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Sage Francis



Dernière mise à jour : 2/02/2010

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Statut : En couple
Ville : PROVIDENCE
Région : Rhode Island
Pays: US
Date d’inscription :: 31/03/2004
samedi, octobre 28, 2006 
Dear MC Serch,

Pardon the length of this letter, but I took my time to make sure that your new asshole would be top of the line.

As a melanin-deficient emcee who began his hip-hop journey in the mid 80's, I've always been interested in what people's take are on white people in hip-hop. How do I fit in? What are my limitations? I've been lucky enough to see some people do it right and some people do it very wrong, and these are lessons that have carried over into many aspects of my life through the years. One golden rule in particular is this: exploiting anything incidental about oneself is pathetic and ultimately self-defeating.

Hip-hop is my lifelong craft and it has been an incredible learning tool for me, so I would be remiss to not contribute as much to this art form as I have received. All I can give is myself though, and if all I am composed of is standard hip-hop wisdom then all I would be doing is recycling other people through my music. Fortunately, I have my own particular perspective, style, technique, quirkiness and subject matter to channel through this medium. There is no success I've enjoyed that has been earned overnight, and I am grateful for that. I did it the hard way. And as overused as it is, there is a lot of merit in the term "keep it real" when it is said and heard by the right people. Let me keep it real for you right now.

One of the first white rap groups I was exposed to was 3rd Bass, via their "Steppin to the AM" video on Yo! MTV Raps. I am not ashamed to say that I was highly excited to see white rappers doing what it is I hoped to do one day. White rappers were a great rarity, which made me view them (and myself) as the underdog, so here I was cheering on a group who was giving me hope that my pursuit in the hip-hop game was not futile. In retrospect, that's a really silly way to think of things because white people are not the underdog by any means in this world. But hey, I was a 10 year old with a dream.

The last I heard of MC Serch is when I saw Non-Phixion perform at NYC's Rock Steady and one of the members said, "Fuck MC Serch!" Non-Phixion being one of the white groups who was first put out on Serch's label, I thought that was pretty interesting. The old 3rd Bass fan in me grimaced and decided to ignore the comment. I mean...gosh darnit...you helped kick open the door for all of us swell white folk!

Almost ten years later I received a few emails from a guy who was approached to be a contestant on MC Serch's "White Rapper" show for VH1, as he divulged a bunch of reasons why this program was complete bullshit. I told him if he had any respect for his career and his art that he would stay far away from that show and he did. I wish he had gone on the show so I could have had more fire to play with, but there's no need really. Let me just look at MC Serch's blog about "The White Rapper Experience":

"The premise is that we take ten white MC's and put them in the South Bronx and teach them about Hip Hop."

Later on in the blog we learn that...

"If you are a white rapper that performs in front of a white crowd then you are not a rapper at all. You are a guy who is simulating what it feels like to rock a crowd."

Using this logic I have deduced that if a white person is teaching you about Hip Hop then you are not being taught at all. You are merely SIMULATING a learning experience. Also, if you are black crowd that is watching a white rapper then you are not a crowd at all. You are a bunch of people who are simulating what it feels like to be a crowd. And we don't take kindly to posers in hip-hop, you got that?

What would be a REAL learning experience is if Ice-T came to your rich, private school and taught you how to "keep it real" by switching up who you really are. Then he could take you to the South Bronx while we all laugh at the way you try to hype up your classmates by doing exactly what you are told to do in front of Grand Master Caz and Melly Mel. Boom fire.

"Due to contracts that hold up my paper I cannot tell you anything more except that there is an interesting thing I have discovered. The White Rapper experience."

This contract must have been holding your paper since the late 80's. Very interesting.

"I met white rappers, and please do not be afraid for what I am about to tell you, but I have talked to and dealt with white rappers who have...ready...NEVER PERFROMED IN FRONT OF BLACK PEOPLE!!!!."

Woah. WOAH! OK, hold on though...really? Do they live in the freaky corn fields of Iowa? Where is this scary scary place where white kids live around other white kids and never get to travel outside of their comfort zone much? I can't take it. Is it...is it most parts of America? Jesus, If you promise me everything will be OK, then maybe I will watch your TV show. The only thing that reassures me right now is that period mark after the four exclamation points.

