Monday, December 9, 2013

Misconceptions of the UFC Final

There are many professional sports in the world we live in today.  Basketball, football, and hockey have been around for over 50 years, while baseball has been around for a century and soccer for centuries.  Even the WWE, if you consider that a sport has been around for a while.  One sport, however, separates itself from the rest, and it has become the newest of them all to be considered one of the best sports of all time: the UFC.  The Ultimate Fighting Championship, or more commonly referred to as the UFC began 20 years ago, and is today one of the most watched sports in the world amongst all other athletic events.   However, despite the gladiator style conflict that takes place in the octagon, minus the pads and lethal weapons of the gladiators of old, something special about these athletes is what makes the sport so popular to so many around the world.  It’s the level of humility, discipline, and mastery of their craft that makes these athletes more than just fighters, but also respectable and humble men, and now women in this international sport.  In a way, the UFC is like a melting pot of cultures, disciplines, styles, and abilities that brings fighters from every country together in the universal language of mixed martial arts, otherwise known as M.M.A.  Many people only see the blood and exchange of attacks in the ring, but it’s what goes on outside of the ring that defines the athletes that make up the UFC and other fighting organizations.  The world of M.M.A. and the UFC are full of humble and very respectable fighters, who despite the imagery of savages going for blood in the ring are actually quite the opposite outside the cage.
Humility is defined as the quality or meaning of being humble.  Humble is defined as showing modest or low estimate of one’s own importance.  This describes not only a handful of the champions of the UFC but also a multitude of other fighters throughout the UFC.  In an article contributed by Jeffery McKinney, 10 of the sports classiest and most respectful fighters are discussed.  One thing all 10 of these fighters have in common, as well as noted in each description, is that they have never talked trash on another fighter in their careers.  Even in the wake of fighting the most arrogant and loud-mouthed opponents in their careers, not a single negative word was spoken from any of these elite combatants.  Of these fighters described, one being a former teacher(Rich Franklin), another being a former U.S. marine(Brian Stan), and the rest having a long career up to today in the sport(Georges St. Pierre), some dating back to around the time the UFC began(Lyoto Machida, Dan Henderson, Forrest Griffin, Antonio Nogueira), it only goes to show the level of class and respect displayed by many fighters in the sport.  
Although only 10 were discussed in this article, another 10 fighters along with those from the other post were chronicled by Matt Molgaard.  These other fighters, though most of them not as successful as the fighters from the McKinney post, were noted to be just as respectful and humble as the others.  This article from Molgaard showed that humility can come from anyone, regardless their rank in the UFC, if they once had a drug addiction(Court Mcgee), or even if they knew they were not the cream of the crop, but they still push themselves with a drive to become the best(Jonathan Brookins), they all have humbly made names for themselves and earned mass respect from fighters and viewers alike.  All of these fighters have another similarity that translates into the humble athletes that they are.  They never underestimate or boast about their own skill.  Prior to UFC 167, Georges St. Pierre was quoted in an article of the Montreal Gazette.  St. Pierre says "There are always going to be challenges," he said. "I'm not above the sport.  In saying this he makes not that he's not the best, or in other words that he’s not the king of the sport and sits upon a thrown that he will never fall off.  He goes on to say, "Everybody's beatable and I always have to keep my head straight and stay humble and train hard."  Besides the excitement of the fights themselves, it's this brand of fighter, this type of athlete that makes the UFC the proud sport it is today.
