It's bigger than T.I.

Hip-hop is on trial and everybody's snitching
Published 10.31.07
Patrick Hoelck
GET OUT OF JAIL CARD: Warner Music Group executives dug into their own bank accounts to help T.I., the only platinum-selling rapper of 2006, post bail.

By the time you read this, the mainstream media will likely have exhausted themselves of the preliminary details of Clifford "T.I." Harris' legal drama in search of the next eye-popping headline. The rapper, tucked away in the confines of his home studio, under 24-hour house arrest, will be diligently putting the finishing touches on what could be the biggest-selling album of his career. And the ATF, or some other branch of federal, state or local law enforcement will probably be gearing up to target the next million-dollar rapper it can catch slipping.

But there's a bigger case that remains unresolved. It involves all the key players, including the rappers and the consumers, the critics and the corporate-owned record labels, even the police and the politicians. Call it "Hip-hop vs. America," as Black Entertainment Television chose to when the cable network aired a two-part town-hall series in September examining some of the recent controversy surrounding the genre.

Or call it the chickens coming home to roost.

Though the first chapter in T.I.'s federal firearms case drew to a close with his $3 million bond release last Friday, Oct. 26, the rap industry continues to dodge bullets in a year that has been full of nonstop drama. Perhaps DJ Drama's arrest on racketeering charges at his downtown Atlanta office was an omen. Since then, everything from violent lyrics and gratuitous sexual imagery in videos to the genre's prolific use of degrading words like "nigga," "bitch" and "ho" have come under fire.

But what came first, incendiary rap lyrics or the incendiary times? That's the multibillion-dollar question, considering hip-hop generates at least that much annually. One thing is certain: With so much money to be made, rap artists aren't the only ones getting paid to exploit the culture. Corporate media and the politicians they lobby also have a vested interest in keeping things status quo. So passing the buck like a hot potato – from Don Imus to hip-hop to 'the America way' to the Civil Rights generation and back to the rappers again – makes dollars and good business sense.

Though there's plenty of responsibility to go around, rappers seem to be the main ones catching the flak. Meanwhile, the media frame hip-hop's pathology as "a black thang," when, in actuality, it's also a vivid reflection of the little white lies America was built on.

"We had sexism and misogyny and violence and materialism in American culture before hip-hop existed," says William Jelani Cobb, who teaches a seminar on hip-hop culture at Spelman College. "In some instances, it's very convenient to just single hip-hop out, but we would really be in good condition if those problems were isolated to a musical genre. They're systemic, they're broad and they're widespread."

Artists are used to blaming society for their ills. But hip-hop entrepreneur and former rapper Percy "Master P" Miller, who sold 75 million records at the height of gangsta rap, took a stand at the latest congressional hearing on rap before the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection to say he was ready to work for change by putting out music minus the negativity that got critics such as Oprah Winfrey, Stanley Crouch and the Rev. Al Sharpton so riled up this year.

Sharpton even started a campaign to hold the parent companies of record labels financially responsible for releasing denigrating material.

But rappers such as Levell Crump, aka David Banner, see such campaigns as personal attacks to his livelihood. In response, he called Al Sharpton a "permed-out pimp," and made a diss track titled "So Special" leveled at Sharpton, Jesse Jackson and Oprah Winfrey.

Needless to say, the finger-pointing has turned ugly on some fronts as the racially charged debate that started in the wake of Don Imus' offhand remark has turned into a bit of a generational and class-based beef among some within the black community. If there was ever any reason to believe African-Americans were a monolithic entity, the last several months have certainly dispelled that myth.

Oddly enough, it wasn't some right-wing conspirator but a former Black Panther, Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., who called the congressional hearing with the intent of challenging the industry to clean up its act.

"We're a direct reflection of what [the Civil Rights generation] did and what they did not do," says David Banner, who was surprised to learn he was listed as the Republican Party's witness at the hearing. "Old black folks are upset because now we have the power."

Banner has been at the center of much of the controversy surrounding rap this year, and like the genre itself, he's racked with contradiction. The Mississippi-bred rapper/actor who splits his time between L.A. and Atlanta began his career as a so-called "conscious" MC – his Heal the Hood benefit concert raised more than half a million dollars toward Katrina relief – but became famous for commercial hits such as the sexually explicit "Play."

"I struggle with that," he admits. "Last year, I went through a major depression and part of that was over that. I was wondering if I was doing my people more harm than I was positive. And that's not true. I'm able to touch more people, do bigger things, I'm able to [save] rap in front of Congress, I'm able to do Heal the Hood. You can only change policy if you have power."

Like many in the industry, he's embraced capitalistic ideals in a quest for socioeconomic freedom, by any means necessary. But even Banner is smart enough to realize that the scrutiny placed on him as a young successful rapper means he can't afford to screw up.

"We have to start being smarter about the decisions we make as young black men knowing that now we see what we're going through with T.I.," he says.

In the last year, several high-profile MCs have been charged, and some convicted, of serious crimes: Remy Ma, Foxy Brown, Lil Wayne, Prodigy of Mobb Deep, and finally T.I., who was arrested blocks away from the site, and hours before the start of arguably the industry's biggest celebration of the year, the BET Hip-Hop Awards in Atlanta.

While some argue it was meant to send a message, not even T.I.'s most fervent fans are quick to proclaim his innocence. "T.I. is a good person," says 19-year-old Shatice Richardson, who stood outside the Richard B. Russell Federal Building and Courthouse with her mother during the rapper's final bond hearing last Friday. "That's wrong what he did, but people make mistakes."

