Skip to content
Portal :: The Hiphop Archive . The Hiphop University . Hiphop Lx . The Circle . World Hiphop . One Mic . El Sitio del Puño . Hiphop Prep . THAT .
The CircleThe Circle - The Hiphop Archive News Blog
Build - Respect  - Represent
  • The Circle ::
  • Hiphop News
  • It Was Shown
  • It Was Written

It Was Written

A White Man’s Look at Race and The Hip-Hop Industry

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Other People's Property
“Other People’s Property” is a very good book that is at its best when its author acts like a DJ. But don’t get it twisted: [Jason] Tanz sees hip-hop as text more than as sonic phenomenon or, for that matter, stone groove. “Other People’s Property” is made up of nine journalistic pieces, each a mix of reportage and personal reflection about race and the industry of hip-hop. It’s freaky, equally in love with Western philosophers such as Jean Baudrillard and the classic albums from hip-hop’s golden era. In a very hip-hop effort to get his shine on, the author mashes up his prose, cutting in and out of reportage and confessional styles.

Read more »

It Was Shown

A Look Into ‘Infamy’

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Cover of 'Infamy'
This cutting edge documentary not only unmasks the faces of seven individuals addicted to graffiti, but it exposes their thoughts, feelings, faults and fears — an avenue unrivaled by any graff film to date[…]”Graffiti is like the United Nations. There is a representative from all corners of the earth. Black, white and the many shades in between, man or woman.”

Read more »

Read latest comments

  • gogobeat on D.C. Go-Go Flavors New Film
  • Radioyako on Malawian Hip Hop: Crying Out for Attention?
  • bizzitybay on Rap Criticism Grows in Hip-Hop Community
  • museman on Islamic Hip-Hop Artists Are Accused of Indoctrinating Young Against the West
  • generalbaker on Rapper Reaches Out to At-Risk Youth

Broken News

  • May 2008
  • November 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
  • March 2006
  • February 2006
  • January 2006
  • December 2005
  • November 2005
  • October 2005
  • September 2005
  • August 2005
  • July 2005

Related links

  • Hiphop Reader

Need 2 Know

Syndicate

    Hiphop Archive - The Circle

    RSS Feed
    Subscribe to Google
    Subscribe to MyYahoo!
    Subscribe to MyMSN
    Subscribe to Netvibes
  • Facebook

Admin

  • Login

The Coup Delivers Music with a Message

Click to read more

Since the Coup’s last album, ‘’Party Music,” was released weeks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, America has launched two ongoing wars, in Afghanistan and Iraq; the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal made headlines; and Hurricane Katrina left more than a few government officials all wet. Which is another way of saying Boots Riley, leader of the ferociously political hip-hop duo, has a lot on his mind these days.

‘’With everything that’s gone on, I think people are feeling empowered to make changes,” Riley says during a recent telephone conversation. ‘’And our music is always trying to tell listeners that you are the ones to make change. It’s not going to be some super revolutionary, it’s not going to be some new version of Martin Luther King or Malcolm X. It’s you. Nobody can do it better than you.”

For more than a decade, no group in hip-hop has been better at delivering daring agitprop served up with a relentlessly funky, break-ya-neck beat than the Coup, which performs tonight at the Paradise Rock Club. While much of mainstream rap remains preoccupied with cars, guns, and women, the Coup, which includes turntablist Pam the Funkstress, has always preferred a more expansive worldview — it’s Frantz Fanon meets George Clinton. Their lyrics address both the daily struggles of average folks and how their untapped inner strength, born of frustration and disenfranchisement, can lead to change.

‘’If things were right, they’d be one of the biggest hip-hop groups in the world,” says Frankie Morales, a member of AllHipHop.com’s Ill Community. ‘’What’s great about them is they’ve never lost sight of what’s important, and they won’t compromise just to get on the radio.”

The Coup’s fifth album, due next year, will be called ‘’Pick a Bigger Weapon,” because, as Riley puts it, ‘’Obviously what we’ve been doing [to change the world] ain’t been working.”

‘’We have a song called ‘We Are the Ones,’ and I talk about everything that’s been going on on a day-to-day basis. It’s about people going to work and their jobs don’t pay enough, trying to pay rent and not being able to do that,” he says. ‘’All those things are affected by the larger macroeconomics of the system. I just want people to be aware of what’s going on, and how to make things work for us.”

Of course, the Coup, formed in the Bay Area in the early 1990s, didn’t introduce politics to hip-hop. In 1982, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five’s ‘’The Message” helped rap evolve from good-time party music into something that could have a sociological impact, with what was essentially a political commentary detailing life in the inner city. Even N.W.A’s ‘’Straight Outta Compton,” in the early years of gangsta rap, nodded toward a sense of street reportage, with its members as correspondents from a forgotten war zone that happened to be South Central Los Angeles.

Public Enemy further fired imaginations with such landmark albums as ‘’It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back” and ‘’Fear of a Black Planet.” Yet, as hip-hop’s popularity increased, its political pulse slowed, almost to a halt. Socially conscious rap was marginalized, and the mainstream was flooded with intellectually unchallenging music.

The Coup released its debut, 1993’s ‘’Kill My Landlord,” just as gangsta rap was securing a foothold it has yet to relinquish. And despite critical acclaim, radio wouldn’t touch the band’s music. It was the same story for the group’s next two albums, 1994’s ‘’Genocide and Juice,” and 1998’s ‘’Steal This Album.”

The Coup’s last release, 2001’s ‘’Party Music” received a lot of attention, but for all the wrong reasons — an album cover that, ultimately, was never printed. As originally designed, it featured a shot of Riley, with a guitar tuner as detonator in his hands, igniting New York’s World Trade Center towers in a cloud of smoke and flames. Conceived months before the terrorist attacks that destroyed the iconic skyscrapers, it remained on their publicists’ website just long enough to upset some people. (The cover shot was changed to a flaming martini glass filled with gasoline.)

Riley describes the original cover shot as ‘’a metaphor for the destruction of capitalism.” Still, even as the Internet buzzed with criticism of the group — often by people who knew little or nothing about its music — Riley says he never considered lessening the Coup’s political fervor.

‘’We have to do what we do, and hip-hop is the most intellectual art form on the planet,” Riley says. ‘’There are more ideas per second spit out in your average hip-hop song than in volumes of — to be sacrilegious — James Brown, and we aren’t about to change that.”

At the same time, Riley is adamant about keeping things funky. The Coup remains one of the few hip-hop groups that relies on real instrumentation as opposed to samples, and that organic energy gives the duo’s music a potent kick.

‘’It’s a full-funk onslaught, and the music is always a big part of what we do live and on record,” he says. ‘’It’s bass-line thick, and we like to combine the live element with the boom and slap of hip-hop. Nobody wants to hear a political message over bad music, including me. I mean, I might have a great idea or a great message, but if the music’s not tight, it’s not going on the record.”

The Coup, with Lifesavas and D-Tension featuring Moe Pope, play at the Paradise Rock Club tonight at 8. Tickets are $15. Call 617-652-8800.

Source: boston.com

Leave a Reply | Playing at the Forum

You must be logged in to post a comment.

. Portal Home . About the Hiphop Archive . Hiphop Archive Director . Contact Us . Support Hiphop Archive . Back to top .
© 2002-2008, The Hiphop Archive | This site is licensed under a Creative Commons License.