RHH: I already know many? - Printable Version +- Twitist Forums (http://twitist.com) +-- Forum: Twitter forums (/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Twitter abbreviations (/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: RHH: I already know many? (/thread-69580.html) |
RHH: I already know many? - #LoMd - 04-30-2013 04:19 AM People of my generation talk about how kids in my generation don't know history of hip-hop and I agreed but it really struck me when this kid who listens to the mainstream stuff said he's never heard a rap song with meaning, AND SAID TUPAC AND BIGGIE FOUNDED HIP-HOP. The reason I post this because I'm confused on how little they know, most rock or country, etc. fans I know actually know the history of that genre. How come in rap, so little is known in the mainstream? - Dâ„¢ - 04-30-2013 04:24 AM shrug. Early forms of rock honestly sound better than the early forms of hip hop, so I can see why people would want to listen to early rock but not early hip hop. - Beni, resurrected - 04-30-2013 04:39 AM your question is a mess frankly to the point that I'm not even sure what you're asking. - Tyler - 04-30-2013 04:41 AM Follow me on twitter fool - Tj - 04-30-2013 04:47 AM Peace. As far as the mainstream goes I think everyone sticks with trends. So if they stick with trends and what's hot, they're never looking at the history of Hip Hop. They're trying to keep up with a trend, why would they? For the folks that don't exactly follow trends but who want the truth or a message or meaning, they have to go back and fight that Hip Hop music. Even I want to go back and learn our American history on my own terms, not on schools terms but what I want to learn about history. Because it seems like the people of the past, Martin Luther King Jr, Huey P. Newton, and others in our history not only had a good grasp on American history but other countries as well and we as a nation and people don't have that anymore. If you don't know where you came from, you don't know where you're headed. Peace. |