21 Facts About Gangsta rap

1.

In 1993, via record producer Dr Dre, rapper Snoop Dogg and their G-funk sound, gangsta rap took the rap genre's lead and became mainstream, popular music.

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2.

Gangsta rap has been recurrently accused of promoting disorderly conduct and broad criminality, especially assault, homicide, and drug dealing, as well as misogyny, promiscuity, and materialism.

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3.

Still, gangsta rap has been assailed even by some black public figures, including Spike Lee, pastor Calvin Butts and activist C Delores Tucker.

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4.

Mafioso Gangsta rap is a hardcore hip hop subgenre founded by Kool G Rap in the late 1980s.

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5.

Mafioso Gangsta rap is characterized by references to famous mobsters and mafiosi, racketeering and organized crime.

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6.

Gangsta rap's album featured other mafioso rap artists, including MF Grimm, Nas, and B-1.

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7.

East Coast gangsta rap was popular by the late 1990s, and there were more modern mafioso rap albums such as Ghostface Killah's Fishscale, Jay-Z's American Gangster, and Raekwon's Only Built 4 Cuban Linx.

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8.

Narco-Gangsta rap emerged in the urban areas of Tamaulipas, a Mexican state currently subject to a turf war between Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel.

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9.

Gangsta rap's pioneers have met success in other forms of pop culture as well.

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10.

Those who are supportive or at least less critical of gangsta rap hold that crime on the street level is for the most part a reaction to poverty and that gangsta rap reflects the reality of lower class life.

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11.

Many believe that the blaming of crime on gangsta rap is a form of unwarranted moral panic; The World Development Report 2011, for instance, confirmed that most street gang members maintain that poverty and unemployment is what drove them to crime; none made reference to music.

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12.

Judy has argued that gangsta rap reflects the experience of blackness at the end of political economy, when capital is no longer wholly produced by human labor but in a globalized system of commodities.

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13.

In other words, gangsta rap defines the experience of blackness, in which he locates in gangsta rap's deployment of the word "nigga", in this new global economic system as "adaptation to the force of commodification".

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14.

Gangsta rap picketed stores that sold the music and handed out petitions.

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15.

Gangsta rap then proceeded to buy stock in Time Warner, Sony and other companies for the sole purpose to protest rap music at shareholders meetings.

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16.

Gangsta rap established himself a career and became the most important representative of German gangsta-rap of his time.

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17.

Aggro Berlin, the label those two artists were both represented by, stated that this version of Gangsta rap was the second, more aggressive evolution of German hip-hop.

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18.

Road rap is a genre of music pioneered in South London, primarily in Brixton and Peckham.

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19.

Road rap retained the explicit depictions of violence and British gang culture found in some early grime music and combines it with a musical style more similar to American gangsta rap than the sound system influenced music of grime, dubstep, UK garage, jungle, reggae and dub.

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20.

In keeping with grime, road Gangsta rap has suffered from pre-emptive policing with Giggs claiming that the Metropolitan Police have set out to deny him the opportunity to make a living from music having banned him from touring.

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21.

Road Gangsta rap went on to influence afroswing, which emerged in the mid-2010s.

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