Now not every fighter is as humble as those mentioned above.  There is always a balance in sports of humble, respectable athletes, and the arrogant, cocky jocks.  You would hope that all champions would be St. Pierre like, but thats not the case for these select fighters.  Scott Harris, a featured columnist on bleacherreport.com noted that Current light heavyweight champion Jon Jones is one of those amongst arrogant champions and former champions, like heavyweight Frank Mir, and one of the pound for pound best fighters of all time, Anderson Silva.  Once the longest reigning champion of the welterweight division, Anderson use to goad all of his opponents into striking first, either by dancing around them, or even mocking them and leaving himself wide open to instigate his opponents.  This arrogance usually wasn't such an issue, until the level of criticism rose after he was knocked out by Chris Weidman earlier in 2013.  Even before his loss, many of his fights as a champion were not exciting or interesting.  There is nothing exciting or interesting about a fight when one of the fighters are dancing around and mocking the other.  Aside from these three, other notable arrogant fighters include welterweights Josh Koscheck and Rory MacDonald, middleweight/light heavyweight Chael Sonnen and Michael Bisping, bantamweight Dominick Cruz, and heavyweight Alistar Overeem.  Many of these as noted earlier partake in a lot of trash talking leading up to their respective fights.  Fighters like Mir, Koscheck, and Sonnen are notorious for talking a lot of smack about thier opponents leading up to their fights.  One example in particular, the fight between Josh Koscheck vs. Georges St. Pierre resulted in Koscheck taking one of the worst beatings in his career in the aftermath of months of talking.  The only enjoyment and satisfaction of these fights is when the arrogant is defeated by the humble.  Maybe its how the match up looks like good vs. evil, and with the good winning that entices so many viewers and fans.  Whether its Champion vs. contender, or even humble vs. arrogant, its these types of match ups that make the fights so much more exciting and interesting, and one of the most watched sports around the world.
               1. http://youtu.be/8ngJ1fPAuGA

           As stated in these three videos,  many people including political commentator Bill O’Reilly view the UFC as barbaric.  That the UFC is comparable to human cockfighting or even pitbull fighting in the first video.  That it is even “repulsive” as one reporter puts it in the first video.  At the end of the first video they pluck a quote from the crowds that flood the UFC pay-per-view events, encouraging “More gore!”  These reporters continue on to referring to fighters of the UFC as openers of blood banks and people whose goal is to open young people’s eyes to extreme amounts of violence.  As these ignorant reporters continue to rant and bash on the sport they overlook what it is they are actually reporting on.  This is fighting.  In the second video, Boxing fan and promoter Lou Dibella  argues that M.M.A. and the UFC is human cockfighting, and that it is not as pure a form of fighting as boxing is.  He is then called out by fight commentator Joe Rogan,  who then explains how UFC is a true form of fighting with all the combat attributes it allows in its fights, such as boxing, wrestling, Jiu-Jitsu, submissions, and other skills in comparison to boxing being limited to only using their hands. Fighting is exactly as its name implies.  It's a match up where two people duke it out, whether its punching, kicking, wrestling, or submissions otherwise referred to as chokes in order to see who is the better of the two.  Rarely ever will a full fight end with either combatant coming out clean and unscathed, or looking as though they did not just go through a one-on-one war.  There is always bound to be blood, cuts, gashes, broken bones, or stitches being put into place by the end of the fight. When the naysayers and opposers of this great sport can look past what’s obvious and bound to happen, such as the violence, they will be able to truly understand what the UFC really is.  How the goal is not to cripple or destroy someone’s well-being through the fight, but the mindset to win as the driving force behind every fighter.  Once people can look past the cover and actually delve deep into the book, as many people will say in other situations. then they can wipe the dirt that covers the true image of M.M.A. and the UFC.
However, the fight is not entirely physical, but equally or more so mental.  Those who watch the fights or other athletic events but have never participated in sport, or at least one at a level of that intensity don't fully understand the war that wages within the minds of athletes such as these. Through wrestling in high school , a coach would preach to me that winning a match was 90% mental and 10% physical, regardless the muscle and endurance needed to persevere and succeed.  Same idea runs true for fighters in the UFC.  In an article from Joe.ie, a fighter named Cathal Pendred explains how important a strong mind is in comparison to a strong body in M.M.A. and the UFC.  He explains, "Walking down to a ring/octagon to face off against another man in a fight is something that requires a lot of training, courage, confidence and a level-head. Of the four things I mentioned, only one is a physical requirement, the others are all mental aspects."  Although it is true that a strong body is likely to withstand pain and punishment far greater than a weaker body will, what surpasses a strong body when its limbs are close to being broken, or a left hook has been delivered to the one spot of the head that would drop any man?  The mind is the only valid answer to this question.  As a fighter himself, Pendred understands more than most this importance in the sport.  As a fighter himself, Pendred has been in these situations numerous times and witnessed countless other occasions where a fighter has lost due to their body and mind failing, as well as occasions where a fighter has won because his body was battered and worn, but the mind pushed on in an effort to obtain victory.  He sums this all up by saying "When your body is beaten, it takes a really strong mind to overcome the natural desire of the body to give up."  The mindset is everything in M.M.A.  Its what separates the champions from the rest.  The mindset to be number one is what drives many of these fighters to compete so fiercely.  Its not that there's a personal vendetta between fighters in the UFC if it becomes outrageously gory, it just symbolizes what fighters will do to win, and what they'll withstand and endure to achieve victory.  This desire, referred to as heart by many athletes, is what makes these fighters more than animals in an 8 sided cage, but more so inspirational and dedicated people who live out their dreams and achieve the goals they’ve had since they were young children.  This desire to win and defeat their opponent’s, these fighters understand is more of a mindset than it is physical.
