What prompted it is whenever a subject arises regarding black social issues, Gangsta Rap is always brought up by multiple people, and usually treated liek it contributes to ongoing stereotypes and perhaps encourages the kids to act like the characters in the MC's lyrical fantasy.
For instance, no offence aimed at stravo, but a good example, from N+P:
Now, I've never read anything lyrically in Gangsta Rap that remotely approaches some of the stuff in Death Metal. I mean, listening to the Cannibal Corpse live album, the singer says before a song, "This next song is for all the women out there <women in crowd cheer>, this song is... FUCKED WITH A KNIFE!" Glorification of the disturbing, taboo and grotesque has been popular in extreme metal at least since Slayer, but the only people that consistently complain about it are far right christian groups.Stravo wrote:For instance the Hip Hop Gangsta culture. Do we see any widespread movement to denounce the messages coming out of hip hop directed to black youth? The degredation of women, the romantacizing of the drug dealer/criminal element, the rejection of 'white' culture which ironically enough transaltes into education and jobs.
No. Instead we see passionate defenses of 'their' music when criticism is leveled by whites or other groups.
Still, a severe minority expect metalheads to go around acting on their preferred music's lyrical fantasy.White-boy death metallers such as myself are found in all walks of life, is it just harder to stigmatise listeners (though goth and hippie stereotypes do crop up)?
So why is this? Is there a perception that blacks are just more given to suggestion due to music? Is it just an easy and popular target? Why do people feel the need to condemn "All these niggaz and all these hos" by Trippy McG-Face and completely ignore "Necropedophile" by Cannibal Corpse? Too OTT and obviously tongue in cheek?