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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
The Massacre by 50 Cent sells 4 million copies:
Why does social backwardness achieve such success?
Part 1
By Kevin Kearney
8 September 2005
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This is the first article in a two-part series
Though rap music has produced a variety of sub-genres in the
last 25 years, it has recently divided itself into two general
currents. The first is so-called Conscious Rap, which is characterized
by lighter, jazz-influenced beats and lyrical content that, while
much less violent and misogynistic than most rap music, is often
informed by a deeply black nationalist and/or Christian outlook.
Mos Def, Common and Kanye West are the most notable artists associated
with this current. The political tendencies of these artists do
merit some attention, but in most cases, their politics and class
origins are readily apparent in their lyrics and video imagery.
Although Conscious Rap has developed a significant followingmainly
within the striving black and Latino petty bourgeoisit has
not achieved the overwhelming popularity of gangster rap.
Gangster rap is the catch-all term applied to rap music that is
characterized by the glorification of money worship, misogyny,
mindless violence, sexism and innumerable forms of social garbage.
The enormous and widespread popularity of gangster rap can be
seen in the recent success of rap artist 50 Cent.
50 Cents latest album, The Massacre, has already
sold 4 million copies and is likely to be the biggest-selling
CD of the year. A representative for Billboard, Ray Waddell, says
Its hard to get any hotter than 50 Cent is right now.
When asked about the summer tour in which Eminem and 50 Cent are
headlining, Wadell responded, Youve got to say theyre
totally mainstream; theyve gone far beyond the rap audience.
Its a very powerful double bill. Eminem and 50 Cent
have taken turns at the top of album sales charts, track-download
rankings and radio playlists in the last few years.
Since 1999, the two artists combined have sold nearly 40 million
albums, nearly 3 million single downloads and have reached more
than 150 million listeners via radio play of their most popular
singles In Da Club (50 Cent) and Lose Yourself
(Eminem). This figure indicates that almost half of the US population
has been exposed to these artists at one time or another. The
15-to-25-year-old audience demographic is saturated by these artists
through every conceivable form of media: movies, videos, cameo
appearances in other artists videos, video games, DVDs,
endorsement deals and commercials.
50 Cent was born Curtis Jackson and first arrived on the popular
music scene in the fall of 2002, as a protégé of
Eminem. His first single, entitled Wankster, was a
meticulous character assassination of another rapper, Ja Rule,
whom Jackson ruthlessly unmasked as a studio gangsteror
one who feigns a criminal history in order to garner the street
credibility that sells records.
Shortly after Wankster, Jackson released the aforementioned
single, In Da Club, in which he boasts of his
favorite club activities: selling the drug Ecstasy and looking
for girls on whom to rub. The single was Jacksons
most successful to date, and, besides being a rhythmic boast about
drug dealing and murder, it elevates Jacksons past to mythical
proportions by pre-packaging a romanticized version of his experiences
as a teenage drug dealerone who was shot nine times and
survivedfor mass consumption.
While Jackson has some talent for rhyming and his album contains
a few catchy beats produced by gangster rap guru Dr. Dre, his
rise to the top of the pop charts is largely predicated on his
criminal or thug (which oddly enough, is now a term
of great respect within hip-hop circles) persona.
Jackson was first encouraged to put his energy into making
rap music by former Run DMC DJ, Jam Master Jay. Jaywho was
undoubtedly motivated to some extent by the great commercial success
of other violent criminals turned rappers such as the Notorious
B.I.G. and the rap group N.W.Ataught Jackson the basics
of rap music production.
Jackson eventually signed a $65,000 deal with Columbia Records,
but continued to sell crack. In the spring of 2000, he was shot
at close range in the face, hand and legs by a man (presumably
a rival drug dealer) with a 9-millimeter. As mentioned, he survived
a total of nine bullets.
Needless to say, all the sordid and tragic details of Jacksons
tumultuous life are prominently displayed on his promotional website,
which at one point playfully jokes with the reader, Thats
not a dimple on 50 Cents face, thats a bullet wound!
Deeply affected by his experiences, Jackson currently takes a
three-man security team with him everywhere he goes, religiously
wears a bullet-proof vest and drives a specially equipped, bullet-proof
SUV.
Jackson says of himself, With some artists, people look
at them and wanna be that artist. I dont think people wanna
be me. Im still searching for my purpose. I do have defects
of character. When I get mad, I get mad. I can do things and say
things that arent nice. And people, they look at me and
they go, Well, hes crazy. Im all right
with that. This statement seems more than a little disingenuous
considering the pains with which Jackson has tried to communicate
and glorify his homicidal tendencies to his young fans.
