I’m Not Afraid of Ice Cube Anymore: Questlove offers some food for thought

I came across this missive from Questlove of the Roots today on twitter… I read it, then peeped the video he linked to and my mind went racing in a few directions all at once. First, I looked at the video from the perspective of the disgruntled fan. In today’s society so many of us attach ourselves to celebrity so much, that our identity gets caught up in what they do or don’t do. This is especially true if that celebrity fills an important void that society refuses or doesn’t seem to have the capacity to fill.When this happens we don’t want our celebrities to change. When they fall short we take it personal. I seen this happen with everyone from Public Enemy to Jesse Jackson.

The second angle I explored was how so many of us are allowed space to grow and evolve. Sometimes it’s our own fault. We don’t wanna take responsibility. We don’t want to endure the pain that comes with growth so we get caught up in what has often been described as the Peter Pan syndrome.

On the other hand , we live in a society that often doesn’t want us to grow. We’re to forever be child-like in our thinking and entertainment minded versus business minded. We’re to forever be the buffoon and never the scholar. When we stray away we get smacked down into place and severely criticized even from our own. So in this case ice Cube at age 40 is still supposed to be a hardcore gangsta riding around with an AK versus maybe be a family guy…For him to grow, he’s considered a sellout.. and not a fully well-rounded thinking man.

Third and most disturbing, is something that author/scholar Adam Mansbach often talks about. He describes the proverbial suburban white Hip Hop fan who grew up fascinated and intimated by Hip Hop which they fully equated with the totality of Black culture. He talks about how many would live vicariously through the words and videos of street oriented rap groups to the point that they would start mimicking them and adapt a worldview that would be warped to the point that anything not falling into the mold was somehow out-of-pocket.

Mansbach describes how those suburban white kids would listen to these records, watch those videos and not ever have to full experience the realities depicted in the songs. This would lead them to feel comfortable and believing that they were not only part of but definers of the culture. They would become embolden and ‘no longer afraid of the ghettos they vicariously visited..

Here’s what Questlove had to say…

-Davey-D

tryna tell yall: this is why i cry out against the press/blogger minstrelsy embrace of hip hop (if its “scary” or “bright” “clownish”/”funny” or “oversexed” or “watered down apolitically” (no balls/opinion/position/eager to pleaseisms) its minstrel!!!! read this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minstrel_show

point is: this song is cute http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cjx8wg0hmY&feature=player_embedded#

but TRULY it is the answer to all the questions we had about hip hop’s demise.

it would be nice to say “oh…its an art form and treated as such” (remember that@harryallen quote about “hip hop is treated like its disposable. its not even considered ‘art'” on our Things Fall Apart intro?–well this is the dangers of embracing something for the wrong reasons:

hip hop’s MASSIVE success was running on the fumes of the “horror flick/roller coaster” syndrome: something scary and exciting you are curious about…but something you don’t take all that serious.

in other words: lets look at sting and lil wayne:

if both figures (both are massive sales figures in pop music)—if both made announcements that they were quitting music for a career in politics: and them in office position effected your life and you had to chose one—who would you be more inclined to take seriously to run your government?

(ill leave it up to you to get my point….but for those who say wayne, i can pretty much also guess that you too dont take life all that seriously or being contrary is how you differentiate yourself from others)

anywho….watch that clip.

reveals ALOT

Questlove

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Ice Cube..Tells New Jacks He’s Not Here to Make Them Famous

Ice Cube drops offers up words of wisdom to new jacks

I got alot of questions since my last blog. I’ll answer a few.

What’s up with these local MC’s in L.A. who keep disrespecting me? They’re just mad cause I don’t fuck with they wack-ass. They ain’t on my level, why should I waste my time. I don’t even remember ever meeting these clowns or even being in the same room with any of ’em. They can’t make a name for themselves so they need help from the O/G’s. I refuse the throw’em a life line. Fuck’em. It ain’t my job to make nobody famous. And for the record, I ain’t scared of no nigga. Especially, no rappers….seriously people.

Age-ism in rap? Age-ism is everywhere folks. In the work place, in sports and of course in hip-hop. We are a out with the OLD in with the NEW world. But as we go through life we realize NEWER ain’t always better. We find ourselves saying, “Back in the day, bah, bah, bah….” All young MC’s should route for old MC’s to have long careers. If you play us out, what kind of future do you have in hip-hop when you get 40?

Advice for young rappers: You gotta be hot on your block first, then your city, then your state, then your country, then the world. If you can’t make your block notice you. The world is a tall task.

