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15 Years Ago, Talib Kweli, Mos Def, Common & More Used Hip-Hop for Justice. The Fight Continues.

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Police officers (and law enforcement officials) murdering unarmed people of color has been a resounding issue, especially since the 2012 death of Trayvon Martin. However, while mainstream media has not always looked at the issue that extends back throughout the United Statesā€™ history, other media has. One of those sources for reflection and commentary has been Hip-Hop music.

In the filmĀ Straight Outta Compton, viewers can see the personal experience with the Los Angeles Police Department that prompted an angry Ice Cube to combat racial profiling and police brutality with his opening verse in N.W.A.ā€™s 1988 subversive street anthemĀ ā€œFuck Tha Police.ā€Ā Three years later, for the 1990s,Ā Large Professor and Main Source equated Americaā€™s pastime to police beating down Black people with bats in ā€œJust A Friendly Game Of Baseball.ā€Ā For the 2000s, less than six months into the millennium, that conversation piece wasĀ Hip Hop For Respect.

Just months removed fromĀ Black On Both Sides, the four-song EP (plus instrumentals) was led by Mos Def, Talib Kweli, Pharaohe Monch, and others.Ā Grantland and journalist Thomas Golianopoulos examineĀ the Rawkus Records effort more than 15 years later, with reflective commentary by Kweli, Monch, in addition to Jean Grae and one of the labelā€™s co-founders, Jarret Myer.

ā€œI was inspired by artists who were directly involved in actions through music and beyond music that spoke to the need of the community,ā€ organizer Talib Kweli explains today. Recently, the Brooklyn, New York MC traveled to Ferguson, Missouri with Pharoahe Monch to perform a free concert fundraiser for locals. ā€œI just thought that thatā€™s what youā€™re supposed to be doing.ā€ Throughout his nearly 20-year career, the Black Star/Reflection Eternal/Idle Warship MC has promoted activism, and civic pride. ā€œLocal, state, federal cops have been paid properly / To protect the property /How can I just stand by and watch a man die for nothinā€™ and not react? / The way we spit on this track is how we bustin back,ā€ rapped Kweli on the Organized Noize-produced title track he helped orchestrate. The April 25, 2000 EP released just days after Sean Carroll, Richard Murphy, Edward McMellon and Kenneth Boss were acquitted for the murder of unarmed immigrant Amadou Diallo. On February 4, 1999, Diallo was shot at 41 times, with 19 of those cartridges striking him in the Bronx, New York. A crime scene investigation and report from the officers on duty revealed that Diallo drew a wallet to show officers upon apprehension. The aforementioned NYPD officers believed it was a gun. Thought to be a wanted rapist in the area, Amadou Diallo died an innocent man.

Jean Grae, who at the time had come from underground Hip-Hop collective Natural Resource recalls, ā€œIt absolutely changed the navigation of what some of us as artists chose to start writing about.ā€ Interestingly, Kweli, Yasiin Bey (f/k/a Mos Def) and Rawkus opened a call to the Hip-Hop peers, prompting the title. More than a month before the EP was released, the organizers sent an industry-wide call to recording arms, for those hurt and affected by the climate of policing. In turn, Common, De La Soulā€™s Posdnuos, Kool G Rap, PMD, Flipmode Squadā€™s Rah Digga, Ras Kass, Channel Live, Rockness Monstah, Aesop Rock, El-P, Nine, Wordsworth, J-Live, and others responded. In speaking with Grantland, Kweli recalls being optimistic, given the profile of some of the diverse supporters. While stars of the day like Puff Daddy, Master P, Ma$e and DMX did not show up, plenty of established, charting, and acclaimed voices did.

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