179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← back to listing · view thread

From:
component
To:
Date:
Fri, 23 Feb 2001 22:07:41 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] Hip Hop
Msg-Id:
<003501c09e0e$f4a727a0$a543343f@oemcomputer>
Mbox:
idm.0102.gz
Oh shit, Dj Spooky is on this list now ? Rob component _________________________ www.componentrecords.com _________________________ ----- Original Message ----- From: Kevin Ryan @ <i__oo__@hotmail.com> To: <idm@hyperreal.org> Sent: Friday, February 23, 2001 8:50 PM Subject: [idm] Hip Hop
quoted 89 lines The genre of hip hop qua cultural locus manifested (and, if I may,> The genre of hip hop qua cultural locus manifested (and, if I may, > legitimated) the inertia of the Postmodern ethos of mediumistic > deconstruction in the 1970s, which in itself was in many respects a > culmination of the 1960s hermeneutic of the post-dada studio production and > re/de-simulation foci of the rising production mnemonic in live music. Seen > from this perspective, can hip hop be "live"? First, one must recall that > hip hop, vernacular usage aside, was originally delineated in its cultural > dimension. The term was allegedly codified, if not fabricated, or at least > lexicalized, by Afrika Bambaataa, who in the mid-1970s identified not four > but five "pillars" of the nascent designation: MCing, DJing, breaking, > graffiti, and Zulu nation, the last of which being a pan-Africanist > association of black skinned persons in urban centres, particularly the > Bronx. It may be useful at this point to note that Bambaataa's namesake > itself is most likely a tipping of the hat to the Bambata insurgence in 1906 > against the British colonial rule of South Africa, easily attributed, by a > gloss, to the society, albeit segmented political system, of the extant > Zulu. The internal structure of Bambaataa's reinscription of nomenclature > thus highlights a fiction of agency that parallels the appropriation of > factual knowledge, an unconscious, or at best quasi-conscious, > de-semanticization of Afrocentric loan terms aimed at fostering a discourse > of racial empowerment and a subsequent deconstruction or reformulation of > the Eurocentric grammar. > > In perhaps simpler terms, the experience of hip hop (re)embodies the very > semantic drift that is tellingly symptomatic of syntactical uncertainty > grafted on to the language of popular culture (seen from the post-Hegelian > viewpoint, at least). While the tacit epistemological justification of > early hip hop remains a rich source of analysis, let us turn to, first, the > reduction-or progression, if you prefer-of hip hop from a socio-cultural > locus to a genre of art, and, second, to its co-optation and re-codification > in contemporary circles of electronic music production. The conceptual > re-casting thematized by hip hop over the last three decades parallels the > renunciation of praxis in other musical cultures, such as rock, blues, and > funk. Here it is useful to invoke DeMan's aesthetic ideology, which is > closely allied to the politics of the Other. Hip hop's heyday in the 1970s > was largely an underground sociocentric endeavor, unconcerned with the > transformation on to physical medium (cf., DeMan's coverage of cultural > aesthetics in a non-art setting) outside of a smattering of cassette > bootlegging. While the Sugarhill Gang were not the very first to codify rap > on the vinyl medium (they were narrowly beat to the punch by a Fatback > b-side and one other obscure recording by an outside impresario, both in the > summer of 1979), in September 1979 their enormously popular 12" "Rapper's > Delight" heralded a new ideological era of hip hop which eventually > marginalized the wholistic culture of hip hop promulgated by its founders. > The (re)formation of history as such is comparable with the delegitimization > of the enigmatic, the very raison-d'etre of the underground, as the > subculture's zeitgeist demonstrated its susceptibility to capitalistic > king-of-the-hillisms with a facility emblematic of the Heraclitean flux of > market forces. > > Here we see that hip hop is not so much a genre in the traditional Platonic > essentialistic sense, but rather a Wittgensteinian "family of resemblences" > amenable to co-optation by new progressivistic artists utilizing physical > media. Although hip hop's chief organizers of the 1970s, such as Kool Herc > (perhaps the original founder of the culture but by no stretch a theorist), > Grandmaster Flash ("the scientist of the mix," the forebear of hip hop's > modern penchant for instrumentals and turntablistic noodling), and their > confrere Bambaataa himself, originally denounced the vinylization of the > genre, all but Herc had jumped on the commercialistic bandwagon within the > first couple years of 1980s. The rhetoric of radical alterity, it followed, > submitted to an almost protean adaptation to the ephemeral marketplace > panopticism. The growing acculturation of white-skinned persons and > electronic producers working within the so-called "IDM" rubric represents > yet another fundamental rehashing of the conceptual nuclei of hip hop (in > the family-resemblance schema), refuting its Platonic essence in favor of a > more accomodationist schematization, reminiscent of the shift from > discophilia to discophobia among recorded rappers in the early 1980s, or of > the violent turnover from an underground orientation to a highly vocal > "moneymaking" esprit (although boast rap, often seen as a concomitant to > moneymaking, was elemental in the formative 1970s sphere). The viability of > such a transfer is predicated upon the notion of a shifting epistemological > bearing within a closed (albeit nebulous) genre delimitation. What's more, > the divisibility of exoticism opens a space for the invention of the > unspoken. The inception of narrative qua rap (that is, the culturally > motivated anecdotal utterances and illicit aphorizing of MCs) invested > itself in the representational validity of the marginal, but now accepted, > transmutability to the disc medium. The speaking of this societal image, > finally, instantiates the historicization of the autonomous selfhood of > cultural organization congruent with the incipient textuality of the musical > lyric. > > _________________________________________________________________ > Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >
--------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org