PREFACE If you''re reading this, no Drake, it''s too late. Rap has moved on. This book cannot be held responsible for or looked to for comment on who is newly canonized or canceled or dearly departed, who''s just been handed a jail sentence or an honorary Ivy League degree, how we''re currently feeling about Kanye West. This book wishes those people the best in whatever awaits them, but it has no insight into the future, which is to say your present. At most it has modest hopes and expectations--that words like opp and twelve will sound as canonically worn-out to your ear as sucker and five-o do to mine, that you have come to lionize Dreezy and Kash Doll and think Desiigner is a typo and need someone to explain the Drake thing (read on)--but it doesn''t know anything beyond its now, the end of 2020. We can''t move through time that way, this book and I, and I bring it up because one of the magical and confounding things about rap music is that somehow it can. This book is, was destined all along to be, the product of a moment: an interval of joyous immersion and contemplation and study that lasted the better part of a decade but whose subject spills past its temporal limits in both directions. My intent was less to write anything definitive or exhaustive than to propose a sort of interpretive mesh whose specific examples--novel vegetal euphemisms for marijuana, best practices for credit card scams--could be replaced intuitively, productively, by fresher material.
"Write like something you don''t mean to be erased but one day know will," as Kevin Young writes in The Grey Album: "then let them try." I wanted to highlight, in between the specifics I did manage to inventory, some things that seem to me to be timeless in rap, transcendent or unchanging or in permanent flux. I wanted to think out loud about why I can''t get them out of my head, about how they work and what they mean about language, that amber in which timelessness is visible when you squint. I finished fussing over the mesh some time in 2018. The world continued to spin. I had written about the weird life some rap lyrics come to lead when commodified beyond context, and about Jay-Z''s wanton borrowings from other people''s raps, and then Jay sued an Australian company called The Little Homie over a book called A B to Jay-Z, which contained the line If you''re having alphabet problems I feel bad for you son, I got 99 problems but my ABCs ain''t one. (The Little Homie pointed out, craftily, that Jay-Z had appropriated those words from Ice-T. You probably know better than I how the case ended.
) I had written about the worrisome trend of criminal courts in America admitting rap lyrics as evidence, and then I learned that rappers in England were getting court orders amounting to five-year censorship sentences. At some point Donald Trump pulled some strings to get A$AP Rocky out of jail in Sweden; later his reelection campaign scored endorsements from Ice Cube and Kodak Black and Lil Wayne, who praised his criminal reform efforts. At some point Kanye, who appears here in a song glorifying the Grammy Awards, tweeted a video of himself pissing on one. At some point opp was an answer in a Times crossword. I could go on listing these screw-turns of complexity, these slippages of reality from where I left it, but my point is that eventually the list will just be this book itself. So it goes. I''ve expanded or nuanced or corrected some things, but even now what follows feels like a time capsule from a time remembered only distantly. At the end of this book I wonder about the notion that we speak a common language in America, about whether we can really take it on faith that we do if "black lives matter" is a controversial sentence and Eric Garner can say I can''t breathe plainly, repeatedly, and still be choked to death by police.
And then this year George Floyd was murdered in the same way, in spite of saying the same words. A grim slippage, a terrible kind of rhyme. By then, and ever since, rap had begun to seem like a smaller and smaller subplot in a story about the world. Has it always been irresponsible to conflate rap with the black experience in America? Is it frivolous to think it can help us learn to understand each other? Maybe, maybe not. But rap is always present, its language, its attitude, its technologies of storytelling and misdirection and economy, the way it dramatizes pleasure and sadness and anger and pain. It finds its way into everything. It''s history telling itself in real time, it''s a telescope and a megaphone. It''s a loop, at least for me, that makes the present that much richer, that much more intelligible.
