dumb hot Posted July 7, 2001 Share Posted July 7, 2001 M1 of dead prez / interview Posted by Seditious News () on May 04, 2000 at 18:20:28: M1 of dead prez The debut album by dead prez, Let¹s Get Free (Loud), has received an amount of press attention wildly inconsistent with the impact it¹s making on the national hiphop scene. As far as I can tell, everyone is feeling dead prez. This interview reveals, in part, why few are writing about them. Dead prez is different from all the other acts doing political hiphop in 2000 for two reasons: First, their music is heavier. Let¹s Get Free alters your mental state before a single lyric is uttered, much like the early N.W.A. and Public Enemy albums did. M1, who is from Jamaica and Brooklyn, and his partner stic.man, from Tallahasseeboth rappers who identity as African, not African-Americanmanage to express complex issues in rhymes that don¹t come across corny or forced in the least. It¹s probably the rarest talent in pop. Secondly, these two young men are ready and willing to do the dirty work the conscious hiphoppers of the 80s left behind. Those emcees galvanized the hiphop movement by connecting the music with black power, black nationalism, African-American historical revisionism and the global buying power of non-white consumers. It was a fairly joyous process for all involved. Which is probably why so many political rappers are still stuck on that moment. But to actually go forward with a leftist hiphop cultural revolution, a few more things have to change. The soldiers have to become far more disciplined and unified than they currently are. They have to weed out the radical chic elementall those kids chanting "Fuck you I won¹t do what you tell me" at the Rage Against the Machine concert, directing the sentiment only at their parents and a few hockey-arena security guards. Unlike Rage, dead prez isn¹t letting their white suburban fans think of themselves as victims of oppression. They¹re hardly easier on black upper-middle-class heads, who I imagine enjoyed the almost-10-year respite since someone last excoriated "Uncle Toms" on a hiphop album. Nouveau-riche rap celebrities, comparatively, get a free ride (though they do get scolded en masse in the scathing second verse of "Hip Hop"), prompting my first question for M1. When most rappers talk about seizing power, they¹re talking about making a lot of money, getting executive jobs at record labels, or in Hollywood or in the fashion industry. How do you feel about hiphop seizing that kind of power? Well, we got to. We got to use all mediums. We got to be multimedia. We have to get on the screen where we attack the display of images of us as an inferior people, and the whole mental and psychological attack that comes through radio, tv and press. We have to combat it every way that we can. But that¹s not power to me. I don¹t want to get that twistedthat is not power. I think power, for us, is gonna be the ability to control our lives, whether they regard tv or not. Tv does not, ultimately, bring food, clothing and shelter to our communitiesalthough it can be a conduit to express the need, even the paramount struggle, that if we don¹t get it there will be no peace in our communities or anybody else¹s communities. That¹s what we can use those tools for. They¹re not needed if we have power in our own hands. We would really not need to go to tv and try to kowtow to their standards, do things that amount to "stoop to stand" because a lot of times when you¹re able to stand you are not who you were when you were stooping... By the time we do certain things, try to become actors or whatever, [to the point] where we can express a serious point of view without it being blocked, then we¹re not the same person anymore. We have transformed. That¹s built into the system. How do you feel about seizing power through electoral politics? Any hope there? Unless we can put a point of view on the ballot that begins to make a general cry for food, clothing and shelter for the African community, economic development and social justice for our communities, there¹s no need to vote. There¹s no need for African people or Latino peopleI think that more than anything the vote gets used against us because there¹s no accountability. The people who are elected into office[activists] say, Elect these people into office and make them responsible. The problem is, that¹s backwards. That¹s the tail wagging the dog. You can¹t make them responsible when they already got the vote! What you have to do is run someone who is accountable to us first. Usually, people are accountable to the government first and then to the people. That¹s backwards. That way, we will always get our laws twisted, anything we¹re going for will come back to us defeated. And how do feel about seizing power through armed revolution? Well, I think it¹s gonna have to come through armedthe police are armed. This country was founded on armed revolution. That¹s true. It¹d be messier now than it was then, though. That depends on what side you live on. Forty-one shots is pretty messy. It¹s already messy on our side of the field. If self-defense means that we have to get guns to stop them from shooting us, I¹m not at all opposed to that. I do think that in order to feel safe here, you gotta own a gun. I know I do. But if you¹re going to openly support the armed overthrow of the U.S. government, you¹re not gonna have much of a music career. You realize that, don¹t you? They¹ll shut you down. Yeah, well, you have a point. You do have a point. We have been shut down in the past, but that does not mean we were incorrect. I¹m not saying you were incorrect. Just that if you get shut down there¹s no more dead prez. I¹m not so sure about your revolution, but I know I want to hear another dead prez album. I feel you, and I understand you too, but then what position am I left to take? I guess you can hedge it and say you don¹t rule out armed revolt but you¹re not necessarily for it. I guess that¹s a little wishy-washy. Yeah, it¹s a little wishy-washy! It¹s kinda playing both sides, which is cool, but I have a position which was my position before I came into the music business. I really believe that we can¹t even be called violent in the face of the violence that¹s been inflicted on us. But once you get a mob of people in a revolution, there¹s going to be a lot of innocent blood spilled, not just on the power side, but on the powerless side, too. Are you really ready to be responsible for that? No. My theory is, "More Sweat and Peace, Less Blood and War." That¹s