Common says “Obama will change Hip-Hop’s attitude

L’effet Obama va-t-il avoir des répercussion sur le Hip-Hop? Outre le nombre de rappeur qui y sont allé de leur petites chansons de soutien pendant les élections ou de commémoration après l’élection (Young Jeezy, Nas, Jay-Z et plus maladroitement Ludacris…). Mais à part un embrasement bien vite rattrapé par le contexte morose du à la crise actuelle, que va changer l’élection d’Obama sur le petit monde du Hip-Hop?
Dans une interview donné à CNN, Common, dont le 8ème album sort mardi, pense que son élection va changer le Hip Hop pour le meilleur. “Je crois que nous les artiste Hip-Hop nous regardons ce qui se passe et nous le reflétons dans notre musique” a-il déclaré avant d’ajouter que les rappeurs maintream ainsi que les rappeurs conscients n’auront d’autre choix que de s’inspirer des tous les aspects positifs de cette élection historique: “Les rappeurs n’auront pas d’autre choix que de parler de choses différentes et de choses plus positives, et de relever un peu le niveau, parce que même avant Obama, les gens en ont marre d’entendre toujours les même choses…” - Le temps est au changement.

L’interview en intégral et anglais plus bas…

Obama “is going to change hip-hop for the better,” predicted the rapper, whose eighth album, “Universal Mind Control” (G.O.O.D. Music/Geffen), hits shelves Tuesday.
“I really do believe we as hip-hop artists pick up what’s going on in the world and try to reflect that,” he told CNN, outlining his belief that mainstream as well as so-called “conscious” rappers — the more socially aware — will pick up on what he sees as the more optimistic prospects of an Obama presidency.
“I think hip-hop artists will have no choice but to talk about different things and more positive things, and try to bring a brighter side to that because, even before Barack, I think people had been tired of hearing the same thing,” he said.

Likewise, “Universal Mind Control,” with its hook-heavy, synthed-out tracks, represents a “broadening” of hip-hop’s audience — one that demands evolution rather than hackneyed revamps of old beats, rhythms and rhymes, Common said. Listen to clips from the album and Common’s interview with CNN.com »
Not that Common, born Lonnie Rashid Lynn Jr., is altogether removed from the temptations of his hip-hop brethren.

He serves as a spokesman for Lincoln Navigator and purports on his new album to “rebel in YSL,” a reference to designer Yves Saint Laurent. Money is also a weakness, as Common — No. 14 on Forbes magazine’s 2008 list of richest rappers — regularly invokes the greenbacks he makes and spends.

Still, Common has come at hip-hop from a different angle from many of his colleagues. He was generally considered “underground” until he linked up with Kanye West, who produced his albums “Be” (2005) and “Finding Forever” (2007).

Even now, while paying homage at mainstream hip-hop’s altar, the Chicago-born lyricist also enters parishes where most rappers wouldn’t be seen. He’s helped front movements for HIV/AIDS awareness and vegetarianism, and he’s written two children’s books emphasizing the importance of self-esteem.
Lyrically, violence has never been his thing; soft-drug use has been mentioned but rarely glamorized; he removed homophobic references from his lyrics years ago; and while there have been hints of misogyny and the occasional N-word in his verses, neither has been a staple of his rhymes.

“I’ve always been conscious, honestly,” he said. “I made a choice on this album, ‘Universal Mind Control,’ to really make some music that was bright, that would be a little more lighthearted, just because of what was going on in the world.”

With a few exceptions, his latest lyrics are consummate Common. In his beat poet’s cadence, the 36-year-old rhymesmith aggressively courts the ladies, personifies hip-hop, aggrandizes himself and his hometown (lovingly, “the Chi”), and respectfully doles out props to hip-hop’s forefathers — most notably to Afrika Bambaataa on the album’s title track.

The album’s sound, however, is atypical, moving — sometimes jerkily — from club-banger to anthem to ballad to Top 40. The latter even runs counter to the opening verse of “Everywhere”: “No pop, no pop, no pop, no pop/We gonna do this thing till the sky just drop.”

But the sound is part of “a whole new sound and a new movement” in hip-hop, something he explored out of disdain for repetition and predictability, he said. That might explain Kanye West’s relative absence on “Universal Mind Control.”

The Louis Vuitton don appears on only one track, the pop-drenched “Punch Drunk Love.” But West has long been credited, even by Common, with bringing his fellow Chicagoan to the mainstream after “Be” and “Finding Forever” went gold and leapt up the Billboard 200.
Of course, it’s not all Kanye, said Common.

“I’m a true believer that it all boils down to the music, because Kanye can endorse something, and if people don’t like it they ain’t gonna get with it — regardless of whoever endorses it,” he said.
He compared his working relationship with West to the collaboration he enjoyed with The Neptunes’ Pharrell Williams on “Universal Mind Control.” Williams, whom Common casually likened to Quincy Jones, pushed him lyrically, much like West did, he said.

Between Williams and Mr. DJ — who composed backbeats for some of OutKast’s biggest hits — Common arrived at the evolution he sought, he added.

Common also is plotting a change, or at least a detour, in his career path. Though his past cinematic endeavors have been primarily gangster flicks, Common has landed a role in the upcoming “Terminator Salvation” and could play Green Lantern in “Justice League: Mortal” should the derailed movie get back on track.

“I would truly love to go increasingly in the acting direction,” he said. “My goal is to be a movie star. I want to be at Will Smith’s level. I want to be co-leading with Leonardo DiCaprio.”
Fear not, Common fans. The aspiring thespian is confident he can pull off both, though hip-hop might ride sidecar to the silver screen. Acting, he said, seems to improve his music.
“I don’t take as much time overthinking it. Actually, since ‘Be’ I’ve been working on films and each album has been expanding and increasing, so I feel like I would still make music, but it wouldn’t be the main gig,” he said.

Selling albums, Common said, is about more than good music, and though he stands proudly by the music he made pre-West, he concedes he didn’t do enough to claw his way up from the underground.
“After you make good, quality music, then it’s your job to go out there and promote it and to market it and to get it out there to the people. I feel like I wasn’t doing that early on,” he said. “Now I am, and I feel like I’m growing as a songwriter and working with producers that are very incredible, so I feel all that is contributing to me getting the recognition that I’m getting.”

Source: CNN

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