- Jun 1, 2008
- 38,406
- 7,519
Future mixtape is amazing too, all about context.
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I'm indian, am I allowed to like the album?
Guess I'll put my two cents in, this whole the album was intended for black people argument is pointless. Kendrick wrote this album from a black perspective with black narratives on it and a historically black influence. However to say this album was written for black people is stupid, no it wasn't. It might be the most relatable to black people, but to say it was solely intended for black people to digest is just incorrect. Thats like saying Mandela wanted equality for only black people
I usually mess with Future but I listened to his mixtape and immediately trashed it. K.Dot got my musical taste in one lane right now
You or Candlestick doing the chop?
Like how posts disappeared from a few pages back. Pretty sure I got told to go hang out with my pedophile friend or something like that haha
Still going to be in here talking about Kendrick and how I like the album.
Here's a simple scenario to float around... Kendrick has a HUGE fanbase that consist of all kinds of people....... he's def gonna do a tour for this album and crowds will be mixed with all races correct.... Everyone is jamming and this comes on
How many NON BLACK people are going to sit at that concert and scream the lyrics to this comfortably like they did with GKMC ?
Since people claim this doesnt have a message focused directly towards black people, EVERYONE at that concert should feel comfortable singing along with those lyrics and loving them....
I highly doubt any of this will be going on During A performance of Blacker The Berry.... That's All i'm saying lmaooo
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wow at this thread lol...
i agree with majority of the points tho...
back to the topic, anyone notice how the track of if these walls can talk serve as a double entendre?
first listen, the track seemed sexual...which it is...
but then after listening later, i noticed it was representing when Kendrick as the Caterpillar was forming his cocoon after consuming everything around him...
Then i found this..
Pupal mating[edit]
In a few taxa of the Lepidoptera, especially Heliconius, pupal mating is an extreme form of reproductive strategy where adult males mate with female pupa about to emerge or with the newly moulted female; this is accompanied by other actions such as capping of the reproductive system of the female with the sphragis, denying access to other males, or by exuding an anti-aphrodisiac pheromone
pupa = caccoon...
i love this album so far...sheesh
Here's a simple scenario to float around... Kendrick has a HUGE fanbase that consist of all kinds of people....... he's def gonna do a tour for this album and crowds will be mixed with all races correct.... Everyone is jamming and this comes on
How many NON BLACK people are going to sit at that concert and scream the lyrics to this comfortably like they did with GKMC ?
Since people claim this doesnt have a message focused directly towards black people, EVERYONE at that concert should feel comfortable singing along with those lyrics and loving them....
I highly doubt any of this will be going on During A performance of Blacker The Berry.... That's All i'm saying lmaooo
View media item 1459103
Na, man, we'll be jamming just like everybody else.
Just because someone isn't the same color as you doesn't mean that they're unable to sympathize w/ you or your situation.
Are you aware of how many white people listen to Dead Prez?
Never thought of that really, dope theory
Someone mentioned earlier maybe parts of the 2nd verse was talking about Compton...thought that fit in some as well
I still don't get the point of coming in here and spewing it the way Nay did. It was unnecessary. Everything you just said it well documented on the album. Its obvious what the perspective is and who he's talking to. I had an issue with jumping in the thread and literally saying 'this is ours, not yours.'But why do we need to tell white folks that this music isn't for them? What purpose does that serve other than ostricizing and making those people who enjoy the album feel unwelcome. This is an album that everyone needs to hear.
Hell, maybe some white folks who don't really understand need to hear this more than those folks that it was 'made for' who deal with and know this struggle everyday.
Point is, there is a lot of learning that we can ALL take from this music. We all have different perspectives, but the message is a good one for EVERYONE to hear.
Nobody is disputing that the album can or should be listened to by everybody, we are simply stating that this was made for BLACK people. the message the energy the stories are all much more impactful for the average black man then the average white man it's that simple. Hopefully some white people hear this album and begin to study the problems talked about on a deeper note. However this attitude that black people have nowadays has got to stop. We calmly take the blame and claim all the negatice parts of the culture.
We don't fight when the media talks about gang violence as if it's only a black thing, poverty as if it's only a black thing, Bad parenting as if it's only a black thing..... yet the second we want to take our rightful claim and say Hiphop is a black form of music... suddenly guys come out the woodwork and claim that we're excluding other people and it's an unfair statement.
Hiphop culture is available for everybody to enjoy and listen too, however EVERYTHING about this culture derived from black/latino culture, the messages are through the scope of black youth, the neighborhoods talked about are black, the specific struggles outlined are heavily endured by black people. So i'm sorry if a few people may have a problem feeling a bit excluded out of rap.
Black people feel excluded too, in the justice system, in the financial system, on a social scale etc etc. These literally weren't constructed with viewing black people as human and yet, 50 years later America still seems to exclude us and clearly refuses to let go of the notion that "America" is a country for Whites.
I agree...i just don't think thats an issue we need to take up with the white people of Niketalk, though.We don't fight when the media talks about gang violence as if it's only a black thing, poverty as if it's only a black thing, Bad parenting as if it's only a black thing..... yet the second we want to take our rightful claim and say Hiphop is a black form of music... suddenly guys come out the woodwork and claim that we're excluding other people and it's an unfair statement.
Hiphop culture is available for everybody to enjoy and listen too, however EVERYTHING about this culture derived from black/latino culture, the messages are through the scope of black youth, the neighborhoods talked about are black, the specific struggles outlined are heavily endured by black people. So i'm sorry if a few people may have a problem feeling a bit excluded out of rap.
Black people feel excluded too, in the justice system, in the financial system, on a social scale etc etc. These literally weren't constructed with viewing black people as human and yet, 50 years later America still seems to exclude us and clearly refuses to let go of the notion that "America" is a country for Whites.
That's real talk. And it's exactly what the term culture vulture is meant to address. Black and Latin folks who came from nothing built this music that took over the world and now everybody has their hand in the pot and feels they should have some sort of claim to it, when alot of those same people couldn't give a damn about the black and latin folks they see all around them day to day. It's disgusting. The fact that black people are still co-signing Iggy Azalea's racist *** and letting her capitalize off the music just blows my mind :x.
I don't like the blanket statement of labeling any white person a culture vulture, but like somebody else mentioned earlier, those same SAE pieces of **** who were singing about hanging ******* were probably partying to music made by said ******* later that night. And there are heads of record labels like that. And A&Rs, and managers, and even artists (Iggy). That incongruity doesn't sit well with me at all. It shouldn't sit well with any black person in this country, especially given the racial climate we're in right now. And really, regardless of your race, if you're truly not a culture vulture, it shouldn't sit well with you either.
On one hand, I don't like the idea of being so divisive as to say the album ain't for white people, I don't really agree with that, and it could really turn off somebody who truly has a respect for the music and it's creators. But on the other hand, I'm really ******* tired of the ********. I'm tired of seeing people that don't give a **** about black people profit off black people, or contribute to the culture in any way shape or form really. It's tired man, it really is.