Ice Cube continues… http://icecube.com/users/icecube/blogs/227401

Bragging and boasting: When I was coming up. Every rapper had a attitude like Kanye. Now when you say you the best and act like you the best. Niggas get their feeling hurt.

Battling: If you scared to test your skills up against any MC in the game. Quit right now. Become a fuckin’ ghost writer and go hide in the corner of the studio. Now they’re 2 ways to battle. Freestyle live: To me this is like a slam dunk contest. Or battle on wax: I call this the Finals. That’s Hip-Hop.

Question: Why don’t I produce up and coming rappers like I use to? I got burnt out. Niggas couldn’t take the baton and run wit it. I was sick of babysitting grown ass men and walking them through the industry. I felt like Dr. Frankinstein building uncontrollable monsters. How? If you DON’T make’em a star, they blame you.
If you DO make’em a star, they leave you. I got sick of that ungrateful shit.

Continued here: http://icecube.com/users/icecube/blogs/272061

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Killer Mike Speaks on Black Economic Empowerment & being for the Underdog

Killer Mike aka Mike Biggums is always outspoken and on point. He rolled through this event I was spinning at during SxSW and talked to us about economic empowerment and why we must keep our dollars circulating in the hood. He also talked about the importance of looking out for those who are less fortunate.. Muike noted that he is always for the underdog and always carries the spirit of Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad within him. Mike is a real stand up cat.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBIGesGMl9E

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKh5p8_XFFc

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Fat Joe, Ice Cube, Immortal Technique & Alex Sanchez Talk about Black & Brown Unity

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In addressing the issue of Black/ Brown unity we caught up with popular rappers Fat Joe & Ice Cube and asked them to address the issue.. Fat Joe spoke at the Hip Hop summit in 2001 and explained the political importance of the two groups coming together…

Ice Cube spoke to the history of unity between Black and Brown peoples in California. He taks about how the Brown man helped the Black man escape slavery..Cube also weighs in on the immigration debate.

We caught up to Immortal Technique at the Malcolm X day parade in Harlem in may of 2006 and talked to him about Black and Brown Unity… He gave us a lot to think about in the areas of colonization and divide and conquer techniques used by those who have enslaved us or colonized us..
Former gang member turned peacemaker Alex Sanchez spoke at Laney College in Oakland during the Critical Resistence conference in 2007 about Black Brown unity and how we should beawre and ideally unify around the issue of immigration. He said we need to understyand the inhumane treatment many are experiencing and focus on this being a human rights issue.. He stressed that both communities need to be more educated about struggles we are going through…
Former gang member turned peacemaker Alex Sanchez talks about solutions for establishing Black/ Brown unity..He talks about the role people in peace and social justice movements must play and the language they must use and not use.. He also talks about regional tactics.. He notes Black-Brown relationships are different in California compared to places like NY and we need to not have a one size fits all strategy.. He also talks about how there are powerful forces within prison that have made unifying difficult because of politics from behind the walls..
We sat down with San Antonio based Professor Mario Salas and talked to him about ways in which Black and Brown communities have worked together. He talks about the Black Panthers and Brown Berets
 
 

Breakdown FM w/ Davey D-All Day Play #8: There Goes the Neighborhood

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Click HERE to Listen to Podcast

As we kick off our 3 day weekend  and with so many people snowed in, we decided to put some funk in your trunk with this week’s show.. We took it back to the old school and came with some vintage joints that’ll have you really appreciating this thing we call Hip Hop…Highlights include the Public Enemy. When you listen beyond their most well known hits you realize Chuck D and company have a pretty deep catalogue of songs.. Almost all of them address some sort of issue.. I think they are underestimated..

Had to dig deeper and pull out something from the late Pumpkin. he was Hip Hop’s first official drummer and of course we had DJ Cheese and his landmark cut ‘King Cut’

We kick things off with a special back to Africa remix I did featuring Malcolm X and music from the late J-Dilla..

