The GODS Of Hip-Hop: A Reflection On The Five Percenter Influence On Rap Music & Culture
“We were beginner’s in the hood as Five Percenters / But something must’ve got in us, ‘cause all of us turned to sinners…” -AZ on Nas’ “Life’s a Bi#ch”
Hip-Hop has lost its way… or shall we say balance. While flaunting money and drug game exploits run abundant, the lessons in the music have been submerged since capitalism took over and the jewels have been buried.
Hip-Hop Wired takes a look at what happened and the importance of the Five Percenter messages which were brought to the game.
Revisiting some classics and talking with some of the pioneers, it’s time for: “Each one to teach one.”
Speaking with Raekwon, Immortal Technique, Fab 5 Freddy, Poor Righteous Teachers’ Wise Intelligent and insight from Russell Simmons, get knowledge of self after the jump!!! [More]
“Rock from party to party, backyard to yard / I tear it up ya’ll and bless the mic for the Gods…” –Rakim “My Melody”
On February 5th of 2010, as blizzards swept across the northeastern part of the United States, hundreds of people braved the snowstorm and converged upon Trenton, New Jersey for a concert called “The Legends of Hip-Hop: Return of the God MC’s.” The show was headlined by Rakim and featured Brand Nubian, Cappadonna and Masta Killa of the Wu-Tang Clan, and hometown hero Wise Intelligent of Poor Righteous Teachers (PRT).
As the artists took to the stage and displayed the wizardry of their wordplay, the festivities transcended the run-of-the mill rap show. Reaching across the ages, grasping at the original purposes of such events throughout time, as the show progressed, it took on the spiritual dimensions of indigenous gatherings where traditions and beliefs were celebrated and reaffirmed; where commune with nature and the universe were reinforced.
Poor Righteous Teachers – “Holy Intellect”
This was more than just music, more than just message. It was a manifestation of a way of life that is at the core of what we now know as Hip-Hop culture.
Pulsating with Five Percenter vibrations, these lyrical alchemists metamorphosed the base elements of the teachings of the Nation of Gods and Earths into the golden wisdom of their songwriting. Indeed, some of the best to have ever touched the microphone have been students of, influenced by, or have utilized elements of the teachings of Nation of Gods and Earths, commonly known as Five Percenters.
This includes Jay-Z, Nas, Rakim, Busta Rhymes, Wu-Tang Clan, Brand Nubian, Poor Righteous Teachers, Gangstarr, Big Daddy Kane, LL Cool J, Big Pun; even Erykah Badu and the Digable Planets whose Grammy-Award winning ‘Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)” contains a line alluding to the Five Percent.
“The God, send you back to the earth from which you came.”-Jay-Z “Jigga My N***a”
The Nation of Gods and Earths was founded as the Five Percenters by Allah the Father (also referred to as Clarence 13X Smith), in 1964 after leaving the Nation of Islam’s mosque # 7, then under the leadership of Malcolm X. Using the foundational elements of his “Supreme Mathematics” and “Supreme Alphabets,” along with a core of the Nation of Islam’s “Supreme Wisdom” which he slightly modified to form the “120 Lessons,” he brought his own unique understanding of Islam as a way of life to the streets of New York.
From the streets of New York, his teachings spread across the United States and around the world. Rap music has had a part in the dissemination of these teachings. But then again, the teachings themselves are the roots of rap music and Hip-Hop culture on a whole.
In his autobiography, Life and Def: Sex, Drugs, Money, and God, Russell Simmons, a founding father of the rap music industry, labels the Nation of Gods and Earths as an “important influence” in the history of Hip-Hop that has been overlooked.
In her study, Five Percenter Rap: God Hop’s Music, Message and Black Muslim Message, documenting that Kool Herc reported a heavy Five Percenter presence at his parties, Professor Felicia M. Miyakawa observed:
“Even in the earliest days of Hip-Hop, the Five Percenters were regarded as an integral part of the Hip Hop scene.” The fact that an entire book has been published on the topic of Five Percenter influence on rap is a testimony to the strength of the impact.
It has also been reported that two of Hip Hop’s founders Kool Herc and Afrika Bambaataa personally studied Five Percent teachings as well. The foundational lessons of the Zulu Nation, the spiritual core of early Hip-Hop, were directly derived from the Supreme Mathematics and Alphabets. The Gods and Earths being a factor in the switch from street wars to street jams gels with what Russell Simmons further records in his autobiography.
“During the period when the gangs I hung with in the 70’s gave way to 80’s Hip Hop culture,” writes Simmons. “It was the street language, style and consciousness of the Five Percent Nation that served as a bridge.”
