The Capri Lounge: Rants and Raves from Rolling Stone's Editors

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A Plea: Save Old School Hip-Hop From VH-1

March 4, 2008 4:37 PM

If you're an old Public Enemy fan, you die a little inside every time a new Flavor of Love spinoff airs on VH-1. Flavor Flav deserves a paycheck in his middle age as much as any veteran rapper – lord knows there are enough out there without one. But in the late Eighties, Flav was part of the most shocking band on the planet, an assault of radical politics and sound that showed Rage Against the Machine how to rage. After Public Enemy, nobody who was paying attention could write-off hip-hop as a minstrel show with a James Brown sample.

For a reminder of the fruitful mid-Eighties hip-hop scene that gave birth to PE, check out the website for the Eyejammie gallery in New York. There's a collection of early-school pictures from writer Harry Allen – PE's original "Media Assassin" – who went to Adelphi University with rapper Chuck D., Flav and Terminator X. Allen is a surprisingly talented documentary-style photographer, and the black-and-white shots show the various members of the band just before they pulled things together: Chuck D. making edits for his radio show, armed only with a pause button; Flav posing for an early PR shot with a guitar, looking like a rap-era Bootsy Collins. (The sense of humor was there – it just didn't come after "Best Week Ever.")

The show has been up since mid-last year, so check it out while it's still there: Bill Adler, the hip-hop historian who has run Eyejammie as a labor of love for the past four years, is going to shut it down in the next couple of months, so he can focus on writing an encyclopedia of hip-hop. And for an extra dose of Eighties hip-hop, check out RS.com's guide to rap's best year ever here.

[Photo: Hutson/Redferns/Retna]


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5 Comments


Schultz | March 6, 2008 3:31 PM

Like punk before it, hip hop is dead and should lie down like its predecessor did rather than recycling old icons into new clowns and trying to sell the crap they produce today as hip hop... or R&B for that matter.

VH1 isn't ruining anything that the public isn't buying... it's just business to them.

Alex | March 5, 2008 9:22 AM

I still cannot believe Flavor of Love even exists. It boggles the mind.

Jon | March 5, 2008 1:47 AM

If hip-hop's best years were in the 80s, maybe it's time for it to go away. Remember this: VH1 couldn't be doing this if Flav didn't want to.

88keys | March 4, 2008 8:36 PM

Can "free" television truly do a show on Hip-Hop that really gets to the core? Not without a cascade of bleeps and heavy editing. C'mon HBO, go do it right.

Will The Thrill | March 4, 2008 6:31 PM

VH1 is definitly ruining Hip Hop, but in more ways than just Flavor of Love. At one point a few months ago, I turned on Hip-Hop Honors and the first thing that I see is T-Pain getting introduced as one of the biggest Hip-Hop stars in the world and performs a song (it was more travesty than song). If this is what VH1 considers as true Hip-Hop, then they be damned.

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