Thursday, April 15, 2010

Whiteness Tuesday

This day's class was one of the more interesting ones we've had this semester. I felt that Hess' theories were thought-provoking in our class, even if it was more negative than Dr. McCauliff would have liked, but it showed that hip-hop has an undeniable effect on our take on racial lines in music.
I think that America is still not comfortable with the idea of white people in hip-hop music, but it's more apparent in hip-hop's African American following. I feel like artists such as Eminem and a select few others only make it in hip-hop because of their white following. The message that Eminem is sending, however, is not a selective white-only one in which he talks more about his struggles from his adolescence in Detroit and drugs than anything else.
I don't want to waste any time mentioning Vanilla Ice because I feel that he did more damage for white people in hip-hop music than good. His sound was very engineered, but not quite as bad as his persona was. The Beastie Boys were at least themselves, even if you don't find yourself humming their tunes quite like you did "Ice Ice Baby".
I felt like our class had a diverse mindset on this topic today. Some people were extremely against Eminem and hip-hop altogether while some accepted white people in hip-hop, mostly Eminem. Does this show that Eminem is the only white rapper that will find his way to success in hip-hop? I doubt it because it looks like the rap game is here to stay and we're discovering new voices faster than ever.

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