The UFC is a great sport.  Despite the grueling matches that have been fought to this day it is still safer than Boxing, says Dana White, President of the UFC.  In an article from buddytv.com, White says that “The misconception is, these guys can kick, knee, punch, elbow, slam to the ground, this has to be more violent and dangerous. It's not true.” This being in regard to boxing, he comes back later saying,” people stand in front of each other for 12 rounds, and the goal is to hit each other so hard in the face that one fighter knocks the other unconscious. In the UFC two people can fight, and one could beat the other and win, and never punch the other guy in the head once. Fighters can go right to the ground, start grappling, and pull off a submission. It's not 25, 30 minutes of blows to the head non-stop.”  This being noted, his point very simply is that boxing is just as dangerous and brutal as the UFC.  The fact that in boxing people are being punched in the head multiple times for twelve five minute rounds seems more like human cockfighting or dog fighting than the UFC.  In the UFC however, not one punch has to be thrown to win a fight.  All thats needed is one strong kick anywhere, or a wrestling takedown finished with a choke to win.  That kick could go anywhere, and the opponent can honorably tap out when caught in the choke to avoid passing out.  Not an arm has to be broken, or a serious brain injury could come from a match that goes in these ways.   While major injuries have resulted from boxing, such as deaths and brain trauma in many retired boxers, White further points out that there’s never been a UFC injury more serious than a broken arm.  He even notes that he’s seen worse injuries in high school football games in one of the video from above, a sport that is not near the professional level as boxing or the UFC is, than in the UFC. He humbly acknowledges however, "At the end of the day it's a contact sport and anything can happen."  This justifies and disbands the idea that the fighters of the UFC are savages just looking for blood. Far from it, the gore displayed is just a result of the sport.  The way that tackles and touchdowns are bound to happen in a football game, so is a little blood on the canvas of the octagon in the UFC.
Throughout its 20 year history, the UFC has become one of the most popluar sports around the world.  The UFC has become a melting pot for many skills and diverse backgrounds.  All this diversity amongst the fighters of the UFC is what makes it one of the greatest sports today.  It is not only for that reason however.  The great fights, along with the many humble champions and other fighters like Georges St. Pierre and Brian Stan are what make the sport the way it is today.  The world of M.M.A. and the UFC are full of humble and very respectable fighters, who despite the imagery of savages going for blood in the ring are actually quite the opposite outside the cage.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Misconceptions of the UFC



There are many professional sports in the world we live in today.  Basketball, baseball, football, and hockey have been around for over 50 years, while soccer has been around for centuries.  Even the WWE, if you consider that a sport has been around for a while, but one sport separates itself from the rest, and it is likely the newest of them all to be considered one of the best sport of all time: the UFC.  The Ultimate Fighting Championship, or more commonly referred to as the UFC began 20 years ago, and is today one of the most watched sports in the world amongst all other sports.   However, despite the gladiator style conflict that takes place in the octagon, minus the pads and lethal weapons of the gladiators of old, something special about these athletes is what makes the sport so popular to so many around the world.  It’s the level of humility, discipline, and mastery of their craft that makes these athletes more than just fighters, but also respectable and humble men, and now women in this international sport.  In a way, the UFC is like a melting pot of cultures, disciplines, styles, and abilities that brings fighters from every country together in the universal language of mixed martial arts, otherwise known as M.M.A.  Many people only see the blood and exchange of attacks in the ring, but it’s what goes on outside of the ring that defines the athletes that make up the UFC and other fighting organizations.  The world of M.M.A. and the UFC are full of humble and very respectable fighters, who despite the imagery of savages going for blood in the ring are actually quite the opposite outside the cage.
