Nov. 16, 2020

Corporate America and Gangster Rap: A Destructive Combination?

From Ashoka Speaks by Maurice L. Harris (author's profile)

Transcription

Introduction: Corporate America and Gangster Rap..."

After I included 2 songs by Ice Cube on "My Soundtrack for the BLM Movement," a lot of people felt he betrayed the Movement by secretly meeting with the Trump administration, which, subsequently, resulted in that administration portraying him as on of their supporters.
Since I did recommend his music, I felt it is MY DUTY to explain how a person, such as Cube, can go from an inspiration to a cause to a, willing or unwilling, shill for its opposition. Therefore, I am posting a revision of an essay, "Corporate America And Gangster Rap, A Destructive Combination," that I originally wrote in Dec. 2019, for the Harvard Blackletter Law Journal--which"challenge anti-Blackness, participate in activism around knowledge production, & engage in collective struggle for liberation."

Corporate America and Gangster Rap, A Destructive Combination?

America likes to suck the cool form Black boys to sell their products, then criminalize these boys for looking like the ads they've created. (Unknown)

This irrefutable statement, which I heard from a woman on KPFA, a progressive SF Bay area public radio station, is the quintessence of a long history of American capitalism subjugating the fruits of Black people's labor & culture for profit. Here, she was specifically referring to the corporate appreciation of the most powerful culture in the world, hip hop.

This began in the late 80's, when hip hop was the pure, unadulterated voice of the streets--represented by Ice Cube's NWA, & of Black rebellion--represented by Chuck D's Public Enemy ("P.E."). During this time, both the NWA & P.E. had shook the power structure to it's core with their classic songs, "Fuck the Police", & "Fight the Power," respectively. However, despite P.E.'s messaging being more universally popular at the time--which was evident by the omnipresence of African medallions & Malcom X hats--Corporate America chose to financially back the gangster rap culture. Why?

First, after initially passing on rap music as a fad, they discovered its high profit margin; therefore they wanted in on it. Besides that, they had a more insidious motivation, which was to co-opt it in order to ensure a self-destructive mind-set wins out over a self-empowerment mind -set. In his book, City of Quartz, Mike Davis aptly documents NWA's complicity in this"

"But one of the most persist 'truths' that NWA report is their own avarice: "We're not making records for the fun of it, we're in it to make money." In contrast to their N.Y. Rap counterparts, P.E. ...who are tribunes of Black Nationalism, , L.A. gangster rappers disclaim all ideology except the primitive accumulation of wealth by any means necessary. ... Surrounded by benignly smiling white record company execs & PR men, NWA brandish customized assault rifles & talk darkly about recent 'drive-by' & funerals of friends-- a polished image like any other business. (Davis, 2006, pp. 86-7)

Coming from the same environment as NWA, I understand why they went for the money. During that time--as now--there wasn't much money in our neighborhoods; so, naturally, we were highly susceptible to any moneymaking scheme presented to us. In fact, I remember telling a female friend how I hated being in the drug business & she asked why I do it then? In which I replied, "Because this is where the money's at. If oranges turned the same profit, I would be under freeway selling oranges along with the Mexicans." However, just as the infiltration of drugs into our neighborhoods became a tool of self-destruction so had Corporate America's infiltration into L.A.'s gangster culture, as Davis acknowledged:

David James expresses pessimism that ANY contemporary culture ... can escape ... assimilation & repacking by the 'hegemonic media.' The experience of NWA, & less subtly of the entire burgeoning Colors genre, suggest that Hollywood is eager to min L.A.'s barrios & ghettos for every last lurid image of self-destruction & community holocaust. (Davis, 2006, p.87)

When such dkstucrive influence penetrates a culture, it becomes that much easier for the powers that be to PILLAGE, CONTROL, &/OR criminalize that culture. For instance, there seems to be a correlation between the time Hollywood backed gangster rap & the rise of U.S. prison population, which went form 773,919 in 1990 to 1,506,757 in 2016. (World, 2019, p. 127)

So, why didn't Hollywood back the more popular Black empowerment culture of the likes of P.E.? Quite simple, their interest didn't line up. Since Ice Cube's NWA had strong capitalistic interests--"accumulation of wealth by any means"--Hollywood found it much easier to manipulate this genre than the Black empowerment genre, whose ideology was based freedom from the American Corporate subjugation. As Chuck D explained, in 1997:

When Public Enemy came out we used say "P.E., we're agents fro the preservation of the Black mind. We're media hijackers." We worked to hiujack the media & put inout own form...Every time we checked for ourselves not he news they were locking us up anyway ["criminalizing"], so the interpretation coming from Rap was a lot clearer. that's why I call Rap the Black CNN. Rap is now a worldwide phenomenon. Rap is the CNN for young people all over the world. (West, 2004, pp. 173-74.)

