Hip Hop Summit
convenes in New York
by Richard Muhammad and
Saeed Shabazz |
NEW
YORK (FinalCall.com)�Facing
potential congressional oversight, constant criticism from the
mainstream press, and with many rap legends and artists concerned about
its future, hip hop returned to its birthplace June 12-13 and plotted a
new course.
That future will likely include greater
self-regulation, increased political activism, more enlightened
expressions and a deeper understanding of how hip hop culture has moved
from Big Apple streets to become a global force and a billion dollar
industry.
Hip hop accounts for 12.9 percent of all domestic
record sales, according to the Recording Industry Association of
America. In 2000, the overall recording industry made $14.3 billion, the
trade group says.
When
rap guru Russell Simmons�who has taken hip hop from records to CDs to
fashion to the Internet and other entertainment venues�called the Hip
Hop Summit at a Manhattan hotel, major artists, recording industry
insiders and execs, members of Congress, academics, civil rights groups
and the leader of the Nation of Islam accepted invitations.
"The Hip Hop Summit is about building bridges on a
myriad of levels where politicians, civil rights leaders, artists and
music executives are coming together to find out where we stand in the
world at large," said Mr. Simmons.
Over two days, artists, scholars and record company
execs�with the media often kept at bay�held panel discussions and
private meetings. A major media forum was a June 13 address by the
Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan and a previous day�s panel on youth
and the future of hip hop.
Issues that dominated summit dialog: getting artists
and the entertainment industry to take responsibility for itself;
providing an opportunity for conflict resolution among artists who have
differences; and closely examining artist development and marketing to
elevate the art form.
Min. Benjamin Muhammad, a summit moderator and
special assistant to Min. Farrakhan, said the private meetings provided
for frank, detailed discussions. According to the director of the
Million Family March Movement, assignments came out of each meeting.
Plans are to keep building the budding coalition, not creating a new
organization, he said. That work hopes to include things like
partnerships with the National Urban League to promote literacy and
voter education work with the NAACP. Urban League president Hugh Price
and NAACP leader Kweisi Mfume both attended the summit.
Min. Farrakhan, in a two-hour message, urged artists
to harness their power to more enlightened lyrical expressions to combat
injustice, racism and exploitation. He also urged critics to reach out
to artists and help change conditions that spawn offensive lyrics.
(See related story.)
While hip hop wants to preserve the right to "keep it
real," some also plan to challenge artists when "thugged out" lyrics are
from imagination, not experience.
"We basically (want to) emphasize truth, we�re not
telling any artist to censor themselves or to not tell the truth. A lot
of the dark things you hear are simply the truth," said Sean "Puffy"
Combs. To change "dark things" means changing negative environments and
peoples� daily reality, a change hip hop wants to impact through more
political and social activism, he explained.
At the same time, record company executives should
talk to young artists whose reality is far removed from their hard-core
lyrics, said Mr. Combs. "We don�t censor them, but we pull their coat
and say, �Come on, man, you ain�t really selling no drugs. You�re not
living that,� " he said.
The head of Bad Boy Records also said personal
experience�an acquittal following a trial involving weapons and assault
charges earlier this year�has helped him mature. The conversation on
lyrics was about sharing experiences, the future of hip hop and sharing
insight with younger artists to emphasize the truth, Mr. Combs said. Bad
Boy Records will not allow artists to glorify dark experiences they have
not lived, he added.
Give the people what they want, or what they need?
The summit was a unique opportunity to collectively
assess hip hop as an industry and its accountability to the Black
community, observed Chuck D of Public Enemy. It is also a time to see
whether the industry is serving the needs of Black people and promote a
broader variety of artistic expression, he said. He also believes the
industry is detached from the life of many Blacks, not living in New
York or Los Angeles.
Public Enemy, whose popularity soared in the 1980s
without airplay, has advocated empowerment and self knowledge, he said.
"Progress is a struggle, to digress is real easy. Often when it comes
down to us as a people, the low road is promoted and is much more
lucrative. Black death is profitable," said Chuck D. Tupac Shakur sold
five millions records in life and 22 million after his death, the
longtime hip hop activist noted.
"It�s a case in point that we�re better off dead when
it comes down to a business that�s run by lawyers and accountants," he
said.
Black music�s contributions are too vast to be
limited to talk of how many records are sold, Chuck D continued. Younger
artists have to be coached by older artists, which happens in sports but
not in the music industry, he noted.
