Page 8- The Michigan Daily -Thursday, November 9, 1989 End of the beginning Rap on the go from here on out BY FORREST GREEN III Dope, NWA, Tone Loc, Kings of airplay, they went platinum. Pressure, Special Ed, De La Soul Through this hyperactivity, or rather W HEN some think about Rap, a and the D.O.C. all released first al- hyperconformism, NWA can be few cliches come to mind, some of bums, as will the Digital Under- loosely defined as "super yuppies": them even stereotypical: maybe ground and A Tribe Called Quest. societal villians, but yet respected leather jackets and pistol,:,mAybe an And altbough Public Enemy has figures of fame and popularity. obese beat box make percussive managedto capure massive popular- Meanwhikrapp0.p sar Eazy-E jets sounds with his mouth The result-I the fkind imist pop acts woul Up the pop charts by boasting and ing thought is that rap is k, bor- il for) NWA urr0 ty.have the lamorizing Back-oh-Black crime, ing, and on the way Ot. . p ight - they are the big thing nd crossig over to a mostly white The last upsur efw rap that rw, the dud, i you:will They are audience If W e "super yup- generated real was the tly g their 15minutes. pies," then. RazyE can only be class of '87: Public Enemy, Ice-T, At overtime. "super bourgeois." How's that for a Eric B. and Rakim and Boogie Down De La Soul cracked the ideologi- fad? Productions all had debut albums, cal st ru frapawided re- and rap gangsters NWA released their lead what t rviewr w ldall And speaking of pop charts, the first single, the "Dope Man/8-Ball the fst truly effeiiv "rap 13llad": rap pantheon seems to have split in Junky" 12". Although three of these " yeK w," sam e an||taed| this regard as well. While groups acts broke new ground with militant fro Steely o po r like Heavy D. and the Boyz and the lyrical content and political com- of 'dye Krw :that besides being aforementioned get over by doing mentary, the rap scene was in a bit a truly charng track, it compro- their own thing, another set raps al- of a quagmire; loaded down with all mises neither the emotional value of most exclusively for the pop charts. sorts of ten cent M.C. crews trying a ballad or the true personality of the For example, notice the frightening to out-bass each other, and r ''i"neveia a rity between "Bust a Move" fiercely competitive. Sami ie the id "I adVild Thing," both top-ten hits. hadn't yet becomea natural craze, L e by Li. Jf nthe other hand, Teddy Riley, and remixing was breaking new