quoted 11 lines I think that's a broad overgeneralization. Sure, a
>I think that's a broad overgeneralization. Sure, a
>lot of the commercial crap is like that, but that
>doesn't comprise the whole of US hip hop. Take a look
>at some groups/artist such as tribe called quest, gang
>starr, genelic & memphis reign, any of the quannum
>collective, j-live etc etc. And of course there's
>antipop consortium, and who knows what the hell they
>are rapping about. In any hip hop culture you'll find
>the people with the egos rappin about gats and
>bitches, and you'll also find real mcs who tear up the
>mic without referencing all that shit.
Agreed. And I'm not even commenting on the content when I say
"british rap is bad," I'm only talking about the technical aspect of
rapping. Rap itself is very punctuated, choppy, and the best stuff
is delivered quickly. I mean, there's a reason that idm with chopped
up [american] rap sounds so good.
I'm not sure if it's just the british rap that I've heard, but even
the stereotypical "urban black" dialect in the US is based around a
very rhythmic matter of speaking. That just doesn't exist in the
stereotypical "british accent" (and if you want to know what a
british accent is and don't have a brit at hand, go up to any white
college kid (preferrably male and quite geeky looking) and ask him.
He'll happily demonstrate), and the lack of vowel variation ends up
making a 'british rap' too much like 'trying to read bad poetry over
a beat.'
Maybe it's just that there's too much british trip-hop with people
trying to rap over it :)
But give me aesop rock over any of that, any day.
derek
--
eggytoast.com
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