Friday, March 20, 2015

A rap music primer for k-pop fans who haven't heard Dr. Dre's "Detox"

People seem to like my technical posts, and for ages people have asked me to write a technical post about rap music just for k-pop fans.

rapraprapraprarpapr

Always eager to please, I have done exactly as asked.  Read on and be entertained as Kpopalypse answers all your important questions about rap music and k-pop!

hyominshower


So, what is rap music?

AOA's Jimin knows all about what rap is and is not, because she's listened to Dr. Dre's "Detox" album, and in fact all the answers to all of your rap questions are on this album but only Jimin knows the secrets.  I approached Jimin for an interview but she's not telling anything, so in lieu of this vital information I'll do my best to unravel rap for you.

Rap music is any music with rapping in it.  Rapping is a vocal style.  It refers to talking with a rhythmic meter, essentially making the human voice a rhythmic musical instrument without specific pitch (like a drum) rather than a melodic musical instrument which generates specific pitches (like a piano). This is the defining characteristic of rap - the strict adherence to rhythm matched with the deliberate lack of adherence to specific pitch.

Someone who is using their voice with both defined rhythm and defined specific pitches is not rapping, they are singing.  Let's use our friend Jimin from AOA as an example.  In "Like A Cat", her vocal section from 2:06 is not a rap, because she is hitting specific pitches with her voice, therefore it is sung, because that's what singing is - pitching vocals.  The fact that her part is sung very quickly at a typically rap-style speed does not actually make it a rap.



However Jimin DOES rap in other songs, such as "Get Out" from 2:29:



Rapping being a rhythmic form is usually matched with rhythmic music, although it doesn't have to be - it can be matched with any type of music at all, or even no music at all (also known as "a cappella").  Think of rap as poetry but delivered vocally with a specific defined sense of rhythm, rather than just a free-form "say the words whenever you please" style.  Just like poetry, rap doesn't have to rhyme... although just like poetry, the more popular examples usually do, and in rap music the rhyming is used to deliver syncopation.  More on that later.

Okay, so what is hip-hop then?  Is rap and hip-hop the same thing?  If there are differences, what are they?

Hip-hop is a cultural movement, comprising of the following elements:
  • Rap vocal style
  • Beats or tracks (a generic term for backing tracks that go behind rap vocal, which may or may not include an actual beat, but usually do)
  • Certain styles of DJing (scratching, certain beat-mixing techniques)
  • Beatboxing (mimicking instrumental sounds of drums and other instruments with the voice only)
  • Certain art styles (graffiti art, etc)
  • Certain dance styles (breakdance (b-boying) and other forms)
  • Certain clothing styles (various types of hip-hop fashion)
  • Not showering before going to school
  • Hanging out with friends and high-fiving each other
It could be debated that hip-hop is also a type of political movement, but to anyone who thinks that all I can say to them is that IKON's Bobby probably doesn't know anything about politics and he probably showers less than politically-focused rappers like Immortal Technique therefore you are wrong.

bobbyab

I don't care about this though.  Let's cut to the chase - is [my favourite Korean pop idol] a good rapper or not?  That's all I really wanted to know when I clicked this.  How do I tell?

Never mind if they are a "good rapper", there's a larger question here which is what actually defines a "rapper".

Oh no Kpopalypse, you're not going to give us a boring fucking rap history lecture are you?

Hey, you're the one who begged me for months to write about this boring crap.  I was all ready to write about T-ara vs AOA jelly wrestling, but no, you cunts didn't want that, you said that you wanted a technical trufax rap post, I said I didn't want to write it, and you kept fuckin' asking me about it, so here it is, so now you can fuckin' shut up and deal with it.

Okay.  I'll just be in the other room for a while fapping to those AOA videos.

Rap music as it is currently known first solidified in the USA but the birth of the form actually comes from the Jamaican club and house party scene.  Clubs and parties would have that annoying creepy guy who tries to talk you into going into the club when you walk past (it probably says a lot about Australian culture that in Australia we have a special word in our dialect for this type of person - a "spruiker") and over time the role of this person integrated with the role of the MC or Master of Ceremonies, a term that comes from the Catholic church but basically means "the person who runs the party".  The improvised dialogue that the MC/spruiker would use to entice people to be part of the revelry became more interesting and complex as clubs and parties competed with each other to draw a crowd, as naturally people wanted to be at the party with the best MC where the most fun was being had.  As time went on simple talking was replaced with the rhythmic "toasting" style of vocals, this became more and more popular and then was exported to the USA's urban ghettos via immigration where through the inflections of the American accent it transformed again into the rap style that we know and love/hate today.

