Funkmasterr wrote:I have never been able to stand KRS-1's music, or him in general.. and don't know many people that can actually. So thats a terrible example to make, he is not a pioneer of anything like he claims to be, and I will argue that point to the grave so Miir, don't even bother.
I've been listening to hip hop my whole life. From when my brother brought home the Sugar Hill Gang record (it's one of the first albums I can remember listening to) in the early 1980s to me dubbing the tape of PE's
Yo! Bum Rush the Show on one of those yellow Memorex tapes. From convincing the clerk to let a 12 year-old buy 2 Live Crew's
As Nasty as they Wanna Be to rushing to the store to buy
The Chronic the day it was released all the way up through the Aesop Rock
Fast Cars album I downloaded a couple nights ago. I've listened and been a fan my entire life. I have two problems with this argument.
First, I've never been a big KRS-One fan. I like a few of his/BDP's songs, but he was never my favorite by any means. That said, to say that he isn't one of the most influential, pioneering artists in the genre is the hands down the dumbest thing you've said in this thread.
Not only was he an accomplished "battle" rapper and did he participate in one of the most popular early rap feuds, he was the impetus behind the whole Stop the Violence movement. He was like the first person to do an album cover holding a gun. Think about that, he was one of the biggest (if not
the biggest) names on the East Coast at the inception of so-called "Gangsta Rap", and he created one of the biggest socially conscious songs in the genre, in the late 1980s. He's recorded more than 15 albums and been a part of like 10 hip hop movies.
You know absolutely nothing about what you're talking about, Funkmasterrr. Sure, you're a big fan of hip hop music, I'm not begrudging you for that. But just because you like to listen to Tupac and have been to a crackhouse or whatever in Brooklyn doesn't qualify you to comment on it with any authority.
Second, rap
is hip hop. The same as an Acura is a Car, an apple is a fruit, a kleenex is a tissue. As previously stated, hip hop is the lifestyle, rapping is an element of the music of said lifestyle. Not all hip hop is rap, but all rap is hip hop. The same as not all fruits are apples, but all apples are fruits. The spoken part of a hip hop song is called "rapping", leading to a lot of hip hop music being called "rap music". It's kind of like referring to all soda as Coke or all tissues as Kleenex.