Humility is defined as the quality or meaning of being humble.  Humble is defined as showing modest or low estimate of one’s own importance.  This describes not only a handful of the champions of the UFC but also a multitude of other fighters throughout the UFC.  In an article contributed by Jeffery McKinney, 10 of the sports classiest and most respectful fighters are discussed.  One thing all 10 of these fighters have in common, as well as noted in each description, is that they have never talked trash on another fighter in their careers.  Even in the wake of fighting the most arrogant and loud-mouthed opponents in their careers, not a single negative word was spoken from any of these elite combatants.  Of these fighters described, one being a former teacher(Rich Franklin), another being a former U.S. marine(Brian Stan), and the rest having a long career up to today in the sport(Georges St. Pierre), some dating back to around the time the UFC began(Lyoto Machida, Dan Henderson, Forrest Griffin, Antonio Nogueira), it only goes to show the level of class and respect displayed by many fighters in the sport.  Although only 10 were discussed in this article, another 10 fighters along with those from the other post were chronicled by Matt Molgaard.  These other fighters, though most of them not as successful as the fighters from the McKinney post, were noted to be just as respectful and humble as the others.  This article from Molgaard showed that humility can come from anyone, regardless their rank in the UFC, if they once had a drug addiction(Court Mcgee), or even if they knew they were not the cream of the crop, but they still push themselves with a drive to become the best(Jonathan Brookins), they all have humbly made names for themselves and earned mass respect from fighters and viewers alike.  All of these fighters have another similarity that translates into the humble athletes that they are.  They never underestimate or boast about their own skill.  Prior to UFC 167, Georges St. Pierre was quoted in an article of the Montreal Gazette.  St. Pierre says "There are always going to be challenges," he said. "I'm not above the sport.  In saying this he makes not that he's not the best, or in other words that he’s not the king of the sport and sits upon a thrown that he will never fall off.  He goes on to say, "Everybody's beatable and I always have to keep my head straight and stay humble and train hard."  Besides the excitement of the fights themselves, it's this brand of fighter, this type of athlete that makes the UFC the proud sport it is today.
                http://youtu.be/8ngJ1fPAuGA
                Now many people say that the UFC is barbaric.  That it is even “repulsive” as one reporter puts it in this video.  At the end of this video they pluck a quote from the crowds that flood the UFC pay-per-view events, encouraging “More gore!”  These reporters continue on to referring to fighters of the UFC as openers of blood banks and people whose goal is to open young people’s eyes to extreme amounts of violence.  As these ignorant reporters continue to rant and bash on the sport they overlook what it is they are actually reporting on.  This is fighting.  Fighting is exactly as its name implies.  It's a match up where two people duke it out, whether its punching, kicking, wrestling, or submissions otherwise referred to as chokes in order to see who is the better of the two.  Rarely ever will a full fight end with either combatant coming out clean and unscathed, or looking as though they did not just go through a one-on-one war.  There is always bound to be blood, cuts, gashes, broken bones, or stitches being put into place by the end of the fight. 
However, the fight is not entirely physical, but equally or more so mental.  In an article from Joe.ie, a fighter named Cathal Pendred explains how important a strong mind is in comparison to a strong body in M.M.A. and the UFC.  He explains, "Walking down to a ring/octagon to face off against another man in a fight is something that requires a lot of training, courage, confidence and a level-head. Of the four things I mentioned, only one is a physical requirement, the others are all mental aspects."  Although it is true that a strong body is likely to withstand pain and punishment far greater than a weaker body will, what surpasses a strong body when its limbs are close to being broken, or a left hook has been delivered to the one spot of the head that would drop any man?  The mind is the only valid answer to this question.  As a fighter himself, Pendred understands more than most this importance in the sport.  As a fighter himself, Pendred has been in these situations numerous times and witnessed countless other occasions where a fighter has lost due to their body and mind failing, as well as occasions where a fighter has won because his body was battered and worn, but the mind pushed on in an effort to obtain victory.  He sums this all up by saying "When your body is beaten, it takes a really strong mind to overcome the natural desire of the body to give up."  The mindset is everything in M.M.A.  Its what separates the champions from the rest.  The mindset to be number one is what drives many of these fighters to compete so fiercely.  Its not that there's a personal vendetta between fighters in the UFC if it becomes outrageously gory, it just symbolizes what fighters will do to win, and what they'll withstand and endure to achieve victory.
