Personal Essay About Hip Hop

850 Words2 Pages

I grew a fond of music at a young age just as many of people grew into their love for music. Music was everyone’s first love and I believe it will be everyone’s last. The notes, the rhythms, and the feeling of euphoria one experiences when they hear their favorite genre of music. The power of will to make the creation of melodies straight from the heart. That is why I believe that everyone sees music as an art form. Everybody has their likes and dislikes when it comes time to listen to music, but each individual has their favorite go-to genre, which for me is Hip-Hop.
Hip-Hop emerged as an underground urban movement genre. Just like every other style of music, Hip-Hop has its roots, which in fact developed in the South Bronx of New York City. …show more content…

Though it may seem like a main form of entertainment, reality raps have a powerful platform to address social, economic, and political issues. This can act as a unifying voice to hip-hop fans and other standby listeners. Don’t get me wrong, I also enjoy listening to today's commercialized rap, but I just prefer the old school style of hip-hop. Another reason I enjoy Hip Hop is that rap music is a form of resistance to the structures of oppression that have created class differences in the United States. For many youths, the heroes and success stories of the inner-city are rappers. The popularity of rap and the spin-offs of hip-hop culture include fashion lines like FUBU and Tommy Hilfiger33, movies such as “Boyz N Da Hood” and “Friday”, and television shows like “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” have had a major impact on American marketing trends. Hip-hop has had a tremendous influence on mainstream fashion, television, movies, and advertising. This has created an appeal to the hip-hop culture, which has been pushed out of urban areas and into the …show more content…

Hip-Hop has served as a platform for those who are oppressed by the systematic government. For example, 25 years later after the 1992 Los Angeles riots, we see the popularity of artists like Kendrick Lamar, Joey Bada$$, Schoolboy Q, and YG urging listeners to “stay woke “on the landscape and violence of innocent people of color on the streets at the hands of law enforcement across the nation such as what happened to Rodney King. Often, the message and artistic integrity of rappers can be lost amidst national marketing campaigns and lose the approval of important commercial allies such as Wal-Mart and MTV. In the growing success of the hip-hop market, musicians have struggled to maintain rap's potency as a form of resistance and

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