I suggest you all check out TheLastPsychiatrist.com. Always love the perspective there.
http://thelastpsychiatrist.com/2009/09/jay-z_gives_ten_reasons_why_po.html
SEPTEMBER 12, 2009
Jay-Z Gives Ten Reasons Why Pop Culture Authenticity Is Real Only If It's Fake On Purpose
"But that title doesn't even make sense!" Exactly. Yet here you are.
I watched Jay-Z's video Death of Autotune, in which he disparages guys like T-Pain for using autotune (electronic modulation of voice) and generally for being pop "z100" music, and not authentic "hot 97" black rap music.
No lyin, your nikkas' jeans too tight
Your colors too bright, your voice too light...
You nikkas singin too much,
Get back to rap you T-Pain'n too much
I'm a multi-millionaire
So how is it I'm still the hardest nikka here?
I don't be in the project hallway
Talkin' bout how i be in the project all day
That sounds stupid to me,
If you a gangsta, this is how you prove it to me
Yeah, just get violent
This is death of autotune, moment of silence
Ok, calling someone less authentic than you is a standard combat maneuver. Nothing new there.
So if Jay-Z wants to depict his authenticity, to show how and raw, honest, legitimate he is in comparison to the other "nikkas" he would do this by placing himself in authentic, legitimate, true to his roots situations and settings.
Here's where it got interesting.
Based on the video, Jay-Z is, deep down, a guy who dines alone in Italian restaurants.
who pays his respects to the chef-- or the other way around--
etc, for more pics see any episode of The Sopranos.
My first reaction was that maybe Jay-Z had had a stroke. Is he aware that he is not actually Italian?
After this meal, he goes to the back of the restaurant with other legitimate Italians like Harvey Keitel and, believe it or not:
Yes this is an all night poker game, yes it is played in the stockroom of the restaurant, yes they are sharing a bottle of wine and some pasta, yes that's an olive oil sign, yes those are hundred dollar bills ("this ain't a strip club"), yes they are all in suits, and no he's not kidding.
In a video about getting back to basics and authenticity, he chooses an entire persona that couldn't be less authentic. What's crazy about this is that music today tries to be more urban, more street, moreblack-- things that he authentically is already, he's technically won his argument just by waking up in the morning-- and yet he instead picks a character that is utterly unrealistic, waves it in our face and and says, "this is me, keeping it real."
II.
It would be easy to just say he's an idiot, but this is a man who is hypersuccessful precisely because he can manipulate imagery to connect to his audience. He may be Italian, but he's no dummy.
The problem Jay-Z faces is that because all anyone knows about him is images, he has no way of signaling authenticity. If he's shows himself in the projects or on a yacht or behind bars or on the moon, no one can know if it's really him or if it's hype. Maybe he owns a spaceship, who knows?
So Jay-Z chooses to signal his authenticity not with authenticity, but with an already establishedsymbol of authenticity: because otherwise, how would we know he was being authentic? Italian= authentic, traditional; black = masculine, strong. He already has the black part. And it doesn't matter if the other actors are real Italians either, as long as they symbolize "Italian" which symbolizes "authentic". Hence Harvey Keitel.
There's another major benefit from choosing a completely unrealistic symbol of authenticity. Note that his audience isn't Italian mobsters or "kids in the hustle;" there aren't enough of them. His audience is regular people, black and white, for whom authentic isn't "being yourself" or "true to where you came from" because for those regular people, that would be unbearably boring. For them, authentic has to mean loyalty to the persona you made up. This video isn't about Jay-Z's authenticity, it's about letting you choose your own authenticity.
He does this not by being Italian-- obviously no one believes he plays back room poker at Rao's; but by reducing "Italian" to a symbol or commodity that can be acquired or put on, like an outfit, in order to convey information to others. In other words, he's using Italian as a brand. He is moreauthentic branded as a TV Italian than if he was actually just himself. Read that last sentence again.
