Footnotes to Plato from the foothills of the Superstition Mountains

Saturday Night at the Oldies Guest Post: From Gospel to Rap, Part II

By X. Malcolm. Trigger Warning! Not for snowflakes. Second in a series on the degeneration of black music. Part I here.

In part I, I summarised the elements of the rap genre as I see them, in particular how it seems to be influenced by Malcolm X’s brand of identity politics. In Part II I shall try to assess the genre. Does it succeed as art, or as political philosophy, or anything else?

In trying to assess the genre, I shall ignore the first two, namely repetitive groove sampled from the beats of Starks and Stubblefield, and the use of speech rather than song. One is simply a musical style: nuanced repetition is the stock in trade of composers such as Philip Glass, and speech song or Sprechgesang is a technique long practised in the classical tradition and a significant part of the canon. This is style, it could reasonably be argued that style is a matter of taste, and I shall not quarrel with taste.

The third and the fourth are peculiar to rap. One is an aggressive style of delivery in the language of the streets, the other is broadly anchored in the politics of Malcolm X. I say ‘broadly’, for if a  position is a political ideology, then it must as such possess  some form of internal consistency or coherence. The assumptions behind it do not have to be true, but they must be consistent. If we say that the agenda of black politics should be set by radical organizations that advocate armed self-defence against the police, this is a version of the just war doctrine, which sees violence as sometimes morally justified under certain circumstances, and it is perfectly consistent.

The problem with rap is the lack of such internal consistency.

Take money. Most ideologies have a view on it, e.g. love of it is the root of all evil. Now the wealth that rappers have made from their craft is legendary. The net worth of Jay Z is currently estimated at $600m, of Dr Dre at $750m. This equals long-established performers like Madonna $800m, McCartney $660m. Their wealth is ostentatious: the typical rapper’s mansion might be worth $20m, 25,000 sq ft, with 15 bathrooms, perhaps a theatre or helipad, in one case a private night club. Is that wrong? No, it is patronising to criticise members of a poor and oppressed class for escaping poverty and oppression. ‘Middle finger to you hatin’ niggas, That hate to see a nigga do his thing’.

But the rap is all boast and braggadocio. The first commercially successful rap single was full of it. ‘Hear me talkin’ ‘bout chequebook credit cards mo’ money than a sucker could ever spend.’ NWA waxed philosophical. ‘Life ain’t nothin’ but bitches and money . . . Fuck bitches, get money, Fuck niggas, get money’. To brag about wealth is hardly a position, and such ostentation is not the basis of any political philosophy, and it does not address systemic racial and socio-economic oppression. Nor is this ‘oppressed people’s music’.

Take violence. Rap lyrics, and especially so-called gangsta rap, is famous for it.

For every one of those fuckin’ police, I’d like to take a pig out here in this parkin’ lot and shoot ‘em in their mothafuckin’ face.

Cop Killer, fuck police brutality!

Cop Killer, I know your family’s grievin’ … Fuck ‘Em!

So they complain about the police, and seek redress for the injustice, but what are they doing to attract this unwelcome attention from the law in the first place? Well, only some dope-dealin’, some gang-bangin’, takin’ niggas out with a flurry of buck shots etc. Where is the consistency? Unfairness requires a presumption of innocence. Again, NWA complain about the police searching cars, ‘thinking every nigger is selling narcotas’, yet other black artists openly boast of the practice. ‘I was only 17, had the neighborhood hooked / Had ‘em stealing out they crib ‘cause my crack taste like ribs’.

They may say they document the violence of street life, yet the words celebrate it. Famously ‘Hit ‘Em Up’ by Tupac Shakur: ‘Killing ain’t fair but somebody got to do it, You’d better back the fuck up before you get smacked the fuck up .. Takin’ a life or two, that’s what the hell I do, You don’t like how I’m livin’? Well, fuck you!’ Famously, Shakur was murdered only three months after its release.

It has too often been real. In 1991, Dr. Dre attacked presenter Dee Barnes, slamming her face and body against a wall. Dre commented ‘[if] somebody fucks with me, I’m gonna fuck with them. .. Besides, it ain’t no big thing – I just threw her through a door.’ In 1993, Snoop Dogg’s bodyguard shot and killed a member of a rival gang, although he was later acquitted on grounds of self defence. After becoming annoyed by his persistent questions, producer Suge Knight dragged a journalist across the room and shoved his head over a tank of piranhas: ‘How about if my fish eat your fucking face?’ See also this rap sheet.

