"Tha Realness": In Search of Hip-Hop Authenticity
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CUREJ - College Undergraduate Research Electronic Journal
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Hip-Hop
Authenticity
Kitsch
humanities
music
Dolan
Emily
Emily Dolan
Ethnomusicology
Authenticity
Kitsch
humanities
music
Dolan
Emily
Emily Dolan
Ethnomusicology
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Abstract
Since hip-hop’s inception in the late 1970s, there has been a pervasive emphasis, from Rakim’s “I Ain’t No Joke” to Pitch Black’s “Its All Real,” on an emcee’s realness, or authenticity. Why is there such an emphasis on proving oneself to be authentic? How has the notion of an emcee or DJ’s “realness” evolved with the music itself? How have musicologists and sociologists defined authenticity with regard to hip-hop? Are these definitions appropriate? Are they adequate? How has the tradition of sampling other songs shaped the debate on hip-hop authenticity?
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Dolan, Emily
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2007-12-14