Understanding the cultural origins of rap will also help you understand the following points about rap music:
  • Rap music essentially started as a cross between entertainment and advertising, this is why rap music to this day often seems very egocentric to an outsider (and why it could never have evolved in Australia's self-deprecating culture).  "I'm so awesome, you're not" raps are actually very true to the original culture, other permutations like the "political", "gangster/social comment" rap styles as well as the "I love you girl" pop stuff all came later.
  • The competitive spirit of the Jamaican club scene is still present in the competitive spirit of rap music today, hence "diss tracks" where rappers criticise each other on record, and "rap battles".
  • Jamaican macho male culture is commonly sexist and homophobic as shit, and this is still reflected in rap lyrics today, and is also why when worthwhile female MCs do appear in that scene they are no-bullshit as fuck, because they have to be tough to rise above and be heard and taken seriously over all the men pretending to not by gay while secretly tugging each other's dicks.
  • Most importantly of all, a very high emphasis was, and still is, placed on being able to wow the audience with a unique and cleverly timed/insightful/funny lyric or turn of phrase.  This is still the #1 quality that a good rapper must have, and this outweighs every other factor for people involved in that scene by something like a 1000:1 ratio.  Keeping people entertained and maintaining the attention of the listening audience (whether they be in a club, a party or on the other side of a computer screen) with clever lyricism was and still is all about having this quality.
Er.... okay, that's nice.  So where are you going with this?

The final point above - uniqueness and cleverness of the content and timing of the lyric being the #1 most important factor that far outstrips every other consideration - has some important implications for k-pop fans who want to evaluate Korean rap.  Are you ready?

Uh oh.

Firstly: if a rapper didn't compose their own rap, their rapping prowess simply cannot be evaluated as either good or bad.  It's no secret that very, very few Korean idols get to write their own lyrics - most idols have no say in this area at all.  If Jimin from AOA busts out a rap part in her next song that was actually written by a 40 year old guy in a suit in a boardroom committee meeting, it's THAT person's rapping skill that you're evaluating when you say "Jimin is good" or "Jimin is shit"... not Jimin herself.

jimindetoxy

But what about things like vocal tone and breath control, isn't that important?

Of course not, take your favourite k-pop agency's dick out of your ass and think about it for a second.  Eminem has a vocal tone like a rusty gate and is widely considered to be one of the best rappers ever.  Kool G Rap sounds like he's continually gargling marbles, and is also widely considered to be one of the best rappers ever.  The reason why is that both rappers strongly meet the criteria of clever self-composed lyricism.  Rapping is just talking in a rhythm so if you know how to talk with breath control (something we all mastered by about age six), you know how to rap with breath control.  Most rappers who specialise in rap only don't know the first fucking thing about the kind of vocal techniques that singers use, and happily remain ignorant of it because those techniques aren't needed in rapping, which is just talking.  If you can talk, and you have a sense of rhythm, you can put two and two together and therefore perform a rap.  The only rappers who practice vocal technique are the ones who also do a bit of actual singing occasionally as well - pure rappers don't give a shit, and I've never met a single rapper who ONLY rapped who ever underwent any vocal training whatsoever.  Why do you think the "dancer" in a k-pop group always gets the rap parts.  Regard anyone who applies "vocalfag" criteria to rap music as a complete and utter brainless idiot with no clue, or alternatively, a deluded obsessed fool who is just trying to clutch at straws of nothing in order to push their personal bias list onto you.  They're either stupid, delusional, consciously lying, or some combination of these three.

Now you know WHY rappers are considered to not be rappers if they don't write their own material - because delivering the lines takes no technical skill at all whatsoever (besides the technical skill of speech, which everybody reading this has - even that ultra-fast rapping Koreans are oddly in love with isn't that much harder than ultra-fast talking).  Therefore, rapping someone else's raps is actually a really easy thing to do... it's the act of coming up with those raps in the first place which is difficult and the part that requires skill.

But I just love the vocal tone of [my bias] and that's why I like their rapping!

This may be true, but "I like the sound of their voice" isn't the same as "someone has clearly identifiable rap skill".  Liking the way someone sounds when they speak is subjective, and you may indeed love the sound of [your bias] but that doesn't mean they can rap well (or that they can't rap well, for that matter).  Rap skill, because it relies on wit and cleverness, can be measured objectively, much like a comedy sketch which can be measured by the humour quality of the jokes... and you might like shit jokes, but that doesn't make them any less shit, it just means you're a dumbass.  Which brings us to our second point...

