independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > The paradigm of Prince & Hip-hop
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 1 of 7 1234567>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 03/05/15 1:33pm

Noodled24

The paradigm of Prince & Hip-hop

So myself and a couple of other Orgers hijacked another thread with this topic, and it was suggested a new thread was created.

The story of Prince and Rap/Hiphop generally goes something like this:

Once upon a time there was a little dressed head to toe in 100% silk imported gypsy lace, and custom handmade high heel boots. He was a rude and funky man. Then came 1992 hip-hop had taken over and Prince was suddenly playing catch up.


I think thats a grossly oversimplified version of events.

When the subject of Prince and Hip-Hop arises I think most fans minds automatically default first to the song "Dead on it" where Prince "disses" hip-hop, and second to the "prince" album because it seems to be the album where hip-hop is most prominant. However it was the "Lovesexy" album where he first called for Cat to rap. One could argue the toss about earlier songs where Prince talks rather than sings (DMSR, Shockadelica etc) but we'll leave that be for the moment.

Now, there is no question that Prince somewhat missed the point of Rap music early on. He saw it as dressing on a party song. He didn't understand the authentic nature of what kids were listening to. There was a vibrant rap scene from the late 80s onwards but it hadn't gone mainstream yet.

Part of the discussion in the previous thread was "How mainstream was Rap in 1990/91/92" when Prince was incorporating it in his own way.

My stance is that it wasn't very mainstream. You could find it if you looked. The names who really helped take Rap mainstream had yet to come. Dr Dre, 2Pac, Snoop, BIG, Puffy, Jay-Z, Nas, were just beginning their careers in these years. Thats not to say there weren't rappers before them, there obviously were. But they weren't making huge production videos or tours like rappers today. There had been a handful of top 10 singles (mainstream charts).

In 1991 Vanilla Ice became the first rapper to top the billboard charts with a #1 rap single. THAT was what mainstream Rap looked like back then. *Again, there was a vibrant and authentic rap scene in the USA at the time... but it wasn't dominating the pop charts.

Of course there were other artists who'd had some success with rap singles. But no Rap artist had blown up in the pop charts and managed to sustain a successful career. Few if any Rappers had a string of hit singles or commercially successful second album.

Once again for clarity - there is no question that in the late 80s and early 90s there was a vibrant rap scene, but it was nothing close to the way hip-hop dominated the charts by the end of the millenium. (It was 1999 when MTV gave it's first "Best Hip-Hop" award.)

I don't think Hip-Hop owes anything to Prince. But I think he did to a degree help establish hip-hop on the mainstream charts. He was still a multi-million seller, he was still banging out top 10 hits... Nobody was buying D&P or prince thinking they were getting a rap album, both are clearly pop efforts. But back in 91/92 before hip-hop went mainstream Prince was taking it to a mainstream international audence.

By the time he'd sacked Tony.M Prince's rap had evolved. He was delivering his flow over funk rather than trying to sound hard. Prince later came up with some more clearly hiphop influenced stuff. 18&Over seems like his take on the westside sound. I've heard other people liken "Emale" from Emancipation to a "Dr Dre like beat"

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 03/05/15 2:29pm

RaspBerryGirlF
riend

avatar

I actually have no idea of the details, so someone please correct me if I'm wrong here, but wouldn't Holly Rock be the first proper rap song Prince did, is there a reason for not counting it (aside from the obvious fact that it's Sheila E doing the actual rapping, but surely it shows that early on Prince was exploring Hip-Hop?)

Heavenly wine and roses seems to whisper to me when you smile...
Always cry for love, never cry for pain...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 03/05/15 3:58pm

Angelsoncrack

Prince's rapping was so cool, even on earlier tracks like Dead On it (not sure if that track is considered true rapping but whatever). I kind of wish he still still did it as much. He probably would, but the best songs with his best rapping in often have profanity in neutral