The UFC is a great sport.  Despite the grueling matches that have been fought to this day it is still safer than Boxing, says Dana White, President of the UFC.  In an article from buddytv.com, White says that “The misconception is, these guys can kick, knee, punch, elbow, slam to the ground, this has to be more violent and dangerous. It's not true.” This being in regard to boxing, he comes back later saying,” people stand in front of each other for 12 rounds, and the goal is to hit each other so hard in the face that one fighter knocks the other unconscious. In the UFC two people can fight, and one could beat the other and win, and never punch the other guy in the head once. Fighters can go right to the ground, start grappling, and pull off a submission. It's not 25, 30 minutes of blows to the head non-stop.”  This being noted, his point very simply is that boxing is just as dangerous and brutal as the UFC.  While major injuries have resulted from boxing, such as deaths and brain trauma in many retired boxers, White further points out that there’s never been a UFC injury more serious than a broken arm. He humbly acknowledges however, "At the end of the day it's a contact sport and anything can happen."  This justifies and disbands the idea that the fighters of the UFC are savages just looking for blood. Far from it, the gore displayed is just a result of the sport.  The way that tackles and touchdowns are bound to happen in a football game, so is a little blood on the canvas of the octagon in the UFC.
Throughout its 20 year history, the UFC has become one of the most popluar sports around the world.  The UFC has become a melting pot for many skills and diverse backgrounds.  All this diversity amongst the fighters of the UFC is what makes it one of the greatest sports today.  It is not only for that reason however.  The great fights, along with the many humble champions and other fighters like Georges St. Pierre and Brian Stan are what make the sport the way it is today.  The world of M.M.A. and the UFC are full of humble and very respectable fighters, who despite the imagery of savages going for blood in the ring are actually quite the opposite outside the cage.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Thesis

The world of M.M.A. and the UFC are full of humble and very respectable fighters, who despite the imagery of savages going for blood in the ring are actually quite the opposite outside the cage.

Monday, November 11, 2013

The proposal to the final grind

The world of M.M.A. and UFC is full of humble and respectable fighters,both for their mannerisms outside the octagon and the legacies they leave behind, despite the barbaric imagery portrayed within the fights.  In an article about a possible rematch between Anderson Silva and Vitor Belfort, the careers of a handful of fighters are slightly chronicled back from when they first began their careers in the UFC.  In another article,  GSP is described as a humble champion, not an over confident fighter viewed as one of the best pound-for-pound fighters.  I will be successful in arguing this point because it is a very strong interest of mine and I can easily pin-point and recognize the humility, non-barbarian mannerisms that lies behind the brutal head shots, chokes, and knockouts of the individuals who headline the main events that many people pay to watch for enjoyment.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

GSP not about to under-estimate Hendricks

  In this article, an upcoming fight in the UFC welterweight division is discussed.  Reigning champion Georges St. Pierre defends his title against power hitter and wrestler Johny Hendricks.  Although St. Pierre is recognized as one of the greatest pound-for-pound fighters in the world, behind light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones, he still acknowledges that anyone can lose at anytime, in any situation.  He respects the fact that anyone can be defeated no matter who they are, as proven by Anderson Silva, who was considered the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world until he lost a few months ago.   Provided by the article were multiple statistical standpoint for both fighters, all of which were in St. Pierre's favor.  Despite all these advantages given to him, St. Pierre still stands by what he says, as is the essence of true respect amongst fighters in all weight classes: to not think of themselves as invincible against others in their weight class

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Mainstream Musics Decline



            Music plays a huge role in society today.  It's the music in movie soundtracks that sets the mood for scenes, the sounds you hear throughout sporting events, and what you hear blasting from car stereos, ipods, and iphones everywhere you go.  Even though the technology was a little different at its birth, rap and hip-hop music have always been this way.  However, something has changed within the last decade that has in many people's view crippled these forms of music from what made them great in the first place: Lyrical power and quality.  Many people prefer to listen to the older generations of mainstream music than today's because of reasons such as these, and it's a damn shame.  The lyrical power and quality of most mainstream Hip-Hop/Rap music today is weak in comparison to that of the 90’s and early 2000’s because not as much time or thought is put into each song.