Clarence 13 X (Allah) - Founder Of The Nation Of Gods & Earths
“Radios on card tables, Benetton, The Gods buildin’/Ask for today’s Mathematics, we Allah’s children / And this was going on in every New York ghetto / Kids listen, Five Percenters said it’s pork in Jell-O” – Nas “No Idea’s Original”
During the initial years of Hip-Hop’s formulation in various neighborhoods throughout New York City, the Nation of Gods and Earths was a formidable force in those same communities. This led to an inevitable cross-pollination whereby elements of Five Percenter culture were incorporated into the emerging world of Hip-Hop culture. The way that the Gods taught, for example, their “self-styled wisdom” way of speaking made them ideal for modeling rapping forms.
“Listen to rappers from Brooklyn or the Queensbridge projects, like Nas, and you hear Five Percent-speak all in their rhymes,” writes Simmons in Life and Def… “Rakim’s poetry is immersed in it. A lot of the poetic images in Hip-Hop are informed by them.”
Hip-Hop pioneer and host of the original Yo! MTV Raps, Fab Five Freddy expressed similar sentiments.
“The Five Percenter theology, thought process and of course, most importantly, the unique use of language had an indelible impact on Hip-Hop music.”
Fab 5 Freddy
The Five Percent popularized use of the expressions “peace,” “word is bond” and even “keep it real.” Amongst the Gods and Earths, using the term “sun,” to describe your “mans and them” wasn’t because you felt they were like your kids, it was because Black Men were symbolic of the that great star at the center of our solar system, which symbolized the Black Family. Simmons presented a simplified explanation in his Life and Def:
“A Five Percenter will say some fly Shyte like, ‘I’ve got seven moons, three suns and two earths.’ It sounds mystical, but he’s really talking about all his women, with his two earths being his closest girls,” wrote Simmons. All of these things were incorporated into the Hip-Hop lexicon.
“I call my brother, Sun because he shine like one…” Method Man “Wu-Gambinos”
Other prime examples of foundational incorporations include “the cipher” and the “B-Boy stance.” Whereas in the Hip-Hop, the cipher is known as a circle of MCs spitting their lyrics, or the space wherein B-Boys boogied, it was adopted from “building in the cipher,” the practice of Gods and Earths forming a circle around a speaker “dropping science,” (another term adopted by Hip Hop) elaborating on the teachings of Supreme Mathematics and the 120 Lessons. In addition, sacred circles are long-standing traditions within indigenous cultures throughout the planet.
The B-Boy stance also is derived from Five Percenter posturing. “The B-Boy stance is originated as a Five Percenter thing,” says Fab Five Freddy. “I can remember the way the Gods would stand. The Gods would stand and have one foot there and you’d fold your arms and it was like… Whoa!” Historical images of the Gods “squared up” or “standing on the square” as it is called can be found throughout the photographic work of Jamel Shabazz.
As rap music infiltrated the music industry, the Nation of Gods and Earths were amongst the vanguard artists. The World Famous Supreme Team, See Divine “The Mastermind” & Just Allah “The Superstar,” were not only pioneering Hip-Hop radio personalities with the show they started in 1979 on Newark’s 105.9 WHBI-FM, they also created several early Hip-Hop hits in collaboration with British music maven, Malcolm McLaren.
These hits included international sensations such as 1983’s “Buffalo Gals” and 1984’s “Hey DJ.” McLaren’s 1983 album, Duck Rock, which is credited with Hip-Hop’s explosion in the United Kingdom, contained clips of the World Famous Supreme Team’s radio show. The late-great Mr. Magic, who went on to host the first rap show on a major radio station, worked on the show before moving to WBLS and “The Rap Attack.”
“With knowledge of self, there’s nothing I can’t solve, at 360 degrees I revolve…”–Rakim “Move the Crowd”
Eric B. & Rakim – “Follow The Leader”
In 1986, rap experienced a paradigm shift with the introduction of a Five Percenter named Rakim Allah to the music industrial scene. The relentless lyrical assault of “Eric B. is President” was biting us, fighting us and inviting us to the rhyme, while the smoothed out serenade of the B-Side “My Melody” seduced us into its lyrical lacework only to trample us under thunderous drum beats. And with that, Rakim revolutionized the way rappers rapped in much the same way T La Rock’s “It’s Yours” changed lyrical structure in 1984 and Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five’s impacted subject matter with 1982’s “The Message.”
But Rakim wasn’t the only one. Just-Ice had made his Back to the old School debut with Mantronix. The following year, while Just-Ice teamed up with KRS-ONE, Brooklyn’s own King Asiatic made his debut as Big Daddy Kane as other groups, such as Divine Force, continued to bless the mic for the Gods.
With legendary and influential Five Percenter rappers such as Rakim and Big Daddy Kane impacting lyricism in rap music on a whole, it would stand to follow that Five Percenters have had a significant impact on the art of emceeing. Wu-Tang’s Raekwon the Chef expands on the topic.
“I think that when you look at brothers like Rakim that got knowledge of self that was coming with so many different words and making sense,” says Raekwon. “It made us more lyrical and more intelligent and I think it helped everybody’s rap sword in general.”
Big Daddy Kane – “Young, Gifted & Black”