In launching our Opinions section on StreetHop.com; we've decided to blog our opinions regarding whats going on in Hip-Hop? Some of us will write about issues in the culture, some of us will write about releases, beefs, and whatever we feel like passing an opinion on.
To begin with I thought it would be fitting to address the current situation with Nas, after all, StreetHop.com is named after a Nas line.
Recently, God's Son came out and announced his next album would be called Nigga. Perhaps unsurprisingly this caught a lot of attention and has even lead Def Jam to deny the whole situation.
One of the loudest critics of Nas', apart from the usual Bill O'Reilly know it alls, has been Jesse Jackson.
"The title using the 'N' word is morally offensive and socially distasteful," Jackson said in a statement. "Nas has the right to degrade and denigrate in the name of free speech, but there is no honor in it. Radio and television stations have no obligation to play it and self-respecting people have no obligation to buy it. I wish he would use his talents to lift up and inspire, not degrade, making mockery of racism."
I have to wonder why Jesse, an intellectual black man himself, would have a problem with this particular release. Or for that matter, why would anyone have a problem with it, and not even mention other similar high profile album names?
Others you ask? Well, there was Tupac's Strictly For My N.I.G.G.A.Z, but 'Pac did cop a lot of negative feedback on that one regardless of the name, and we probably didnt pay that much attention to it; after all it was the norm for 'Pac back then after Vice President (of the United States mind you) Dan Quayle publicly denounced his 2Pacalypse Now album.
But what about Nigga Please by Ol' Dirty Bastard? The Nigga What Nigga Who single by Jay Z? Or Jigga My Nigga? Dat Nigga Daz? One Mo Nigga Ta Go by Yella from NWA (Niggaz With Attitude)? Still That Nigga by G.O.D?
You may be saying they are old news and not relevant, but what about Hood Nigga Diaries by Gorilla Zoe that came out this past Tuesday; right in the middle of the Nas controversy?
I cant help but feel, and I don't mean this with any offense to the other artists, that Nas is being punished solely because his musical content is anti-establishment and not just commercial or gangster. Not to take anything away from Jay Z or Gorilla Zoe, but their music has hardly dealt with the same social and political issues that Nas touches upon, or that Tupac touched upon.
Is Nas being singled out for using the word "nigga," or is it deeper than that? If Nas, like Tupac before him, didn't empower the word "nigga" with strong positive yet anti-establishment undertones, and instead was all about party and bullshit, while still making entertaining music, would he be enduring these attacks now? Or would he go unnoticed like those artists before him?
What do you think? Drop your feedback and discussion below.
To begin with I thought it would be fitting to address the current situation with Nas, after all, StreetHop.com is named after a Nas line.
Recently, God's Son came out and announced his next album would be called Nigga. Perhaps unsurprisingly this caught a lot of attention and has even lead Def Jam to deny the whole situation.
One of the loudest critics of Nas', apart from the usual Bill O'Reilly know it alls, has been Jesse Jackson.
"The title using the 'N' word is morally offensive and socially distasteful," Jackson said in a statement. "Nas has the right to degrade and denigrate in the name of free speech, but there is no honor in it. Radio and television stations have no obligation to play it and self-respecting people have no obligation to buy it. I wish he would use his talents to lift up and inspire, not degrade, making mockery of racism."
I have to wonder why Jesse, an intellectual black man himself, would have a problem with this particular release. Or for that matter, why would anyone have a problem with it, and not even mention other similar high profile album names?
Others you ask? Well, there was Tupac's Strictly For My N.I.G.G.A.Z, but 'Pac did cop a lot of negative feedback on that one regardless of the name, and we probably didnt pay that much attention to it; after all it was the norm for 'Pac back then after Vice President (of the United States mind you) Dan Quayle publicly denounced his 2Pacalypse Now album.
But what about Nigga Please by Ol' Dirty Bastard? The Nigga What Nigga Who single by Jay Z? Or Jigga My Nigga? Dat Nigga Daz? One Mo Nigga Ta Go by Yella from NWA (Niggaz With Attitude)? Still That Nigga by G.O.D?
You may be saying they are old news and not relevant, but what about Hood Nigga Diaries by Gorilla Zoe that came out this past Tuesday; right in the middle of the Nas controversy?
I cant help but feel, and I don't mean this with any offense to the other artists, that Nas is being punished solely because his musical content is anti-establishment and not just commercial or gangster. Not to take anything away from Jay Z or Gorilla Zoe, but their music has hardly dealt with the same social and political issues that Nas touches upon, or that Tupac touched upon.
Is Nas being singled out for using the word "nigga," or is it deeper than that? If Nas, like Tupac before him, didn't empower the word "nigga" with strong positive yet anti-establishment undertones, and instead was all about party and bullshit, while still making entertaining music, would he be enduring these attacks now? Or would he go unnoticed like those artists before him?
What do you think? Drop your feedback and discussion below.