Its all butter folks.. please enjoy

http://www.alldayplay.fm/episodes/breakdown-fm-w-davey-d-there-goes-the-neighborhood

Breakdown FM w/ Davey D on All day Play#8

There Goes the Neighborhood

01-J-Dilla ‘J-Dilla Meets Malcolm X’-(DaveyD remix)

02-Dr Dre w/ Ice Cube ‘Natural Born Killa’

03-Public Enemy ‘Assault Mix’

04-Public Enemy ‘House of Rising Son’

05-Public Enemy ‘How to Kill a Radio Consultant’

06-DJ Punisher ‘The Cutting Edge’

07-DJ Pumpkin ‘King of the Beat’

08-DJ Cheese ‘King Cut’

09-Bobby Jimmy ‘We Like Ugly Women’

10-Digital Underground ‘DooWhatchalike’

11-MC Lyte ‘10% Diss’

12-Lost Boyz ‘Music Makes me High’

13-Ice Cube ‘The Mack’

14-Outkast ‘Players Ball’

15-Ice T ‘Colors’

16-‘Dr Dre w/ Snoop Dogg ‘Next Episode’

17-Marley Marl w/ MC Shan ‘The Bridge’

18-Ice T  ‘6 In the Morning’

19-Eric & Rakim ‘ The Ghetto’

20-Conscious Daughters ‘Something to Ride To’  ‘(Davey D Screwball remix)’

21-Snoop Dogg ‘Gin & Juice’

22-Mystical ‘Shake Your Ass’

23-Black Sheep ‘The Choice Is Yours’

24-Grandmaster Flash ‘Girls Like the Way he Spins’

25-Donald D ‘FBI’

26-Whodini ‘Friends’

27-Dogg Pound ‘Lets Play House’

28-Kool Moe Dee ‘Go see the Doctor’

29-The Doc ‘ It’s Funky’

30- MC Lyte ‘Cappucino’

31-Craig Mack ‘Get Down’

32-Heavy D ‘Black Coffee’

33-Mobb Deep ‘Shining’

34-Gang Starr ‘Words I Manifest’

35-KRS-One ‘Outta Here’

36-Kool G Rap ‘Road to the Riches’

37-Brand Nubians ‘To the Right’

38-Schooly D ‘Megamix’

39-Ice Cube ‘Megamix’

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Ice Cube Drops New Song About The Oakland Raiders, while Other NFL Cities sit back in Silence

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Ice Cube drops song for oakland Raiders

Ice Cube drops song for oakland Raiders

To all my football fans around the country.. Can I just quote from the immortal being we call Ice Cube.. ‘Bow Down’. thats right suckers bow down..

Ice Cube has dropped a dope song honoring the greatest football team on earth-The Oakland Raiders..And even though I have publicly chastised our owner Al Davis and his moronic decision making, we has a Raider nation are the best.. Here’s the new Raider nation Anthem..Oh yeah you can download it for free..

Click link below to get Ice Cube song….

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9iY1kdT0yM

As you listen to this Ice Cube song..ask yourself why haven’t the artist in other cities followed up to support their teams..

For example, In Boston-home of the Cheating Patriots why hasn’t Mr Lif , Akrobatik, Benzino, and 50 thousand other emcees made a dope Patriot song?  Why? I’ll tell you why.. Because they don’t have true love for their team. They are fair-weather fans.. Plus their team is not inspiring..

In Pittsburgh you have everyone from Jasiri X to Paradise of the legendary group X-Clan, you have Wiz Kalifa, Kelly Maize, Mel-Man, Sam Sneed etc.. Where the hell is the terrible towel song? Where’s the ode to Franco ‘Yeah Right You caught the Ball’  Harris? Where’s the hit song extolling the virtues of a team that won 7 Superbowl?

To my 49er fans.. You guys are from the Bay..Where’s the 49er song? What San Quinn, Big Rich, Sake 1 and the 50 thousand other good emcees and DJs from Frisco couldn’t make a little time for their team or is the wine and cheese everyone is filling up on making folks lazy..Y’all better call up E-40 and tell him to get to work-he’s a 49er fan

I won’t talk about my new York brethren.. That Jim Jones adopt a song (Ballin anthem) don’t count.. When I see Diddy, Jigga and everyone else from the birthplace of Hip Hop do a real song for the Giants, or Jets I’ll be convinced y’all are legit..

Philly?? I was just there-Y’all got Michael Vick. Y’all have Beanie Sigel , Freeway and a thousand emcees. Y’all are gully, but not gully enough to have an Eagle anthem? Very suspect. very suspect.. mmmm

Atlanta..What? lil Jon, Outkast, Young Jeezy, Goodie Mob and every other rapper from the Black meca couldn’t do a song for the Falcons? Not one of y’all? I know the team is sorry, but still.. ATL has lived up the name of being the sleepy South.

New Orleans, Miami, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Minneapolis-Y’all should hold your heads in shame..Where’s Lil Wayne?  Where’s Prince? Master P? Common? Luke? Rick Ross?, Paul Wall?, Bun B?