I'm not going to like this, either, am I.

It is literally impossible to evaluate a rapper's true skill if you don't speak the same language that they are rapping in.  Not just tricky - impossible, even with subtitles.  To evaluate the true skill of anybody who raps exclusively in Korean, you need to understand Korean fluently... and not just regular Korean speech, but also all the slang and cultural references being used as well as the way words intersect and rhyme, as it's the interplay of rhyming words with their meanings and often double-meanings (which subtitles generally won't convey) which forms part of the cleverness of a good rapper.  This skill is what is known as "rap flow" (a term which has nothing to do with vocalfag stuff).  Allow me to demonstrate using a video that showcases two completely different styles of rap flow in one song, and it's definitely far from my favourite track from anyone involved here that's for sure, but it's a good example just for educational purposes.



At 0:22 DMC from 80s rap superstars RUN-DMC raps.  DMC raps (no doubt deliberately) in the style that he's known for - mostly strict rhyming couplets.  Rhyming words happen in the middle or end of the bar and pretty much nowhere else, and everything is delivered in much the same consistent rhythm.  This sounds dated today but it was the norm for mid-80s rap when RUN-DMC were at their peak.  Rap flow wasn't as advanced then as it is now and while his flow does have a retro charm for those who remember those days, if a new rapper surfaced and rapped only in that style they wouldn't make a dent on today's hip-hop scene.  At 1:38 (after that fucking hideous chorus, what were they thinking) Necro raps.  Necro might be a scumbag like Kpopalypse but he has a much more sophisticated modernised flow by rap standards, with complex syncopated rhymes (not always delivered at the end of each line but chained together at varying points to produce their own rhythm within the rhythm), plus his usual outlandish slang and pop-culture references that fly by pretty quickly and need a few listens to absorb with the context intact even for a fluent English speaker like myself.  Imagine how someone who doesn't even know any English language apart from "hello" "thank you" and "please notice me oppa" would go trying to evaluate Necro's rapping ability in that song - pretty fucking dumb, right?  Now you know how fucking dumb you might look when you throw down your opinion on Korean idol rappers and how great their often basic lines are when you can't even speak the fucking language and therefore have no idea what you're actually talking about.

There's got to be someone in k-pop who I can evaluate the rapping of though, right?  Please, throw me a bone here.


Of course we all know CL is shit by rap standards because she was in that English Dr. Pepper song so we got to hear her rap disastrously in English, in her own words. We know that she writes her own words too because her label is always banging on about what a supposed creative genius she is, and YG Entertainment never lies, so you can totally blame her for this crap:



I bet she showers every day, too.

clnath

Okay, so is that it?  Are you finished making me feel like I've wasted my life now?

Not quite, there's one more point that I should cover which is the idea of "authenticity", often referred to within rap songs as "keeping it real".  Authenticity of the original rap creation is a big thing in rap music and the most severe of insults are reserved for "biters" - people who steal lines and ideas from other rappers, precisely because it's so easy to do.  As covered in the first point, it requires really no special skill beyond grade-school level to deliver a rap line, only to think up a rap line, therefore people who say "I'm a great rapper" while using other people's lines are generally treated as not just intellectual property thieves, but also as musically fraudulent on a basic "you don't actually even have any rap skill" level - someone who might like rap but doesn't understand it or even know what they're doing.  Obviously in a style where almost nobody is writing their own raps (k-pop) authenticity isn't even an issue - people who are interested in rap music dismiss k-pop idol rappers out of hand because they are not the writers of their own material.

The value of "authenticity" in the rap scene goes further than this, it also extends in other directions.  To take just one example, threatening physical violence in rap songs is generally a metaphor for rap battles rather than an actual intention to kick anybody in the head but these lyrics when used in rap gain extra power from the idea that they might be real given the circumstance (2Pac/B.I.G. being the obvious example, but there are others).  Such verbal threats in rap style are often transposed directly over to the world of k-pop idols when the companies are trying to give their idols a bit of modern rap flavour, but in such a scene where idols have to be polite and their behaviour is tightly controlled at all times, this language looks frankly laughable to a rap fan.  The lyrics when delivered by idols lose their double meaning (an invitation to rap battle plus a potential physical threat) and therefore part of the gravity that makes them work in their original context is lost.