           Back in the 90's, also considered "The Golden Era" of hip-hop, many great artists and groups began to flood mainstream music.  These artists would later become inspirations to the mainstream artists of today.   According to hiphoptop10s.com, Wu-Tang Clan, A Tribe Called Quest, and Outkast were some of the strongest groups in hip-hop and rap at the time, as well as immortalized artists such as Biggie Smalls and 2pac, who will forever be remembered in the industry.  What made these artists great however, was their quality of music and lyrical prowess.  Their songs were not compilations of catchy one liners but filled with an abundance of smooth flows and impeccable word-play.  Biggie Smalls "Hypnotize" and "Juicy" were both lyrical master pieces in many people's eyes.  In 'Hypnotize" he fluidly flows from pen to persian in one of his rhymes, even though they don't look like they would sound the same by the way they are written.  He in turn makes this not only a song that was popular in its time, but still a solid piece of work that is respected to this day by those who listen to it for its quality because it is not some modern day catchy tune, but a catchy tune from the past that was very strong lyrically.   In "Juicy", each of his verses were like a river, completely fluid from start to finish.  The lyrical skill put into both of those tracks, as well as the quality of the music itself was what made those songs so great.
           The mainstream music of today is in most cases garbage.  Artists such as Drake are respectable for a handful of songs, but he also contributes to the vast majority of artists today who make their music of catchy one liners and acronyms.  He is one of the few today that could excel lyrically, but he chooses to produce music and short quotes that are honestly over quoted on a daily basis.  But hey, YOLO right?  Other artists out today that contribute to this mainstream massacre, or take over are sort of over hyped.  2 Chainz is another one of those artists who in songs played on the radio today isn't that powerful or talented lyrically, but he can definitely make a catchy line to be used in multiple occasions.  You might notice it some time, a fine female walks down the hall and you might catch a guy break out a couple seconds later like "Look back at, whoa!  Look back at it, whoa!"  Or maybe out of the blue you'll hear something along the lines of "She got a big booty, so I call her big booty".  Its lines like these that fill the air waves and are in my opinion as well as others not that interesting or complex.  A fifth grader could come up with half these lines, that's how simple mainstream songs are becoming as far as some lyrics are concerned.  Artists like Future, who has a song like "Honest" isn't showing much variety in this mainstream hit.  Variety meaning rhyming a word with something other than the same word is not displayed here.  He ends just about every line with "I'm just being honest", and in all honestly, no pun intended, it doesn't show much time or thought put in, which is what looks like is happening to most of mainstream music today.
           Quality and lyrical skill is what truly makes a great song.  As the years have passed however quality has started to disappear.  Where a good song in the 90's had a wide variety of rhymes for every verse, a good song today repeats the same word or phrase repeatedly over the course of a verse or a whole song.  In his first verse of "Juicy", a song from the 90's, B.I.G. drops nine different bars, or a measure from when one set of rhymes starts to when it ends, like "I use to read word up magazine, Salt 'n' Pepa and Heavy D up in the limousine", and doesn't repeat one word to rhyme with the same word once.  An example of these modern day songs where repetition is abused are "Versace" where Drake repeats the same word 5 times for a line, and that same word is repeated throughout the chorus not even half a minute later 18 times.  It may be catchy to some, but as far as quality goes it does show too much.  There is also the matter of songs like "Honest" by Future, who's word choice for each rhyme is always the same.  Songs like these today are overplayed on radio stations and don't hold a candle to the music produced a decade and a half ago.
           Now some may say that the music of today far exceeds the music of the past generations.  They might claim that Biggie and Pac were dope, but Lil’ Wayne, Drake, and Tyga are the best in the game today, overlooking artists such as Kendrick Lamar and Big K.R.I.T. or Joey Badass.  Unfortunately, these claims come from a lot of middle school and high school kids who find little interest in music produced a decade and a half ago.  Upon hours of tedious searching, I could not find one site or source the backed these claims.  Even searching “Modern day Mainstream is great” led me to forums and conversational threads where just about everyone bashed modern day hip hop and rap, referring to it as garbage and similar terms.  A post on a forum, known as GiantBomb.com shares my thoughts exactly.  The post, #10by JazzyJeff states “There’s some good stuff, but it’s mostly garbage. Kind of a shame…”
This video shows a number of different views and takes on how lyricism is or isn't making a comeback into modern music, and how artist such as Lil Wayne and Rick Ross are not the same lyrically as artists such as Kendrick Lamar or Big K.R.I.T.  In the “mainstream bucket” as they mentioned, lyricism is sparse.  They also noted that big mainstream artists like Lil’ Wayne and Rick Ross are not as high on lyricism as people like Kendrick and K.R.I.T. are.  What was stated and has been noted through this paper, was that what’s big in mainstream music and what captures a lot of attention today are hot beats, not so much what’s said or put forth in the lyrical aspect.  This justifies how when I said that the quality of music today is not as solid as what was made in the “Golden Era” of rap and hip-hop music.  They also noted that other artists today like Chief Keef are not as strong lyrically as a Big K.R.I.T. because they did not study or fashion their style of music after older generation rapper like Dr. Dre and Bun B.  Both of these artists are also from the 90’s, verifying that quality wise and lyrically, the 90’s and early 2000’s were stronger in mainstream music.
