Masta Ace Pens Open Letter: Has Hip Hop Lost Its Soul?

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"HAS HIP HOP LOST IT'S SOUL???" -Open Letter This past weekend I appeared as a guest on "Street Soldiers" with @LisaEvers which aired on @fox5ny Saturday night and a affiliate Radio Station WQHT #hot97 early Sunday morning. As part of agreeing to be on the show I was asked to write a few paragraphs on the topic 'Has Hip Hop Lost its Soul'. Unfortunately the conversation never really lead down a path where I could make some of the points I wanted to make. I thought i would share with you all the paragraphs I submitted to the show regarding this topic: When I think about the state of today's hip hop I am reminded of Sister Souljah's iconic phrase "We Are At War"! We are at war with ourselves. We realize the importance of hip hop having a place at the table of today's music genres. We feel the need to celebrate today's successful hip hop artists because they are representing our music and culture. At the same time we are torn because when we dissect the prevailing images and messages dominating the forefront, it disturbs us. We know all too well the influence OUR music has on the next generation of young people. We notice the lack of balance in the music and messages being broadcasted to the masses of young influential fans. The SOUL of hip hop has never left. The broadcasting of that SOUL has disappeared from radio and television. The Golden age of hip hop was a truly balanced representation of hip hop. We balanced 2 Live Crew with Public Enemy. NWA was balanced by Heavy D and the Boyz. Ice T balance by Big Daddy Kane and Rakim! Many of these groups even toured together in those days. There is an unannounced agenda to the playlists that exist at today's commercial radio stations. Hip Hop's SOUL is intact...we just need MORE of it played for our children.



"The Golden age of hip hop was a truly balanced representation of hip hop,” Masta Ace writes. "We balanced 2 Live Crew with Public Enemy."

Masta Ace has penned an open letter asking "Has Hip Hop Lost It's Soul???” The Brooklyn, New York rapper appeared on Street Soldiers and Hot 97 programs this weekend and was asked to write about whether or not Hip Hop has lost its soul.

But the Juice Crew rapper says that the interviews didn’t enable him to make some of the points he felt noteworthy, so he shared his comments on Instagram yesterday (February 1).

"When I think about the state of today's hip hop I am reminded of Sister Souljah's iconic phrase "We Are At War”!” Masta Ace writes. "We are at war with ourselves. We realize the importance of hip hop having a place at the table of today's music genres. We feel the need to celebrate today's successful hip hop artists because they are representing our music and culture. At the same time we are torn because when we dissect the prevailing images and messages dominating the forefront, it disturbs us. We know all too well the influence OUR music has on the next generation of young people.”

Masta Ace, who emerged in the 1980s under Marley Marl’s tutelage, delivered two genre-shifting albums with Masta Ace Incorporated in the 1990s, the Gangster Rap treatise SlaughtaHouse in 1993 and the East and West Coast-blending Sittin' On Chrome in 1995. In the 2000s, he emerged as one of rap’s most insightful independent acts thanks to 2001's Disposable Arts. He says that the type of Rap music that gets played on the radio today lacks a certain component that the music had in the 1980s.

"We notice the lack of balance in the music and messages being broadcasted to the masses of young influential fans,” Masta Ace writes. "The SOUL of hip hop has never left. The broadcasting of that SOUL has disappeared from radio and television. The Golden age of hip hop was a truly balanced representation of hip hop. We balanced 2 Live Crew with Public Enemy. NWA was balanced by Heavy D and the Boyz. Ice T balance by Big Daddy Kane and Rakim! Many of these groups even toured together in those days. There is an unannounced agenda to the playlists that exist at today's commercial radio stations. Hip Hop's SOUL is intact...we just need MORE of it played for our children."


Masta Ace Pens Open Letter: Has Hip Hop Lost Its Soul?
 

Flychologist

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What I've been saying for the longest. There's no balance anymore. Too many songs feel like they were made for commercial appeal and come off sounding unauthentic and the ones that don't are made by unintelligible people. There's no rawness in it anymore. Some of these guys can't even be bothered to rhyme at some points in verses.
 

BXKingPin82

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I be tellin people in the city i done started a movement out this bytch
We riding around listening to old ass commercial jingles and tv show intros
:pachaha:
You in New York City, New Jersey, The Poconos and see a black Mkz bumpin the pizza bagels song and smoke coming out the window

:jawalrus:
 

PhonZhi

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In 2016, hiphop is more of a detriment/liability to the black community and an asset to white supremacy. Today, media propaganda is one of the most effective tools of white supremacy:



Commercial hiphop is a modern-day Minstrel Show being used to keep the most negative stereotypes of the black man and woman alive in the mainstream. There is a specific reason 90% of easily-accessible music on urban radio promotes and glorifies criminal and destructive activity.

He's right. The soul never left, its just that when our enemy (the white man) discovered its power and influence, he decided to manipulate it for HIS benefit. There's no way in hell the white man would EVER allow music that uplifts, educates and inspires black people to dominate the airwaves.
 

Insensitive

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I agree with the lack of balance and representation disagree with the idea that it has an influence more dangerous than the immediate circumstances of a black person.
 

infamousred

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I have no doubt that there's no balance on the radio/in the mainstream...and at the same time you shouldn't have to actively look for music so hard that's not following the trends.
 
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