"Are white rappers not going to black people to seek their approval"

Well, according to Ice-T and his private prep-school teachings, being "yourself" is what Hip Hop is all about. So do these little white dipshits have to get approval from little black dip shits in order to get approval? Or is it older black dipshits they need approval from? Do older WHITE dipshits like yourself hold any credibility? If not, then I have no idea why I am listening to you at all. Moving on...

"HOW CAN WHITE RAPPER BE WHITE RAPPERS IF BLACK PEOPLE HAVE NEVER SEEN THEM RAP."

Was that a question? Well...why is the sky blue. Why is water wet. Why is a period mark following these long unanswered questions. If a white rapper cries in front of a black crowd and no one posts it on youtube, is he still emo? If it IS posted on youtube and a black person watches it...does that make him an official rapper? If your group was manufactured by someone who wanted to put two white rappers together and hopefully exploit the race situation...and then someone named Vanilla Ice comes around and gets exploited even BETTER than you...and you beat down a Vanilla Ice impostor in the video to a song that actually makes its way onto commercial charts...are you street? Are you hood? Are you an honorary black person if you co-opt enough black culture? How's that high top fade doing these days?

"Hip Hop culture is Black culture....period."

OK. Now what? So is rock and roll. So is jazz. Now what? Is this when we get into a discussion of culture and how it is an exclusive thing that separates groups of people forever and ever? If so, I'm sure glad it hasn't stayed exclusive. It has crossed over many boundaries because PEOPLE see value in it. Artists see the artistic value. Business types see the commercial value. Some people see no value in it at all, and they are the people we collectively hated back in the 80's. If all of these people remained stubborn in their ignorance and hatred of hip hop then maybe you could have developed a TV show called "Why Don't White People See the Value in Hip Hop as Genuine Art Form?" And then 20 years from then someone could have developed a corny reality TV show called "The White Rapper Experience." Maybe that show would be responsible for developing the first EMINEM! Instead, you'll have to settle for being the show that tried discovering (err...developing) the NEXT Eminem, as you tie them into a bunk recording contract.

"You can take the hood out of Hip Hop but you can't take the Hip Hop out the hood."

It's not out of the hood, but Hip Hop HAS been taken out of the hood. It's gone to a place called VH1. Remember VH1 from way back in the day? Yeah, that's the station that wouldn't touch a rap video (or any black person except for Tracy Chapman) with a 10 foot pole. NOW look...you have a job again! Amazing.

"A white rapper cannot be considered a white rapper until he rips in front of a crowd of black people."

Well, thankfully I started rapping during a time when a majority of people going to Hip-Hop shows were black. I'm officially a white rapper! Never thought I could be proud to say that, but you've helped me feel secure. Now...now I'm feeling so secure I think I can go one step ahead and claim that a white rapper who performs in front of an exclusively black crowd actually becomes a real rapper, not just a white one. And...ummm...if the black crowd throws their hands up in approval you then become an honorary BLACK rapper. Fuck yeah. man. (Note: shaving the name of your rap group into the back of your head does not win you any extra points.)

"I am not saying they all have to be black. You can have some spanish, some multi-racial kids mixed in there for flavor, I would even say Asain people."

Even Asians??? You're too generous. Are you sure, though? Even Asians count as a possible flavor?

"White people will usually applaud anyone who has the balls to step on stage."

Haha. Ahhh. Yes. Only white people do this. Ahhh man. Yes! So much to say here, but mainly I just have to tip my hat and say, "Sir...you are a fucking genius. Don't worry about that hit MC Hammer put out on you. The black crowd is totally there to save your pale ass."

Now that I think of it, you neglected to mention the Beastie Boys in your list of rappers who got approval from a black audience. As you know, they were the other white group who came up around the same time you did. In fact, you shared the same DJ as them for a while, Sam Sever. You pointed the Beasties out as fakers and tried to discredit them as if you guys were real...and they were fake (wasn't it the Beasties who just received hip hop honors last week on...*gasp*...VH1?) Were they too white for you, Serch? Did their fakeness take on any cooler effect when three black rappers covered songs from License to Ill as Rakim, Bambaata and Wu Tang bobbed their heads to the music? I guess anyone who was white and not down with you way back then was a fraud. I believe Upski has a good chapter about this type of "I'm the only cool whitey" complex in his Bomb the Suburbs book. Check it out.

"Some of this, well most of this as I am sure you know is toungue and cheek but lets be real."

