«Today’s Lyrics Are Pathetically Bad» Rick Beato


He know better than me. He is a musician and i am not.  I dont listen contemporary lyrics anyway, they are not all bad for sure, but what is good enough  is few waves in an ocean of bad to worst...

I will never dare to claim it because i am old, not a musician anyway,  i listen classical old music and world music and Jazz...

And old very old lyrics from Franco-Flemish school to Léo Ferré and to the genius  Bob Dylan Dylan...

Just write what you think about Beato informed opinion...

I like him because he spoke bluntly and is enthusiast musician ...

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQoWUtsVFV0

128x128mahgister

I get it .  NOT a statement about my feelings on Rap one way or the other, but there is a big difference (in my book, anyway) between lyrics with “raunchy” sexuality, usually by way of innuendo or double entendre and lyrics that demean and debase by way of raunchiness, misogyny and/or suggestions of violence. The latter is the Rap that I can do without.

Now of course there was ’gangster rap’ that emerged in the 70’s but from that came the ’Neo Soul’ movement which was a subset of (gangster) rap which got it’s start in the mid 80’s. In this particular genre those young kids brought back the cafe style of rap as a softer form of rap where poetry, books, coffee and wine was shared amongst like minded folks.

They even had a snap your finger technique they would do after each person’s rap of poetry. And yes, sometimes it was with backing bands and sometime it was not.

You never hear about that subset of rap because it didn’t make the evening news. Nevertheless, it was massively important to the community because it brought us these young musicians and for a short time there was a New York city based form of rap called ’New Jack Swing’. And out of the out of the ’New Jack Swing’ era we got a type of music that these new artist called ’Neo Soul’. And this movement gave us artist such as:

Erykah Badu

D’Angelo

Lauryn Hill

Floetry

Jill Scott

The Fugees

And many, many others. Was this Rap persay? Yes, because they not only rapped but sang too. It was all connected and this was the first time musicians played live and studio sessions with instruments over recorded music ’samples’ or what some call ’beats’ today.

Rap has evolved just like any thing else, and it’s a shame that only the bad things are remembered, by some. And I will admit that some of this so called rap music that some put out is straight garbage. But I will not let an entire genre of music music be categorized, judged and generalized by some of that garbage.

 

@mahgister I’m trying not to be rude. This rap stuff is a long part of my history, culture and community and I think I may know more about it than you do.

 

No offence!

You are right and knowledgeable more than me about Rap meanings and history...

My point is about the mechanization of music , musicians and the public... The point made by Beato...

There is genius poets in jazz music and songs as there is in all genre rap included...Even nowadays for sure...

My point stemming from Beato video is about mechanisation and manufacturing of lyrics and music ...

I had my taste but i am not deaf...

I did not like blues for example till i listen Hooker and Waters and few others...

There is genius everywhere...

But there is also by the industry growing monster a mechanization of mind and public...

And this mechanization reach a point of great power over artists and public molding their minds in the last 30 years...

 

It is my opinion but i am not an informed musician...

 

We need frogman ... cool

 

 

'While some interpretations of the song would like to see it primarily as a celebration of a drug counterculture, any pretence the phrase “Brown Sugar” is other than a reference to a black woman falls away in the final lyric of the studio album.'

I won't argue with that; I was only remembering what someone who was theoretically an "insider"  stated in a book.  

Disclosure - I'm a 70 year old boomer and I'm becoming crotchety in my old age.

@8th-note , you've got five years on me, but how did your dad feel about Dylan and The Beatles?  I remember that my dad did not like either of them--not at all.