In their defence of rap, the liberal left have naturally avoided this aspect of the genre. Theresa Martinez (‘Popular Culture as Oppositional Culture: Rap as Resistance.’ Sociological Perspectives 40: 2, 265-86) has claimed it as a form of ‘oppositional culture’ promoting ‘resistance, empowerment, and social critique’. But as Sikivu Hutchinson has complained, this passes over how gang rape, pimping and the murder of prostitutes are ‘chronicled, glorified and paid homage to’ as the spoils of street life. ‘Black female survivors suffer on the margins in a culture that still essentially deems them “unrapeable”’. Nor is there anything liberal about some rappers’ views on gay rights. Try this. ‘Won’t play basketball cause your nails ain’t dry’. ‘I ain’t into faggots,’ added 50 Cent, ‘I don’t like gay people around me, because I’m not comfortable with what their thoughts are,’ although he claimed ‘I’m not prejudiced,’ and that it was OK because on the street they ‘refer to gay people as faggots, as homos. It could be disrespectful, but that’s the facts.’

This is not a position.

Uncle TomAs for the overall success of the genre, if it attempts to be serious, it needs to be serious. But rap, in becoming the court jester of black music, has also, with considerable irony, turned into the house negro. Of course, sometimes the fool gets to tell the truth, the truth that would be trouble in the mouth of another, but that is the problem of the fool: we can only take him seriously on the assumption we do not take him seriously. ‘Truth has a genuine power to please if it manages not to give offence, but this is something the gods have granted only to fools’.

Indeed, has the history of black music been about playing the fool? In Golliwogg’s Cakewalk (1908) Debussy not only ‘appropriates’ the rhythms of the negro minstrels, but also the music of the white German nationalist Wagner. Listen out at 1:09 for the opening theme of Tristan. Perhaps Debussy is having a snigger at the pompous high-culture aesthetic of Bayreuth, yet he must contrast it with the vulgar and comical cakewalk – which itself began as black people aping the manners of the white upper class of the American Golden Age: ‘the bumbling attempts of poor blacks to mimic the manners of whites’ (link).

The later American fascination with Harlem was part of a larger fascination with black culture that Nate Sloan believes was imported from France in 1900s, with artists like Picasso painting ‘African’ art, and Debussy writing ‘minstrel’ music. The project was sincerely intended as respectful of ‘primitive’ or ‘exotic’ art, but it was a condescending form of respect. Berliner has complained about the ‘stereotypical representations of black as grands enfants – whether savage, servile or hypersexual’ which helped define the colonial and civilising ‘French self’. ‘Duke’ Ellington’s style of symphonic jazz began at the Cotton Club, open only to whites, where blacks were depicted as jungle savages or ‘darkies’ in the cotton-fields of the South. So the signature sound of probably the greatest black composer of the early twentieth century is located in a white primitivist fantasy. Sloan views this as Western ‘romantic re-imagining’ of non-Westerners as charmingly primitive and primal, but black writer Langston Hughes was more direct, speaking of the Club as ‘a Jim Crow club for gangsters and monied whites’, and likening it to the entertainment provided at a zoo

Is rap any better? As I have argued, it is not a coherent political philosophy, but a form of entertainment. And do not forget that about 70% of people who buy the stuff are white. Spike Lee has argued that it is just a modern version of the Victorian minstrel performer. Lee grew up aspiring to be like the educated black men he saw reading books and going to college, when young black kids ‘didn't grow up wanting to be a pimp or a stripper like they do now’. Are the personas of the pimp, the pusher and the gangsta just another kind of blackface?

As for this gem, which I began with, I find no redeeming qualities whatever. It does not even pass as entertainment, except for disturbed adolescent boys. Aristotle pointed out long ago that music has a power of forming the character, and should therefore be introduced into the education of the young. ‘For young persons will not, if they can help, endure anything which is not sweetened by pleasure, and music has a natural sweetness’. But this has no sweetness, nor does it seem capable of forming the character.

