3 FEBRUARY 2001, Page 38

Let's face the music

Robert Lewis believes we ignore the rhythms of rap at our own peril

There isn't a culture in the world that doesn't accord the highest esteem to its original music, just as individuals cherish their favourite music, regardless of its origins.

Of the world's many languages music alone resists translation. Its meaning is as elusive as the wind we cannot clutch but always feel in our midst. It allows us to indulge feelings we would feel ill at ease with if they were expressed in any other language. Music is that friend outside ourselves who understands us as we would like to be understood. No one would think of saying he can't face the literature (poetry), or he can't face the painting. But we all have used the expression: he can't face the music. In the 1920s Irving Berlin wrote a song, recently popularised by Diana KraII, entitled 'Let's Face The Music And Dance'. In both instances, music is substituted for truth.

The music we create or love to listen to is our confession to the world. For every feeling, inchoate or articulate, of anger, rage, unfulfilled longing, insecurity, alienation, there is a musical counterpoint, and is the reason why we listen to music outside our personal preferences. And when new feelings arise as a result of the world changing around us, new music forms come into being through which we can express how we feel about ourselves. Some of the music we think we don't like (rap, hip-hop, acid jazz, techno, house) is perhaps music we haven't understood or don't want to understand — about how people feel about themselves in today's world.

The least interesting thing anyone can say about new music, or any music for that matter, is that he doesn't like it. It takes no effort not to like any number of musical genres that, like Spanish or Chinese, are languages to be learned; a painstaking process that requires time, patience and willingness to meet what is there on its own terms.

So, yes, for the record, I can only scratch the surface of, for example, rap music, that for a rapper is a way of being and transcending. But as someone's confession about how he feels about himself in a world that I am partly responsible for, I am interested because I choose to be.

In the history of music, rap is the precursor of the visual arts equivalent of minimalism. That art and music found their vital pulse in minimalism as the 20th century came to a close is not a coincidence. In the 15th and 16th centuries, when both Renaissance and Baroque art and music offered the senses the greatest variety of expression, it was in direct contrast to the monotony of life, mostly lived in one town or village, where the days predictably blurred into each other over a lifetime. Today, where frenetic change is the new paradigm, we insist that all forms of the arts provide the simplicity and clarity that is lacking in our daily lives. (That literature has yet to discover its equivalent of minimalism may be the reason why it — as opposed to books — is hardly read anymore.) In the words rapport, rap brown, beat the rap, trapped, derape (out of control) we find the word rap. Rap is reverse capitalism, reverse colonialism. Rap is the reflux of Reagan economics. Rap is oblivion. Rap is Prozac wrapped in rapt, based on a sustained, one-note harmonic, that is hardly a melody, that repeats from the outset until the song ends. From America to the Arab quarters in major French cities to Africa and Indonesia, it is listened to worldwide.

Embedded in the ghetto origins of rap is the founding principle that melody is a bourgeois luxury rappers can't afford. For the world's millions that live on the wrong side of the tracks, melody has nothing to do with the wail of sirens, drug addiction, crime, poverty, despair, domestic violence. The repetition in rap might be the rap of someone banging his head against a wall over and over again, protesting against the life he can't get out of, that he doesn't want to lead, that doesn't let him live, that doesn't allow him dignity, self-esteem, a place in a community. Rap is someone's confession about how it feels to be trapped in a no-exit life.

Since none of us is genetically predisposed to create rap, or to be trapped, or derape, how many consecutive negative life experiences does it take to grow a rapper? Is there a significant relationship between the tax law that allows the Reichman family to dump billions of dollars into a taxexempt, off-shore account, and the millions of tax dollars Revenue Canada doesn't have that could be used to counter the ghetto conditions that spawn rap? That rap and its derivations have become part of mainstream popular culture that appeal to have-nots everywhere should come as no surprise. We ignore the foreboding rhythms of rap, that sometimes sound eerily similar to the sound of a machine-gun, at our own peril.

At some point in the life of someone who is no one and nowhere, he'll try anything that promises to dull the brain. And why not? Why should he want to know more about self-loathing that has no cure, about his life that has become everyone's embarrassment. Coming to his rescue, like the endless drone of baul, or alar or sufi music that have lightened the burden of hundreds of millions of India's dispossessed, is rap and its transcendental monotony. It would be self-defeating if this music were complicated. Its function is as straightforward as its structure; and every time it plays it asks: do you have enough of whatever it takes to catch up with that single note, that vibration that hovers like a magic carpet — and lift off and drift away and leave that stinking world behind you — for as long as you can, for as long as the music lasts? In the context of human suffering that most of us cannot begin to fathom, a three-minute pop tune is a joke, an insult, a non sequitor.

Despite the much ballyhooed high-tech revolutions in fibre-optics, and unprecedented wealth the world is apparently generating, in both rich and poor nations the conditions of life are such that millions upon millions of people are drawn to the properties that inhere in a single note that repeats over and over again until the mind goes numb.

Like an explosion scarred into metal, rap has become one of the places where the have-nots gather to register their highoctane confessions to the world. And where prose and poetry fly off the sustained note like sparks in the night, the words are the reason and justification for indulging the music. Through a persistent, unvaried harmonic that connects the culture of unvaried days and rappers to each other, rap culture is serving notice that there are people out there who exist for numbness which is their death wish, that they don't give a damn about themselves — or us. And every time we don't hear them the music plays louder and longer. Eventually something has got to give. And what gives gets on the 6 o'clock news.

Robert Lewis is a contributing editor at Montreal Serai Magazine.