Classic Drug References

sometimes i wonder what the fuck i’m rappin for

October 17, 2007 · 6 Comments

i try not to do these kinds of posts too often because, honestly, i don’t think most care too much about it, and this is definitely a music site. sometimes though, i can’t help it.

courtesy of this piece of shit source of ‘information.’

NEW YORK — A popular rap star’s shocking claim before a Big Apple audience that his next album will be titled “Nigga” was emphatically denied Tuesday by his record label.

Not only does the rapper known as Nas not have an album called “Nigga” coming out in December, as he told a concert crowd on Friday, but he apparently has no album coming out in December at all.

“There is no album release by Nas on the release schedule at this point,” a source close to Island Def Jam Music Group chairman Antonio “L.A.” Reid told FOXNews.com.

“And they would be unlikely to release an album with that title. How would that look at Wal-Mart?”

But there’s no doubt that Nas made the claim — which set the hip-hop community abuzz this week — during a Friday night performance at the Roseland Ballroom in New York City. The rapper’s “Greatest Hits” album is set to hit music store shelves in early November.

Nas — whose hits include “One Love” and “Hate Me Now” — told the crowd that he actually wanted to call his last record “Nigga,” but Def Jam wouldn’t hear of it, and made him change the name to “Hip Hop Is Dead.”

The rapper laced his between-song shout-outs with the N-word, which he frequently used to address his fans at the New York show, the last stop on the Sneaker Pimps tour (a promotional tour for the sneaker industry, as the name implies).

“Power to the people. Power to the real people!” Nas yelled to the cheering crowd, raising one arm triumphantly in the air. “This is our m—f— world. We’re going to do it our m—f— way. … Put your fist like this: real niggas only!”

The inflammatory word pops up throughout Nas’ rap lyrics, sometimes written in the plural with a “z” on the end.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson denounced the rapper’s remarks about his desired album title.

“The title using the ‘N’ word is morally offensive and socially distasteful,” Jackson said in a statement. “Nas has the right to degrade and denigrate in the name of free speech, but there is no honor in it.

“Radio and television stations have no obligation to play it and self-respecting people have no obligation to buy it. I wish he would use his talents to lift up and inspire, not degrade, making mockery of racism.”

The NAACP this week also threw up its hands at the news of Nas’ claim, saying the idea showed a lack of creativity and was only perpetuating toxic terminology.

“We will not support and we will not continually be assailed by other individuals who want to use that type of term in our presence,” said national NAACP spokesman Richard McIntire. “This has gone on long enough.”

McIntire said the absence of such racial slurs characterizes the “real history of rap,” a genre of music in which rhyming words are spoken, not sung.

“The NAACP believes in free speech. We are not a censorship organization,” said Vic Bulluck, executive director of the organization’s Hollywood bureau. “But we think is pejorative, no matter who uses it — even if it’s to sell records. It shows a real lack of creative imagination.”

Even Don Imus’ camp weighed in, amid the controversy surrounding the shock jock’s anticipated return to the airwaves in December, six months after he was fired for calling members of the Rutgers University women’s basketball team “nappy-headed hos” on the air.

In a rather surprising meeting of the minds, Imus’ lawyer gave the thumbs-up to Nas’ proposed record title.

“It’s a good thing,” Martin Garbus wrote in an e-mail to FOXNews.com. “Words like that should be deprived of their meanings, and then they can’t hurt.”

Several prominent members of the African-American community who have been vocal throughout the Imus scandal, including the Rev. Al Sharpton and Oprah Winfrey, were unavailable for comment on Nas’ remarks.

this shit irritates on many different levels. and i agree with Garbus, except that Nas isn’t proposing to deprive the word of any meaning, but re-interpret it.

what the NAACP, Jesse Jackson, the people who ‘buried’ this word seem to be missing, is that the word in and of itself is a word, but all the causes of the suffering and injustice that is attached to that word can’t be bleeped out. the craziest thing is that people assume that because a person of color like Jackson or Oprah Winfrey are speaking on the subject, it automatically makes them an authority on the issue. I would propose you help people think critically and de-construct the things around them rather then tell them that the way in which they talk is self-demeaning.

i have no idea how invested Nas truly is in spearheading a change in discourse or politics, but what he’s proposing is still a very interesting, creative and progressive thing. take someone’s worst insult towards you and the men and women and children that look like you, and do what’s been done in neighborhoods and songs for decades, make it a term of endearment. take it back. name your fucking album after it.

i would be suprised if any of the heads of Def Jam or any other major label would actually have a moral problem with this. LA Reid said it best, it doesn’t look good at Wal Mart, and since the US is stuck in Wal Mart right now, that shit won’t fly. even though the images companies like Def Jam and others put out of people of color essentializes them down to dances, fashions, guns and all kinds of other things that are not at all as bad as using the word, nigga.

