Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, please, 2020: Induct more women.
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Nipsey Hussle in Anaheim, Calif., May 16, 2015.
(Earl Gibson III/WireImage/Getty Images)
Monday - April 01, 2019 Mon - 04/01/19
rantnrave:// He was open—and thoughtful—about his teenage years in the Crips and he made it one of the themes of his music. He was murdered Sunday, not far from where he spent those years, in what appeared to be a premeditated gang-related shooting, according to a LOS ANGELES TIMES law enforcement source. Feel free to stop there if you want to miss the entire point of NIPSEY HUSSLE's life as a self-made artist, businessman and tech entrepreneur who rose up from the streets of South LA, never left, and spent most of his tragically short adult life giving back everything he could. He wanted kids in his neighborhood to have a better start than he had. A year ago, he was opening a STEM center and co-working space in LA's Crenshaw district. A month ago he was at the GRAMMY AWARDS, a Best Rap Album nominee for a major-label debut that followed a decade-plus of hustling mixtapes in ways that every other rapper wish they'd thought of first. On the day of his death, he was at his high-tech clothing store (the store, not the clothing, had the tech) on Slauson Avenue, on a block where he owned several other stores. He wasn't quite a bonafide hip-hop star yet. He was also much more than hip-hop, a driven, forward-thinking, community hero. "R.I.P Nipsey the solid morals you stood on and your legacy will last 4L!!," 21 SAVAGE tweeted Sunday. "My spirit is shaken," RIHANNA tweeted. Asked comedian ZACK FOX: "why are y’all shootin at the folks who put their energy and wealth back into the community." Why indeed. Nipsey Hussle is the third hip-hop artist I'm aware of who's been shot to death in 2018, following KEVIN FRET and LIL MISTER. There were at least seven of note in 2017, including local stars like Pittsburgh's JIMMY WOPO and Baltimore's NICK BREED and international ones like XXXTENTACION. (That's based on my ongoing list of music passings, which I'm pretty good about keeping up, but it's quite possible I missed one or two.) It's great—it's important—that the music business is talking about mental health and opioids and encouraging artists to speak out, speak up and seek help. The music business should be talking about this, too. This is a crisis that's taking young artists' lives at a horrifying pace. And not just artists. "We lost more than a rapper today," eulogized DAVID DENNIS JR. in the UNDEFEATED. "We lost someone who loved us." RIP... "I remember distinctly saying to myself, how can I even take this awards ceremony seriously if they’ll open their doors to X, Y and Z and not acknowledge the CURE," TRENT REZNOR said Friday night, proving that rock stars have pretty much the same opinion of the ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME as you do (though you may end your sentence with a different artist; there are many, many options). Reznor was speaking at the Hall's induction ceremony, inducting the very solution to his own complaint. "Let’s just say," he concluded, "I’ve never been as happy to eat my words as I was tonight"... Here's a list of women the Hall should consider inducting next year, along with a cogent argument for why it should consider nothing but women. I co-sign 100 percent, though I would like to add the SHANGRI-LA's to the list if I may... COACHELLA is getting religion this year, in the form of KANYE WEST's Sunday Service... RIP early rock songwriter DAVID WHITE and influential ticketing exec SHELLEY LAZAR.
- Matty Karas, curator
f-f-f-foolin'
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MUSIC OF THE DAY
YouTube
"Crenshaw and Slauson"
Nipsey Hussle
He was murdered steps away from this intersection. RIP.
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