In summary, rap music is for the most part a form of entertainment. It has made a lot of black people wealthy, but that is precisely because it is entertainment, which needs no coherence or system or ideology, nor the kind of difficult writing or subtlety of thought that is less financially rewarding. Perversely, its ‘oppositional’ and separatist black identity politics has become absorbed into the mainstream culture of America, as another form of stereotype, and has even turned into a weird form of integration, namely the house negro as court jester. Just as Malcolm X complained there are ‘house negroes among us’, so Lee laments that ‘Minstrels are still with us today’. And that irony is still with us today, too. 


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18 responses to “Saturday Night at the Oldies Guest Post: From Gospel to Rap, Part II”

  1. BV Avatar
    BV

    You’re an amazing guy, X. Thanks.

  2. Jim Soriano Avatar
    Jim Soriano

    This is an excellent offering and it should be developed into a form for publication, pace to Mav’s blog.
    The Cotton Club was as you say it was, racist terrain on the NYC entertainment scene, but dwelling on its inherent racism doesn’t fully describe its contribution to American culture. Many a tune in the Great American Songbook was introduced at there. The music was mainlined. It became part of a whole larger than itself. Rap music, it seems, has no such part-to-whole relationship, because the whole doesn’t exist anymore.

  3. BV Avatar
    BV

    Thanks for the comment, Jim. Merry Christmas.

  4. Malcolm Hex Avatar

    >>doesn’t fully describe its contribution to American culture
    Of course, and I alluded to this in Part I

    Rappers rejected the integration that was fundamental to the golden years of American popular music. Paul Robeson sang ‘Old Man River’, written by Jerome Kern. Billy Holiday sung ‘Strange Fruit’, written by Abel Meeropol. The embrace of violence is essential to the rap of the late 1980s, but I shall discuss this later.

    It all went horribly wrong in the 1960s with the idea of ‘singer songwriter’. Some singers are good songwriters, most are not, and vice versa. The whole point of the American songbook is that it is music composed by one person, lyrics by another, interpreted by a third or more. A lot of the early bebop was from the songbook.

  5. BV Avatar
    BV

    >>The whole point of the [Great] American songbook is that it is music composed by one person, lyrics by another, interpreted by a third or more.<< That's an interesting claim. Never thought of that before. Thank you! Does every song in the GA songbook satisfy those conditions? (I don't know enough to supply counterexamples.) It sounds strange to say that the GAS has a point. It's just that these songs got written and performed during a certain period of time and that subsequently one could see that they shared certain attributes that justified lumping them together into the GAS. Things "went wrong" before the '60s: Chuck Berry was writing music and lyrics of songs he himself originally performed in the '50s. And I wouldn't say things "went wrong." Some of us in the '60s thrilled to see the scrawny Jewish kid from Hibbing, Minnesota, Bobby Zimmerman, up there on stage all by himself with guitar and harmonica singing songs he himself wrote, songs with meaning, unlike so much of the pablum of GAS. One could say that that was truly American: the lone individual, a musical and lyrical maverick similar to Bobby Fischer who alone, without state support, defeated the state-supported best the Evil Empire could produce back in the summer of '72. A wonderful presagement of the coup de grace delivered to the Soviet commies by Ronald Reagan with help from Margaret Thatcher, Lech Waleska (sp?) and the Pope. Boris Spassky was, I will grant, a much nicer and saner man.

  6. Malcolm Hex Avatar

    >>Does every song in the GA songbook satisfy those conditions? (I don’t know enough to supply counterexamples.)
    Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer are possible exceptions. This excellent one is by them both (Mercer, lyrics and singing, Arlen, music). The version by Sinatra is more well known. ‘We’re drinking my friend – to the end – of a brief episode’. Like many GAS it was originally written for a musical (‘The Sky’s the Limit’, 1943). Here is Astaire singing it, but without the deep existential melancholy of the Mercer and Sinatra versions.
    >> one could see that they shared certain attributes
    The uniting factor was Tin Pan Alley, a sort of factory for writing hit numbers, so perhaps the shared attributes are essential rather than accidental.
    >> Bobby Zimmerman
    Well I deliberately said ‘Some singers are good songwriters’, with that one in mind, although some may say he was better at the songwriting bit. I prefer his versions. E.g. this is much better than this sickly anodyne version, which doesn’t even get the chords right.

