Greyfyl, on 13 June 2013 - 08:39 AM, said:
But you can't honestly expect to come into an internet forum and say that hip-hop provides a positive cultural influence as a general blanket statement and expect people to agree with you.
Sure I can. Why would I assume that, just because I'm on an internet forum, the folks I'm having a discussion with are ignorant and loaded down with stereotypes?
Greyfyl, on 13 June 2013 - 08:39 AM, said:
I think we should just agree to disagree, from my point of view any positive impact at this point is just a raindrop in the ocean compared to the huge negatives that have spawned from this 'culture'.
We can certainly agree to disagree, but be aware that your point of view doesn't represent reality. You're talking about a genre that you admittedly only have scratched the surface of. How, then, are you qualified to pass judgement on what proportion of hip hop is positive and what is negative? If you've experienced only 1% of something, to generalize that experience to the remaining 99% is a failure of logic.
Shumabot, on 13 June 2013 - 09:22 AM, said:
No, Hip Hop is not a culture. Hip hop is a broad category of musical influences which are commonly co opted into urban subculture norms and which reciprocate those norms by placing them at the focal points of its own output. If Hip Hop is a culture so is EDM, Western, and any other broad spectrum of artistic output. Hip Hop is commonly self promoting in how it's advertised and created and tends to act exclusionary due to the focal points of its music, but it's hardly a culture. There are tens of thousands of music, fashion, and political entities that identify as functioning under the umbrella of hip hop influence, and they espouse just as many wildly divergent viewpoints, traditions, fashions, and everything else that makes a culture homogeneous. Without homogeneity you don't have a "culture" and hip hop clearly lacks it.
You're missing the point of my post I think. Hip hop is more than just rap. Hip hop is more than just music. Unlike EDM or country/western, there are things other than music that are a part of hip hop. I wouldn't make the claim if there wasn't more to hip hop than music. Google the 5 pillars of hip hop.
I'd agree that there are a number of places on the musical spectrum where hip hop's influence is felt, but that doesn't take anything away from the 5 elements that are central to hip hop. It certainly doesn't detract from hip hop's status as a culture, rather, it shows us how hip hop culture has influenced musical movements outside of rap.
As an aside, I disagree that a culture necessitates homogeneity. Consider Canadian culture: I think it'd be hard to claim there isn't such a thing, despite the fact that it is an amalgamation of vastly different cultures: the Irish/island culture of Newfoundland, the Francophone culture of Quebec, the Ukrainian culture present in the prairies, the Asian culture that is common on the west coast.
Sorry to resurrect the thread; I've been away for a few days :/ I'm still away and likely won't be back to argue my point for a few days, but perhaps we've sufficiently derailed this thread as it stands