            There's also a point that the music of today is not being produced or made to the fullest.  In an article called "Why Conscious Rap Does Not Sell", written by ProfessU, rapper Trinidad James discusses how his music is more about the numbers on the check than the message delivered.  Going deeper into the article, this point was proven through the lyrics of long time rap presence, Jay-Z.  The article pulls lyrics from his song "Moment of Clarity":  "Hustlers and boosters embrace me and the music I be making, I dumbed down for my audience to double my dollars, They criticized me for it, yet they all yell “holla”, If skills sold, Truth be told I’d probably be, Lyrically Talib Kweli, Truthfully I wanna rhyme like Common Sense”  Through his lyrics he states that he could rap differently, but it wouldn't provide as much of a profit as if he dumbed down his lyrics as he does now.  By the sound of it, today's music is more about money than it is quality.
           Mainstream music has gone to waste over the last few years.  According to Mike Lynn, a blogger,  "Mainstream music has gone downhill and is gradually getting worse by the day"  Many have noticed that, and a decent sized group has not.  Quality of music is just as important as how catchy it is.  This generation however bypasses the aspect of quality, and as consumers, only look for the freshest beat that catches their attention and a line or phrase that they can over use and pull out in any situation as stated with the 2 Chainz reference earlier.  There isn’t much quality in music if all you’re saying is “Versace, Versace, Versace, Versace, Versace” to make part of a verse, or ending every couple of words in each verse with “I’m just being honest”.  There just isn’t as much thought of power behind most of the lyrics in the music that’s been produced the last few years.  They may have worded it differently through all of their views, but Mike Lynn, #10by JazzyJeff, Mike, Ken, and the others from the video agree that the lyrical power and quality of most mainstream Hip-Hop/Rap music today is weak in comparison to that of the 90’s and early 2000’s because not as much time or thought is put into each song.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Mainstream Music's Decline



             Music plays a huge role in society today.  It's the music in movie soundtracks that sets the mood for scenes, the sounds you hear throughout sporting events, and what you hear blasting from car stereos, ipods, and iphones everywhere you go.  Even though the technology was a little different at its birth, rap and hip-hop music has always been this way.  However, something has changed within the last decade that has in many people's view crippled these forms of music from what made them great in the first place: Lyrical power and quality.  Many people prefer to listen to the older generations of mainstream music than today's because of reasons such as these, and it's a damn shame.  The lyrical power and quality of most mainstream Hip-Hop/Rap music today is weak in comparison to that of the 90’s and early 2000’s because not as much time or thought is put into each song.
            Back in the 90's, also considered "The Golden Era" of hip-hop, many great artists and groups began to flood mainstream music.  These artists would later become inspirations to the mainstream artists of today.   According to HIpHopTop10s.com, Wu-Tang Clan, A Tribe Called Quest, and Outkast were some of the strongest groups in hip-hop and rap at the time, as well as immortalized artists such as Biggie Smalls and 2pac, who will forever be remembered in the industry.  What made these artists great however, was their quality of music and lyrical prowess.  Their songs were not compilations of catchy one liners but filled with an abundance of smooth flows and impeccable word-play.  Biggie Smalls "Hypnotize" and "Juicy" were both lyrical master pieces in many people's eyes.  The lyrical skill put into both of those tracks, as well as the quality of the music itself was what made those songs so great.