Edit: Nas responds, “If Cornell West was making an album called Nigger, they would know he’s got something intellectual to say. To think I’m gonna say something that’s not intellectual is calling me a nigger, and to be called a nigger by Jesse Jackson and the NAACP is counterproductive, counter-revolutionary.”

anyway, here’s a dope ass Blu and Exile song not on Below The Heavens.

Blu – Another Day (prod. Exile)


Blackstar ft. Black Thought – Respiration (Flying High remix)

Pete Rock on the beat. Talib, Dante, Tariq on the mic. nothing else really needed, if you don’t have this yet…

Phonte of Little Brother and DJ Spinna – Dillagence

for some this is also old news, but if for some reason you haven’t peeped this tribute that has Spinna flipping the Don’t Nobody Care About Us beat his own way and Tay singing a medley of different Dilla-sung lines….do not sleep.

speaking of sleeping.

i’m kind of disheartened by this. this is exactly the kind of attitudes i was referring to in the opening paragraph of this.

this is the offical Lupus walk webpage, at least check it out, inform yourselves, because it’s about more than just the illest beatmaker of our era.

LA is the 17th of November. find your city, and if you can, you know what to do. shit, holler if you need a ride.

Categories: Dill Withers · Flicks · Singles · blu · friday night up in drews with dj house shoes · kweli · opinions are assholes

6 responses so far ↓

  • olaolu // October 17, 2007 at 3:23 am | Reply

    The word may be re-contextualized, but it never loses its power. I feel what Nas is trying to do just like how I felt Tribe’s “Sucka Nigga” stance, but ultimately, “nigger” is still a word that’s just as shocking – if not moreso now than ever – to black people. I don’t mind the use of “nigga” in the hip hop that I listen to, but I never bought into the notion that it was robbing the word of its power in the least. All it does is set up standards that one group automatically meets because of skin color and that all other groups can never meet. The issue of double standards has run amok since the word got popularized in hip hop lyrics.

    I’m not saying the word should be barred or anything, but I honestly don’t feel like the popularization of “nigga” has done anything positive for the connotations that “nigger” still has in this day and age.

  • olaolu // October 17, 2007 at 3:29 am | Reply

    It also sucks about the turn out at the lupus walk, man. I can relate a lot to your original article about Dilla. I didn’t get into hip hop in general until a fea years ago and my first exposure to Dilla was through Jaylib, which to this day, I consider good but not excellent. Donuts and Fantastic Vol 2 singlehandedly made him one of my top 5 favorite producers, though.

  • jh // October 18, 2007 at 3:38 am | Reply

    thanks for the reminder about the dilla walk, most definitely gonna be there when it rolls to my town nov. 16.

  • Ninoy Brown // October 18, 2007 at 5:46 am | Reply

    thing with that nas story, isn’t this news from last year? correct me if i’m wrong, but “n*gger” was the working title for “hip hop is dead”. and many in the hip-hop community already had this discussion around this time in ‘06. so what this all comes down to is that some fuckin idiot from fox news, or whatever sensationalist media actually broke the story, saw some outdated press release and decided to jump on an attack since its in style to critique the use of the word. and let’s all forget that many of the people from the media trying to offer their critique on the subject don’t even hold authority to discuss the topic since they don’t come from the community.

    even more bullshit is that it’s nas that keeps getting attacked? they continuously take his lyrics out of context even though he spreads much more positivity than bill o’reilly’s hate filled ass could ever attempt to spread. but isn’t that how history is written, the elite white class decide what attributes and characteristics to take from people of color and use that to teach the rest of society how they actually act.

    i’m just waiting for the day when someone on fox news tries to call out common or black thought for slaying emcees.

  • olaolu // October 21, 2007 at 8:55 pm | Reply

    Actually, just so you guys know, the news is recent: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1572287/20071018/nas.jhtml.

    It’ll be called “Nigger”, not “Nigga” and will be coming out in December.

  • retro // November 1, 2007 at 2:47 pm | Reply

    I do love the classics.

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