  7. Malcolm Hex Avatar

    >>so much of the pablum of GAS
    I don’t agree. Perhaps some of it, yes, but I only have to point to the Mercer-Arlen number I linked to above. The difference is that GAS is mostly about the individual human condition, perhaps the guy sitting at the bar at 3 o’clock in the morning. Unlike the 60s, there is no political position that I can think of. Then you get Dylan and all the rest, and you end up with an idiot like Bono mouthing off about unemployment or whatever, although he has special tax arrangments outisde the EU. Entertainers should leave stuff like interest rates and quantitative easing to those who know better, no?

  8. Malcolm Hex Avatar

    A further example of this division of labour. Arlen wrote the song, Ira Gershwin the lyrics, Garland the incomparable singer. Let’s also not forget the skills of the arranger (don’t know who did this one) and the individual players who bring it all together.

  9. BV Avatar
    BV

    One example of non-pablum does not prove that most of GAS is not pablum/pabulum. How much is that doggie in the window? Am I being fair?
    Isn’t ‘individual human condition’ a *contradictio in adjecto*?
    But you are surely right that the music of that era was apolitical. To put it somewhat pejoratively, it was a music of escape, rather than a music of engagement. (In those days there was a popular music of social commentary, Woody Guthrie, et al. but none of that is included in GAS, as you will undoubtedly agree.)
    It would be interesting to try to define ‘GAS’ rigorously, both intensionally and also extensionally, i.e., give a list of all and only GAS numbers.
    As for escapism, the WWII people needed escape from war and econ. depression, whereas our candy-assed Boomer generation didn’t, and could afford to comment on racism and sing about civil rights, and working on the railroad when few of us did any really ass-busting work.
    My grunt jobs were only for a time and I had the reasonable assurance that I would be able to live by my wits, which is what I have done, despite working class background.
    There are a lot of interesting questions here.
    I don’t know about Bono in particular but your general point is well-taken.

  10. Julian Avatar
    Julian

    Bill,
    I can not find your answer to this type of objection to dualism:
    “[B]rain damage inhibits the exercise of the intellectual power. In other words, as long as soul and body are united, you need a good functioning brain to engage in intellectual activities; therefore it seems the intellect is dependent on the brain…
    [So] it does seem to be a contradiction to say that the intellect can function independently of the brain after abstraction occurs. How can [one] say that the intellect can function independently of the brain but yet is inhibited in its power when the brain is damaged? It would seem that the power of intellection cannot be achieved independent of the brain, which of course would ruin [the] argument… for its survival after bodily death.”
    What would your answer be?
    All the best,
    Julian

  11. Malcolm Hex Avatar

    >>Isn’t ‘individual human condition’ a *contradictio in adjecto*?
    Interesting point. I don’t think so. Off the top of my head, there is the human condition as it applies to the individual, the personal etc. The sitting in a bar at 3 in the morning, reflecting on lost love. Many of us have been there.
    But then there is the condition of the mass, the community, the nation. The individual cannot be at war (except figuratively). Only the nation, the community, the mass, can be at war. So to be warlike, or prone to war, is a condition of humanity considered as a mass, contrasting with pugnacity, which is a condition of the individual. Although I am sure there is a connection. Likewise, loneliness is part of the human condition, qua individual. Insularity is a condition of the mass, or of a nation.
    Bono is the front man of pop group U2. He is fond of lecturing us about giving money to developing countries through the tax system, on the other hand he is wont to avoid tax himself.
    >>One example of non-pablum does not prove that most of GAS is not pablum/pabulum. How much is that doggie in the window? Am I being fair?
    Likewise, one example of pablum does not prove that most of GAS is pablum/pabulum. Patti Page also gave us Old Cape Cod

  12. BV Avatar
    BV

    That’s an example of non-pablum?
    I know who Bono is; just didn’t know about his lecturing.
    I suppose my thesis is that most of the GAS tunes are escapist, sentimental, formulaic, cliche-ridden and without depth. I grant, though, that sometimes that is exactly what one wants.
    Take Deep Purple: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwtFcr7E0O8
    I like it in the April and Nino Tempo version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MCv3Uw2dvNg
    But now compare the great Phil Ochs song in the Baez version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4BYOJ1tc-k
    This is why the music of our generation beats the crap out of the stuff our parents listened to.
    Or am I just a generational chauvinist? I know I am being tendentious. But I am having fun.

