
Hip-Hop and American Culture
Author(s): Rob Turner
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Hip-Hop and American Culture
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Rewinding through five decades, this book listens closely to the bars, samples, and stories that have made hip-hop the true sound of America. Bringing together nineteen essays from leading figures in hip-hop studies, it traces lines of influence from Atlanta and Detroit all the way back to the Bronx and the Caribbean. The book's first half digs into the instrumental layers that continue to underpin hip-hop, while taking a close look at the poetic effects that lurk within key verses. For its second half, the focus turns to the larger culture, assessing the cluster of social tensions that are coming to define the US – and which can be heard in the nation's most powerful and controversial music. Accompanying the book is a 42-song playlist, including both iconic tracks and underground tapes, making it easy to follow the relevant beats and rhymes while reading each chapter.
- Combines closely focused, granular analysis of particular hip-hop songs with larger scale thematic discussion
- Foregrounds the work of groups that have previously been marginalised by some earlier histories of the genre, including musicians who identify as women, and disabled artists
- Includes an interactive link to a 42-song playlist, an online resource that directly maps onto its contents
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