Fortunately, as Fred Hampton used to say: "You can kill a revolutionary, but you can't kill a revolution"; therefore, despite the co-opting of the capitalistic rappers, the revolutionary messaging of Chuck D, & others, still lives on. One of my favorite of P.E.'s progeny, dead prez, is continuing the TRUE Black empowerment messaging, as evident in their song "Gangsta, Gangster,"--featuring Styles P--which explains the pre-Hollywood meaning of gangsta [spelled with an "a," not and "er"]:

[A gangsta is] not the image they selling us not he TV screen/he's a survivor, a provider by any means/move with strategy, outsmarting his enemies/...everything's twisted, the fame is so misunderstood/ [a gangsta] used to be a protector, MAN OF THE POPLE/ now they're MOSTLY FOLLOWERS/man WHERE ARE THE LEADERS?/...he works a hard job/trying to raise a Black child/he breaks bread with is people like Jesus did/try to explain to the children what the evils is.

Now to truly understand why rappers, such as Ice Cube, Lil Wayne--a man who, a few yers ago, said "Fuck Black Lives Matter" on Nightline, & the others wold risk their reputations by being associated with a capitalist who openly has White Supremacists on stand-by, just because he promised to increase their bank accounts, reread this piece & substitute Trump/Republican Party for Hollywood & Corporate America.

Resources
Davis, Mike. (2006). City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in L.A., 2nd ed.
(UK: Verso)
West, Cornel. (2004). Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight Against Imperialism (New York: Penguin Group)
World Almanac, The. (2019). (New York: Infobase)

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Replies (6) Replies feed

tenzintenzin Posted 4 years ago. ✓ Mailed 3 years, 11 months ago   Favorite
Mr Harris.
It’s almost a sort of mental gentrification. People seems to quickly forget, or develop amnesia about their previous life, and seem to be tone deaf about the lives of others.
Nipsey Hussle didn’t, and he paid with his life.
Ice Cube comments on something a few months ago on Twitter. It was regarding some faction in Africa. He asked people to fill him in about it. And I thought to myself, why is he sitting on his rich fat arse, in a mansion, asking people on the internet to do his research for him.
This is the sort of prevarication you get with celebrities. Some of them attach themselves like ticks to causes they have no idea about, but hope it will inflate 5eir careers and their follower numbers. There are no people in the front of civil rights. The civil rights movement froze and died in 1969 wi5 the deaths of the two Kennedy Brothers, Malcolm X, Dr King, and the implosion of the Black a panther movement.
Good news is Hollywood is dying. The big studios are reluctant to put their money into different projects. They fire their money, like bullets, at the Marvel DC universe. Netflix, Amazon, make more daring productions and Dog Woof,
another company that makes outstanding documentaries.
They are attempting to take Rap away from black people and make it Disneyfied for a white audience. But saying that, there is, in my opinion, a lot of crap out here. The soundcloud mumble rappers, 69, even Drake. Over produced vapid nothingness. Or, as Wendy Williams would say, ‘A big hot cup of steaming nothing’!
Rap has a history. And it has a future. It is a genre and not a trend.
Wu Tang and Gravel Pit. Busta Rhymes Gimmee some more, Kanye Jesus Walks. These tunes stand the test of time. They don’t age, and never will.
All the best.
T

ap377 Posted 4 years ago. ✓ Mailed 3 years, 11 months ago   Favorite
Thanks for writing! I finished the transcription for your post.

Maurice L. Harris Posted 3 years, 9 months ago.   Favorite
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Maurice L. Harris Posted 3 years, 9 months ago.   Favorite
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tenzintenzin Posted 3 years, 9 months ago. ✓ Mailed 3 years, 9 months ago   Favorite
Hello Moe.
Hope you are well and staying safe and strong. We are in a lockdown here in the U.K., looking at three months of it now we have a mutant strain of COVID-19 direct from South Africa. Easier to transmit and of course deadlier. I continue to test negative. Not through a robust immune system though, mostly because I keep the hell away from people. My anti social personality works in my favour at last! My dad has myeloid leukaemia so his immunity is low, and we are living with him at the moment. Keep those germs at bay. Prison is a terrifying prospect, just a Petri dish of bacteria and transmitability. Hope you are keeping a regime of protection, even with the bare minimum.
I’m sort of moving back into favour with JayZ. I really liked him, then didn’t, but now I think he might be a silent genius. He understands how to make money from assets. Something I never did, born poor, will die poor. I particularly liked his Story of OJ, that was astonishingly brave. A great critic on modern society and attitudes of race. The Black Lives Matter movement needs to move smart, all their good work can be undone with one ill prepared rally, or people connected to it messing up. It looks good so far and I believe has been nominated for a Nobel peace prize. But unfortunately so has Trumps son in law Jared Kushnerfor his work bringing Israel and Morocco together. We will see how that works. It won’t. Too much enmity in Islam to want a peaceful coexistence with Israel. Not in our lifetime. There will be peace in the Middle East, but the people who will orchestrate it successfully haven’t been born yet. Ice Cube and Lil Waynes previous comments regarding Trump have stuck in my craw. So Lil Wayne’s ass kissing got him a pardon and saved himself ten years in jail, I suppose in his position I probably would’ve don’t the same. Except these are important changing times, and all the protagonists on the world stage during these strange times will be recorders of history, and recorded by it.
You are free to borrow my mental gentrification phrase. I actually made that up myself. You have to pay me ten dollars every time you use it in a sentence!!!!!
Keep on keeping on. Look after yourself.
T

Maurice L. Harris Posted 3 years, 6 months ago.   Favorite
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