OK, let's. The term is actually "tongue IN cheek" and maybe that's where you should keep yours from now on. Yes, it is very important to respect and understand the origins of one's craft. It is also very important to respect and understand people in general...until they give you a reason to do otherwise. I didn't want to help promote your TV show, which was the reason for your blog in the first place, but I can't stand by while people like you perpetuate massive falsehoods that do nothing but make Hip-Hop look like a 30 year old child. I respect it too much.

Sincerely,
Sage Francis

www.sagefrancis.net
www.strangefamousrecords.com
www.knowmore.org
>> 1-50 / 131
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Crazy Ninja Goddess

 
well put...

~lisamae
 
Publié par Crazy Ninja Goddess le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:13
[Répondre
Kenny Wisdom // DR. STRANGELOVE

 

When I say hip, you say hop.

When I say pwned, you say n00b.

I have never even heard of the existence of this tragedy of a TV show before this blog, thank you kindly, Mr. Francis.

-Wisdom-


 
Publié par Kenny Wisdom // DR. STRANGELOVE le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:15
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MilesBonny.com < go there. not >

 
ahhh hhaaaa

got em, pulling cards with sense.

 imagine someone actually thinking before writing.. thats craazzyyyy. i hope his head doesnt explode and his dripping neck starts crying.. woah, soryy got graphic there. but come on, this is A GREAT reality check for mr.white rapper presidente i guess.

 
Publié par MilesBonny.com < go there. not > le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:17
[Répondre
Vic Baca
Vic Baca

 
so, is it by the monkey bars at 3:30 then?
my mom will pick us up if someone else's mom can drop us off!
jk bro, but you do catch more flies with honey, though I have yet to prove that. Got out of the whole fly with the chopsticks thing after I discovered fresh prince of bel-air and could stop watching Ralph Macchio be a badass over and over.
and aside from Coleridge I don't think anyone's written a book on catching an albatross.
So, best of luck Cap-i-tan.

 
Publié par Vic Baca le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:19
[Répondre
Chris

 
i'm not sure serch deserves that kind of approach here, to be honest.  Theres no reasonto try to catch honey here, hes been around long enough and hes been where hes been... to the point that hearing this shit come from him in particular is utterly rediculous and somewhat surprising.
 
Publié par Chris le dimanche, octobre 29, 2006 - 4:33
[Répondre
zushikikato

 
wow. wow. i don't even know what to write as a comment. speechless. wow.
 
Publié par zushikikato le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:20
[Répondre
Bryan

 
I respect you a lot Sage. Your the shit man. Love what you do but  Xaul Zan is CRAZY.
 
Publié par Bryan le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:22
[Répondre
Sophi

 
so so well put, sage. since when has skin color had anything to do with ability to produce or apreciate amazing music? you're my favorite.

keep it real :-)

 
Publié par Sophi le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:44
[Répondre
John Wu

 

i smell beef.  can't wait for the thirty minute diss track to be unleashed. haha... i lost a lot of respect for mc serch after this as well... sad really.  You made very valid points here, VH1 is using the hip hop honors (and flavor of love) as a Ghetto Pass to try and slide in the Ice-T show and the White Rapper show.  Its wool over our eyes.  Bastardization of hip hop and real heads/fans shouldn't let it go.  "It's cool, they gave a fake award to KRS-ONE."  No its not cool.  We can't let them redefine hip hop and marginalize white rappers.  I'm not too worried because they are really only fooling morons but its throwing dirt on something unnecessarily.  POP goes the weasel and this weasel's gone POP.

 

johnny


 
Publié par John Wu le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:58
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mitchell robert adams, professional®
Mitch Adams

 
As being just (holds up his fingers) this much too young, I always though 3rd bass was whack. I tried to respect them because I knew they were respected and did help blend some lines, but fo realz...they're a novelty.
 
Publié par mitchell robert adams, professional® le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 1:25
[Répondre
That Jake kid
Jacob Copenhaver

 
damn i had respect for serch now i feel bad for likin some one who can discriminate aainst ones own race
 
Publié par That Jake kid le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 1:27
[Répondre
frank

 

WHEN WILL HISPANIC RAPPERS GET ANY RECOGNITION?

Sage that was well written.


 
Publié par frank le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 2:52
[Répondre
xsalxpoffox

 
sage is just upset that serch got that big honeycomb commerical and he didn't.in ninth grade i woulda got live with anyone for sayin shit on 3rd,funny how you wise up over the years.
 
