So here we are – in the age of everything Nicki Minaj, and not too
far removed from when it was all about Foxy or Kim. Female rappers have
always had a place, but never quite seem to stay in first place. In a
male-dominated genre, it seems harder to find a female artist who keeps
her street and radio marketability, without being too far left field.
R&B seems to give fans more covered ground than rap does; more of
those women seem to give off intelligence, modest sexuality, and
strength at the same time.
Maybe Hip-Hop should take notes and make a fresh start back to where it began.
For
most, the ’80s stood out as a period where ladies went outside their
usual box and began to find a voice in rap. Unlike some of the newer
generation of ladies in Hip-Hop, they weren’t automatically stuck on all
things sex or fashion – they conveyed real messages like their male
counterparts. Many may recall Roxanne Shonte’s “Roxanne’s Revenge”,
which was a diss to the original “Roxanne Roxanne” record by UTFO. She
started a powerful movement for Hip-Hop. Other artists began to surface
such as Salt N Pepa, one of rap’s first female crews. They also started
out with a response record. In this case it was “The Show Stopper”,
which played off of Doug E Fresh and Slick Rick’s uber-classic, “The
Show”.
Around the same time, artists peaked in their own way and positioned
themselves as lyricists to watch for. They took individual approaches
that fans found appealing, simple, and more relatable. Some examples are
MC Lyte with the hardcore, pull-no-punches role, and Queen Latifah as
the strong, empowered woman. They gave listeners real insight into a
woman’s massive potential in rhyming. They were followed by Lauryn Hill,
Missy Elliott, and Eve, to name a few, all creating different forms of
success and originality, while remaining true staples of quality. That
formula, as of late, seems harder to come by.
The voices of women can’t be limited to that of a particular artist
or group, but the masses shouldn’t get stuck with the usual,
cookie-cutter types that often make it to the mainstream. Female MCs who
break the mold do exist. The fans are waiting for a real everyday woman
with raw talent, minus the typical expectations put on her craft.
The ones they once heard more of. The ones from around the way.
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