By Steve Jones, USA TODAY
Not long ago, rap dominated album sales charts. Now, the music that has been a driving creative and commercial force in American culture is struggling to get its swagger back.
The music industry is suffering across-the-board drops in CD sales, but rap is in a steeper slide: This year, rap sales are down 33% from 2006, twice the decline for the industry overall, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Five years ago, Eminem’s album The Eminem Show was atop the Billboard chart, on its way to becoming the runaway best-selling album that year, with 7.6 million copies. Since then, no rap album has sold as well.
Established rap stars no longer are sure things in sales. During the past nine months, Jay-Z, Ludacris, Snoop Dogg, Diddy and Nas released albums, but only those by Jay-Z and Ludacris have sold at least 1 million copies in the USA, and only Diddy is still on the charts.
Rap’s decline can be traced to a range of factors, including marketing strategies that have de-emphasized album sales in favor of selling less-lucrative single songs and short versions of those singles as ring tones for cellphones. But more important to the industry, there are signs that many music-buying Americans — particularly the young, largely white audience that can make a difference between modest and blockbuster sales — are tiring of rappers’ emphasis on “gangsta” attitudes, explicit lyrics and tales of street life and conspicuous consumption.
Within the rap industry, there’s a growing debate about whether years of rampant commercialism — Snoop Dogg now endorses Pony sneakers; 50 Cent peddles grape-flavored vitamin water — have drained credibility and creativity out of a once-vibrant genre of music. And there’s concern that rap, also known as hip-hop, has reached an evolutionary plateau: After more than a quarter-century on the charts, it’s no longer the radical newcomer.
Rap pioneer KRS-One, who just released Hip Hop Lives with fellow legend Marley Marl, offers a blunt explanation.
“The music is garbage,” he says. “What has happened over the past few years is that we have traded art for money, simple and plain, and the public is not stupid.”
Chuck Creekmur, co-founder of hip-hop news website Allhiphop.com, says rap once was known for creative storytelling and clever rhymes, but now is being undermined by a lack of both.
“A lot of these albums now are looking to duplicate the success” of whatever is hot at the moment, he says. “There is a lack of variety.”
An industry force no more
Whatever’s causing consumers to tune out, it’s clear that rap no longer dominates the music industry. In 2006, rap sold 59.1 million albums, down 21% from 2005 and 27% from 2004. Sales are trailing those for country albums (75 million) and heavy metal (61.6 million) — genres that rap formerly overshadowed.
In 2006, for the first time in five years, no rap albums were among the year’s 10 biggest sellers, a list led by the soundtrack to Disney’s High School Musical, which sold 3.7 million copies. Compare that with 2003, when 50 Cent’s Get Rich or Die Tryin’ ranked No. 1 with 6.5 million copies.
This year’s top-selling albums thus far are by American Idol rocker Chris Daughtry’s band and jazz chanteuse Norah Jones.
The rap industry is pinning hopes on 50 Cent’s Curtis, due Sept. 4, and Kanye West’s Graduation Day, expected in late August, as well as releases by Eminem and Dr. Dre that could arrive before the end of the year.
But those albums may not be enough to salvage the sales numbers for this year, and it’s unclear whether 50 Cent or Eminem can match their past sales.
A genre is born
Hip-hop was born out of DJ-hosted block parties in the Bronx, N.Y., in the early 1970s and evolved with emcees “rapping” over the beats the DJs played.
The genre hit the Top 40 with the Sugar Hill Gang’s Rapper’s Delight in 1979.
Rap soon became, as Public Enemy’s Chuck D described it, “the CNN of black culture,” encompassing everything from party tales to political commentaries, especially from the view of poor and disaffected urban youths.
Rap found an audience not only in cities but in mostly white suburbs, as well.
By the 1990s, a harder-edged version of rap that glorified gang life began to dominate music and influence youth culture. Its songs and videos typically depict violence and drug dealers awash in diamonds and platinum jewelry, champagne and scantily clad women.
Rap became a multibillion-dollar-a-year global industry, influencing fashion, lifestyles and language while selling everything from SUVs to personal computers.
Rap’s declining sales haven’t escaped the attention of its kingpins. Declaring that hip-hop needed saving, Jay-Z ended a three-year retirement in November with his CD Kingdom Come, in which he essentially cast himself as Superman trying to save hip-hop.
A month later, Nas decried rap’s lack of originality on his disc Hip HopIs Dead:
“Everybody sound the same, commercialize the game / Reminiscin’ when it wasn’t all business / They forgot where it started / So we all gather here for the dearly departed.”
Rap may not be dead, but it’s significantly weakened, in part by its own doing, music analysts say.
