StillFaggyAF
New member
They like it. And im pretty sure the Death Row era was worse
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AggyAF;8608083 said:They like it. And im pretty sure the Death Row era was worse
Young Stef;8608173 said:Cause I Be Strokin and Let's Get It On are Christmas carols compared to Juice Box or Back That Azz Up. No Older music is not any better in terms of content older generations overlook their fuckery to chastise up and coming
generations.
haute;8608119 said:I find the lack of singing more offensive
And since you jungle niggas don't go to church anymore there's a lack of soulfulness
Young Stef;8608173 said:Cause I Be Strokin and Let's Get It On are Christmas carols compared to Juice Box or Back That Azz Up. No Older music is not any better in terms of content older generations overlook their fuckery to chastise up and coming
generations.
haute;8608119 said:I find the lack of singing more offensive
And since you jungle niggas don't go to church anymore there's a lack of soulfulness
AggyAF;8608231 said:haute;8608119 said:I find the lack of singing more offensive
And since you jungle niggas don't go to church anymore there's a lack of soulfulness
Well ladies prefer the look of their singers vs how well they can sing so....
Kat;8608203 said:Young Stef;8608173 said:Cause I Be Strokin and Let's Get It On are Christmas carols compared to Juice Box or Back That Azz Up. No Older music is not any better in terms of content older generations overlook their fuckery to chastise up and coming
generations.
I agree that the content back in the day was just as suggestive, the difference to me is that they were more creative with it back then. It wasnt so blatant and in your face..the wordplay and innuendo kept it sexy without being sleazy.
Now days it's just too much. It's nasty and lacks creativity.
ZuluQueen;8608234 said:I don't listen to Hip-Hop like I used too. The younger me enjoyed it; but I was also ignorant at that time, especially socially. Hip-Hop is right next to the porn industry in the amount of sexism that it projects, and their is no other culture thats as sexist as the porn industry, but what makes Hip-Hop unique is that Hip-Hop suffers greatly from misogynoir; the culture projects an anti-Black female rhetoric, and no one has a problem with it. The last Hip-Hop album I purchased was Kendrick's last album (before then I haven't purchase a Hip-Hop record since maybe the early '00), but even then it was greatly projected with the elements I just described. If I find myself listening to any Hip-Hop its Lauryn Hill, Fugees, Nas, Dead Prez, some Pas stuff, Tribe Called Quest, Brand Nubian, and De La Soul; generally 90s stuff with a balance. My ears have adapted now towards R&B and Jazz, referring to drug culture, calling women bitches and hoes, degrading black women, gets played out as you mature; especially for women.
The culture of Hip-Hop today is in a worse state than it has ever been. Today, it glorifies non-black women like a normalcy. I can't look at any mainstream rap videos and see a black woman. Yet, when I go look at white videos I see nothing but white women, even white artist who culturally appropriate black culture don't use non-white women.
There is generally no R&B thats mainstream today; if you consider Chris Brown R&B then... but even he doesn't use Black women in his videos unless for props... But yeah, I'm pretty much over Hip-Hop of today, these rappers ain't talking about nothing, they all sound the same, rapping about the same shit. But in the end they are all anti-Black female.
I was watching something on the Oprah O.W.N network a while back that was discussing Hip-Hop, and a white guy that was discussing it made a good point, which was Black male rappers claim to be so proud to be black, yet when he looks at their videos he don't see black women at all. He see's women who look closer racially to him. I believe it was on that documentary Oprah had about race. Anyway, he made a great point...
A Talented One;8608289 said:ZuluQueen;8608234 said:I don't listen to Hip-Hop like I used too. The younger me enjoyed it; but I was also ignorant at that time, especially socially. Hip-Hop is right next to the porn industry in the amount of sexism that it projects, and their is no other culture thats as sexist as the porn industry, but what makes Hip-Hop unique is that Hip-Hop suffers greatly from misogynoir; the culture projects an anti-Black female rhetoric, and no one has a problem with it. The last Hip-Hop album I purchased was Kendrick's last album (before then I haven't purchase a Hip-Hop record since maybe the early '00), but even then it was greatly projected with the elements I just described. If I find myself listening to any Hip-Hop its Lauryn Hill, Fugees, Nas, Dead Prez, some Pas stuff, Tribe Called Quest, Brand Nubian, and De La Soul; generally 90s stuff with a balance. My ears have adapted now towards R&B and Jazz, referring to drug culture, calling women bitches and hoes, degrading black women, gets played out as you mature; especially for women.
The culture of Hip-Hop today is in a worse state than it has ever been. Today, it glorifies non-black women like a normalcy. I can't look at any mainstream rap videos and see a black woman. Yet, when I go look at white videos I see nothing but white women, even white artist who culturally appropriate black culture don't use non-white women.
There is generally no R&B thats mainstream today; if you consider Chris Brown R&B then... but even he doesn't use Black women in his videos unless for props... But yeah, I'm pretty much over Hip-Hop of today, these rappers ain't talking about nothing, they all sound the same, rapping about the same shit. But in the end they are all anti-Black female.
I was watching something on the Oprah O.W.N network a while back that was discussing Hip-Hop, and a white guy that was discussing it made a good point, which was Black male rappers claim to be so proud to be black, yet when he looks at their videos he don't see black women at all. He see's women who look closer racially to him. I believe it was on that documentary Oprah had about race. Anyway, he made a great point...
I have been noticing that more and more artists are using non-black women too. I commented on this just yesterday:http://community.allhiphop.com/discussion/comment/8605378/#Comment_8605378 But this is different issue that deserves its own thread.
Kat;8608203 said:Young Stef;8608173 said:Cause I Be Strokin and Let's Get It On are Christmas carols compared to Juice Box or Back That Azz Up. No Older music is not any better in terms of content older generations overlook their fuckery to chastise up and coming
generations.
I agree that the content back in the day was just as suggestive, the difference to me is that they were more creative with it back then. It wasnt so blatant and in your face..the wordplay and innuendo kept it sexy without being sleazy.
Now days it's just too much. It's nasty and lacks creativity.