Lemme go listebn to my raider nation Ice Cube anthem.. Oh yeah for the record, this is our second Raider Nation song.. The first one was done by the Luniz..

If any of you other cities need an emcee from oakland to come do a song for your team.. please let us know..

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Casual of Hiero Weighs in on Museum Controversy….Furious Styles is a Jerk.

Casual of Hiero Weighs in on Museum Controversy

I also applaud the people working with the development of the new Bronx museum. I really think its important in telling the story of Hip Hop aswell. I also think that Furious Styles is a Jerk.


(Casual is referring to the article we passed around earlier which is located here:
http://p076.ezboard.com/fpoliticalpalacefrm73.showMessage?topicID=20.topic

casual-HieroTo support the exclusion of Gangsta rap from a hip hop museum is like the act of excluding the mention of African Americans in the development process of America. His erroneous assessment of “gansta music” further proves his disconnection from our society. He is like a outsider looking in. “Gangsta Music” is the opposite side of the spectrum. The Yang to our Yin. A Museum with no mention of gangsta rap will receive no merit. Not even a room?.. a wall? Gangsta rap is the fuel pushing hip hop to the front of main stream music, It has enveloped and eclipsed your traditional “Positive Hip HOP” for many reasons, the main reason being,.. The aloof attitude of the positive hip-hopper.

Positive Hip Hoppers(for lack of a better term)or should I say hip hop optimist can always point you to a time when hip hop was better, more meaningful, and artist were more positive.
But truly there was no time like this, and if there was, it didnt last long. There is no evidence that there is more gangsta rap now than there was in the 1980. (And for any hip hop historian who wants to debate this,.. We can go song for song.)But there is evidence that gangsta rap has grown into a more lucrative commerce than “Artsy Rap”.

Here is a point I would like to make. Furious Styles shares the views of most Upper Middle Class, American-College educated Black Men. This problem you have with Gangsta rap mirrors the problem you have with the lower classes of society, your own Race, even your own less accomplished family members. This is western philosophy at its best. Bottom line is-you feel you are better than the people who achieved less. Do you believe the persons singing about Murder, Guns, Drugs, Sex, Mayhem, etc,. has know place in a museum of Hip Hop History?. You want to shelter you children from this awful exposure to reality like your hiding porn. But the truth is,… N.W.A. Can save your daughters life, So Can Justice-Ice, KRS-One, Tupac, Ice Cube and even listening to Too-Short Can Help your Daughters with their street smarts. And here is a quote for Furious Styles to further expose his insensitivity to your struggles;

I understand the age old worn out statement that Gansta Hip Hop is a product of the environment, its bigger than the thugs, pimps and playas, we dont own the planes that bring drugs into our communities, the-had- a- bad up bringing, no daddy in the house, being shot, the streets, etc. etc. etc.. etc.. But the fact of the matter is that these artists are pushing stripper music into the ears of our children, they are talking about crack selling, distribution, and murder, and wonder why we have so much violence in the lives of our youth.- Furious Styles

What is your major malfunction? Do you think living with no dad helps? Or being shot? Or having a bad upbringing? Surely your dad was there, you never been shot, and you had a good upbringing, that is why you are so insensitive to others reality. Your like a inconsiderate bitch.

And SO IS THIS WHY WE HAVE SO MUCH VIOLENCE? IS GANGSTA RAP THE REASON WERE IN IRAO OR AFGANISTAN? DID GANGSTA RAP PLAY A PART IN COLOMBINE OR WAKO? GANSTA RAP SURELY DIDNT BRING DOWN THE WORLD TRADE CENTER DID IT? AND IM SURE BLACK WALL STREET AND HEZBOLLAH HAVE SOME SORT OF CONNECTION?

And whos the Judge?

Is K.R.S.-One not a Gangsta? Did he release a album called Criminal Minded? Did he tote a Uzi On the cover of “My Philosophy?” Or is he afforded a period of time to change his views that now young artist wont be allowed?

Will Ice Cube Be in your Museum? He is definitely one of the most positive Artist to Date, Yet he grew from this most awful Gangsta rap, Bitches, Hoes etc…. Shall his efforts be slighted by your Museum?

On the other Hand Tupac? was he positive or a optimist or just a Soft Thug? who’s the person to say that a particular song or artist has know purpose universally?

Go ahead and build your little “Twinkle Toes” hip hop museum and “Georgie your own wee-wee”, But the truth is, The more divisions we place, the smaller each category gets, and leaving gangsta rap out of a hip hop museum confirms your intend to lie to your children, and your successors.

