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

Senegal rappers aim to keep it real but fear censure

Senegalese Rapper Didier Awadi

By Rose Skelton
August 7, 2006
Reuters

DAKAR, Senegal (Reuters) - Senegal’s rappers pride themselves on having helped change their world six years ago by urging people to vote in elections that ended four decades of rule by one party. It was rap’s coming of age in the country.

But today, some of those same artists feel the price they now pay for criticizing the very authorities they helped bring to power is rising. And this as elections loom in 2007.

“For me, things are getting worse,” Didier Awadi, one of the country’s top-selling rappers, said in his roof-top studio in Dakar, the seaside capital of the former French colony.

“For this new power, if you’re not with them, you’re against them,” he said.

Senegalese hip-hop has long broached taboo topics, and modern Senegal has on the whole enjoyed freedom of speech that is rare in a region torn by conflict and despotic rule.

Rap artists, many of whom are household names, follow in the footsteps of bards-turned-social commentators, known as griots, who for centuries used song to praise or criticize West Africa’s leaders.

In 2000, rappers encouraged young people to go out and vote in the presidential election.

The Socialist Party, which had ruled for 40 years since independence from France, lost power to the Democratic Party headed by current President Abdoulaye Wade, who is expected to seek re-election for a second and final term next February.

“It was a time to test our power … to say, yeah, it’s rap that’s got the power, it’s rap that has an influence in Senegal,” Bamba Diop, another rapper, said.

But today, that confidence is tempered by fear, driving some artists to tone down their socially-conscious lyrics for fear of sparking conflict with politicians or other figures of authority in the mainly Muslim country.

HONEYMOON OVER

The expulsion in 2003 of a French journalist accused of “biased” coverage in the rebellion-hit South, and the beating this May of a reporter who questioned the political influence of a well-known marabout, or Muslim leader, are among incidents that have left many musicians concerned for their own safety.

Diop knows all too well what criticizing the wrong people can mean. He says he was subjected to months of harassment and death threats in 2000 by disciples of a marabout he criticized in one of his songs.

“In that five months, I saw my life going down, and in that five months I saw that hip-hop had a big, big power,” the 27-year-old singer said, his voice cracking with emotion.

He gave up writing overtly political and religious lyrics and fled to England, only returning home last year.

Awadi says rappers are both courted and feared because of their influence among the country’s youth.

When the new government took office in 2000, ministers asked him for support, he says, much as leaders traditionally paid griots to travel with them, singing their praises.

But he refused, telling them if they didn’t do their jobs properly, he would be the first to criticize them.

No Democratic Party officials were available to comment.

“They come to us because we have credibility and they need this credibility to ease their situation. We’re not here for that,” Awadi said.

Crouched on his living-room floor surrounded by CDs and cassettes, Xuman, one of Senegal’s most popular disc jockeys and rappers, gestures passionately to the television set behind him.

“A lot of people, they don’t listen to the news, they listen to hip-hop, because hip-hop tells them exactly what’s happening in the street,” said Xuman, 32, a member of the internationally successful hip-hop crew Pee Froiss.

REBIRTH?

In contrast to 2000 when he and Awadi led the rap movement, Xuman is despondent about the situation today.

“In 2000, I knew that rappers were ready to fight,” he said. “But now I can’t feel it anymore. The situation is confused.”

Like Awadi, Xuman says he has been approached by government ministers asking for help to win over the younger generation.

Despite financial incentives, he too said he refused.

“I’m not going to sell my soul to … these politicians.”

Fearing the back-dated tax bills which some artists say are sent to rappers who refuse to sing the government’s tune, Xuman says he has had to become more subtle.

“I’m trying to be more intelligent when I’m writing. I say what I want to say without saying a name, I let people understand, I use some symbols, some metaphors.”

The last six years, he says, have seen the movement weaken, but Awadi sees signs of a rebirth.

With thousands of Senegalese migrants risking their lives to get to Europe and with rumors flying among young people that the February polls may be postponed, socially-aware rap is coming back, he says.

“They’re conscious now of the despair, they’re conscious that there’s a real problem,” he said.

“We all know that these guys (politicians) are not serious and it’s our historical responsibility to be engaged in the real fight against them. Because we cannot accept a regression of democracy in this country, we cannot accept it.”

Source: reuters.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.