The chorus of his most recent single instructs the listener,
Clickity clank, clickity clank the money goes into my piggy
bank Clickity clank, clickity clank the money goes into my piggy
bank, Ill get at you, my knife cut ya skin, Ill get
at you, blow shots at ya man. While such murderous threats
are hardly uncommon in most rap music, the simple and almost child-like
chorus gives one the impression that he is not only homicidal,
but emotionally stunted as well.
Sadly, this is a fairly representative sample of Jacksons
lyrics, which are daily piped into the American cultural landscape
by some of the largest and most powerful media corporations in
the world such as Infinity Broadcasting, Clear Channel and Time
Warner. Like most of the best-selling rappers, Jacksons
music is a litany of homicidal threats and many other retrograde
tendencies, set to an infectiously catchy pre-programmed beat.
While it is easier to understand why someone who hadnt
witnessed all the poverty, desperation and violence of the inner
city could so effortlessly make a Faustian pact with the record
industry to glorify poverty and social backwardness, one has to
ask: How can Curtis Jackson so uncritically glorify the exploitive
conditions that tore his family apart, ultimately led to his own
near-fatal shooting and now compel him to wear a bullet-proof
vest every day just to feel safe?
One suspects that he is probably totally unconsciousno
doubt aided by copious amounts of alcohol and marijuanaof
the forces that have pushed and pulled him through his life. Id
like to call him a sell-out, but I suspect he was
never really down in the first place.
Industry cash for chaos
Considering how degenerate and mindless most rap music has
become, many would like to dismiss itand the predominant
gangster genre especiallyas some sort of cultural aberration.
However, the overwhelming popularity of 50 Cent makes clear that
gangster rap is a cultural phenomenon that requires a deeper analysis.
As the numbers indicate, gangster rap is currently embraced
in the US and around the world by an economically diverse and
multicultural fan base. The most gruesome of rap tunes entertain
shoppers at the mall, pre-teens at suburban slumber parties and
students at universities all over the country. According to the
Recording Industry Association of America, hip-hop and rap music
officially became more popular than country music for the first
time in America in 2001. The American music market was worth $14.3
billion in 2001. In 2003, rap sales accounted for 13.3 percent
of the total market share.
Gangster raps popularity, in particular, has soared to
levels not seen since N.W.A. (Niggas with Attitudes) helped invent
the genre 15 years ago. Although the real-life tragedies of 50
Cent fit nicely into the popular, cartoonish image of the black
ghetto experience, the profit motives of the record industry,
not ghetto life, have played the definitive role in the construction
and development of the genre. If an artist makes more money
talking about being a thug and his realness in the street, then
hes going to do more of that because thats where the
success is, said MC Search, best known from the group 3rd
Bass and now a radio DJ in Detroit. They will do what sells.
The record industry routinely attempts to exculpate itself
for the rise of gangster rap by arguing that it is just passively
providing the consumer with what she or he desires: murder, sexual
exploitation and humiliation, proud ignorance, racially stereotypical
behavior and attitudes, etc. (more about why it sells, later).
Yet, by promoting gangster artists with its billion-dollar marketing
machine, the industry plays a massive and undeniable role in creating
and fostering the tastes of the youth market. If profits can be
boosted by putting on a pedestal the perspectives of the most
thoroughly ruined and exploited social elements of the inner city,
the record industry wont hesitate.
Doubtless, there are many unscrupulous record executives who
would probably market 50 Cents music to toddlers if they
could make an extra nickel per unit, but it must be made plain
that the gangster rap phenomenon is not the result of a conscious
plot to corrupt the youth of America.
Obviously, neither the record industry nor the rappers invented
poverty, drugs, pimps, guns or killings. These phenomena have
their roots in social conditions. The content of gangster rap
merely reflects the most individualistic and primitive reactionmanipulated
by definite social intereststo these harsh economic realities.
In the late 1990s, recording industry giants bought out or
lured gangster artists away from most of the original, smaller
peddlers of gangster rap. Independent labels such as Death Row
records, which made its name and fortune by packaging and marketing
romanticized images of the inner-city criminal lifestyle, were
closely analyzed and eventually overtaken by industry executives.
Some of these smaller labels hastened their own demise by making
use of the violent practices recounted in the songs of their top
artists. The tragic culmination of these practices was seen in
the murders of Christopher Wallace and Tupac Shakur in 1996. Shug
Knight, then-owner of Death Row records, has been linked to the
killings. In fact, Wallaces mother alleges that off-duty
Los Angeles Police Department officers were involved in the murder
of her sonseveral of whom moonlighted as Shug Knights
bodyguards at the time.
While there were many sober admonitions against gang violence
following the murders, major labels wasted no time snapping up
as many unsophisticated independent gangster labels and rappers
as they could in the aftermath. Since then, the once-underground
gangster rap phenomenon has been almost completely absorbed into,
and centralized under, the command and guidance of corporate conglomerates.