P.S. All of my releases have been positive by your standard,..bet i wont be in that bitch either,… some museum.

Casual of Hieroglyphics

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner

Why Hip Hop Is Dead?

Lethal-wonder-finalHip Hop is dead. I don’t care what anyone says, it has absolutely seen its last days. There used to be a time that everyone would come out and relish in the fact that they had conquered new skills or discovered a new technique. Kids couldn’t wait to drop a new style of rhyming on their peers.

Hip Hop was about creativity and to a lesser degree having fun. Today all that has changed. All these big willie and wanna be gangster types have ruined it. I know everyone is afraid to say it, but I will be straight up and honestly say, hardcore gang bangers like Suge Knight and his Death Row affiliates along with Fake Ass Puffy and his Biggie Bad Boy collective of friends have played a major role in killing off hip hop. They help usher in the dope game and the whole gangster mentality that now plagues this music. It was bad enough that you had kids from all over the planet trying to be like NWA or the Ghetto Boys. But now the gangster crap they spoke on records has become a frightening reality in the real world of hip hop.When I go around my block, everyone I see aspires to be the next Gangster Don.

Everyone wants to be like a Suge Knight and intimidate people. Everyone wants to be like a Sean Puffy Combs and get paid lots of money with no real concern for the art form they are ruining. Now alongside the Suges and Puffys we have Master P and Jay Z, Fat Joe and Big Pun and Ice Cube and Mack 10 and Jermaine Dupris. These are the are the supposed top Dons in hip hop. They all look and act like gangsters. Some of them even have a few dollars in the pocket. Unfortunately it’s chump change compared to the real big willies of the world.

Master P congress-225I don’t see Fat Joe owning a skyscraper in Manhattan. Master P may be the big money shot caller right now, but his country ass still has to go through Priority Records to get distributed. That means the owner of Priority is the real money maker and not Master P. Suge for all his worth and intimidation tactics is still locked away in some jail cell in California. You would think that with all the crap his Death Row affiliates talked that they would have had the whole Justice System in check for real. I guess when it comes down to it Uncle Sam has the last word.

Ice Cube and Mack 10 change with the wind. One minute Cube is a Muslim talking all this Black Power and righteous shit. Now he’s back to calling women bitches and hos and pretending he’s a gangster. He wasn’t much of a gangster when that kid who is down with his former partner Kam rolled on his ass and snatched his gold chain. For all the money that guys like Puffy, Jay-Z and Jermaine Dupris have you would think they would own some sort of tv station. Perhaps a cable access station would do. None of these big ballers own a radio station or even a magazine. Not a one of them own the record companies that distribute their material.

It sickens me to see these kids run around yelling money ain’t a thing. Some one needs to tell those assholes Money Does Mean A Thing if you don’t own a goddamn thing. Instead of throwing away all those 20 dollar bills like they do in concert, maybe should be stacking those dead presidents so they could save up and buy some stuff that they could own.

You would think that after 25 years of existence that hip hop would own something other then a bad reputation of violent prone niggaz who pretend to be gangsters because they have a little bit of money in the pocket. Hip Hop is sadly misguided.

Mos def

Mos def

On the other side of the coin you have all these fake ass ‘underground’, backpack wearing kids. They pride themselves on being broke and keeping it real. But like their hip hop gangster counterparts they too lack creativity. I would have to say a guy like Mos Def and Kweli have managed to shine through, but look at all these other kids who have fallen off in a big way.

I don’t need to name names. All you have to do is look around and you see these kids living in the underground bragging about how they are true to hip hop, but they have yet to step up and redirect the misguided flow of this beast. Hip Hop is lost and you definitely will not find it in the underground. All you will see is some buster ass rappers who will yell about how they are all about keeping it real. They will be sporting dreads even though they aren’t Rastas. They’ll have backpacks with nothing in it. They’ll be chewing on a stick or smoking a blunt with a young impressionable white girl under their arm. The sad part is that young white girl will most likely have a lot more game then these underground cats. She’s just using them as a momentary pit stop for experience while these underground bustas run away from the challenge that is before them. That challenge is take control and change the negative direction of hip
hop.

Hip Hop is dead my friends. It’s been overrun by gangsters and dope dealers and other unscrupulous motherfuckers who care nothing about us, the culture or the music. Hip Hop is dead because a bunch of motherfuckers stayed underground with their head in the sand. Hip Hop is dead.

By Lethal Wonder

let me know what y’all think.. by hitting me at :Davey D

I will forward all mail to Lethal