Publié par xsalxpoffox le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 3:18
[Répondre
c|dubb

 

Sage, you kick ASS!!! 

And all I can say about this:

"I am not saying they all have to be black. You can have some spanish, some multi-racial kids mixed in there for flavor, I would even say Asain people."

is... Wow... thanks for including us Asian people... lmao


 
Publié par c|dubb le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 3:34
[Répondre
That Jake kid
Jacob Copenhaver

 
btw i wonder how many people are gonna go to his myspace just to read his blog
 
Publié par That Jake kid le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 5:15
[Répondre
BUTTERBASS

 
oops.
 
Publié par BUTTERBASS le jeudi, novembre 02, 2006 - 7:17
[Répondre
Bridger
Bridger Landle

 

"Pardon the length of this letter, but I took my time to make sure that your new asshole would be top of the line. "

Well put, to say the least.


 
Publié par Bridger le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 5:22
[Répondre
Shawn
Shawn Neitzel

 
Much respect Sage... That was well written and very well thought out.
Take care! =)

 
Publié par Shawn le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 5:39
[Répondre
←♥ß'm'߬★☆

 

My Mommy likes 3rd Base. and the rest is for the paupers.

~b.


 
Publié par ←♥ß'm'߬★☆ le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 6:16
[Répondre
bleunt
tommy håkansson

 

Not that I'm even trying to rap, I'm sticking strictly to poetry. But damn it, some of the stuff I've read from that guy somehow offends me anyway. Maybe I'm offended because, well, I'm white. But I'm probably offended because HE's white. I started listening to hiphop 1995, when I was 11 years old (hey, that's pretty young for a white kid in a swedish lower middle class home), and yes when I was around 13-14 years old I often wished I was black. True, and silly. I didn't feel "real". You could say this guy thinks like I did back when I was 13, which is pathetic...

Anyway, via labels like Mush Records and Anticon I have later learned that whites do have a respected position within hiphop (opposed to what Eminem taught me back in his early interviews about how hard it is for white rappers).

Today, I no longer wish I was black.
Today I'm actually proud to tell people that my favorite MC's are husky white men close to 40, with flanell shirts, white dirty t-shirts, brown manchester pants, big lumberjack beards and receviving hairlines. And I make sure to tell them about that, when they ask me about my taste in music.

So thank you, rappers like Soul and Sage amongst others, for setting the ignorant swede in me straight. Let's just hope this Serch guy won't make any kids feel like I felt, when I as a white fan of hiphop thought I wasn't "real" just because the colour of my skin.


 
Publié par bleunt le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 6:35
[Répondre
bleunt
tommy håkansson

 
I can't believe I spelled it "Soul". Oh well, that's what I get for writing semi-long posts that early. Fuck me. SOLE
 
Publié par bleunt le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 7:20
[Répondre
familiar face

 
"Hip Hop culture is Black culture....period"

what you said, plus the fact that 1) the most influential record label in hip-hop history, DEF JAM, was co-founded by a white guy and 2) most break dancers back in the day were white.

hip hop was/is a culture for the underdog, for those without a voice.

people need to get the fuck over it.  talking like serch is racist, plain and simple.

 
Publié par familiar face le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 7:34
[Répondre
Smart Chronicles

 

selling records is about money and contacts, so bringing up Rick Ruben is ...well..it just doesn't make sense.  he was and still is MAD TALENTED and had more hook ups and a mixed following than a dude from queens named Russell Simmons.  To be perfectly honest, Russell was not looking for someone help him sell hip hop, rather someone to help him spread the word to a larger buying audience....viola BEASTIE BOYS (Run wrote a lot of their rhymes tooo)

Blacks, Hispanics and other groups of people get mad when whites eventually water down a culture.  Hip Hop is and will always be "black culture" that was born in NY from a Jamaican DJ.  I think most hip hop heads who are black and older-like myself- will give props to skill point blank but we can't forget  where it came from and why it came to be.  we know it came in an era when arts in schools were not there and our fam's lived in the projects of NY. 

Serch is entitled to his opinion as are you....People feel the way they feel and it is not my place to discount it, BUT YO....hearing kids born in the 80's outside of its birthplace speaking about what hip hop is very interesting especially when they try to redefine what has been created and defined already:  "Hip Hop culture is Black culture...period"

P.S.  Black is so many things (West Indian, African, Brazilian), so don't get it twisted.  PEACE

 

most break dancers inthe day were white?  GOOD POINT!!! but the fact that the population of this country dictates that but the most influential off the chain break dancers were mainly HISPANIC.