jucythr

All values in the rap scene are filtered through the lens of "authenticity" and it's easy to understand why some rappers get hate and some don't if you understand this point.  Vanilla Ice wasn't hated by the rap world because he was white, he was hated by the rap world because he was "fronting" (putting up a false impression): he said in interviews that he was "from the ghetto" when he very obviously wasn't.  Iggy Azaelia isn't hated by rappers today because she's a white Australian, she's hated because she's a white Australian trying to sound like a black American - if she used her own accent most people wouldn't have any problem with her, just like they don't have a problem with Hilltop Hoods who are highly respected.  The race isn't the issue, the lack of authenticity is the issue.  Every Korean idol on the other hand is sitting at roughly Vanilla Ice levels of authenticity, and it shows when they start actually talking about rap music.

jiminill

But what's authenticity got to do with the actual music?  It doesn't affect the way it sounds, I just know when I like the sound of what I hear.

AND THAT IS THE CORRECT ATTITUDE.  WHICH IS WHY YOU SHOULD STOP BANGING ON ABOUT ALL THE OTHER FUCKING SHIT.

It's fine to like what you like (yes, even CL) and dislike what you dislike.  The problem with Korean pop fans is that they feel like they constantly have to make excuses and justify their music taste by "proving" how great their favourite idol is with a bunch of lies, made-up bullshit and terms they don't even understand properly.  You don't have to do this and with Korean rapping idols you can't anyway, because these people are mostly objectively not even rappers by any standards with which proficiency in the style is actually measured.  I personally quite like a lot of raps in k-pop songs, because I like the way they sound, but I don't try to kid myself that these people are "real hip-hop".  You people with your Korean idol rap obsession talking about rapping idols and trying to pull everything apart and be analytical and justify shit are basically comparing a bunch of apples and asking yourselves "which one is the best motorcycle".  Just forget about it, stop making yourself look like an idiot and appreciate an apple as an apple.

hyominapple

37 comments:

  1. How do Australians feel about iggy? lol. And dude i don't know why some kpop fans even care about the rap parts when they don't speak Korean. When i sing kpop songs, I usually only sing the terrible English parts and mumble the rest. Or say things that sound similar. But nice post.

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    1. The average Australian on the street doesn't give a shit about Iggy one way or the other. Obviously the rap scene hates her for reasons stated in the blog. Maybe young pop fans like her, I don't know, I don't follow her doings closely enough to even know what her fanbase is.

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  2. I learnt a lot. And for once I didn't have to read a technical post a minimum of three times to understand it. #feelingpleased

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  3. If this stops the no-stop discussion on who is the better rapper "Unpretty rapstar" that would be fucking great. No matter to what kpop site i go they all are talking about it for like 2 months. I'm not going to see that shit, thank you very much.

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  4. This is why I could never go hiphop, because I think when it comes to making worthwhile statements, 99.99997% of lyrics are shit, including my own. Even songs I really like where I learn the lyrics and sing along, if I sit down and think about them, they aren't worth much to me because they barely scratch the surface of the topics in view. When it comes to making worthwhile statements on anything, I feel that I've only appreciated writers. So, because they suck at anything else, lyrics are almost purely about expressing a feeling rather than saying something substantial on whatever the feeling is about. If I feel like I have caught on to your feeling, that's enough for me. All these social plays and politics people incorporate and judge one against the other is drivel. Now, that does naturally play back into the culture, with all the "you don't know me/that life" and shit talking back and forth on and off tracks, but it's supremely immature due to the structural blockade against proper discourse, and I just can't get into that side of it. Unfortunately, "that side" is perceived as the real/authentic portion, so the more you get into the scene the more it is expected of you and people start to hate you if you're just there to enjoy the expressiveness angle.

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    1. Looking at rap for "worthwhile statements" is like looking in a brothel for a marriage proposal.

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    2. ^ best analogy ever! Also, here's a list of every "political rap" ever : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_conspiracy_theories

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  5. Raps can sometimes include small changes in pitch though. Can this be likened to hitting a different part of a drum kit which can make a different sound?

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    1. Well, ALL sound is pitched in some way because all sound has a frequency. The key word is "specifically". Rapping is not done at a *specific* pitch, like in singing where a certain note has to be hit and the song will sound wrong if that note is not hit. Rap may assume a certain pitch range by default but as soon as rap is specifically pitched to hit a certain note it ceases to be rapping by definition.

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  6. Hey kpopalypse can you name some of your favourite rappers?

