Rap music has changed dramatically
over the years. This change, I believe has been for the worse. Rap music goes
all the way back to Africa when people were performing stories in a rhythmic
matter. Slaves used to sing about the hard work they endured and their
struggles. Rap artists today believe that they are doing something similar when
they talk about their “struggles” growing up and how they got to where they are
now, but the fact of the matter is, is that degrading women in songs has
nothing to do with struggles one grew up with unless you have a pure hatred for
women by some traumatizing experience. Unlikely. What’s even worse is that
there is now a subgenre of rap referred to as death rap. In the song “Light my
Fire” by Necro, he degrades women in a way I have never heard before. There is
absolutely no care in how he is portraying women. He manages to objectify women
in every way possible and use profanities all the way through. Necro makes it
clear throughout the song that all women are good for is sex and doing anything
to please a man.
According to Kellner, “in an era of
globalization, one must be aware of the global networks that produce and
distribute culture in the interests of profit and corporate hegemony” (Kellner,
p.11). The reason why songs like this
are able to be sold is because it is what the people want. If a rap artist isn’t
willing to degrade women and talk about all of the “bitches” and “hoes” out there,
then chances are the music will not be as popular. Similarly to female artists,
if they aren’t willing to be sexualized then they won’t be able to make it to
the point of fame that they desire nor have the fan base that they want. Ultimately,
these artists are forced to be sell-outs. This is what Kellner would refer to
as the political economy of culture.
There are several ways that Necro goes
about degrading women in his song through his lyrics. Kellner states, “Traditionally,
the qualitative analysis of texts was the task of formalist literary criticism,
which explicates the central meanings, values, symbols, and ideologies in
cultural artifacts by attending to the formal properties of imaginative
literature texts-such as style, verbal imagery, characterization, narrative
structure and point of view, and other formal elements of artifact” (Kellner
11). There are several lyrics in the song that prove the attitude and ideas
that Necro is trying to convey through his music. One of the first things he
says in the song is, “fuckin whorebags.” He has no respect for women. Necro
also gives off the notion that women will do absolutely anything for a man. In
the article “There Are Bitches and Hoes” by Tricia Rose, she says “Some hip hop
artists defend their endless salf-aggrandizing talk about dominating bitches
and hoes by saying that they are not talking about all women” (322) but he places
all women into this category, “work it, you’re all babes doin it/Bitches down
to drink piss, fluid, plus manure shit.” He makes it seem as though women have
no morals. Another idea that Necro conveys through his text is that there is no
need to reciprocate any sexual favors. Male dominance is portrayed throughout
the song as well because he is always directing the women what to do, “suck my
dick, show me your tits, rub your clit, you’re a fuckin twit.” He is making a mockery of women because he is
saying that women are stupid enough to act like this. Although all of these
lyrics are horrible, the section that really gets to me is “I feel women should
be stripping and sinning, syringes in em’ trippin’ while their pimp brainwashes
them in a building, you OD’d now you hooked up to an intravenous, it’s a minor
inconvenience from the hospital bed you’ll suck penis.” This statement touches
upon the idea of radical feminism and focuses on the idea of patriarchy and men
trying to oppress woman. Necro’s lyrics definitely display his values and ideologies.
“Members of distinct genders, classes,
races, nations, regions, sexual preferences, and political ideologies are going
to read texts differently, and cultural studies can illuminate why diverse audiences
interpret texts in various, sometimes conflicting ways” (Kellner 13). Different
people interpret things differently. One person may interpret these lyrics as
totally vulgar and offensive but another may not take them seriously because
this is what the music industry has become unfortunately. Music is all about
the audience and there are different kinds of people who are into different
genres of music so what one person is into another person may not. There is no
winning in this category because there is no way that everyone is going to be
happy.
Works Cited
Kellner, Douglas. “Cultural Studies, Multiculturalism, and Media Culture.” Gender, Race, and Class in Media. Ed. Gail Dines and Jean M. Humez. 3rd ed. Los Angeles: Sage, 2011. 7-18. Print.
Rose, Tricia. " There Are Bitches and Hoes." In The hip-hop wars ( pp. 167-185). New York: Perseus.
I agree that it is true how rap music has changed overtime. Artists such as, Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac’s rap songs were truly stories about them living in the streets, etc, and not like some of today’s rap music that talks about, bitches and hoes, “paper,” (also known as money) or how, “blinged out your crib is”, or in other words, how luxurious your house is. I have never heard of death rap before or of the artist Necro and his song, “Light My Fire.” I looked into what death rap was and I found out that it is related to a subgenre of music known as horrorcore. I also found it interesting, that is it true that a genre of music has been formed and named just from what the topic of the rap song is or what it talks about?
ReplyDeleteI agree with what you say about Necro and what his views on women are. Many rappers who seem to have a sense of "rebellion" in any which manner that is diverse in its ways seems to get a vast amount of popularity. Also, I feel that the hip-hop/rap genre of music is not "dead" like most people consider it, but it has become mainstream with artists that evoke the masses, while other artists with "true" lyrics that attempt to convey life stories are either underground are don't have the sound of mainstream rap. He links his Horrorcore music with that of Death Metal. Coincidentally, his influences are rappers who are legends in the game who are on a total opposite side of the spectrum than what he has to offer. Like you said though, it is the way somebody interprets what they hear and we will most certainly have varying views on a topic like this.
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