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 03/05/15 4:34pm

TrevorAyer

Sorry but fear of a black planet was bangin around sott ... There was tons of top shelf everywhere ... Prince hated rap and clearly was too full of himself to really explore the art... It's like he thought it was stupid and easy and approached as such... Prince is worse than vanilla ice and every other crappy pop rapper... He should have let a great rapper sit in instead of tony. All the other pop stars paid for the good rappers. Prince had mad money after DNp... Just no excuse
[Edited 3/5/15 16:35pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 03/05/15 4:45pm

funksterr

Prince didn't mainstream rap in any way shape or form. Prince's rap music is an AWFUL embarassment. It's a stain on his legacy. It was out of touch and dated even at the time he released it. The first rap song Prince released was Holly Rock by Sheila E for the Krush Groove soundtrack. It was G-A-R-B-A-G-E as a rap song, but as a funk song and a part of the PR era history I like it. Hip Hop music was mainstream as fuck in 1992, so come off of it. Almost every major pop record back then had a guest rapper for 16 bars or so, going back to 1987 or so. Prince thought he was too good to have a "name" rapper on his records like everyone else, so he stoopidly hired a d-list one instead in Tony M.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 03/05/15 6:05pm

skywalker

avatar

Prince is very much his own thing.

-

His influence on (and assimilation of) hip hop is much like his influence on (and assimilation of) new wave. He played with each genre in his own way, yet he didn't really add to the genre in a direct and measurable way. That's because what he did was all still "Prince Music."

-

Example:

-

Sexy MF, My Name is Prince, etc. definitely use hip hop imagery/phrasing but they are soooooooo much Prince that they are in their own category. They aren't really hip hop. Nor were they really trying to be.

-

Similarly, Prince's early 80's synths owed a lot to /borrowed a lot from to New Wave, but they weren't really categorizable as such.

[Edited 3/5/15 18:07pm]

"New Power slide...."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 03/05/15 6:43pm

funksterr

skywalker said:

Prince is very much his own thing.

-

His influence on (and assimilation of) hip hop is much like his influence on (and assimilation of) new wave. He played with each genre in his own way, yet he didn't really add to the genre in a direct and measurable way. That's because what he did was all still "Prince Music."

-

Example:

-

Sexy MF, My Name is Prince, etc. definitely use hip hop imagery/phrasing but they are soooooooo much Prince that they are in their own category. They aren't really hip hop. Nor were they really trying to be.

-

Similarly, Prince's early 80's synths owed a lot to /borrowed a lot from to New Wave, but they weren't really categorizable as such.

[Edited 3/5/15 18:07pm]

Excuses. Prince was trying very hard to be hip hop actually. More so than any other 80's pop/rock/soul act... by far.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 03/05/15 7:36pm

KingSausage

avatar

Maybe MJ mainstreamed hip-hop with Dangerous.

Right.

Prince had nothing to do with making hip-hop mainstream. It was already blowing up in the late 80s. Public Enemy. Beasties. Etc. Prince played catch up then. He plays catch up now.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 03/05/15 8:00pm

skywalker

avatar

funksterr said:

skywalker said:

Prince is very much his own thing.

-

His influence on (and assimilation of) hip hop is much like his influence on (and assimilation of) new wave. He played with each genre in his own way, yet he didn't really add to the genre in a direct and measurable way. That's because what he did was all still "Prince Music."

-

Example:

-

Sexy MF, My Name is Prince, etc. definitely use hip hop imagery/phrasing but they are soooooooo much Prince that they are in their own category. They aren't really hip hop. Nor were they really trying to be.

-

Similarly, Prince's early 80's synths owed a lot to /borrowed a lot from to New Wave, but they weren't really categorizable as such.

[Edited 3/5/15 18:07pm]

Excuses. Prince was trying very hard to be hip hop actually. More so than any other 80's pop/rock/soul act... by far.

You think songs like "Gett off" or "Love 2 The 9s" was an honest attempt on Prince's part to do what Public Enemy, Run DMC, or even MC Hammer was doing? C'mon....

-

If Prince was trying to do straight on hip hop he'd have ditched the feminine stuff and bought into the hyper masculinity that is MANDATORY for hip hop. Sure, Tony M was in the mix, but he and the Game Boyz had been around since 1984 and by 1991 they were faux butt shagging Prince onstage.

-

Now what "real" hip hop artist would do that? None. Only Prince would. Again, Prince wasn't trying to be "real" hip hop.

-

All the gangster glam imagerly and gun microphones owed way more to 70's funk than 90's rap.He was just toying with it and putting it in his sound. He had been doing so since at least 1986. Again, it was never going to be "real" hip hop, it was always Prince's take on a genre. Same as he always did/does.

[Edited 3/5/15 20:00pm]

"New Power slide...."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 03/05/15 8:02pm

skywalker

avatar

KingSausage said:

Maybe MJ mainstreamed hip-hop with Dangerous. Right. Prince had nothing to do with making hip-hop mainstream. It was already blowing up in the late 80s. Public Enemy. Beasties. Etc. Prince played catch up then. He plays catch up now.

