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Saul Williams speaks!
 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 22:34 [#00884747]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker



i dunno how many will take the time to READ this rather
lengthy message Saul left a few months ago on his site, but
for those who do, you'll find it REALLY eye opening and
quite an honest opinion from the eyes of a black entertainer
on hip hop, and SO MANY other things.....i just found this
to be excellent, i hope a few of you do as well!!

ok, finally. well, i would definitely agree that much of hip
hop has served as great works of fiction. but that is hardly
the case with contemporary main stream hip hop. although
rappers may not own the cars they drive in their videos,
they definitely aim to and most would be quite hesitant to
let you know that there is any gap between their rap persona
and their real life. most do not seem to set out to write
works of fiction nowadays and thus i would question whether
they would qualify in the fiction category. when a rapper
brags about his ice he brags about his ice. contemporary hip
hop reflects our fixation with the materialistic idea of
success. in 1982 when run dmc boasted about "champaigne,
caviar, and bubble bath", that was fiction. but there desire
to become rich was not. nowadays the "real" element is much
more closely linked to the truth. i personally have no
problem with that. i love the real element of hip hop. i
like 50 cent. I liked it when jay z counted "10 million, 20
million, 30 million more", because it wasn't fiction when he
said it, so it resonated beautifully. we love it when
someone like dr. dre or jay z boasts because it's real. we
hardly prefer fiction in hip hop nowadays.


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 22:35 [#00884748]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker



cont.
so the difficulty arises when these same rappers express
some view of reality that we disagree with. whether it be
exploitive, abusive, or just uninformed we have to decide
the level of importance they are putting into what they are
saying and the level of importance we place upon it. for
myself, i am incapable to listening to hip hop as background
music. when a song is on i'm listening to the lyrics. if the
lyrics are totally connected to a mentality that i don't
want to ingest, i turn it off, for the same reasons, i don't
eat meat, i don't want that shit in my system. ingestion is
ingestion and is not only a factor when consuming food. that
is not to say that i don't listen to contemporary hip hop. i
find much of jay z's cockiness undeniable. 50 cent resonates
with me because it feels real and because his wit is proof
of some gained understanding through his travails. ja rule
always felt like fiction to me, on the other hand, and so i
never liked him. fiction is no longer a factor in mainstream
hip hop. the philip k dick heads (no pun intended), although
they have great sales, are still underground, and if that is
what you're referring to then i agree 100%. but if you're
talking about the power stations or the beat stations
then...nah. perhaps you could compare posdonus to a camus
and nas to a genet, but for the most part these radio emcees
are far from fiction writers. modern day hip hop aims more
to be autobiographical than fictitious. we'll stop
supporting an emcee if we find out they're fake.



 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 22:36 [#00884749]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker



still cont...

what if the autobiography of malcolm x was a lie? r kelly is
not nabokov, rather he's become a main character in lolita
or a work of fiction as have many hip hop artists. the aim
seems to be to live in the video. thus they would not be
writers of fiction, rather portrayers of it. or worse yet,
they are unsuspecting characters in a snuff film, being
directed by the unseen hand of capitalism and big business.
but once again don't get me wrong, lil' kims, "the jump off"
had a great beat and i liked it. alot of this shit is
undeniable and the quest is to be free of judgement and open
to all perspectives. but that does not imply that we must
surrender our ability to discern. there is a time and place
for everything. and the strict vegetarian diet is not for
everyone. which is to say, that you, alone, must discern
what your tolerance level is. can you still think creatively
and originally after a day of listening to the radio? can
you function imaginitavely and not as a reactionary if you
spend 4 hours watching cnn? it may not benifit me to listen
to violent or donald trump loving hip hop, because i may
have a slow auditory metabolism, where for you, it may go in
one ear and out the other, and so not effect you greatly.
only you know. and how often and for how long should you
fast, from the radio, the television, just to get an idea of
what thoughts are your own and what you've ingested into
your belief system unsuspectingly? these are the questions
that are of importance to me. my dissatisfaction with much
of contemporary hip hop is the same as my disatisfaction
with much of contemporary america. not enough people seem to
be thinking for themselves. and that is not true of great
fiction writers. great fiction writers have always prided
themselves on originality. the american rag to riches story
can no longer be said to be an original story which
disqualifies many of our contestants.


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 22:38 [#00884751]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker



keep READING!!! i promise it's worth it!!

but then there are so many sides to the story. because much
of this is still an african-american phenomenon. and history
has been turned against us for so long that why should we
hesitate to revel in earthly glory that's been denied us for
so long? well, the reason why is because, we can see how
it's a dead end street to invest in exploitation (literally)
and it seems to me to be an even greater crime for those who
have been exploited to invest in the exploitation of others.
we should be well aware of the sweat shops connected to
nike, gap, and all the companies we support because they
exploit people of color just as we were decades ago. we
should be well aware of the violence surrounding diamonds in
africa, because countless africans are murdered daily as a
result of the malevolence of the power/money hungry tyrants
and corporations that own the mines. so then when the song
is about ice, and the beat is hot, and the rapper is
obviously uninformed (uniformed), or just doesn't give a
fuck, where is the fiction? in order to write fiction you
must first be aware of the facts. and the fact is that most
of us, emcees or not, have succumb to believing in the dog
eat dog reality that america presents as God. The powers
that be, know the facts. they feed us fiction. main stream
emcees sound like republicans for the most part. they've
bought into the fiction they've been told and are
perpetuating the myth of happiness as connected to wealth,
devoid of spirit... but i digress fiction in hip hop was
beautiful while it claimed airtime up 'til the early 90's.
but the whole keep it real phenomenon, which was really a
reaction to hammer, will smith, and vanila ice, limited hip
hops growth tremendously and hampered many imaginative
aspects of it. because then it claimed that it wasn't hip
hop if it wasn't raw, street, projects, ghetto. but LL, run
dmc, rakim, de la, tribe, chuck d, epmd, and many more all
came from houses with basements and lawns. queens or long
island. and


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 22:39 [#00884752]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker



wee bit more!!

queens or long island. and these were the people responsible
for making it global.... (draw your own conclusions here) i
just re-listened to jeru's "can't the stop the prophet...".
i loved that album, but i always had to fast forward past
that "da bitches" track. the point is that the contemporary
songs that we would point to as mysogynistice are not works
of fiction, they are pure uncut excerpts of peoples minds.
for instance, think of the love affair that black americans,
in particular, have with image of the pimp. now think of
every emcee that has likened themself to a pimp in a song.
now think of the number of them caught in a sex scandal at
one time or another. unfortunately, it all adds up. there
would be no problem if most cats didn't aim at making less
of a gap between there rap personans and there real lives.
what if prodigy of mobb deep boasted of growing up middle
class and of having supportive enough parents to put him in
a ballet class? what if guru boasted of having a judge for a
father and graduating from morehouse college? hip hop is
powerful. it effects you internally. you automatically nod
your head "yes" when the beat drops.


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 22:39 [#00884753]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker



this is IT! =0)

thus in my perspective it cannot benefit us all as an
"anything goes" artform. i am not for any type of imposed
censorship. i'm just into cats that ain't trying to be the
next "dawg" eat "dawg" in black face, cause i'm not trying
to sit through a repetition of history, just with more
cameras. i'm trying to use the cameras to expose the
bullshit and share our findings as we enter the realest
cypher imaginable. i'm trying to love more and more. i'm
trying to spend more time creating and less time analyzing
(and less time on-line). i'm trying to spend more time
making love and less time worrying or doubting. and if, in
the meanwhile, some fucked up hook comes on the radio, with
a nice beat, i'll be trying to jack that beat and render my
example of what i would do with it to add to the ongoing
societal dialogue (ie. dead prez, "turn off the radio"). and
if i find out that danzy senna or tom robbins is writing
rhymes instead of novels, i'll be sure to pick it up. and
who's the james baldwin of hip hop?



 

offline theo himself from +- on 2003-09-30 22:51 [#00884757]
Points: 3348 Status: Regular



saul williams speaks in lieu of myself.. by proxy.. I do and
always have (said this) completely

where did he say this?


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 23:11 [#00884759]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker | Followup to theo himself: #00884757



i'm SO glad you took the time to read this.....i was like
nodding to myself throughout ..... i was stunned that he
admitted to this ------->

"i am incapable to listening to hip hop as background
music. when a song is on i'm listening to the lyrics. if the

lyrics are totally connected to a mentality that i don't
want to ingest, i turn it off, for the same reasons, i don't

eat meat, i don't want that shit in my system." BRAVO!!!
Saul =0)

you can find this and other great things he's written
HERE


 

offline theo himself from +- on 2003-09-30 23:25 [#00884762]
Points: 3348 Status: Regular



oh nice! does he frequently engage with/respond to the
posters on that site?