That's how you build the Matrix.
http://thelastpsychiatrist.com/2009/09/jay-z_gives_ten_reasons_why_po.html
SEPTEMBER 12, 2009
Jay-Z Gives Ten Reasons Why Pop Culture Authenticity Is Real Only If It's Fake On Purpose
"But that title doesn't even make sense!" Exactly. Yet here you are.
I watched Jay-Z's video Death of Autotune, in which he disparages guys like T-Pain for using autotune (electronic modulation of voice) and generally for being pop "z100" music, and not authentic "hot 97" black rap music.
No lyin, your nikkas' jeans too tight
Your colors too bright, your voice too light...
You nikkas singin too much,
Get back to rap you T-Pain'n too much
I'm a multi-millionaire
So how is it I'm still the hardest nikka here?
I don't be in the project hallway
Talkin' bout how i be in the project all day
That sounds stupid to me,
If you a gangsta, this is how you prove it to me
Yeah, just get violent
This is death of autotune, moment of silence
Ok, calling someone less authentic than you is a standard combat maneuver. Nothing new there.
So if Jay-Z wants to depict his authenticity, to show how and raw, honest, legitimate he is in comparison to the other "nikkas" he would do this by placing himself in authentic, legitimate, true to his roots situations and settings.
Here's where it got interesting.
Based on the video, Jay-Z is, deep down, a guy who dines alone in Italian restaurants.
who pays his respects to the chef-- or the other way around--
etc, for more pics see any episode of The Sopranos.
My first reaction was that maybe Jay-Z had had a stroke. Is he aware that he is not actually Italian?
After this meal, he goes to the back of the restaurant with other legitimate Italians like Harvey Keitel and, believe it or not:
Yes this is an all night poker game, yes it is played in the stockroom of the restaurant, yes they are sharing a bottle of wine and some pasta, yes that's an olive oil sign, yes those are hundred dollar bills ("this ain't a strip club"), yes they are all in suits, and no he's not kidding.
In a video about getting back to basics and authenticity, he chooses an entire persona that couldn't be less authentic. What's crazy about this is that music today tries to be more urban, more street, moreblack-- things that he authentically is already, he's technically won his argument just by waking up in the morning-- and yet he instead picks a character that is utterly unrealistic, waves it in our face and and says, "this is me, keeping it real."
II.
It would be easy to just say he's an idiot, but this is a man who is hypersuccessful precisely because he can manipulate imagery to connect to his audience. He may be Italian, but he's no dummy.
The problem Jay-Z faces is that because all anyone knows about him is images, he has no way of signaling authenticity. If he's shows himself in the projects or on a yacht or behind bars or on the moon, no one can know if it's really him or if it's hype. Maybe he owns a spaceship, who knows?
So Jay-Z chooses to signal his authenticity not with authenticity, but with an already establishedsymbol of authenticity: because otherwise, how would we know he was being authentic? Italian= authentic, traditional; black = masculine, strong. He already has the black part. And it doesn't matter if the other actors are real Italians either, as long as they symbolize "Italian" which symbolizes "authentic". Hence Harvey Keitel.
There's another major benefit from choosing a completely unrealistic symbol of authenticity. Note that his audience isn't Italian mobsters or "kids in the hustle;" there aren't enough of them. His audience is regular people, black and white, for whom authentic isn't "being yourself" or "true to where you came from" because for those regular people, that would be unbearably boring. For them, authentic has to mean loyalty to the persona you made up. This video isn't about Jay-Z's authenticity, it's about letting you choose your own authenticity.
He does this not by being Italian-- obviously no one believes he plays back room poker at Rao's; but by reducing "Italian" to a symbol or commodity that can be acquired or put on, like an outfit, in order to convey information to others. In other words, he's using Italian as a brand. He is moreauthentic branded as a TV Italian than if he was actually just himself. Read that last sentence again.
That's how you build the Matrix.