Interesting. Prince was playing catch up in the late 80's? Like during "Sign O' The Times" and "Lovesexy"?

"New Power slide...."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 03/05/15 8:09pm

KingSausage

avatar

skywalker said:



KingSausage said:


Maybe MJ mainstreamed hip-hop with Dangerous. Right. Prince had nothing to do with making hip-hop mainstream. It was already blowing up in the late 80s. Public Enemy. Beasties. Etc. Prince played catch up then. He plays catch up now.


Interesting. Prince was playing catch up in the late 80's? Like during "Sign O' The Times" and "Lovesexy"?




No. Catch up on his full embrace of hip-hop.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 03/05/15 8:40pm

skywalker

avatar

KingSausage said:

skywalker said:

Interesting. Prince was playing catch up in the late 80's? Like during "Sign O' The Times" and "Lovesexy"?

No. Catch up on his full embrace of hip-hop.

Would you say that Prince was playing catch up to trends with Dirty Mind?

-

His first two albums were mostly slick well produced R&B/Pop (sold as Stevie-esque) albums.

-

Yet, in 1980...Prince made a concentrated effort to alter his sound/style. He borrowed a lot of soundstyles and imagery from what was "hot" at the time (New Wave, Punk, Brit Rock, etc.)

"New Power slide...."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 03/05/15 8:56pm

KingSausage

avatar

skywalker said:



KingSausage said:


skywalker said:



Interesting. Prince was playing catch up in the late 80's? Like during "Sign O' The Times" and "Lovesexy"?



No. Catch up on his full embrace of hip-hop.


Would you say that Prince was playing catch up to trends with Dirty Mind?


-


His first two albums were mostly slick well produced R&B/Pop (sold as Stevie-esque) albums.


-


Yet, in 1980...Prince made a concentrated effort to alter his sound/style. He borrowed a lot of soundstyles and imagery from what was "hot" at the time (New Wave, Punk, Brit Rock, etc.)




No. On Dirty Mind he brilliantly blended styles. When he embraced rap in the early 90s, it usually stuck out like a sore thumb.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 03/05/15 9:13pm

skywalker

avatar

KingSausage said:

skywalker said:

Would you say that Prince was playing catch up to trends with Dirty Mind?

-

His first two albums were mostly slick well produced R&B/Pop (sold as Stevie-esque) albums.

-

Yet, in 1980...Prince made a concentrated effort to alter his sound/style. He borrowed a lot of soundstyles and imagery from what was "hot" at the time (New Wave, Punk, Brit Rock, etc.)

No. On Dirty Mind he brilliantly blended styles. When he embraced rap in the early 90s, it usually stuck out like a sore thumb.

1. His blending of styles on Dirty Mind was executed better. Yet, does it negate the fact that Prince was still , you know, chasing trends and borrowing from what was (in 1980) popular and "hot" at the time?

-

2.Did his embracing of rap stand out like a sore thumb? Always?

-

I mean, "Gett Off" was a monster of a song in the summer of 1991 and I don't remember a person (other than a few bitter Prince fans) complaining about Tony M back then. Same with Sexy MF. Same with Prince's rapping in Pussy Control.

-

Don't get me wrong. I hear you. I cannot stand Jughead. Yet, I am not a big fan of the DooWop circa 1980 feel of "Gotta Broken Heart Again." So, what do I know?

[Edited 3/5/15 21:30pm]

"New Power slide...."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 03/05/15 11:23pm

Rebeljuice

skywalker said:

KingSausage said:

skywalker said: No. On Dirty Mind he brilliantly blended styles. When he embraced rap in the early 90s, it usually stuck out like a sore thumb.

1. His blending of styles on Dirty Mind was executed better. Yet, does it negate the fact that Prince was still , you know, chasing trends and borrowing from what was (in 1980) popular and "hot" at the time?

-

2.Did his embracing of rap stand out like a sore thumb? Always?

-

I mean, "Gett Off" was a monster of a song in the summer of 1991 and I don't remember a person (other than a few bitter Prince fans) complaining about Tony M back then. Same with Sexy MF. Same with Prince's rapping in Pussy Control.

