REVIEW: Rakim – The Seventh Seal
10 hours, 14 minutes ago | 26








« Previous StoryNext Story»
2008's Biggest Stories #2: Hip-Hop Artists Rally Around Obama 
Facebook ADD TO GOOGLE
    By Ismael AbduSalaam
    President-elect Barack Obama’s landmark 2008 presidential run not only galvanized the nation, but ignited a renewed sense of political awareness and music from Hip-Hop artists.

                   

    The noticeable trend began slowly at the end of 2007 through artists such as Common and Talib Kweli, both of whom publicly supported Barack Obama’s then perceived long shot bid to become the first African-American president of the United States.          

                   

    “He’s fresh, you know, he’s got a good style,” Common explained to CNN. The Chicago emcee was one of the first artists to mention Obama in a Hip-Hop song courtesy of Jadakiss’ 2005 “Why (Remix). “As far as people in my age group and people that love Hip-Hop, there’s a love for Obama. He represents progress. He represents what Hip-Hop is about. Hip-Hop is about progress, the struggle.”

                   

    Talib Kweli added on that Obama’s appeal can be traced to his youth and multicultural roots.

    “His youth, his being black, the way that he speaks, they way that he lays out his point of view,” Kweli detailed. “It’s someone who looks more like you. I don’t mean black, but I mean the young thing. And his name is Barack Obama. This country has become more and more multicultural.”

                   

    One of Obama’s first public displays of support for Hip-Hop came courtesy of Chinese rapper Jin’s tribute song “Open Letter to Obama.” The president –elect offered the track as a free ringtone on his website and used it as an introduction song before several speeches.

                   

    Aware of Hip-Hop’s influence among young people, Obama praised the culture and publicly met with its biggest stars while still offering constructive criticism on their materialism and misogynist themes.

                  

    “I’ve met with Jay-Z; I’ve met with Kanye. And I’ve talked to other artists about how potentially to bridge that gap,” Obama stated to BET earlier this year. “I think the potential for them to deliver a message of extraordinary power that gets people thinking [is huge]. There are times, even on artists I’ve named, the artists I love, that there is a message that’s sometimes degrading to women, uses the N-word a little too frequently. But also something that I’m concerned about is [they’re] always talking about material things about how I can get something; more money, more cars.”

                   

    Despite these concerns and the potential political fallout, Obama made sure his campaign kept a strong presence in the Hip-Hop world throughout 2008. His campaign allowed Nas to sample his voice for the triumphant track “Black President,” off the lyricist’s controversial but critically acclaimed Untitled album. Mogul Jay-Z constantly referenced his support for Obama at many concerts and on his first Blueprint 3 single “Jockin’ Jay-Z.” Atlanta rapper Young Jeezy recently did the same with the video for his black-nationalism ode “My President Is Black.”

                   

    Obama’s relationship with Hip-Hop was occasionally tense, as the senator over the summer had to condemn a tribute song from one of his favorite emcees, Ludacris. In the celebratory song “Politics: Obama Is Here,” Ludacris referred to President Bush as “mentally handicapped,” and Hillary Clinton as a “b*tch,” prompting Obama to state “while Ludacris is a talented individual he should be ashamed on these lyrics.”

                   

    Even with that setback, Obama’s campaign still reached out to Hip-Hop just days before the November 4thelection. In a nationwide conference call to DJs and radio personalities, Democractic strategist/CNN correspondent Donna Brazile and Bad Boy CEO Sean “Diddy” Combs urged a final push before the election.

                  

    “Remember, as DJs you hold a powerful voice as representatives of the people,” Brazile stressed. “You all hold more power in your words than any politician simply because you have more credibility being in these communities.”

                   

    Combs added a somber note to put the campaign in perspective.

                   

    “If our forefathers can get killed fighting for us during the Civil Rights Movement and dragged to jail, the least we can do is stand in line for a few hours,” Combs stated. “We do more just to get tickets to a Mary J. or Jay-Z concert.”

                   

    It remains to be seen if Hip-Hop’s high political consciousness will continue into 2009 and subsequent years while Obama is in office.

                   

    According to Common, the “change” Obama promised will not just affect politics, but Hip-Hop culture as a whole.

                  

    “I think Hip-Hop artists will have no choice but to talk about different things and more positive things,” Common predicted earlier this week. “Try to being a brighter side to that because, even before Barack, I think people had been tired of hearing the same thing.”

                   

    President-elect Barack Obama will be sworn into office on January 20, 2009.



      

    News Archives
     >