Wednesday, September 30, 2015

5 Reasons Logic (Almost) Reigns Supreme

I’ve never been a fan of logic… the idea, that is.  I am a huge fan of Logic, the artist.  Logic, as an artist is smooth, emotional, expansive.  Logic, as an idea, is none of these things.  It is cold, calculated, cuts to the point.  But whatever the reason Robert Hall picked this name, here are some reasons (just in time for his upcoming sophomore album) why he is one of the best up-and-comers in the rap game.   

  1. Secretly socially conscious

Listening to Logic is as fun as listening to Lil’ Wayne, but the topics he raps about are closer to Mos Def, or Talib Kweli, etc…  He can rap over a banger beat and you think you’re just having a good time, meanwhile he’s rapping about how he had to grow up fast and stay away from drugs and gang bangin.  This is the type of hip-hop I would want my kids to listen to… well maybe when they’re older.  But the point is that he provides good messages for youth (and adults) over some of the smoothest beats.  You don’t have to be a socially conscious nut-case to listen to intricately constructed, socially conscious, poetic rap anymore.

  1. He’s an honest storyteller

Logic grew up in a home where his parents were both addicted to crack.  His older brother sold crack and was involved in gangs.  He speaks about this in his raps a lot, and one of the best songs that speaks on this is “Gang Related.”  He is so brutally honest throughout this song.  It takes a lot of courage to rap about your upbringing when you had to go through stuff like that.  But rapping honestly about struggles of gang violence and drug abuse helps younger generations to stay away from that stuff.


  1. He’s also a producer (produced 4 songs on his debut album, Under Pressure)

Other than just being a smooth rapper, he is beginning to find his place as a producer.  He produced four songs on his debut album “Under Pressure.”  A couple of those songs are actually my favorite on the album.  The song “Buried Alive” is, in my opinion, the catchiest song on the album.  
When asked by BET.com about production, he talks about honing crafts, one at a time.  He says, “I believe you should master one craft before you move onto the next. I spent almost 10 years just rapping and honing my craft and then the year before my album came out I spent that entire year producing like a motherf**r to the point where I wound up producing four of the records on my debut album, which is crazy because I felt comfortable enough.”

  1. He’s versatile
In that article, he also talks about how he tries to show his versatility.  He says, “I’d jump on something that sounded kind of like a Drake beat or jump on something that would sound like some Nas s**t.”  The first time I listened to Logic, I thought to myself, ‘who is this? Drake?  Oh no, it’s Childish Gambino, oh wait, no that’s Kendrick Lamar…’  The beginning of the second verse sounds so much like Kendrick’s flow.  The meter and timing, and the way he throws so much into one stanza-it’s so Kendrick. I couldn’t believe it because it was all in one verse that he sounded like all three of my favorite rappers.  I was impressed.  He obviously is a student of the game because the way he switched up his flow, and put emphasis on specific words was so precise.  Maybe that’s why he’s called Logic, because he’s so precise.

  1. Confident/Not cocky
One thing that I think comes across very strongly in Logic’s music is his confidence.  Not his cockiness.  It’s something that I really respect in a rapper.  He wants to battle Kendrick and Drake and J. Cole.  But he comes from a respectful place saying he wants to push other rappers and artists so they can all get the very best out of each other.  He is a true artist and I am excited to see his career play out.  

ALSO, His trailer for his new album/sci-fi movie is sick.  Give it a watch!


Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Finding Hip-Hop's Place in Culture

Hip-Hop's Place in Culture

When you look at the recently played tab on my Spotify, you’ll find tons of Kendrick Lamar, some Childish Gambino, J Cole… and Christian Contemporary playlists and artists.  A lot of people might find this confusing and conflicting.  The messages conveyed in these two genres can be very conflicting at times.  But I think the thing that draws me to these two seemingly opposite genres is the passion that both put forth.  It’s a recurring theme in my life that I can’t remember the exact words of a quote or conversation, but I can vividly recall how things made me feel.  The passion that I hear in these raps and these praise songs can bring forth the most vivid and deep emotions for me.  But even though rap can conjure such emotion in so many people, it is still considered a lower form of art.  If you really dig deep into hip-hop, though, I believe you can find some of the most moving, inspiring, real, and eye-opening art of this generation.  

If you’ve ever listened to hip-hop, you’ve heard it.  The claim that “rap saved me,” that rap “got me off the streets,” so on and so forth.  Numberless rappers have explored this idea-that the art itself, and the devotion to that art got them out of trouble.  Yet the things they rap about are often deemed inappropriate, trivial, or unworthy of a listen; more than that, some people think listening to rap is dangerous, or rebellious.  So does the dissonance come from delusional artists who overestimate the good influence of their artform? Or does that dissonance come from a delusional mainstream attitude to hip-hop and the many diverse cultures that were born from it and are associated with it.  I think it’s a mixture of both of those things.  Like anything else, there is tons of variance in hip-hop.  In my personal opinion, listening to Kendrick Lamar vs listening to Riff Raff is like eating a delicious blackberry (Get it… The Blacker the Berry) vs eating a pile of garbage (Get it… like any Riff Raff song).  But overall, I believe hip-hop can be an influence for good in society, and I think it is important that we search for those artists and groups who promote that kind of influence in the genre of hip-hop.  

Hip-hop has a way of speaking on social issues that is almost impossible for any other kind of art to replicate.  The sincerity and passion displayed in many rap songs comes from the artist actually living through the experiences.  The song “m.A.A.d City” by Kendrick Lamar is a perfect example of this.  On the surface it might seem like Kendrick is endorsing gang violence and the lifestyle that he grew up in.  But in actuality, he is telling the story of his life growing up in Compton and the dangers that he had to face everyday.  He speaks on his friend packing a “9” when he was only 9.  He speaks about the first dead body he ever saw, and who he suspected did it.  After telling his story of growing up, he then almost confesses to his audience and asks if they still want to “ride” with him.  He then turns anti-drug for the last couple of lines of the last verse.  “...they vandalizing/ The option of living a lie, drown their bodies with toxins/ Constantly drinking and drive…”  I think this is such a profound line.  It comes right after Kendrick talks about whether or not he killed someone when he was 16.  He is saying that instead of drowning his body in toxins (drugs and alcohol), he needs to accept real life.  Accepting the things that he’s done is living his real life.  Trying to run from them using drugs and alcohol is living a lie.  
This is something that all society could benefit from.  Everyone feels shame for things they’ve done.  The ability to accept those things and continue to live a “real” life, instead of running from those things is crucial to happiness and peace.  Any kind of addiction feeds off of shame.  But shame disappears when we fearlessly accept who we are.  Step 4 of the 12 Steps in Alcoholics Anonymous is to “make a searching and fearless inventory of your life.”  This song, in a sense, is Kendrick Lamar’s inventory.  Hip-hop is a way to express yourself, and just like any other form of self-expression, it can be good or bad.  But it is our responsibility to find the good in everything.  We, as a society cannot ignore or brush off a whole genre.  And rappers like Kendrick Lamar are giving us reasons not to.