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What do you think about the song you just heard ? What about the video? What’s the feeling it gives you ? What’s your opinion on hip hop?. Hip Hop Planet
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What do youthinkaboutthesongyoujustheard? Whataboutthe video? What’sthefeelingitgivesyou? What’syouropinionon hip hop?
Hip Hop Planet Whether you trace it to New York's South Bronx or the villages of West Africa, hip-hop has become the voice of a generation demanding to be heard.
Hip Hop Planet Whether you trace it to New York's South Bronx or the villages of West Africa, hip-hop has become the voice of a generation demanding to be heard. This is my nightmare: My daughter comes home with a guy and says, "Dad, we're getting married." And he's a rapper, with a mouthful of gold teeth, a do-rag on his head, muscles popping out his arms, and a thug attitude. And then the nightmare gets deeper, because before you know it, I'm hearing the pitter-patter of little feet, their offspring, cascading through my living room, cascading through my life, drowning me with the sound of my own hypocrisy, because when I was young, I was a knucklehead, too, hearing my own music, my own sounds. And so I curse the day I saw his face, which is a reflection of my own, and I rue the day I heard his name, because I realize to my horror that rap—music seemingly without melody, sensibility, instruments, verse, or harmony, music with no beginning, end, or middle, music that doesn't even seem to be music—rules the world. It is no longer my world. It is his world. And I live in it. I live on a hip-hop planet.
Think of a social (urban) issueyouthinkneedstobespokenout. Writethe rap lyricsfor a song (basedonanyknown hip-hop song) talkingabouttheissueyouchose. Singitfortheclass!
Didyouknow…? Hip-hop breaks out of the Bronx via New Jersey. … now what you hear is not a test—i'mrappin to the beat and me, the groove, and my friends are gonna try to move your feet see i am wonder mike and i like to say hello to the black, to the white, the red, and the brown, the purple and yellow … "Rapper's Delight," by the Sugarhill Gang, was the first commercial hip-hop single to hit big. It sold more than two million copies and reached number 4 on the Billboard R&B chart and number 36 on the pop singles chart. The 1979 hit wasn't only a surprise to radio listeners but also to the established hip-hop crews throughout the South Bronx, where the music thrived in playground battles and nightclubs, for it was the brainchild of a record producer in New Jersey.
Hip Hop Nation. "Hip-hop is the rebellious voice of the youth. It's what people want to hear."
So… is Hip-Hop a BeliefSystem?
Wyclef Jean confirms he will run for Haiti president Wyclef Jean, the Haitian-born rap star who became one of the world's most popular hip-hop artists, has told the Guardian that he will run for president of Haiti in the country's November elections. The singer-songwriter's declaration ends weeks of speculation after Jean began exploring the possibility of standing. For the past five years he has been steadily increasing his engagement with Haiti through his charity, Yéle Haiti, having left the country to come to the US when he was nine years old. Wyclef Jean's manifesto will focus on what he calls his 'four policy pillars' – education, job creation, agriculture and security. Photograph: Paul J Richards/AFP/Getty Images In an interview at his recording studios in New Jersey where he is putting the finishing touches to his latest album, The Haitian Experience, Jean said his decision to run was informed by his experiences after the 12 January earthquake. About 230,000 people died in the disaster, and Jean was involved in rescue missions amid the rubble. He said: "I just feel singing is not enough. I'm being drafted. Every year I probably do 200 shows and I have a very comfortable life. But people are saying to me: 'Clef, if you don't put yourself on the ground, in 10 years' time you will look at it and say you could have.'"
Jean plans to launch his electoral campaign in Haiti next Thursday. He has already assembled a team of political advisers and is fine-tuning his manifesto, which will focus on what he calls his "four policy pillars" – education, job creation, agriculture and security. By formally entering the race, Jean throws himself into a wide-open competition with numerous candidates, including his own uncle, Raymond Joseph, who serves as Haiti's ambassador to Washington. Jean will have the disadvantage of having lived largely outside Haiti for the past 29 years, but the huge advantage of being Haiti's most famous son. The rapper must now convince the electoral board in Haiti that he is eligible to stand for president. Under criteria introduced recently, any candidate must have lived in the country for five consecutive years before an election. Jean has put a team of lawyers onto the issue, arguing through them that as a roving ambassador for Haiti with a home in Port-au-Prince he fully qualifies. "The word in Haiti now is that the opposition want me out so bad that every day they add new criteria. I think the new one is that I have to be 6ft 5in," the singer said. There will also be issues of security surrounding his candidacy within the volatile and still devastated country. In the lyrics of one of his songs, written long before he conceived a real presidential run, he imagined standing for president of the United States: "If I was president, I'd get elected on Friday, Assassinated on Saturday, And buried on Sunday, I'd be back at work on Monday." "Security is always an issue in Haiti," Jean said. He added that he had already been the subject of a foiled assassination plot in his native country.