 
Publié par Smart Chronicles le lundi, novembre 06, 2006 - 9:57
[Répondre
B-Side Malone

 

church

 

nowadays cats just dont get it, hip hop was made for cats without a home

 

were a gathering of heads who can bob to the same beat

 


 
Publié par B-Side Malone le jeudi, novembre 02, 2006 - 1:17
[Répondre
Smart Chronicles

 
SPEAK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Publié par Smart Chronicles le lundi, novembre 06, 2006 - 10:02
[Répondre
Smart Chronicles

 

I think Serch's point is this: 

Getting respect from a black crowd,especially in NY, validates you as an MC.  Nowadays you have many rappers making paper but until they can rock a crowd in NY, they will never have the respect of the people who created the culture and never have a sense of hip hop immortality.  Let's be honest here.  IF Eminem did not spend time in the NY underground, would he have had the respect of the hip hop community?  NO.  Like most things in life, its political.  If you want the black vote you go to the black areas and churches and so on and forth......

If I say I can rock a crowd anywhere, I go to the areas that have the toughest audiences who are known to boo you in a minute and break out on you quick.


 
Publié par Smart Chronicles le lundi, novembre 06, 2006 - 10:07
[Répondre
B-Side Malone

 

nah kid slug is emo

 

he got big by bein emo, not by bein lyrical


 
Publié par B-Side Malone le jeudi, novembre 02, 2006 - 1:13
[Répondre
Smart Chronicles

 

HA HA

 


 
Publié par Smart Chronicles le lundi, novembre 06, 2006 - 10:00
[Répondre
sui generis

 

slaying them as usual.. glad england didn't take anything from you this time..

sage francis - as faces grin

xXx


 
Publié par sui generis le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 12:07
[Répondre
Nomadic

 

hahaha well put Sage... You're a pretty good writer, you should think of becoming a journalist or something like that, i don't see much a future for white rappers...  Nobody gets credit for things n-e-wayz, so don't worry, we who have seen you rock a show the way it should be done know ur a real rapper. 

I wish Ice-T could have made me into a rapper back in High School, I actually went to that same High School in the Rap School show for a couple of years when I moved from MIA to NYC... Since I went to college and developed my rap knowledge and skills without Ice-T, I guess I'll never be a real rapper...  However, Latino rappers are for real right??  I still got a chance!!


 
Publié par Nomadic le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 1:23
[Répondre
cullen
Cullen Balch

 
gahhahahhaaa...what about the Pacific Islanders...i hear thier rapping now....cred or no cred? survey says.....................
 
Publié par cullen le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 2:17
[Répondre
BUTTERBASS

 
i love dj q-bert
 
Publié par BUTTERBASS le jeudi, novembre 02, 2006 - 7:20
[Répondre
RiddleBox
Riddle Box

 
w0rd, well said. It's not about skin colour, it's how you spittin.
And you doin it great sage.. Peace.

 
Publié par RiddleBox le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 2:37
[Répondre
junkyard ghost
matthew fisher

 

what is this hip hop or starbucks coffee shops?

well put sage

 


 
Publié par junkyard ghost le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 3:14
[Répondre
Janel

 

How do I give you 1,000 Kudos. 

 

damn.


 
Publié par Janel le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 4:12
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Andrea

 

"Even Asians?"

You kill me, Sage.


 
Publié par Andrea le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 4:30
[Répondre
TRINA

 

UMMMM...3 THINGS. 1) WOW **JAW DROP** 2) WELL PUT, OF COURSE & 3) FUCK YOU FROM THE SCARY CORN FIELDS OF IOWA.  I STILL LOVE YOU THOUGH. ASSHOLE.


 
Publié par TRINA le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 7:11
[Répondre
TRINA

 
i'll correct myself...."freaky corn fields of Iowa"
 
Publié par TRINA le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 7:13
[Répondre
{ b a k e r }

 
Well, I've always said, Maori Rappers who have never performed in front of a White Crowd who all "know" Black People are not real Maori Rappers.
 
Publié par { b a k e r } le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 7:31
[Répondre
Lucky Lucianni

 

The Eloquence of The Sage....

 

gotta love it.

PEACE!

LUCK


 
Publié par Lucky Lucianni le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 8:18
[Répondre
ERERWINWIN PAPAPAPA
Erwin Papa

 

How bout them inter-racial kids, Serch?

