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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not quite where it's at, 15 July 2003
Expectations are a funny thing. Before I started, I must say they were high. The author and I have similar traits, thirty something white boys who just happen to have been carried away by the most compelling lifestyle phenomenon of our generation.Initial indications were great, references, conversations and material that was right on the money. But for me, as the odyssey goes on the material becomes more dislocated from any objective assessment of the subject. With each chapter it becomes evident that we are passengers on the authors journey, that this is no comentary on Hip Hop, it's evolution or it's current state. What it is however, is a platform for the author to relate Hip Hop directly to socio ecconomic and political climates within each location. It feels a little like being preached to. I've no problem with that, except that it makes for unfulfilling and somethimes slightly tedious reading. This is very much one man's view. Less about Hip Hop and more of a travellers journal. So really, my criticism is that this isn't the book I wanted to read. The fact that it came close to being that book only added to my disappointment. I also struggled with the mismatched ratio of material and locations. You can't write about Hip Hop worldwide without at least visiting California and the New York section is half as big as the South African section. There is little to represent the home scene (UK)either. Of course there are reasons for this, I just don't know what they are. Overall, it is well written and has truly insightful details that also reveal the authors passion for the subject. What is evident, is that the vastly exploded world of Hip Hop is one you can no longer hold in your hands (not so the "old school"). There's just too much of it. I feel like the author has probably not really found the core of Hip Hop because he's happily settled in the periphery of loving how it used to be. Getting to the messy rough cutting edge is probably best left to the next gen. They instinctively know where it's at.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Hip-hop can be content over style, 12 April 2005
Hip-hop's ubiquity has rendered it stale and dull. Whatever music show you're watching, it's the same hip-hop video, with the standard checklist well and truly ticked. Big cars, scantily-clad girls, jewellery, 'Cristal' bottles popping in slow motion, you've seen it all before. It's all about as innovative and daring as a boyband dressing in white suits and clasping their hands to their hearts in mock anguish for a love that remains unrequited. Everything's bling. Everyone's pimping. Only last week at my local supermarket, I had to curb my desire to tell the young staff chatting at the checkout that the latest compilation CD by a well-known hip-hop DJ was probably not the best introduction to hip-hop they could receive. Fearing a path that would end with me writing to the Daily Mail on a regular basis to complain about the minutiae of life, I bit my tongue. What Neate does so well in this book is to introduce you to people in New York, Tokyo, Cape Town and Johannesburg who harness elements of hip-hop that aren't dripping in the common clichés. Neate aims to uncover that hip-hop is a force for good, and he wants hip-hop to be a unifying element that can teach and enrich people in the way that he feels it has done with him. I got the feeling that what Neate really wanted was to meet people who feel the same way about hip-hop that he does. Once he stopped yearning for this to happen, he was able to see that this global phenomenon affects people differently in their own locality, but in a positive and uplifting way. And so, his firm belief that hip-hop remains a vibrant medium for positive change in the modern world is confirmed. This is a book written with passion and compassion. Neate's love of hip-hop (and indeed, reading) comes through clearly in his writing, and he's a thoughtful and interesting host. There's a lot more to hip-hop than what you see on TV. It is still very much a genre rooted in reality, participated in by real people. And these people are a thousand times more interesting than most of the artists who make an overblown living from it.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Keeping it unreal, 29 Jun 2003
This is delicious delight of a book, a thought-provoking page-turner that will send you scurrying back to your favourite hip hop albums and set you thinking afresh about how the world's changed since Grandmaster Flash and the Sugarhill Gang first exploded out of our brick-sized Walkmans ...Neate packs in an unbelievable amount into a relatively short book. I for one didn't expect to leave it having broadened my knowledge of early South African tribal history or Japanese racial consciousness. It's his ability to juggle insights and statistics on global culture, race, politics and economics with a personal emotional journey and some hilarious anecdotes that makes the book so successful. Neate's thesis - that hip hop is more of a cultural phenomenon than a musical form and one of the few (perhaps only) to have been embraced worldwide by every class, race and nationality - is utterly convincing. His vision of hip hop as a tool for radical political and social change had me less convinced - until he hit the favelas of Rio in the final chapter ... Anyone interested in the complexities and contradictions of life in the 21st century will find this book fascinating. Anyone who had their ears blown off by 'Bring The Noise' 'I Know You Got Soul' 'Straight Outta Compton' or any other hip hop classic should turn the stereo up to 11, sit back and enjoy.
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