  13. BV Avatar
    BV

    Julian,
    Who are you quoting? And what is meant by abstraction?

  14. John B. Avatar
    John B.

    Irving Berlin often wrote music and lyrics, as did Cole Porter. The latter is better known as a lyricist, and I think that the wordplay in his lyrics and the catchy and enjoyable nature of his melodies have led people to write him off as a top-notch writer of hits for Tin Pan Alley and nothing more. But the harmonic progressions and modulations in his compositions are often deceptively complex. To be able to supply a composition with that kind of musical depth without losing its surface appeal is a really special talent. Duke Ellington had it in abundance; not many do.
    Fats Waller often performed–providing both piano and vocals–songs on which he was the composer, although he didn’t write any lyrics that I know of; he usually worked with Andy Razaf. Several Waller compositions are in the GAS by any fair reckoning.
    Of course, music from the rock era had plenty of composer-lyricist duos as well. But usually one of those people also sang the songs, and usually it was the lyricist. Two exceptions are Elton John (lyrics by Bernie Taupin) and Jerry Garcia (lyrics by Robert Hunter). I don’t know of any others right off. Country has maintained the division of labor to a much greater extent than rock.
    What makes Dylan’s style a new departure compared to the GAS era, in my opinion, isn’t just politics. It’s that Dylan wrote about sources of emotion, conflict, elation, and despair other than romantic love. Politics was one of those, but it was really a small part of it. He had plenty of songs about romance and heartbreak, too, and they are among his best, but even those songs managed to reach out to something greater, to find something in (usually the failure of) a romantic relationship that speaks to a more fundamental knot in the human condtion. It Ain’t Me, Babe; Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright; well, I need to stop myself or I’ll get carried away naming songs. My point is, the GAS mostly stuck to courtship. What exactly is the connection between this greater depth and breadth of material and the emergence of the singer-songwriter? I don’t have an answer to that, but it seems like an important question if one is to understand the change in popular music after the second world war.

  15. BV Avatar
    BV

    Good comments, John.
    >>My point is, the GAS mostly stuck to courtship.<< My point as well. And when Dylan treated love relations in his best songs he achieved a poetic depth that I will challenge Malcolm to find an any GAS number. For example, "Just Like a Woman": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljbxm_sKC90
    True, Dylan wrote conventional cliched love songs. But those songs were not what made Dylan Dylan.
    Again, I challenge Malcolm to find a GAS song that achieves the beauty, depth, poetic richness and magic of “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RrdtrT6ukM
    Do I sound like a fan?
    >>What exactly is the connection between this greater depth and breadth of material and the emergence of the singer-songwriter? I don’t have an answer to that, but it seems like an important question if one is to understand the change in popular music after the second world war.<< Good question. Perhaps it is because the whole culture became less social and more individualistic. Dylan was both effect and cause of this: he didn't care much about catering to his audience or to anybody's expectations. For example, he dropped the folk music-protest stuff when he moved into his surrealist-existentialist phase in the mid-60s with his best three albums, Bringing it all back home, Highway 61 Revisited, and Blonde on Blonde. He didn't much care that people called his a sell-out. He was pursuing a personal vision.

  16. Malcolm Hex Avatar

    >>I challenge Malcolm to find a GAS song that achieves the beauty, depth, poetic richness and magic of ‘It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue
    Well I don’t particularly like that song. ‘The vagabond who’s rapping at your door. Is standing in the clothes that you once wore’. It aims at the high poetic highway but fails madly, and the result is kitsch.
    The highway is for gamblers, better use your sense / Take what you have gathered from coincidence
    I am sure I could write a Dylan song generator like those post modern generators.
    By contrast, the GAS rarely makes such risible attempts at high culture.
    As a riposte, I give you When the World was Young, Julie London singing.
    Bill, I believe you declined my witty comment about Dylan and cliches. Humph.
    John B >>Country has maintained the division of labor to a much greater extent than rock.
    Yup.

  17. Malcolm Hex Avatar

    And with a nod to John B, Diana Krall singing Night and Day. Singer songwriter style, but music and lyrics by Cole Porter.

  18. BV Avatar
    BV

    Hex,
    Even though you are a cantankerous defender of the indefensible [grin], I hereby invite you to write a shorter guest post in which you select the top five or so GAS songs in your opinion. You should also say something about your criteria of selection.

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