Sure, How Hip Hop Changed the World
was a Channel 4 top 50 countdown show, clips'n'pundits (the correct term isn't
actually clips'n'pundits, it's clips and something else that I'm not allowed to
write). But as top 50 clips'n'pundits shows go, this one was about as good as
it gets.
For one, the clips were pretty good:
Public Enemy in all their military stuff; Outkast in their crazy stuff; a lot
of girls around pools in very little stuff at all. And Kool Herc driving his
badass convertible around the Bronx in the 1970s with his monster soundsystem
in the back.
And then the pundits were pretty good
too: Nas, Rakim, Snoop Dogg. Snoop was the best. "It felt so good and so
confident to you ears, because it was actually what you were going
through," he said. "You mighta not didn't go through getting shot at
and the gangbanging, but just about the expression of being young and being
challenging and dealing with life and having to make the choice of: am I going
to do right, or am I going to do wrong?"
What's he talking about? G-funk, and
Snoop Dogg himself, of course. Hey, Mr Dogg, how do you know I wasn't getting
shot at up here in Dollis Hill, and gangbanging and all that? When I first
heard Doggystyle I decided I was going to do wrong.
And MC-ing it all: Idris Elba,
Stringer Bell himself. From a suitable urban rooftop. With attitude. But there
was no mention of Gil Scott-Heron, which I thought was odd. How can you have
Wham! in there, and Vanilla Ice, the dance troupe Diversity and the London
Olympics logo, but not the Godfather of Rap?
But then these shows are about
disagreement, and starting a debate. And it wasn't just about music, and
musical influence; it was about a bigger picture – how rap entered the
mainstream, commercialism and language, and even politics. It was about how
hip-hop changed the world. And it was fabulous.
No comments:
Post a Comment
give ur feedback here!