Are they allowed to only listen to the music and never perform it?

.billy


 
Publié par ERERWINWIN PAPAPAPA le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 8:28
[Répondre
electRIC feel

 
Well put, enough said. See you on the 12th.
 
Publié par electRIC feel le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 9:42
[Répondre
Ramon

 

*puts his Derelicts album on the shelf and quietly wipes tears from his face*

imagine a world where people are just proud of who they are.


 
Publié par Ramon le samedi, octobre 28, 2006 - 10:31
[Répondre
GNARKIEL

 
FUCK MC SERCH ,POP GOES THE WASH UP CAUSE THE WASH UP GOT DROPPED!EVEN BETTER...POP GOES THE WEASEL CAUSE MC SERCH AIN'T HOT!BETTER YET WHEN THEY KILL MC SERCH ILL MAKE A SONG ABOUT IT........MC SERCH COME TO MY WHITE NEIGHBERHOOD AND FIND YOURSELF IN MY GLAMOROUS THREE BEDROOM GETO RIGGED APPLEBOTTOM SHIT NEST I CALL HOME...WAKE YOURSELF UP  WHEN YOU GET THERE, YOUR CAREER IS ONLY OVER BECAUSE YOU MADE IT POSSIBLE BITCHHHHHHHHH!
 
Publié par GNARKIEL le dimanche, octobre 29, 2006 - 3:14
[Répondre
the last days of Billy

 
ain't no gettin' up from that. stay down kid, stay down.
 
Publié par the last days of Billy le dimanche, octobre 29, 2006 - 3:58
[Répondre
A's, bitch!
Ryan Cullen

 
To Whom It May or May Not Concern (.....errrr, Sage),

Don't let Serch get under your skin. His wallet, and not his skills, was doing all the talking. No-one ever said Serch wasn't good at what he does (rap), but we're forced to realize that VH1 wanted some ratings and Serch answered his voicemail before The Grouch, El-Producto, Aesop Rock, Sole, Buck65, or yourself did (awwww, shucks).

I had a great time reading your article and you struck a chord with me on almost all of your points. Genres of music are not defined by the color of skin of the person(s) that made it popular: Johnny Cash sang gospel before he sung the blues and whether I stereotype both of those types of music as "black" is between myself and the guitar. Music is music and I'm here, on your website, because I love muzak. I assume that the same goes for the rest of your fans.

As the son of a newspaper reporter and a serious candidate to end up as a journalism major, I appreciate your appreciation for correctly-spelled words and the like. Good grammar is, unfortunately, a lost art form. Spread the word, brother!!!!!!. (<----- see period)

I have a goal of moving to the East Coast so I can open a radio station and use the call letters WGRB (White Guys Rap Better). Long live reverse-racism!

A's 2007, bitches.

 
Publié par A's, bitch! le dimanche, octobre 29, 2006 - 8:06
[Répondre
-Babyface-
Dom Liddle

 

Haha. Okay, I'll admit to being a Serch fan but you made him look ridiculous here (not that that was even necessary, judging by some of the quotes...) A shining beacon of genius as usual Sage, but my guess is Serch won't be paying much attention :(.


 
Publié par -Babyface- le dimanche, octobre 29, 2006 - 12:53
[Répondre
ugly
grant hoskins

 

MC Serch is a bitch. but then again ALL mainstream rappers are.

Ice-T takes it up the ass so hard.


 
Publié par ugly le dimanche, octobre 29, 2006 - 5:52
[Répondre
Sage Francis

 
hey now. Some of y'all are going to a place where I really wasn't taking it. 
 
Publié par Sage Francis le dimanche, octobre 29, 2006 - 5:53
[Répondre
anonymous

 

Hey sage,

I caught this topic from Davey's profile and dropped a few comments over there but now I'm going to flip the coin and drop one here.

Like I said, serch's comments, as a black person, are to me somewhat offensive.I don't need Mc serch patronizing me.WE ALL know that hiphop started in the black and PR hoods of new york, it's irrefutable fact known everywhere from the whitest towns in switzerland to the yellowest prefectures of japan.Mc serch, as I stated before, simply LOVES BLACK PEOPLE, and that love is clouding his mind and seceding it from logical thinking, as love tends to.

 


 
Publié par anonymous le samedi, novembre 04, 2006 - 2:31
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