The industry’s longtime strategy of pushing singles to sell albums has backfired in the digital age, says Felicia Palmer, president of 4Control Media and founder of the hip-hop news website SOHH.com.
Digital sales have outstripped CD sales, but not yet to a degree that compensates for the price difference between a 99-cent download and a $19.99 CD.
A just-released survey by the website found 82% of nearly 700 respondents are purchasing fewer albums than in previous years, and 67% acknowledge that they have illicitly downloaded albums rather than pay for them. One reason: 69% say they’re “not inspired by many albums.”
“People have gotten smart and know that (record companies) usually put out the two best singles, and the rest of the album is usually garbage,” Palmer says.
Labels need to do more to help artists build their fan bases with promotional tours, which help consumers buy into the performer and not just a song, says Michael “Blue” Williams, who manages Outkast and other urban acts.
“People like hot music, but we are still not making artists who matter across the board,” Williams says. “So while the labels are screaming that the sky is falling, they are trapped in their own vicious cycle of having to chase each single.”
Promoting singles means getting favorable airplay, and that’s more difficult now that hip-hop isn’t the “only contemporary music that matters,” as it was just a few years ago, says Sean Ross of Edison Media Research.
“Three years ago, you wouldn’t have wanted to be a Top 40 station playing Bright Lights by (pop/rockers) Matchbox Twenty while your competitor was playing Get Low by (rapper) Lil Jon,” Ross says.
“Now, Top 40 has Daughtry and Gwen Stefani, as well as a lot of quasi hip-hop from artists like Fergie and the Pussycat Dolls that, for some listeners, fill the same need as the real thing.”
The real thing may no longer be real enough.
Glenn Peoples, founder and editor of music industry blog Coolfer.com, says: “A lot of people who used to listen to rap are now listening to rock. Rock is really strong right now.”
‘The public has made a choice’
Part of hip-hop’s attraction has been the assumed authenticity of its lyrics and artists, but now, many younger listeners “believe that so much of what the mainstream (rap) industry does is orchestrated,” says Bakari Kitwana, author of the books The Hip Hop Generation and Why White Kids Love Hip Hop. “I don’t think they have a lot of confidence in the music the industry is producing.”
For years, increasing sales of rap albums effectively muted protests about some songs’ promotion of misogyny, racism and violence. Now, dwindling receipts and fading interest in rap have provided what some in the industry see as an opportunity to rethink content.
“The public has made a choice,” KRS-One says. “They’re saying, ‘We do not want the nonsense that we see and hear on radio, and we are not putting our money there.’ Rap music is being boycotted by the American public because of the images that we are putting forward.”
The rising angst about rap lyrics was spotlighted this spring during the fallout over radio talk-show host Don Imus’ smearing of the Rutgers University women’s basketball team. Imus called team members “hos,” then later noted in his defense that the word is commonly used in rap songs to describe women.
Soon after, hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons called a meeting of music industry executives. His Hip-Hop Summit Action Network later recommended that the rap industry voluntarily delete or bleep out offensive terms for broadcast.
Such efforts have drawn mixed reactions from rappers.
Master P, who built his multimillion-dollar No Limit Records empire on gangsta rap in the ’90s, announced plans to start a new label, Take A Stand Records, with his son Romeo. He says he has been part of the problem and now wants to be part of the solution with clean, positive music.
That idea was derided by 50 Cent, who said he has no intention of cleaning up his lyrics.
“Music is a mirror, and hip-hop is a reflection of the environment we grew up in,” he said at a news conference.
“If I ask you to paint a picture of the American flag and not use the color red, you’re going to have a difficult time.”
A new business model
Content questions aside, rap faces the same challenge that has alarmed much of the music industry: how to adapt to the digital revolution.
“What we have to do is figure out what the new music business is,” says Kevin Liles, executive vice president of Warner Music Group, home to artists such as DJ Quik, Lil Scrappy and E-40.
“There was a time when an artist like a Jay-Z or DMX or 50 Cent would sell 4 million or 5 million CDs. But there’s a new climate. Artists like Young Jeezy might sell 2 million albums, but 6 million ring tones.”
Recent sales by rap star Mims reflect the problems facing the industry. His single This Is Why I’m Hot has done well this year, selling 634,000 downloads and 1.9 million ring tones, the 2007 leader in ring tones so far. But the album that contains This Is Why I’m Hot hasn’t been so hot, selling only 231,000 copies. Music Is My Savior is No. 100 on Billboard’s albums chart 11 weeks after its release.