-

Don't get me wrong. I hear you. I cannot stand Jughead. Yet, I am not a big fan of the DooWop circa 1980 feel of "Gotta Broken Heart Again." So, what do I know?

[Edited 3/5/15 21:30pm]

I agree somewhat. When Prince did incorporate rap into his music it was probably a bit of a surprise to his fans. Especially after dissing it on TBA. But for the most part I think he did ok with it. Lets not forget it was the early 90's and the style he incorporated was very much of its time. He also misfired with it at times too. Jughead (I actually dont mind it as much as most fans do) was indeed a misfire. The rap in 2the9s pisses me off and to some extent on MNIP. But I think the rap on Willing & Able is really good and that is hardly Prince trying to be hip hop.

I think Gold Nigga is Prince really trying to be hip hop. And that album sucks as far as I am concerned. But mainly the rapping in his own songs was ok in general, if somewhat overused and misplaced at times. It only stood out like a sore thumb to his fans because it was such a departure and many of us thought he would never do it.

Prince as a rapper is another story. He really shouldnt go there. P Control he may have just gotten away with it, but by and large, he sucks at rapping.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 03/06/15 12:09am

lrn36

avatar

funksterr said:

Prince didn't mainstream rap in any way shape or form. Prince's rap music is an AWFUL embarassment. It's a stain on his legacy. It was out of touch and dated even at the time he released it. The first rap song Prince released was Holly Rock by Sheila E for the Krush Groove soundtrack. It was G-A-R-B-A-G-E as a rap song, but as a funk song and a part of the PR era history I like it. Hip Hop music was mainstream as fuck in 1992, so come off of it. Almost every major pop record back then had a guest rapper for 16 bars or so, going back to 1987 or so. Prince thought he was too good to have a "name" rapper on his records like everyone else, so he stoopidly hired a d-list one instead in Tony M.

To be fair, rap in the 80s and 90s was an incredibly fast moving genre. Rap artists who were hot one year were played out the next. The slang, fashion, dance, and music was changing dramatically almost every six months. Hip hop artists struggled to keep ahead of the trends so it was almost impossible for an outsider like Prince to keep up.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 03/06/15 1:58am

Aerogram

avatar

Some rather wild generalizations and simplifications on this thread.

1. Rap was huge way before 1992 -- that was only the year it became overwhelming dominant. Before it got there, it was extremely common, most rap music was bought by suburban white, asian, latino, etc. kids, not just black youth, "young" huns like me had Run DMC, Public Enemy in album form and all sorts of wildly popular singles, those pre-Gangsta rap years saw some extremely accessible music, a lot of it made for and from the mall, and not the "ghetto". Rap simply wasn't equivalent to new wave. which by comparison was just a short lived variation on the rock sound.

2. So Prince didn't come out growling in his deepest voice trying to act like a true boy in the hood -- that doesn't prove he wasn't getting on a rap train already going full steam ahead.

3. Whatever styles he used in the early nineties in terms of rap were already "old school", but not in a good way.

4. There is no such thing as a genre called Prince music, he's the great style integrator, not a genre of his own. He was least successful at integrating rap, just didn't sound credible most times.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 03/06/15 3:28am

KingSausage

avatar

Aerogram said:

Some rather wild generalizations and simplifications on this thread.



1. Rap was huge way before 1992 -- that was only the year it became overwhelming dominant. Before it got there, it was extremely common, most rap music was bought by suburban white, asian, latino, etc. kids, not just black youth, "young" huns like me had Run DMC, Public Enemy in album form and all sorts of wildly popular singles, those pre-Gangsta rap years saw some extremely accessible music, a lot of it made for and from the mall, and not the "ghetto". Rap simply wasn't equivalent to new wave. which by comparison was just a short lived variation on the rock sound.


2. So Prince didn't come out growling in his deepest voice trying to act like a true boy in the hood -- that doesn't prove he wasn't getting on a rap train already going full steam ahead.


3. Whatever styles he used in the early nineties in terms of rap were already "old school", but not in a good way.


4. There is no such thing as a genre called Prince music, he's the great style integrator, not a genre of his own. He was least successful at integrating rap, just didn't sound credible most times.






THIS. Nailed it.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 03/06/15 4:08am

paulludvig

Prince is to fem to convincingly pull off the machismo of rap music.

The wooh is on the one!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 03/06/15 6:11am

BartVanHemelen

avatar

Noodled24 said:

Part of the discussion in the previous thread was "How mainstream was Rap in 1990/91/92" when Prince was incorporating it in his own way.