Floyd was a rapper too, for a time. He didn''t make a career of it, but he made some moves in one of the most magnetic and strange rap scenes of the twentieth century, and if his talents were modest he still fit in perfectly there, sounded buoyant and airy and free even over the glacial grind of a DJ Screw beatscape. The thing is he still sounds that way now, however many years hence. His loss is senseless and tragic, and neither this book nor I need to see the future to know it will still be true at the moment you''re reading this, no matter many new bad things have happened since. No matter how late it''s gotten. But what a joyous, generous, weightless way for his voice to stay alive. What a place to spend forever. dlb, December 2020 ********* WORD MACHINES Coke like a caterpillar, I make butter fly Cam''ron, in Clipse, "Popular Demand (Popeyes)" (2009) ** As promised, we''ll start small.
Poetry, said Mallarmé, is made of words, not ideas; so too is it too with rap. I know I said there was so much more to rap than words, but that was pages ago. We''ve all grown so much since then. Lots of the lyrics that commandeer my rewind button are what you''d call one-liners: they''re self-contained thoughts, single servings of imagery and wit rather than subordinate parts of a larger rhetorical proposition. (Lots of great rap songs, in fact, are sprawling assemblages of essentially unrelated one-liners.) Coke like a caterpillar, I make butter fly is a good example; I''m coming after you like the letter V is another, one that in fact so fully assumes its one-linerness that I''ve forgotten the line it rhymes with. I know it comes toward the end of a seven-minute Midwest-rap posse cut, but I''ve retained little else, and in a way that''s exactly what I''m talking about: one line from a rap song may be a single brick in an entire wall, but one brick can be the reason we take note of the wall in the first place, remember it when we don''t even remember what rhymed with letter V. The funny thing about one-liners--funnier, at times, than the one-liners themselves--is that as a rule they take several lines of explanation to unpack with any precision or utility.
They''re mechanisms that require more energy to assemble than to release. I''m coming after you like the letter V is not a particularly complex construction, meaning-wise: the pronoun you sounds like the letter U, which the letter V comes after in the Roman alphabet, much as one might vengefully come after an enemy, that enemy being you, the pronoun, and voilà, sentence diagrammed, joke autopsied, spring-loaded snake stuffed back into novelty can of mixed nuts. There is all the same a deliberate functionality to it, a specific sequence in which the words, few as they are, have to hit. The ironic part is how many more words you have to throw at it afterwards just to reassemble it. Same, then, with Cam''ron on coke and caterpillars. One line, eight words--you''re supposed to hear seven, but this particular mechanism doesn''t engage until you parse apart the last two. By my count, there are three simultaneous meanings in the second half alone, distinct but overlapping: I sell crack (butter) so quickly it appears to fly away; I make crack fashionable (fly); I turn the ugly act of selling crack into a thing of beauty (a butterfly). I''m already getting ahead of myself.
How did we get to (a)? What makes butter crack? Why not give equal consideration to an interpretive scenario where Cam whiles away a slow day by making macramé butterflies or flinging pats of Land O'' Lakes at passersby? In a word, context. I happen to know that Cam''ron is the capo of the Harlem crack-rap syndicate The Diplomats, and that this line concludes his guest verse on a record by the Virginia crack-rap duo Clipse. (Crack-rap is in no way a dig at either group, by the way, both of which rose to fame and greatness by rapping with tirelessly inventive gusto about selling crack, one convention of doing which is that you almost always call it something else, such as rock or krills or yams or butter.) If you have some inkling of these connections--and it''s not like Cam keeps them a secret in the rest of his verse--you may also surmise that caterpillar pertains in some oblique way to the drug trade, that indeed any unexpected word in a crack-rap lyric will probably bend toward drugs, connotatively speaking, like a flower toward the sun. If you don''t, not to worry: that''s what the word coke is for. So you rewind the thought, turning it over, looking for the seams. How do the two halves of the lyric fit together? Coke is like a caterpillar, and caterpillars become butterflies, so what does coke become? Why would Cam say I make butterfly rather than I make butterflies or I make a butterfly? This is the mechanism starting to work, defamiliarizing the thought in its constituent parts, raising questions you would never think.