Rap’s early stars, from Grandmaster Flash to Public Enemy and LL Cool J, “touched on humor, politics, ghetto life and realities they faced,” says music consultant Tom Vickers. “Rap has gradually degenerated from an art form into a ring tone. It’s a hip catchphrase or a musical riff with a short shelf life. It has a novelty element that captures the listener’s imagination, but it’s not a song. It won’t build a career. That’s why we’re seeing this backlash.”
To rebound, he says, “rap has to look at the bigger issues confronting society. There’s only so much bling the public can take.”
The upside for rap, Kitwana says, is that so much of it “remains off the mainstream radar. You never know when hip-hop is going to reinvent itself, or when something operating out on the fringe is going to emerge and become the next new thing.”
The other day I purchased my first copy of “USA Today” — ever — because of Steve Jones’ article above. I guess I knew what I was getting into, but I was interested enough to drop three quarters in the machine nonetheless.
By “knowing what I was getting into,†I mean that I knew Jones unfairly pick on rap music, discuss the genre and the culture in a manner that lacks knowledge and respect, and end up saying not much at all of any substance. I do my damnedest not to be cynical about such things — I did buy the paper hopefully after all — but this article demonstrates in spades why my attitude already sounds so bad.
First of all, “rap†and “hip-hop†are not interchangeable, synonymous terms. Rap is a style of speech. Hip-hop is a culture. As KRS-One put it so long ago, “Rap is something you do. Hip-hop is something you live.†With that said, rap music hasn’t been the mainstream’s “radical newcomer†in nearly thirty years, and product endorsements and “rampant commercialism†have been a part of its mainstream cachet ever since (Ahem, anyone remember Run-DMC’s Adidas? Or KRS-One’s Nikes?). And Jones’ quoting KRS-One (as I did above) might give his article “street cred†to some, but here it’s really quite silly. No one in hip-hop has paid any attention to what KRS says since he ran through the streets of New York some ten years ago, claiming, “I am hip-hop!†I mean, really, the “public’s not stupid� The “music is garbage� What year did Kris say this? Hasn’t he been saying the same thing since 1986? Along the same lines, the quote, ‘a lot of these albums now are looking to duplicate the success’ of whatever is hot at the moment,†could be said about 95% of any genre at any time. Some bands owe their entire careers to this notion (Stone Temple Pilots and Creed come immediately to mind).
Anyway, the music industry is cyclical. Let us not forget that heavy metal was once the best-selling genre in the country. Did it get as picked-on when it lost its mainstream crown in the early 90s to so-called “alternative†music? No. Somehow, rap music is both revered and criticized because of its social relevance — a quality it maintains like no other genre. Moreover, rap’s early stars (Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, Run-DMC, LL Cool J, et al.) never sold records like Diddy or Eminem. Comparing the lyrical content of Public Enemy with that of 50 Cent is specious at best.
To bounce back, Kitwana says, “Rap has to look at the bigger issues confronting society. There’s only so much bling the public can take.†Yeah? Tell that to Dead Prez, The Coup, Immortal Technique, Jean Grae, dälek, Mike Ladd, Jedi Mind Tricks, Mr. Lif, or any of the other socially aware acts that have been slugging it out for years in relative obscurity. The public might be sick of “bling,†but they don’t want to hear about racism, poverty, and oppression. Shown and proven.
One of my biggest pet peeves with mainstream media (yes, aside from commenting on things that it knows or cares very little about) is its contempt for its audience. Using statements like “People have gotten smart and know that (record companies) usually put out the two best singles, and the rest of the album is usually garbage,†and “many younger listeners ‘believe that so much of what the mainstream (rap) industry does is orchestrated,’†is condescending and shows a general lack of respect for the group of music fans about whom one is talking. Hip-hop fans haven’t “gotten smart.†They are smart. It takes a certain aptitude to be a fan of rap music. Before you attempt to refute my point by quoting Lil’ Jon or Mims, let me explain.
Rap music is rife with wordplay, is full of intricate, intertextual references, and is a breeding ground for new language structures and slang. Perhaps not all rap fans think of it on this level, but a lot of them do. Even so, just by dint of being exposed to the complexity of rap, fans gain a set of cognitive skills that can be used elsewhere. The general principles that underlie these skills are more important than the skills themselves. The decoding of messages, the understanding of complex metaphors, and a grasp of the power of language all become second nature to a true fan of rap music. Again, a quality that no other genre can claim, and, as I’ve claimed in the past, it keeps getting more complex.
Kitwana states the obvious, but the positively obvious (finally) when he says that much of rap “remains off the mainstream radar. You never know when hip-hop is going to reinvent itself, or when something operating out on the fringe is going to emerge and become the next new thing.†Indeed. Just you wait and see.
June 19th, 2007 at 3:18 pm