My stance is that it wasn't very mainstream.

.

Bobby Brown did the title song for Ghostbusters II. And that's just one of MANY examples of rap and rap-offshoots like New Jack Swing being popular. Hell, Run-DMC had a hit in the mid-1980s that was so big it resurrected Aerosmith's career. The Beastie Boys were front-page material. Yo! MTV Raps was one of MTV's most popular shows.

.

In 1991 Vanilla Ice became the first rapper to top the billboard charts with a #1 rap single. THAT was what mainstream Rap looked like back then. *Again, there was a vibrant and authentic rap scene in the USA at the time... but it wasn't dominating the pop charts.

Of course there were other artists who'd had some success with rap singles. But no Rap artist had blown up in the pop charts and managed to sustain a successful career. Few if any Rappers had a string of hit singles or commercially successful second album.

.

All of these are YOUR ARBITRARY RULES. Here's what you're saying: "There is absolutely no evidence (except for this huge pile of evidence which I ignore because it doesn't fit my theory)."

.

I don't think Hip-Hop owes anything to Prince. But I think he did to a degree help establish hip-hop on the mainstream charts.

.

This is nonsense.

.

He was still a multi-million seller, he was still banging out top 10 hits... Nobody was buying D&P or prince thinking they were getting a rap album, both are clearly pop efforts. But back in 91/92 before hip-hop went mainstream Prince was taking it to a mainstream international audence.

.

Dude, hip hop was already HUGE in the UK. Those live sounds on Public Enemy's second album? That's from a massive UK gig that was recorded and broadcast by the BBC on Def II, a weekly music show that featured tons of rap and hip-hop. Kool Moe Dee's "Go See The Doctor" was a top ten hit in Holland. Hell, "Holiday Rap" was one of the biggest hits of the year back in 1986.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 03/06/15 6:24am

Graycap23

avatar

funksterr said:

skywalker said:

Prince is very much his own thing.

-

His influence on (and assimilation of) hip hop is much like his influence on (and assimilation of) new wave. He played with each genre in his own way, yet he didn't really add to the genre in a direct and measurable way. That's because what he did was all still "Prince Music."

-

Example:

-

Sexy MF, My Name is Prince, etc. definitely use hip hop imagery/phrasing but they are soooooooo much Prince that they are in their own category. They aren't really hip hop. Nor were they really trying to be.

-

Similarly, Prince's early 80's synths owed a lot to /borrowed a lot from to New Wave, but they weren't really categorizable as such.

[Edited 3/5/15 18:07pm]

Excuses. Prince was trying very hard to be hip hop actually. More so than any other 80's pop/rock/soul act... by far.

I'm going 2 have 2 agree w Skywalker on this one, especially when it was Prince doing the rapping.

FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 03/06/15 6:26am

Graycap23

avatar

Aerogram said:

Some rather wild generalizations and simplifications on this thread.

4. There is no such thing as a genre called Prince music, he's the great style integrator, not a genre of his own.

I completely 100% disagree w this comment.

FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 03/06/15 6:26am

ludwig

Bart is totally right. Prince just followed trends, he wasn't helping rap to become mainstream at all. This theory is ridiculous.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 03/06/15 6:29am

Graycap23

avatar

ludwig said:

.Prince just followed trends, he wasn't helping rap to become mainstream at all. This theory is ridiculous.

Any notion that Prince helped rap in any way, shape or form is complete nonsense.

FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #24 posted 03/06/15 6:30am

Rebeljuice

Plagarised from this site. I remember quite a lot of these songs and many did do well in the charts so I would have to agree with Bart, hip hop and rap music was already well under way and mainstream by the time Prince got his mits on it.

The Beginnings of Hip Hop

Though it was not the first rap song ever made, Rapper's Delight by the Sugarhill Gang was the first hip hop song to become really popular. The original 15 minute song was recorded in a single take in 1979 and involved the Sugarhill Gang rapping over the top of the baseline to Chic's song "Good Times". While Kurtis Blow's The Breaks reached number 87 on the Billboard Hot 100, the first single featuring 80s Hip Hop to really make a dent in the Billboard charts was Rapture by Blondie. The song went all the way to number one in 1980. It featured Blondie rapping and included references to rap pioneers Fast Five Freddy and Grandmaster Flash. Other early 80s rap songs included:

