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Why hasn't rap died?

It's been popular for multiple generations now.



Let's say hiphop started in 1980 so it's abouyt 41 years old. That's the begining of the 90's for rock music (if we consider it's origins to be the early 50's, though of course none of these dates represent hard boundaries) which feel about right. Hiphop and it's ofspring are the dominant forms of popular music but the tide of creative progress has perhaps slowed somewhat since the peak. Maybe. I don't necessarily believe this because the technological/ cultural landscape for music is so different from the late 20th century that making these broad comparisons doesn't really make sense. I guess my point is that 40ish years isn't that old for a musical genre to still be hanging around.


Jazz also had a long rein as the apex genre for something like 50 years but then fairly quickly succumbed to rock and disco in popularity. I would guess hip hop is past its peak already and it’s also splitting and merging with other genres so it gets hazy


Also note that rock had a back-and-forth influence with country, and rap is now having a back-and-forth influence on rock (and country to a lesser degree).


It kind of has, at least as a mainstream music genre.

What passes for rap (or hip hop) in 2020 is far removed from the golden era of the 80s and 90s.


The Grammy's nixed The Best New Female Raper.

(I don't know why though? I hear Rap everywhere. Well a year ago.)


> The Grammy's nixed The Best New Female Raper.

That seem unsurprising lol. This is why proof reading is so important.


Hip hip is the philosophy of survival in a racist culture. It dies when the racism dies.


I hope it doesn't. I'd like to see a world without racism and with hip hop. Also, there have been so many changes in the popular sub-genres of hip hop, with each new generation of musicians altering the popular form (maybe not always for the better (RIP DMX)), that it's almost like rap has died and been reborn several times since the 80 -- a bit like rock between the 50s and 2000s.


Oh come off it. Little to no mainstream hip hop addresses racism in any meaningful way. It’s still mostly sex, drugs, objectifying women, glorifying the rich, and violence.


It doesn't have to address racism in any meaningful way to fulfill the function of being centered around identity. When that identity becomes meaningless, the culture around it will lose meaning as well.

The Martians and the Belters will have their own music.


That's just silly and I have to question your exposure to the genre. Some of mainsteam hip hop's biggest hits have dealt with racism: This Is America, DAMN, The Black Album, KOD, and hip hop artists have been outspoken about Black Lives Matter and racism.


Since when has mainstream music been what is listened to outside of White American culture? Beyond the marketed artists is a voice you're not hearing and it speaks from a culture emerging out of lies told about itself and shunted from economic stability. The economic situations of 99% of the readers of HN is science fiction to large portions the economic underclass in the United States.




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