|
Rap music analysis unusually honest
01/07/2008 3:40 AM, Reuters
"Somebody Scream! Rap
Music's Rise to Prominence in the Aftershock of Black Power" is
the story of this powerfully influential and yet surprisingly
little-understood American musical genre.
The story has been told several times in the past few
years; there would seem little need for yet one more account.
Journalist Marcus Reeves' first book more than makes the case
for its necessity, however, even if the going is rocky at
times. Couched in the lively prose of a cultural reporter, his
thesis is that generations with little direct connection to the
civil-rights or black-power eras find in rap culture "the
popular voice of America's black, brown and white underclass.
(Those huddled masses yearning to breathe free and, one day, be
rich enough to drive off in a Bentley.)"
To illustrate this idea, Reeves takes readers through a
muscular narrative of rap music that gets more done by
leapfrogging from one milestone to the next, avoiding the risk
of spreading itself thin by attempting to be definitive. Each
chapter places a particular artist or group in the context of
what was happening simultaneously in racial politics, whether
it was the assault on black teenagers at Howard Beach that
inspired Run-DMC or the Million Man March with Tupac Shakur.
This format forces Reeves to make some rather abrupt
transitions, segueing from a vibrant take on the factors that
contributed to the rise and fall of a particular rap icon to a
racially tinged news development that doesn't always relate. He
clearly has done more research on the music side; his chapter
on the psychology of Public Enemy is especially on-target.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
|