  • The Message - Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five
  • Planet Rock - Afrika Bambaataa
  • Roxanne Roxanne - UTFO
  • The Show - Doug E. Fresh
  • The Roof is on Fire - Rock Master Scott & The Dynamic Three
  • Friends - Whodini

80s Hip Hop Enters the Mainstream

For the early part of the 80s, Rap made a large impression on the Billboard R&B charts, but failed to break into the mainstream, then came the big break through. In 1986, Run DMC turned an old Aerosmith tune into a 80s Hip Hop classic. Their collaboration with Aerosmith on the song Walk this Way was a smash hit. The song went all the way to #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 and ushered in the commercialization of 80s Hip Hop. The song made Run DMC a mainstay on MTV and they followed it up with a very popular video for It's Tricky featuring Penn & Teller.

Chart Topping 80s Hip Hop Hits

The success of Run DMC set the stages for a Billboard Hot 100 chart takeover by 80s Hip Hop. Some of the acts to build on this success included the Beastie Boys, DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince , Young MC, MC Hammer and LL Cool J. Songs that raced up the charts included:

  • (You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party) - The Beastie Boys
  • Hey Ladies - The Beastie Boys
  • Parents Just Don't Understand - DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince
  • Bust a Move - Young MC
  • Word Up - Cameo
  • Going Back To Cali - LL Cool J
  • I'm That Type Of Guy - LL Cool J
  • I Need Love - LL Cool J
  • Me, Myself, and I - De La Soul
  • Supersonic - JJ Fad
  • Buffalo Stance - Neah Cherry
  • Wild Thing - Tone Loc
  • Pump up the Jam - Technotronic
  • It Takes Two -Rob Base & DJ EZ Rock
  • Wild Wild West - Kool Moe Dee
  • Wipeout - Fat Boys
  • Push it - Salt-N-Pepa
  • U Can't Touch This - MC Hammer


Other top 80s Hip Hop songs included:

  • Paid In Full - Eric B. & Rakim
  • Gittin' Funky - Kid n' Play
  • Smooth Operator - Big Daddy Kane
  • Somebody for Me - Heavy D and the Boyz

80s Gangsta Rap

By the late 80s, some rappers rebelled against this commercialization of 80s Hip Hop. Groups like Boogie Down Productions, Public Enemy, and N.W.A. took rap in a different direction. They rapped about urban crime and the violent lifestyles they encountered growing up in the inner-city. While critics said this new direction glorified violence and indiscriminate sex, Gangsta Rappers responded that they were just representing real life in the inner-city. This new style of Hip Hop set the tone for the direction rap would take as it moved on into the 90s. Some of the top Gangsta Rap songs from the 80s were:

  • Straight Outta Compton - N.W.A.
  • Express Yourself - N.W.A.
  • Criminal Minded - Boogie Down Productions
  • Colors - Ice T
  • Fight The Power - Public Enemy

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #25 posted 03/06/15 7:21am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Brenda Bennett(Vanity 6/Apollonia 6)

If a Girl Answers Don't Hang Up: Don't know if the public is aware of it or not, but "If a Girl Answers" was one of the first rap songs by a girl group.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #26 posted 03/06/15 7:49am

joyinrepetitio
n

avatar

Also around 1982/83 Prince's first rap was on the full vocal version of Lust U Always

__________________________________________________
2 words falling between the drops and the moans of his condition
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #27 posted 03/06/15 8:08am

KingSausage

avatar

Graycap23 said:



ludwig said:


.Prince just followed trends, he wasn't helping rap to become mainstream at all. This theory is ridiculous.



Any notion that Prince helped rap in any way, shape or form is complete nonsense.




YES
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #28 posted 03/06/15 8:14am

nextedition

avatar

Prince can do a lot of different music, but he doesn't own them all.

He is rock, pop, funk.

He doesn't own classical, house or hiphop.

When he does that kind of music, it's more funny.

Not that i don't like it, but it's not to be taken that seriously and that's ok.

I mean sexy mf and pussy control...they are just fun tracks.

So I wouldn't say he had any influence on the hiphop movement.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #29 posted 03/06/15 9:06am

ludwig

joyinrepetition said:

Also around 1982/83 Prince's first rap was on the full vocal version of Lust U Always

On Irresistible Bitch he kind of raps, maybe it's a little bit too melodic.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 1 of 7 1234567>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > The paradigm of Prince & Hip-hop