Rap is now big business, and young rappers stand to make as
much as star athletes in some cases. Rappers Jay-Z, Sean Combs,
Snoop Dogg and Master P have all made hundreds of millions of
dollars selling the ghetto cartoon to Americas youth. Consequently,
more and more aspiring rappers are tailoring their songs to fit
the gangster mold, whether they have lived that life or not.
A man who is starving will say anything and do anything
to get on, explains MC Serch. Since most gangster rappers
arent starving in the first place, it must be added that
a man who simply desires to be rich and famous may also do
anything to get on. The result: the vast majority of young
rappers take record industry cash to vigorously encourage and
glorify social chaos.
What is the social content of gangster rap?
Gangster rap, like all forms of rap, is apologetically portrayed
by an army of liberal intellectuals and black nationalists as
nothing more than a reflection of the poverty and violence of
inner-city life. A piece in the Guardian describes how
deeply these views on rap have been accepted and promoted by the
intelligentsia: The lyrics of Tupac Shakur are dissected
in university classrooms; former Public Enemy front man Chuck
D has a political talk-show on the radio. Among professional African-American
intellectuals, big names such as Michael Eric Dyson and Cornel
West sing hip-hops praises. Literally so with West, a Princeton
University professor and probably the best-known black intellectual
in the country, who last year cut his own rap and poetry album,
Sketches of My Culture.
There is a widespread belief amongst hip-hop devotees that
they are taking on a political perspective by listening to the
music. This raises the question: Does
rap have any real political content, or is it just recreational
oppositionalism? To answer this question, one must look at those
to whom rap appeals. Who buys gangster rap and why?
The popular notion that rap reflectsin an unadulterated
mannerthe poverty and violence of inner-city life is only
partly true, at best. There is no denying that the black community
in the US suffersand has historically sufferedan inordinate
amount of crushing poverty, but rap isnt just a simple reflection
of this reality, as the liberal intelligentsia would have us believe.
The sentiments that originally animated the gangster rap genre
were derived from the perspective of the weakest and most backward
sections of the inner-city lumpen proletariat; a perspective that
is characterized by a thoroughly anti-social and anti-working
class reaction to the ravages of inner-city life. This ultra-individualistic
and confused point of view places animalistic hedonism as its
top priority and rejects everything that stands in the way of
immediate satisfaction. The lumpen proletariat does not, in fact,
have any independent interests or ideological expression. This
seriously damaged or even destroyed layer generally copies in
a particularly crude manner the behavior and outlook of the most
predatory bourgeois elements.
The sentiments of poor inner-city inhabitants, struggling to
raise their kids, pay ever-increasing bills, and scrape out a
living are not reflected in most rap music and certainly not in
gangster rap. So, gangster rap only reflects the reality of the
ghetto from one narrow perspective. While this perspective has
never been a complete or accurate reflection of ghetto life (a
fact widely acknowledged, at least in rap circles), it has always
drawn an audience.
But the violent lumpen layer is just a subsection of a single
social layer. By no means could such a small segment of the population
buy enough records to fuel the record-breaking sales posted by
50 Cent.
A 2003 Boston Globe article excitedly reported that
Today 70 percent of hip-hop is bought by white kids.
The rap industry is increasingly aware that their audience is
not just black city-dwellers, as pointed out by Erik Parker of
Vibe magazine: You dont necessarily need the
white face to cross over to the non-urban audiences.... Before
you had Eminem as a huge success because hes a great rapper
and hes white. Justin (Timberlake) is a great singer and
hes white. Now you have Nelly and Lil Jon crossing overblack
artists doing black music. I do think that rappers are more conscious
of a growing market and theyre creating records to accommodate
that market. Despite the fact that rappers are just now
becoming conscious of their audience, the audience has been influencing
rap musics content for some time.
Since the Globe cited that statistic, MRI researchers
have changed their methods and no longer decide for themselves
the race of their respondents. In fall 2004,
using the new method, MRI found that 60 percent of rap buyers
are white. This leaves a full 40 percent of rap consumers who,
at least, do not identify themselves as white. Although the racial
demographics of rap consumers are currently en vogue, they only
provide limited insight into the phenomena of gangster rap. Every
race group contains within it antagonistic socioeconomic classes.
While not perfect, ones social class is a much more reliable
indicator of behavior.
The fact that gangster rap has a racially diverse audience
and enjoys enormous sales indicates that, although the impetus
and content of gangster rap may have originated in the desperation
and backwardness of the inner-city lumpen population, it has won
an audience with youth from many distinct racial and, more importantly,
class backgrounds. This begs the question: What do young people
from so many different backgrounds all find attractive about gangster
rap?
To be continued
See Also:
Outkast: a case study
in social misleading
[1 July 2004]
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