn’t hear this
And you don’t want to turn the volume low
Stripped bare of melody, armed only with their own rhythmic flow
The words stand alone and speak for themselves
Eviscerating anger, pretention-free tenderness
Crackling, crooked humour, hope hidden in the wisdom of the despondent
Expose themselves to the elements, and thus
Become vulnerable, and to the listener, tangible
This is rap
This is the music of the rose that grew from the concrete
Who read Shakespeare in school but never got a chance
And so wrote his love letters to his mother and his dispossessed people
Over a drum machine and a 90s beat
The music of the ageing genius trying to recapture that lightning in a bottle
While laying his demons to rest and raising one last middle finger to the world
Of the kids rapping in their basements trying to make a dream
Of those who only need one mic
To speak to generations of heartbeats
To reach out to lost and angry teenagers
And those who are still that teenager inside
To give soul and spunk to those who need it
To make a shy and awkward 11 year old girl
Sit up, and take notice.
For what I’m trying to say, words alone can’t do justice
I have over-artsy-fied it, over-romanticized it
Over-intellectual-pick-it-apart-ized it
I have under-beat-ified it
Under-to-all-the-ladies-in-the-place-with-style-and-grace-ized it
Under-when-you-heard-the-Control-verse-for-the-first-time-and-it-felt-like-something-had-detonated-ized it
Trapped in plain text, it’s lost the spark that living rap has
Because really only the music can say what it has to say.
Words and words, essentially saying
That yes, I listen to rap
And yes, I love it.
In the end, it can be distilled to this:
I’m talking about poetic justice, poetic justice
If these hands put headphones on your ears, would you trust them?
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Comments: 218
Bansini In reply to ??? [2014-06-01 08:03:17 +0000 UTC]
I feel like this would make a great spoken word poem as well.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
matrixwrath8 In reply to Bansini [2014-06-01 22:22:10 +0000 UTC]
I have thought about that. There's a writer's group I regularly attend that has people read out some of their pieces at every meeting, so who knows.....*strokes chin thoughtfully*.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
chromeantennae In reply to ??? [2014-05-19 21:54:48 +0000 UTC]
This is amazing. I love this so much. As a hip hop head.....just....
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
matrixwrath8 In reply to chromeantennae [2014-05-19 22:06:05 +0000 UTC]
Thank you, for the comment, two favourites, llama and watch ! And yes! I now know that this has been read by at least one hip hop fan. All the references have now paid off
.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
chromeantennae In reply to matrixwrath8 [2014-05-19 22:07:37 +0000 UTC]
My pleasure, Catherine!
Yes, I recognized allll of them. This is my favorite poem of the last couple of weeks!
If you ever need some hip hop recommendations, come find me!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
matrixwrath8 In reply to chromeantennae [2014-05-19 22:12:27 +0000 UTC]
Aw, I feel so loved . Thank you, I'll be sure to seek you out
.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Silencedbook9 In reply to ??? [2014-05-18 02:44:42 +0000 UTC]
Whoa, just whoa. . . . . . .You, sir, are awesome!!!!!!!!! It's true that I listen to only listen to a few rap songs, but I agree with what you said about rap being poetry. (Being a poet myself). Thanks so much for this wonderful poem about rap!!!!!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
matrixwrath8 In reply to Silencedbook9 [2014-05-18 04:55:47 +0000 UTC]
I am a girl, for the record, but thank you!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Silencedbook9 In reply to matrixwrath8 [2014-05-18 17:35:26 +0000 UTC]
Dang it! I forgot to do my usually "sir or ma'am" address! So sorry about that!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
matrixwrath8 In reply to Silencedbook9 [2014-05-18 23:04:55 +0000 UTC]
Haha, don't worry about it!
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Fate4Destiny In reply to ??? [2014-05-17 23:42:03 +0000 UTC]
It raises a good point. Someone in my class once made the joke that they thought i only listened to classical music since i'm one of the top students in my year. It was kinda funny, since i absolutely love some of it but that's so stereotypical. If it was my friends and i told them i listened to rap, they's probably ask in what language (international music geek). XD. My law teacher who loves classic rock would probably be heartbroken though.
but yeah, i think people have an image of listeners for each genre, people in the city like pop, 'ganstas' for rap, nerds like classical, etc, etc. and i absolutely live the fact that now with youtube and such, everybody can love everything
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
matrixwrath8 In reply to Fate4Destiny [2014-05-18 04:54:27 +0000 UTC]
Haha, I know that feeling . YouTube has definitely been a great thing in terms of music; finding new artists and trawling through their discographies on YouTube is one of my favourite things to do.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
DeniseCroy In reply to ??? [2014-05-03 23:17:22 +0000 UTC]
I really like how we can feel all your passion in this peace. And I agree, rap, like any other music, has its goods artists and its bad artists. It's not "rap" as a whole that should be judged, but rather the various qualities inside of rap. I would listen to much more if only I knew where to look for the god sort !
Very good work on the piece
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
matrixwrath8 In reply to DeniseCroy [2014-05-04 00:48:01 +0000 UTC]
Thank you, I'm glad you liked it ! I guess the most important thing I can tell you on getting into rap is to treat it like any other genre; keep an open mind, start from somewhere and feel free to explore different artists and styles until you find some you really like. Listen closely and look up lyrics if you need to, because it's so much better when you know what they're saying. Same goes for getting to know the back stories of some of the artists (wikipedia!), as rap is probably one of the most personal genres out there and many of the best draw from their own life experiences to make their art.
I won't recommend any specific artists because I don't know your personal tastes; you should probably ask any friends you have that listen to rap since they'll know you better. In general, though, I'd stay away from heavy gangster rap at the start - especially if you aren't comfortable with loads of profanity - as well as the likes of Lil Wayne and Chief Keef. They're the "Sosas" I was referring to, and probably aren't the greatest representatives of the genre
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
DeniseCroy In reply to matrixwrath8 [2014-05-05 08:49:41 +0000 UTC]
Thank you. You are very insightful, my dear I shall look around, I hope I find interesting artists !
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
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