Monday, November 12, 2012

I'm Political in My Songs, but I Don't Vote



"I don't vote...do what you do. Do good with your people and live your life because what's going on isn't really in our hands," rapper Kendrick Lamar told Truth Is Scary.

Lupe Fiasco, who criticized President Obama's actions during the Gaza Strip bombings, admitted during a CBS interview this year that he does not vote.

Why are current rappers openly blazoning their views in public as well as their songs? When Barack Obama first won the presidency in 2008, the rap industry celebrated the election of America's first African-American president with songs like Young Jeezy's "My President" and "It's A New Day" by will.i.am.

In a Nov. 8 Spin blog, Brandon Soderberg investigated why a wave of political apathy has surfaced in rap. Soderberg confessed in the blog that the only time he had been afraid at a rap show was at the Hopscotch Music Festival in Raleigh, N.C. when the audience cheered and applauded for Killer Mike's delivery of the line:
Ronald Reagan was an actor, not at all a factor / Just an employee of the country's real masters / Just like the Bushes, Clintons, and Obama / Just another talking head telling lies on the teleprompter
One can argue that Kendrick Lamar's music, especially on good kid, m.A.A.d city, contains an underlying sense of community which is good and all, but this is strikingly similar to Mitt Romney's approach to Hurricane Sandy when he said he once helped clean up a trashed football field with some buddies.

"Some things are too big for even a determined group of individuals to fix, and both Lamar and Romney must know that," says Soderberg.

Obama has influenced rappers like Jay-Z to help significantly reduce the misogynistic message portrayed in rap music. At Obama's final campaign rally, Jay-Z altered his hit "99 Problems" and took a stab at Romney. "I've got 99 problems but a Mitt ain't one."

Some thought it was cheesy, and others thought it was uncalled for and offensive to conservatives; that's besides the point though. The point is, he dissolved Mitt Romney with the forcefulness of poetry in lyric form.

Because Obama endorses the careers of rappers like Jay-Z, less prominent and established rappers like Lupe and Kendrick are trying to gain publicity by making controversial statements about the president in interviews and their work.

Though there is no doubt hip-hop helped make its listeners politically conscious when it went through a political phase driven by Public Enemy, those who refuse to vote like Lupe Fiasco and Kendrick Lamar have no right to criticize or even question politics through outspoken, cut-throat statements.






Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Dave Grohl Retakes the Drum Throne


Queens of the Stone Age front man Josh Homme confirmed during a BBC interview that Dave Grohl, ex-Nirvana drummer and singer of the Foo Fighters, will rejoin QOTSA for the band's new album set for release sometime in 2013.

Spin and Rolling Stone also broke the news of the Grohl addition, both attributing the departure of drummer Joey Castillo for Dave's return. Their coverage of the story, however, was very dry and lacked details surrounding Castillo's departure.

Dave appeared on the band's 2002 album Songs for the Deaf which peaked at  #17 on the US Billboard 200 chart. He toured with QOTSA, headlining internationally at festivals such as Glastonbury in England in 2002. The band will perform at the 2013 Download Festival in England June 14-16 with Iron Maiden, Rammstein, Alice in Chains, the Gaslight Anthem, Motörhead and more.

It is not clear whether Grohl will once again tour with Queens of the Stone Age, but the break from the Foo Fighters makes it seem promising.

"[Grohl] and I have this wonderful musical relationship which we don't have with other people. It's a very cool and comfortable position," says Homme.

Both Homme and Grohl performed in the supergroup Them Crooked Vultures alongside Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones in 2009.

Dave's drumming contains influences from the heavy drum hitting of John Bonham who helped usher in the heavy metal genre. Like Bonham, Grohl has played a key role in the music industry by helping foster the grunge subgenre of rock & roll as a member of Nirvana.


                                                John Bonham "Moby Dick" drum solo live 1970

The addition of Dave Grohl to Queens of the Stone Age may bring back the commercial success the band experienced with Songs for the Deaf which many critics consider to be one of the greatest rock albums of the 2000s.
                             Dave Grohl in the music video for Queens of the Stone Age's "No One Knows"