It has nothing to do with rap music as a genre.
Where we run into a problem is w/ these brothers buying into the lifestyle that they rap about. They feel they need to live that life 24/7 because that is what gets promoted, that is what sells. That's not the fault of rap, that's the fault of a culture that perpetuates it.
These record labels get these young men twisted into horrible contracts, throw money up front at them, but they have no structure in place to help them live life. They rap about something they aren't living, so they start trying to live it. They don't hire real security, they have gang members and homies on the payroll instead.
You don't see Joe Pesci going from filming Goodfellas to carrying out hits on people, right?
Personal accountability does have to come into play here, but a lot of what Kanye has said about the record labels and ppl who run them is the God's honest truth. The people paying rappers only want to bleed money out of them until they're gone, and then they find someone else. These young brothers are getting thrown into situations with no structure, no direction, and no one to point them as to where to go.
shyt sad AF. Here in the UK, obviously some people have guns, but it's pretty rare. In the US too many people have a gun. I know this is an obvious statement but this incident illustrates the problem
I know US at the point of no return given the amount of guns in circulation, but in UK this ends up in a fist fight, or perhaps a knife gets pulled out in an extreme case or in the most rare case a gun. If someone got a gun on them, it's too easy for something that should escalate into at most some punches getting thrown, to a weapon getting drawn that can with one pull of a trigger blow someone's brain's out. shyt is just alien to me.
We can talk hip hop, poverty, mentality. But when guns are so accessible it's too easy for a trip to the ER for a broken nose instead be a homicide. I know this argument is somewhat irrelevant given the culture of guns in the US, but as an external observer, it's depressing how easily someone getting hot headed ends in death. Of course that can happen anywhere, but the risk level is naturally so much lower when no one packing a fukking gun
it absolutely does....I don't have to show you 5-6 notable white artists to make the point that none of this has anything to do with rap. Why? Because the homicide rate in their community isn't as high. They don't statistically have the same challenges as we do, which is why it's crazy to bring up the Black community having a problem and then asking why the same isn't happening to 5-6 notable white artists.
It has nothing to do with reveling an element especially in this case.
The Jews are following supply and demand that’s not their responsibility.
Only ones as huge when they died were xxxTakeoff
PnB Rock
Pop Smoke
XXXtentacion
Young Dolph
King Von
Nipsey
All huge
Even rappers like Trouble and JayDaYoungan were big in their markets.
These nikkas dying every couple months. It’s a crisis in rap.
Here y’all come with the “rappers are really broke” nonsenseMaybe their net worth isn’t reflective of what they actually have
Buying jewelry and cars and designer goods and big houses all adds up. You gotta pay labels back for videos and album budgets, etc
People swear these rappers are rich but they just keep up an image that the public buys into. Not saying it’s everybody, but they can’t all be millionaires
STFUA music genre that perpetuates the reality of living in America--usually as a black man.
We don't even have all the details yet, but, another "the culture" comes into question.
It was a private Halloween party and ppl have issues with dice--which is some party shyt.
I've seen ppl (family) mad over Monopoly. I done got hot over Uno with my cousins.
This convo is polarizing because it's so extreme.
consumer create demandWho creates the demand though?
Go on Apple Music, under Hip Hop - look at what songs Apple is recommending you listen to at the top of the list.
300 Blackout - Kodak Black
Bag Talk - Polo G
Listen to these songs or read the lyrics.
I'm not talking down on these brothers and they art, but they are creating this music in part because it's what the record labels want to sell to our people.
Consumers. The culture.Who creates the demand though?
Go on Apple Music, under Hip Hop - look at what songs Apple is recommending you listen to at the top of the list.
300 Blackout - Kodak Black
Bag Talk - Polo G
Listen to these songs or read the lyrics.
I'm not talking down on these brothers and they art, but they are creating this music in part because it's what the record labels want to sell to our people.