The state of hip hop today reflects American
society�with the attendant confusion, mis-communication, wealth,
individualism and disconnected groups working on the same causes, said
Sway, a reporter for MTV News and "The Wake-Up Show," a syndicated radio
program. Hip hop needs to police and define itself to preserve power, he
said.
"Rap music has become a commodity; it�s become a
product and we�ve lost control. We don�t have control over who gets
signed; we don�t have control over the big money as a whole. We have
little percentage deals, distribution deals, imprint deals but we don�t
run the distribution. It�s come to a time where we need to take
ownership of this, understand its power and affect on the world and do
good by it," he said.
Control was an important part of discussions, with
concern over Connecticut Democrat Joe Lieberman�s Senate bill to have
the Federal Trade Commission regulate hip hop lyrics. Hillary Rosen,
president of the Recording Industry Association of America, called the
bill blatantly unconstitutional.
Lyrics are so open to interpretation, unlike images
on film, that arbitrary federal control is wrong headed, she said. Her
group lobbies for most of the companies that sell music in the United
States.
She found some allies in Congressional Black Caucus
members Earl Hilliard (D-Ala.), Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) and Bennie
Thompson (D-Miss.), who participated in opening day activities ands
spoke with the press. All three lawmakers opposed censorship from
Capitol Hill, citing the volatile mix of hip hop ignorance, politics,
race and economics. Rep. Hilliard said parental advisory labels that
warn of explicit content are good, but urged a new level of
self-policing was needed. The summit came days after the FCC fined a
radio station for playing an edited version of a song by rapper Eminem.
"It is time for the hip hop community, civil rights
and the business community to come together to forge an agenda to move
the nation forward," Martin Luther King III told The Final Call.
"My greatest expectation is that after two days the flame does not die,
that there are direct steps that come out of this summit, and that may
mean coming together five, six more times," Mr. King said.
Actor/rapper Will Smith also has expectations.
"Today�s Hip-Hop Summit opened a dialogue which is always important, but
like Sister Souljah said, how do we put it into action? It�s always
difficult to quantify the effects of the summit during the summit. I�m
excited to see the people and willing at least to discuss the fact that
hip hop has been on a negative downward spiral for quite a few years, so
let�s acknowledge that. The first step is to acknowledge it and the next
step is to figure out what to do about it."
For hip hop artist Eric B, who has been in the rap
game since 1986, beyond politics, record deals and performances, artists
need to be fully developed. Problems with drug, alcohol and abuse of
women abound in the industry and need to be dealt with, he argues. When
artists have hit records things are great but when personal problems
hit, artists are abandoned, said Eric B. Artists need to embrace one
another and record companies must teach artists how to be "real people,"
he said.
"You go from just being an everyday guy to all of a
sudden all these women want to sleep with you. Everybody wants to be
your friend, everybody wants to give you something," he explained. If
artists are not prepared for the downside, they can end up killing
themselves or someone else, he said. If the summit doesn�t do more
toward dealing with people this is just a conversation about the last
conversation, said Eric B, referring to previous meetings.
"Right now we�re at the final frontier of hip hop
music," said Vinny, of Naughty By Nature. Artists have owned record
labels and the next stage is economic development and political impact,
he said.
"We have to use this money we�re making; we can
reinvest in all of our �hoods, like we�re doing in Jersey�urban
development. You know, all the �hoods in the ghetto, clean that junk up.
Build up new houses and social programs and all that stuff politically
and economically. And then you have a lot of politicians who are in
there stealing money. So, if we come in there independently financed,
support candidates who are not going to steal money, then a lot of these
federal monies that come into these cities would actually go into these
programs," he said.
"We come from the era when battling was battling,"
said Treach, the other half of Naughty By Nature and host of a hip hop
TV show. Rappers would compete and lyrically challenge one another
without violence, he said. "We�re here to just bring a whole hip hop
vibe and movement together as one, because this is our future and this
is our livelihood. So, if we destroy it, it�s not going to be here
anymore," said Treach.
Photos:
1) Min. Farrakhan urged the hip-hop community-including Sean Combs,
Jermaine Dupri, Abdul Haqq, L.L. Cool J, Queen Latifah, Redman and
others to accept the responsibility of leadership.
2) (l-r) Nation of Islam Supreme Captain Mustapha Farrakhan, Jada
Pinkett-Smith, Nation of Islam First Lady Khadijah Farrakhan, Min.
Farrakhan, and Will Smith. (Credit Kenneth Muhammad)
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