Artists are being forced to grow up and act responsibly in spite of their spoils. It presents a challenge, particularly for those who fashioned their gangster swagger after Tony Montana, aka Scarface, "the patron saint of hip-hop," according to Cobb. But lyrical content, whether fact or fantasy, has a way of coming back to bite MCs in the ass. The notable hip-hop cops, reported to exist within both New York's and Miami's police departments, are known to keep dossiers on high-profile rappers that they update by listening intently to rap CDs.

Cries of conspiracy, however, are tempered by harsh reality. "A lot of these rappers are getting caught up in shoot-outs," says Cobb, referring to incidents such as the one outside NYC's HOT 97 that earned Lil' Kim a perjury conviction. "Unfortunately ... we have black men that are 21 times more likely to be killed by violence than white men in this society. Do we really need a conspiracy?"

Others like Banner think his generation suffered from a lack of compassionate role models and too much criticism. "We're forced to piece our manhood together," he says. "We were forced to raise each other, but we [face] such drastic consequences when we fuck up."

Projecting an alternative image of young black males is part of the mission of hip-hop journalists such as Dennis Byron, who covered the T.I. bond hearings for Hip-Hop Weekly. "I'm with the media, but more importantly, I cover this so I can make sure there's a balance of information put out about hip-hop artists," says the self-proclaimed "old hip-hop head."

"It's very important that we make sure hip-hop doesn't die."

As the big, black SUV carrying T.I. pulled away from the curb outside the courthouse Friday, it was hard to distinguish Byron from any other T.I. supporter. Amid the screams and cheers from lingering fans, the reporter trotted alongside the vehicle for a few steps before shouting: "Free hip-hop."

For links to BET's "Hip-Hop vs. America," Oprah Winfrey's "After Imus" or the congressional hearings on hip-hop, click here.

COMMENTS

RE: It's bigger than T.I.

Posted by G' on 11.02.07 @ 10:03 PM

According to the CDC, if your are Black you are 219% more likely to die from a gunshot than a White citizen; that is true whether you are a kid on his way to school in Chicago, a family praying in church or watching a public fireworks display in Detroit or a celebrated Journalist trying to make a difference in Oakland CA. From 1993 through 2001, Blacks accounted for 54 percent of victims of firearms homicide, but are roughly 12 percent of the U.S. population. I contend that gun violence in the Black community is robbing some communities of its more successful residents ;those who can flee - do. Moreover , the loss of more economically successful residents combined with the higher insurance and security cost of operating in high crime areas has made some communities nonviable as business locations for all but the fortified liquor stores and pawn shops – who need to be there . If the KKK perpetrated this gun violence in the Black community, a furious fury and outrage would reverberate from pulpit to barbershop and the collective expressions of outrage would be off the Ricter Scale. Frankly, the outrage should be no less when the forces are seemingly from within the community . The community is equally traumatized and terrorized by wanton murder no matter the source. Gangster Rap is not the sole cause , but it has played a major role in increasing the level of gun violence in our communities through its language and images. I believe strongly that we must counter the subculture’s celebration and glamorization of the guns and its worship of the largely mythical thug life. We must stop the marketing of gun celebration to impressionable youth, and cease making idols of people, who use guns as fashion statements or video props. In effect, the combination of easy gun access and glamorized gun culture aimed at impressionable and disaffected youth, has given rise to a toxic quagmire that, at its worst, reduces the quality of life in some neighborhoods to conditions that would for qualify for UN Peace Keepers were this a third world country. This is a problem we can fix; we decide what’s cool in our culture –we always have.

RE: It's bigger than T.I.

Posted by Prodigy on 11.01.07 @ 10:47 AM

Yo thun fuck this these rap niggas are fools man stpid motherfuckers oh yeh look ot 4 hnic 2 im gonna release that in jail thun and another thing fuck saigon mutherfker bith ass nigga what i feel t i situation man

RE: It's bigger than T.I.

Posted by The Shaman on 11.01.07 @ 10:04 AM

In regards to the "T.I Arrest" and it's relation to hip hop. I don't think we can file this under the "AMERICA IS ATTACKING OUR RAPPERS" category. It just doesn't apply here, T.I was doing something that was HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH HIP HOP. This boy ALLEDGEDLY tried to arm himself like he was a one man militia, and it obviously ain't in relation to some beef with another rapper, or musical dispute, T.I prior to this was sitting on top of the world, biggest rap debut record sales outside of 50 Cent and KANYE, a starring role in a blockbuster film starring Denzel and not too mention he was tapped to recieve 3 BET AWARDS that same evening he got arrested. Rappers like T.I have to learn to seperate the STREET from the MUSIC......I'm an artist myself and i live by the mantra Krs One set... "Who you kidding, your only hear to Rock a Party..you ain't really down to shoot nobody!!!"... These rappers are "fronting" all of this violent imagrey is not only silly it's FRADULANT, T.I is a father with 7 kids at home, and an accomplished business man, in fact practically all of these "gun toting" rappers live in the suburbs and send thier kids to private school, the only reason they get caught up in these ignorant arrests and brushes with the law, is because in order to sell records they FEEL that they have to keep up thier street cred, even if it means catching a few cases and associating with known felons and street characters, because they feel they are ABOVE THE LAW, cause thier support group (record label, management) will BAIL them out of every situation , just like T.I (3 million dollar bond posted)....so it basically gives them a warped sense of Ammunity, and just makes life hard for everybody who participates in REAL HIP HOP...as Chris Rock says..."I LOVE HIP HOP, but i'm tired of DEFENDING IT, and i'm sick of us defending IGNORANT RAPPERS like T.I who are an embrassement to many great civilized conscious rappers that the world overlooks. peace........... the SHAMAN

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