Nas visited Georgetown University to depart some his impressions of Hip-Hop and culture and alerts us of his dissatisfaction with modern rappers.
As a rapper of legendary proportions, Nas
was invited to the prestigious Georgetown University, along with
Georgetown's own sociology professor, Michael Eric Dyson, to discuss at
length with the director of Africana studies at Lehigh University, James
Peterson, about the current state of Hip-Hop and the recent rise of
higher learning pursuit within the culture.
If that sounds like the epitome of a dull way to spend an hour, know
that the rapper touched on some important issues for the community, as
Nas parts with his thoughts on the issues before a live audience
preceding his live performance of Illmatic at the Kennedy Center.
He showed particular pride regarding the fact that 9th Wonder
is currently attending the end-all, be-all of the ivy league, Harvard
University. Nas went on the record, saying, "It’s so many layers to that
question, where is Hip Hop? You talk about 9th Wonder at Harvard, I
recently been over there and met with Skip Gates and Dr. Morgan and just
watching where Hip Hop is today. Myself, re-releasing an album from 20
years ago is like, '20 years? That’s crazy.'”
Of course, when you don't have ignant rap, you have yourself
conscious rap, which has a penchant for sounding both pretentious and
corny bundled into some, oft times, righteous package of broad
statements and condescending tones. Of this phenomenon, Nas said:
“I don’t see enough emcees who are brave enough to be honest. I would
like to see more of that. There’s a lot of good stuff. There’s a lot of
bad in Rap. The socially conscious stuff can come off sometime as
preachy, so a lot of people tend to stay away from it. That ain’t their
bag. That’s not what they do. But still, they kind of have some artistic
responsibility to do more than what’s the latest trend...I would like
to see people remember it’s an artform because the better we all become
we push each other to make the whole artform better. Then we won’t have
to worry about who won the Grammy.”
This isn't the first time Nas went critical on the recent crop of
Hip-Hop artists. That's nothing new, but Nas also went on to explain how
he wanted to bring his music to higher education.
“When I first started I said, ‘You know, it would be cool to talk at
colleges...but that would never happen,’” he says. “That’s really what I
thought. I didn’t know. It’s kind of like surreal but then at the same
time, it’s what it’s supposed to be. Especially for me, at a place like
the John F. Kennedy Center, I had like dreams of that kind of stuff
early. I didn't think it was really possible. I kind of gave away those
dreams. I let those dreams go. Now that it’s here, that it’s come around
to this, it feels like this is where it’s supposed to be.”
Thoughts? Opinions? Let us know. Or, you know, if you have an hour
and a half to kill listening to some serious academic discussion on Hip
Hop, check out the interview in full below.








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