Hip Hop is Far Healthier at 50 Than I Saw Coming

And I couldn’t be more happy to admit I was wrong — and even happier I was.

Brian Brewington

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Photo by Gordon Cowie on Unsplash

Sometime in what I want to say must’ve been 2016 I wrote a post, personal essay, or better-described opinion piece, about how I felt about the state of hip hop as it stood day of publishing. I wrote it for me. It’s what was on my mind, irrevocably at the time, not just from the music I was hearing daring and bold enough to call itself rap or real hip-hop at that seemingly low point or valley of a genre I’ve loved nearly as long as I’ve lived, but also what some weren’t doing. Some weren't conforming and thought for themselves.

It was love at first listen when it came to records like Bone Thugz N Harmony’s classic Crossroads or 2Pac’s Hit Em’ Up (both of which were equally the first songs that made me fall in love with hip hop as a whole) — or the once-in-a-lifetime generational talent like Eminem bursting on the scene less than five years after the tragic murders of both 2pac and Biggie.

Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, and even legendary executives like Jimmy Iovine among others backing him helped — but damn if Eminem didn’t bring it, and still does even though he's easily one of rap’s elder statesmen at this point, and I say that as a superfan putting it the only way I’m willing to, respectfully…

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Brian Brewington
Brian Brewington

Written by Brian Brewington

Writing About the Human Condition, via My Thoughts, Observations, Experiences, and Opinions — Founder of Journal of Journeys and BRB INC ©

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