            The mainstream music of today is alright at times, but in most cases garbage.  Artists such as Drake are respectable for a handful of songs, but he also contributes to the vast majority of artists today who make their music of catchy one liners and acronyms.  He is one of the few today that could excel lyrically, but he chooses to produce music and short quotes that are honestly over quoted on a daily basis.  But hey, YOLO right?  Other artists out today that contribute to this mainstream massacre, or take over are sort of over hyped.  2 Chainz is another one of those artists who in songs played on the radio today isn't that powerful or talented lyrically, but he can definitely make a catchy line to be used in multiple occasions.  You might notice it some time, a fine female walks down the hall and you might catch a guy break out a couple seconds later like "Look back at, whoa!  Look back at it, whoa!"  Or maybe out of the blue you'll hear something along the lines of "She got a big booty, so I call her big booty".  Its lines like these that fill the air waves and are in my opinion as well as others not that interesting or complex.  A fifth grader could come up with half these lines, that's how simple mainstream songs are becoming as far as some lyrics are concerned.  Artists like Future, who has a song like "Honest" isn't showing much variety in this mainstream hit.  Variety meaning rhyming a word with something other than the same word is not displayed here.  He ends just about every line with "I'm just being honest", and in all honestly, no pun intended, it doesn't show much time or thought put in, which is what looks like is happening to most of mainstream music today.
            Quality and lyrical skill is what truly makes a great song.  As the years have passed however quality has started to disappear.  Where a good song in the 90's had a wide variety of rhymes for every verse, a good song today repeats the same word or phrase repeatedly over the course of a verse or a whole song.  Examples of these songs are "Versace" where Drake repeats the same word 5 times for a line, and that same word is repeated throughout the chorus not even half a minute later 18 times.  It may be catchy to some, but as far as quality goes it does show too much.  There is also the matter of songs like "Honest" by Future, who's word choice for each rhyme is always the same.  Songs like these today are overplayed on radio stations and don't hold a candle to the music produced a decade and a half ago.
            Now some may say that the music of today far exceeds the music of the past generations.  They might claim that Biggie and Pac were dope, but Lil’ Wayne, Drake, and Tyga are the best in the game today, overlooking artists such as Kendrick Lamar and Big K.R.I.T. or Joey Badass.  Unfortunately, these claims come from a lot of middle school and high school kids who find little interest in music produced a decade and a half ago.  Upon hours of tedious searching, I could not find one site or source the backed these claims.  Even searching “Modern day Mainstream is great” led me to forums and conversational threads where just about everyone bashed modern day hip hop and rap, referring to it as garbage and similar terms.  A post on a forum, known as GiantBomb.com shares my thoughts exactly.  The post, #10by JazzyJeff states “There’s some good stuff, but it’s mostly garbage. Kind of a shame…”
This video shows a number of different views and takes on how lyricism is or isn't making a comeback into modern music, and how artist such as Lil Wayne and Rick Ross are not the same lyrically as artists such as Kendrick Lamar or Big K.R.I.T.  In the “mainstream bucket” as they mentioned, lyricism is sparce.  They also noted that big mainstream artists like Lil’ Wayne and Rick Ross are not as high on lyricism as people like Kendrick and K.R.I.T. are.  What was stated and has been noted through this paper, was that what’s big in mainstream music and what captures a lot of attention today are hot beats, not so much what’s said or put forth in the lyrical aspect.  This justifies how when I said that the quality of music today is not as solid as what was made in the “Golden Era” of rap and hip-hop music.  They also noted that other artists today like Chief Keef are not as strong lyrically as a Big K.R.I.T. because they did not study or fashion their style of music after older generation rapper like Dr. Dre and Bun B.  Both of these artists are also from the 90’s, verifying that quality wise and lyrically, the 90’s and early 2000’s were stronger in mainstream music.
            Mainstream music has gone to waste over the last few years.  Many have noticed that, and a decent sized group has not.  Quality of music is just as important as how catchy it is.  This generation however bypasses the aspect of quality, and as consumers, only look for the freshest beat that catches their attention and a line or phrase that they can over use and pull out in any situation as stated with the 2 Chainz reference earlier.  There isn’t much quality in music if all you’re saying is “Versace, Versace, Versace, Versace, Versace” to make part of a verse, or ending every couple of words in each verse with “I’m just being honest”.  There just isn’t as much thought of power behind most of the lyrics in the music that’s been produced the last few years.  The lyrical power and quality of most mainstream Hip-Hop/Rap music today is weak in comparison to that of the 90’s and early 2000’s because not as much time or thought is put into each song.