 

offline theo himself from +- on 2003-09-30 23:27 [#00884763]
Points: 3348 Status: Regular



why are you surprised he admitted that?

btw I think his "PE#1" scene in slam is probably one of the
greatest film moments of all time


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-09-30 23:34 [#00884766]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker | Followup to theo himself: #00884762



apparently so, he went on after that initial post after
someone responded. i wish i coulda linked you directly to
the post but i wasn't working for some reason! =/

i loved SLAM.....i was lucky enough to see him in DC last
year.....he opened for Andrew W.K. if you can believe it.
hehehehe

i dunno i have yet to see a major artist say that some hip
hop lyrics are not all that.....i have a love/hate
relationship with hip hop....only because i really dislike
what are IMO the mysogynistic attitude of some rappers. and
sometimes i can't take the language. i dunno, i just gets to
me after a while.

i was just glad to not be the only one that felt like what
Saul described as "not wanting that shit in my system." i
couldn't agree more. some things no matter how acclaimed
just will remain off my playlist because i can't ignore the
lyrics for the arresting beat!


 

offline theo himself from +- on 2003-10-01 00:07 [#00884785]
Points: 3348 Status: Regular



oh believe me .. there are plenty of people that come out
against the content of most mainstream rap songs/albums..
the most critical are those within the hiphop community that
are disappointed with their fellow members and want to see
better things from the people that give them a bad name.. or
they want the spotlight that the media puts on negative
stereotype to be placed rather on the uplifting and more
enlightened music hiphop has to offer..


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-10-01 00:13 [#00884788]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker | Followup to theo himself: #00884785



well i'm VERY glad to read it from someone who i think has
some very thoughtful and interesting things to say!

this is the direct link to the comments, and you can read
what else he said. for SOME reason it's not working for me,
but i hope it works for you! (for me it said something about
illegal characters or somesuch)

http://www.saulwilliams.com/cgi-bin/ubb/ultimatebb.cgi
?ubb=get_topic;f=2;t=000011;p=2#000016


 

offline theo himself from +- on 2003-10-01 00:58 [#00884799]
Points: 3348 Status: Regular



nice .. thanks!


 

offline ifkardo from 785.8 mb of radio babylon (Equatorial Guinea) on 2003-10-01 01:27 [#00884806]
Points: 1135 Status: Lurker



*true dat*


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-10-01 12:11 [#00885671]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker | Followup to ifkardo: #00884806



yippee thanks for taking the time to read this VERY
important message!

this is just BRILL IMO!

"it may not benifit me to listen
to violent or donald trump loving hip hop, because i may
have a slow auditory metabolism, where for you, it may go in

one ear and out the other, and so not effect you greatly.
only you know. and how often and for how long should you
fast, from the radio, the television, just to get an idea of
what thoughts are your own and what you've ingested into
your belief system unsuspectingly? these are the questions
that are of importance to me. my dissatisfaction with much
of contemporary hip hop is the same as my disatisfaction
with much of contemporary america. not enough people seem to
be thinking for themselves."


 

offline deepspace9mm from filth on 2003-10-01 13:31 [#00885793]
Points: 6846 Status: Addict



That's a very perceptive analysis...

"Mainstream emcees sound like republicans for the most part.
They've bought into the fiction they've been told and are
perpetuating the myth of happiness as connected to wealth,
devoid of spirit..."

Absolutely bang on. I often wonder if mainstream hip hop
could reject consumerist obsessions or whether people would
simply stop listening if it did. Is mainstream "realness"
ignoring the facts of how the capitalist model operates to
pursue its own populist agenda, or does it indicate a true
belief that life SHOULD operate in this way, ie "dawg eat
dawg" no matter who it fucks along the way? It's an
interesting point anyway.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2003-10-01 13:34 [#00885796]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



I promise to read this tommorow... I'm in a hurry now, but
this is in my favs. I like Saul Williams.


 

offline Anus_Presley on 2003-10-01 13:37 [#00885802]
Points: 23472 Status: Lurker



o God! i just can't brring myself to do it.


 

offline LeCoeur from the outer edge of the universe (United States) on 2003-10-01 13:39 [#00885805]
Points: 8249 Status: Lurker | Followup to deepspace9mm: #00885793



great point.

i wondered how many up and coming emcee's yearn to make it
to the big time to take in all the bling bling or if they
are in it for the love of the music. sadly i fear that most
are in the former catagory with just a minority in the
other.

for me hip hop is about the thought provoking lyrics just as
much as the beat. if they start going on and on about
bitches and ho's and pimping.....i just turn it
off.......not my cup O tea!


 


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