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  7. I agree with most of this, but you guys are totally forgetting that flow is just as important as lyrics (maybe a little less, but it's important for the delivery of good lyrics). RAP stands for Rhythm and Poetry, you gotta have both. You need Rhythm to deliver your Poetry, and you need Poetry to get a good Rhythm.
    Examples of shit rhythm/flow: Jace, Bora (though Bora can't even be considered a rapper); Examples of good rhythm/flow: Zico, Rap Monster, Cheetah
    So you CAN partially evaluate how good a rapper is based on if their flow is good. You can't evaluate how good of a lyricist they are, but you can evaluate their ability to actually rap the lyrics.

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    1. Rap is not an acronym, I don't know what cheesy bullshit site you read that from but it's wrong.

      Nothing else you've written contradicts anything in my post.

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    2. I've read that Rhythmically Applied Poetry too: it's on Wikipedia.

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    3. you're asserting that there's nothing to judge if the rapper isn't the creator, but for me (and the other one) flow is certainly something that's guageable, otherwise it wouldn't have taken three years for Taecyeon to go from terrible to merely not very good, or why Kpop academies will take someone who's obviously a poor singer and go "we'll make you the rapper, so let's at least train you to make sure you're not atrocious at it".

      it's just an issue of semantics, when people talk about Kpop rappers they're talking about who has a good flow. like all vocal faggotry it's subjective, but you can still tell good from bad.

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    4. But flow comes from the creator, not the performer. Flow is a compositional construct, not a performance choice.

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    5. A rapper should always have good lyrics before they focus on flow. He's having a good flow is good and can help but if your lyrics are shit then you're not a good rapper regardless of how good your flow is.

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    6. I meant to type Sure instead of he's, I don't know how that happened.

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    7. But good lyrics and good flow are inseperable. I'm not sure people reading this have actually understood what "flow" is, because the concept of "flow" can't be separated from lyrics.

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    8. I know. I said that a bit wrong and conjumbled but I still stand by non-crappy lyrics being a major key.

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  9. I don't understand this obsession with authenticity. So what if Vanilla Ice wasnt from the ghetto? He was playing a role.

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    1. I guess the issue was that he wasn't honest about that he was playing a role. He really did say hand-on-his-heart that he was "from the streets" in interviews and that pissed off a lot of people,

      Personally I agree that the "authenticity" obsession in all music is silly because it doesn't affect the way the music sounds (as I covered). I just brought it up because it helps people understand why certain things are perceived in the way that they are when people talk about rap music and hip-hop.

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  10. So much of K-hip-hop is trying to emulate American hip-hop and it rather seems to lack its own flavour. Not many nations or languages have their own unique flavour or brand as they are just repackaging where most of the successful rap comes from a year or two behind the trends.

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    1. You could say the same with k-[insert any other style here].

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  11. I have never showered before going to school. I guess that makes me a real thug.
    Also my dad got me into Immortal Technique with The Maytr album. I think he's pretty cool.

    In all honesty I think the reason authenticity is so important is because a lot of people feel some sort of connection feeling that someone has went through the same stuff but made it out, and when you take that away then that sort of connection is lost. I care about authenticity to an extent, but at the same time I don't care how authentic Nicki Minaj is because her music is complete garbage and her lyrics are shit imo.

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  12. Another enlightening technical (well, not so technical, more like definitive 'coz if this was too technical, I probably wouldn't read it word for word) article, Kpopalypse! Great job! This totally makes sense, and thinking about this, it kinda gives light to how my country appreciates hip-hop.

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  13. Fuck, marry, kill: Kendrick, Kayne, Lil B

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    1. Fuck kendrick he cute,marry kanye cause the money,kill lil B he cool but aint got no looks or money going for him

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  14. Don't ask me for any rapfagging posts.

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  15. There's a subtle flavour to Korean rap, for example the Americans fight with guns and shit, teh Koreans fight with pillows https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mG1hMKTEV40

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  16. Man I've been waiting for T-ara vs AOA jelly fight forever. And to think what stands in its way is a blog about the only music genre that never interests me in the slightest. Fuck you whoever makes Kpopalypse oppar do this.

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  17. The problem here is that you are applying the traditional definition of rapping (as a musical art form) to something different.

    Kpop is a performance art and that includes rapping. And yes, you can evaluate Kpop rapping on its own merits. Clearly, some Kpop rappers are absolutely horrible and most people will agree. There is a general standard that a lot of people agree on.

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