Nas Talks Education, Controversy & Hip-Hop
New York rapper Nas has never shied away from news controversy in his almost two-decade career. Even so, the artist, whose real name is Nasir Jones, has little patience for controversy for the sake of selling albums. âIf youâre just faking the funk, if youâre just starting trouble with people just for attention and you got no goal, itâs going to end before it started,â Nas said. âPeople will catch onto it.â
Nasâ latest untitled album has stirred up plenty of its own trouble. Nas originally called the album Nâ-r, but left it untitled after criticism around the title. Rev. Jesse Jackson and the NAACP both criticized Nas for the album title, while some artists, including Jay-Z, Alicia Keys and Common, supported it. Nas said he eventually changed the title because he didnât want the negativity to overwhelm his albumâs content.
âI donât like to feel that somebody is trying to pick out one thing about me and make it negative,â Nas said. âUnfortunately, you have a lot of people who are threatened by people like me, whether they rap or not. I donât give them any power by saying Iâm just selling the nâ-r word.â
âIf the title isnât there, the album cover becomes even more powerful,â Nas said, referring to the untitled albumâs cover. The cover shows Nas shirtless with flagellation scars in the shape of an âNâ on his back.
The counter-culture music Nas makes goes along with his life story. He grew up in the Queensbridge housing projects in Queens, N.Y. After dropping out of middle school, Nas educated himself, studying ancient religious texts and early hip-hop music. The irony of college students paying to see a middle-school dropout is not lost on Nas.
âYou wonder what your teachers would say now,â Nas said. âYou wonder what people â âcause they saw me on the corner â I wonder what they think now.â
Even so, Nas said he still appreciates the value of education and hopes to complete his own some day.
âIn education, thereâs a lot thatâs wrong with the way the system works, but at the same time, itâs very important,â Nas said.
âThis is a whole new world for me,â he said when asked what he would study. âLiterature is one [major]. And of course, history. I like to think of myself as a historian.â
Nasâ interests show through in his music as well. His songs deal with issues in hip hop music, race relations and other controversial topics.
âThe stuff that I listen to the most is not the most radio played,â Nas said. âRadio is important too, but you canât let everything be about the radio. I like to make music where Iâm not always working for the charts.â
âI still do have fun, even though it comes out serious,â he added. âThe records that I tend to keep on the album are the ones that are not much about fun.â
Even though his music deals with heavy topics, Nas said the music doesnât have to be contemplative.
âYou can be flying down the highway doing 90 [mph], listening to something like âTestify.â Itâs all about how you are feeling.â
Source:
The Temple News















juwon wrote:
rappin is life if u know how to do it thats all i gotta say
Posted on 02-Dec-09 at 1:01 pm | Permalink