The message from rap pioneer Melle Mel: ‘Hip-hop has to grow up … it’s way too juvenile’

urban music 080707

LOS       ANGELES - Hip-hop may need a checkup.

The culture that in the 1990s lost its brightest stars to gun violence has in  recent years seen a series of notable rappers die of drug- and health-related  causes. Since 2011, hip-pop pioneer Heavy D, singer and rap chorus specialist Nate Dogg and New York rapper Tim  Dog all died of ailments in their 40s. Kris  Kross rapper Chris Kelly was found dead  last week in Atlanta of a suspected drug overdose at 34.

[expand title="More MBiz" tag="h2"]

Some of the genre’s elder statesmen say they’re worried about the culture’s  focus on youth, current emphasis on freewheeling partying and “you only live  once” ethos, as popularized by Drake’s 2011 hit “The Motto.”

“Hip-hop being a lifestyle culture … a part of American culture, you have to  be mindful that somebody is going to grow old, age,” said rap pioneer Melle Mel. “At some point somebody has to realize that hip-hop has to learn how to grow up.  It’s way too juvenile, and it’s been that way for too long.”

The 51-year-old rapper, who memorably warned in 1982’s “The Message” about  urban youth who “lived so fast and died so young,” said he suffers chronic  bronchitis from being around marijuana and cigarette smoke when he was  performing. Of course, heavy drug use in hip-hop or rock is hardly new: Cowboy  of his Furious Five group died in 1989 “basically from getting high,” Melle Mel  said.

In this Feb. 23, 2013 photo, Chris Kelly of Kris Kross performs on stage at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta during the So So Def 20th Anniversary Concert. Kelly was found dead in his home, Wednesday, May 1, 2013, from a possible drug overdose. (AP Photo/Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Jonathan Phillips, File)Enlarge Photo

In this Feb. 23, 2013  photo, Chris Kelly of Kris Kross performs ...  more >

“It’s not really worth it to literally party yourself to death. It’s like  committing suicide,” he added. “You have to choose between what makes you feel  good and what makes you think you feel good.”

Other influential rappers who’ve died in their 30s in the last decade include  Southern rap pioneer Pimp C and Wu-Tang Clan’s Ol Dirty Bastard, both from drug  overdose.

As some of the genre’s more well-known figures hit their late 30s and 40s,  they’ve figured out ways to keep up appearances in public while also keeping  their health. 50 Cent said he rarely drinks alcohol anymore. That “bottle full  of bub” he’s holding in nightclubs nowadays isn’t what you think.

“I want to live a good long healthy life. So I’m health-conscious,” the  37-year-old rapper-actor said. “You never see me drink. If you did see me with a  bottle, it had ginger ale in it.”

Though he’s still a heavy marijuana smoker, Snoop Dogg said he stopped drinking alcohol at  clubs six years ago after suspecting that a woman put the sedative Rohypnol — widely known as a “date-rape drug” — in one of his drinks.

“I used to drink alcohol as a fashion statement. If you in the club, they  bringing you bottles, bringing you drinks. And you’re just drinking because  you’re drinking. I don’t do that anymore. I drink water or cranberry juice,” he  said. “I’m not cheap. I just don’t want to do this to my body anymore. I want to  survive.”

Snoop, 41, said his focus on health comes  from his desire to remain competitive and relevant to a genre that’s largely  focused on youth.

“Because when we perform, we don’t have as much energy,” he said. “So now  we’ve got to get up and work out, do push-ups or jumping jacks, or whatever  we’ve got to do to keep ourselves looking good and feeling good. Because one  thing about an old man — he don’t ever want to feel like he old. So to me that’s  my personal push is to be able to compete with the youngsters and to be able to  dance with them so to speak. … Because when they welcome you into their world as  far as being on a song, you’re not old. You’re accepted.”

For producer and rapper RZA, hip-hop’s emphasis on youth stems from an urban  culture that since the ‘80s has had trouble planning for the future.

“They said we should be dead or in jail by the age of 25. And I think we live  like that,” the 43-year-old Wu-Tang Clan founder said. “But what happens when  you make it past 25? What happens when you make it to 30? What happens when you  make it to 40? Are you prepared for life now?”

[/expand]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *