I understand the point you think you're making, and admittedly it would make more sense to me if Kanye were some otherwise ill-regarded clown that this particular community just happened to be mysteriously going apeshit over (like if, instead of Kanye, RM suddenly developed a cultish clique around MC Paul Barman), instead of a widely acclaimed artist that was drawing similar praise from all directions, including from his peers within the rap industry. Some sociology grad students should really look into why dorky white guys consistently feel the need to point out that other dorky white guys are listening to rap music wrong -- perhaps they believe it diverts attention from their own dorky whiteness if they pretend like they're on some level of "authenticity awareness" inaccessible to their "naive" peers? I don't know.verb_to_trust wrote:I'm fairly secure in my judgement on the kanye situation here, yesKevin Davis wrote:Nevermind then -- you're basically a rapper yourself! I defer going forward.verb_to_trust wrote:I've spent a lot of time around black people
I don't think getting a handle on rap music is as elusive an achievement as people like to pretend. The themes are widely universal even when the settings are not, and -- like jazz, rock, blues, etc. -- the skeletal structure and aesthetic trends of the music are parseable to anyone who feels compelled to put the hours in. Yet people consistently take this haughty "if you have to ask, you'll never know" tone when discussing it. It's ridiculous.