Hurricane Raps -- Freestyles, Conscious Laments and Battle Rhymes
Inspired by Katrina
Kevin Weston and Cliff Parker
New America Media, September 21st 2005
BATON ROUGE, La. and MOBILE, Ala.--Most Americans get their information
on how black people are dealing with Katrina from the mainstream media. But
you have to listen to the rhymes of the hip-hop generation to get the whole
picture. Hip hop is this generation of black peoples' old negro spirituals
-- the language that connects people to each other.
Leroy Guy, aka Lil Realiss, 27, is from the lower 9th Ward and now resides
in the River Center Evacuation Center in Baton Rouge. Leroy has a gold grill
that gleams in the noontime sun. When he talks you hear the distinctive N.O.
accent: a slow, then fast, low baritone drawl.
Lil' Realiss believes that black people should stop blaming racism for their
conditions. "Everybody say this is a racism thing that the people did this
to us," he says. "I can't really fault nobody, we gotta take our own blame
because the reason why this happened is it was in God's will.
"We were the murder capital city. It just had to come to a complete stop.
Everythang needed to come to a complete stop. Before the storm New Orleans
was chaos -- the worst city to be in."
He delivers his rap freestyle -- in this technique of M.C.in'/rappin' you
might have the hook memorized, but you make up the body of rhyme on the spot.
Click image to see streaming MP4 video.
You need Quicktime 6 or later to view it.
"Katrina you only showed me what a woman can do
Take my house, my clothes, my rings too.
Understand
I'm coming back like a twister so frantic
So schizophrenic
Girl you know the game is panic
Hold up what you did
I ain't gonna get mad
I just get game for me
Katrina baby you made it get strange for me
You came like a twister spinning the flame
Hold out baby you know I been in walkin' the rain
I never walked from a storm I never ran from the storm Cuz I know my Lord
Jesus Christ be loving me since the day I was born
Katrina you only showed me what a woman can do
Take my house, my clothes, my rings too.
She comin' like a twister four
I remember I heard walls shakin' like a thompson four four
Katrina girl you played that game.
Looking at New Orleans and you made it all change."
Lenard Rochon, 27, aka Venom, is from the lower 9th Ward and has lived in
River Center since August 28, a day before the storm hit. Twenty-one members
of his family stay with him in the shelter. You can see the anger in his
face when he talks about the aftermath of the storm.
Venom is convinced that race was a factor in the evacuation/relief process
and he blames the government for being slow to help. Venom's rhyme could
be categorized in the "conscious" genre of rap -- ones that address political
and social issues in the community -- pioneered by rappers like Grandmaster
Melly Mel and Chuck D from Public Enemy.
Click image to see streaming MP4 video.
You need Quicktime 6 or later to view it.
"So where you at, Mr. President
You know we need help
Leaving us up in a situation by ourselves
Take a look all around you man
See there's nothing left
Except for problems in the streets
No food up on the shelf
And the water is contaminated you can see that man
But they steady tellin' lies I can't believe that man.
So Lord wont you help me
I think I'm going crazy
Many of my people died
But most of them they really loved me
If you look up in my eyes
I tell you this is for my people that find our passion
See
They telling all these lies
But if you sending help
Then tell your people come and rescue me
So won't you help me lawd."
Kim Benjamin, 25, lives in Mobile, Ala., which has received many evacuees.
She looks hardcore, like the classic female M.C.'s -- MC Lyte or Lisa Lee
-- boyish with a aura of feminine danger and allure underneath her white
do rag.
Kim has heard the rumors about New Orleans evacs coming through other hoods
like hers and trying to take over the street hustles. She was on her way
to her studio in Mobile when she busted this classic battle rhyme -- a lyrical
pounding of the chest -- aimed at anyone who would try to play her set/neighborhood.
Click image to see streaming MP4 video.
You need Quicktime 6 or later to view it.
"I love walking back to my hood
chillin' wit my folks
They gonna love me the same if I'm walkin'
or pushin' twenty fours
and the harder you come at us
the stronger we get
Cuz all those cold nights on the block is somethin'
we never forget
But why you out here runnin' your mouth
Actin' straight b----
This Spring Hill till we die nigga
we don't play that sh--
Cause ain't sh-- changed
except the extension of my range
the perfection of my aim, and the bitches that I tame
But other than man, sh-- is still the same
in my hood
Rollin a 'lac in all black
so we up to no good in my hood."
Kevin Weston is editor-in-chief of YO! Youth
Outlook Multimedia, a journal of young life in the Bay Area. Cliff Parker
produces videos for New California Media, an association of over 700 print,
broadcast and online ethnic media organizations.