why I¹m on the front lines of issues nowthat¹s why I do what I do. What I know is: Power changing hands doesn¹t happen easily and it won¹t happen without a fight. We have to have power. I can¹t go on living my life this way. I can¹t keep going to jail, I can¹t keep having my people afflicted by crack, undereducated, miseducated. I can¹t continue to live under the welfare system, with no community control over many aspects of our lives. That may be an option for a lot of other people, but I¹ve come to the pointthe point that¹s driven through my musicthat we can¹t take it anymore. I can¹t go that route anymore. I¹ve done as much as I can do. I¹ve gone at it backwards, sold as much crack as I can sell, seen as much crack being soldthat doesn¹t bring power. I seen people get elected to office and then turn their backs on usthat doesn¹t bring power. I know how to get real power. We have to get organized. And I think that when we do become organized, whether we are armed or unarmed, that this U.S. government will come after us in an armed fashion to retaliate. So I just have to be prepared. I¹m very moved by your album and I¹m very moved to hear you say what you just said. But I¹m not black, and my perception as I follow politics is that as moving as I find your message and messages like it that I hear in the hiphop music I love, the black community is still this very reliable voting bloc for the Democratic Party that Al Gore is counting on. If things are really as bad as you sayam I to believe that most black people are just completely deluded? That¹s a misconceptionthat all African people are voting for Al Gore. He can count on a majority of black voters¹ support in every single state. Yeah, you¹re right, that¹s through misrepresentation, and we have been duped. A lot of times, when powerless, people turn to whatever "can work." Right now, voting is an option so I don¹t rule it out. I say, Let¹s run the next Malcolm X. And white people have a place in that. You, yourself, have a place in that. You have a similar relationship to history that I have. How do you mean? Your relationship and mine are congruent. The reason why you live the way you live has determined the way I live. We are directly related. Your legacy has been that of the slavemaster, mine has been the legacy of the slave. I¹m not saying that you¹re proud of that, I¹m saying that everybody has to recognize that. Just by being a light-skinned American, I carry the legacy of the slavemaster? I can see that if you¹re talking about my everyday white privilege, but that¹s not the only legacy of mine. I also have the legacy of the slave, and of the liberator in my blood as well. Okay, well, and I¹m not being racist by saying thisI believe that white people are human beings and deserve to live, believe me, I don¹t know how to express it any other waybut I do know that your legacy has enabled you to live with the benefits that the slavemaster has had over my life. You have to understand, my inability to educate myself, the economic oppression that we endure, has been over 500 years. It didn¹t happen to me last year. I understand if you want to end it. I think that that¹s a humble and progressive statement to make if you say that. But I also know the way you can do it is different than the way I can do it. Because you have ownership of the resources. Your family, and your people who are related in that way have ownership of all my resources that we worked hard to build. The exploitation, this capitalist government, has made sure that it kept that power, through wielding guns, through state laws, state apparatuses, the courtsthat¹s the statement that we¹re putting out. It¹s a serious question that both you and I are confronted with. You have the responsibility to solve it just as much as I do. Just because I¹m standing up making this statement, don¹t think that white people can¹t unite with it. You can, and so can black people are now getting a chance to hear this because those who haven¹t are voting for Al Gore. Once you have the ability to make a decision, well, then it¹s on you. You make a class decision. I hope to be in the whirlwind. I want to be part of the deciding factor. We don¹t claim to know everything, and I don¹t. But I do know that I want to be part of this change. vol 13 no 18 i'm currious to konw what u guys think Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brown twinkie Posted July 7, 2001 Share Posted July 7, 2001 are these the guys that did that bass heavy track about 'fake records' ("i don' t player hate, i just stay awake...")??????? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dumb hot Posted July 7, 2001 Author Share Posted July 7, 2001 eah i don't think so Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brown twinkie Posted July 7, 2001 Share Posted July 7, 2001 "if you check 1,2 my word of advice too you is just relax..."??????? who is this????? "its real hiphop and it won't stop till we get the po-po off the block..."????? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BoB Hope ONER Posted July 7, 2001 Share Posted July 7, 2001 thats dead prez. some love.. some hate. think theyre a fucking.. great group.. hip hop .. and i dont mean.. fucking.. cliche term.. hip hop.. i mean. people.. who live the reality.. of .."hip hop" take that.. how you want.. ...theres been a gap since.. public enemy.. and.. early.. Ice T.. there really needs to be this kind of .. music.. personally. good stuff.. solid.gold. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest fr8lover Posted July 7, 2001 Share Posted July 7, 2001 saw em live on the okayplayer tour... very smart, very politically aware...sort of racist, but i dont hate... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brown twinkie Posted July 7, 2001 Share Posted July 7, 2001 bhoobpe...............thanks... . ...... ...i've only heard that track, i always wondered if it was them.... ....niceness. i'll have to reconnoiter........ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SIELOETTE Posted July 7, 2001 Share Posted July 7, 2001 Believe me when I say im very into hip hop..Its in my face constantly due to roomate musicians with common tastes..but dead prez has always been too angry for me.I just get pissed...I can speak on politics any time any day..But I dont know..Maybe thats the point..Its just not my cup of tea.. they were horrible live.. [This message has been edited by SIELOETTE (edited 07-07-2001).] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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