DJ Mark Foggins Samantha Sanders/WEEKEND Hammering the streets for more then ten years, rap music has recently seeped into white-bread America. And, like everything else that eventually invades the mainstream, rap has trickled into Ann Arbor. Weekend 's Donna Iadipaolo spoke with LSA Senior Mark Feggins about deciphering media myths currently harassing rappers, such as Newsweek's March 19 cover story. Earlier this month Feggins, who grew up in Detroit, kicked offed "rap Night" on Tuesdays at the U-Club. He is also spins "everything but country" on his WCBN radio show "Slave to the Rhythm" on Wednesday from 12-3p.m.} Weekend: Why have you important about rap music that its chosen rap as a form of being highlighted in this way expression, whether it may be right now? your show on CBN or "rap Night" F: Well, I think it's because of at the U-Club? Why is it its activist nature right now. important to you? Especially because it's Black Feggins: It has just as much voices - Black people voicing to do with the fact that it's good their concerns, their ideas, their music to dance to as much as it experiences. Its a challenge to the has something to say. Either one establishment. In the same way is a draw. I that punk music mean there's been dance music before, whether it be disco or even ART ATTACK challenged and opened the eyes of the establishment - shocked them with its music. Rap has the same kind of idea, but it's more house, but it hasn't by Donna addressed issues as well as rap seems to be doing these days. W: How does rap address issues more than other dance music? F: Well, by nature of the form. House music has relied on and was influenced by sort of minimalist disco. You know, just basically love songs with more bass. Whereas rap is very engaging. By its nature, it's rap and there's just a lot more to be said. W: Rap has been receiving a lot of attention in the mainstream media these days. Newsweek, for instance, had its cover story on rap last month. What is so ladi paolo whether it be politics, media or other forms of expression. Like Black religion, music is one of the only ways for Blacks to express their feelings to a wide audience. And I think it's unfortunate it has to be limited to music, but that's the chief form of Black expression in the secular world right now. At this point you have to take whatever you can get. And it has made changes. It's encouraged young Blacks to find out more about their culture. Malcolm X is becoming hip. And hopefully it won't end at just rapping to some tune with Malcolm's name in it, more people will feel encouraged to find out who he is. W: So you see rap affecting other areas besides music? F: Definitely. I think more people are expressing themselves and doing what they can for the movement by a heightened awareness. And what it does for Black culture is positive, but its influence on American culture is where the rift starts, especially with those who are worried of its effects. W: Specifically, what kind of effect do you see on Ann Arbor or on campus? Or do you see something about to occur as far the music seen or in relation to activism? F: Well, as far as Ann Arbor is concerned, the whites I've seen here, you know, I have alot of friends that are very much into rap and quote the lines and listen to it. Now as far as repeating what they say, and finding out more, I don't know. Hopefully Blacks are encouraged to find out more. I'm not sure if the whites aren't taking just the spirit of it and enjoying that aspect of it. You know, the anger, the catharsis of it. And that's a concern. I would hope that someone is taking something from the rap. But at the same time I'm not sure if that is happening. W: And you think that should happen? F: Well, I would like to see it happen. Because as I said before, voices for expression are limited. Music and religion and politics, to a very limited extent, are what we have. Thank God there's Spike (Lee). But you can see in that field how limited Black film makers are. Look at the Black film makers that get exposure. I would hope that someone would take something home or be encouraged to try and understand what's going on in the music. Ask questions. What does this song mean? Why do they say that? I think that Black music has been also very positive in that it has opened the door up to the market. In the sense that, if you look at how rock music came about in the fifties the establishment didn't have a hand on the form, the genre. And they weren't able to exploit it. And so what you had were these smaller labels springing up. I think everyone's for diversity in their music, you know, a wider range of music being brought to everyone. In the samrn .ay hat Motown was able to grow because Berry Gordy was more in the trenches to find that music and had the ear for it. In the same way, you find these smaller independent labels like Tommy Boy or Fourth and Broadway becoming successful. And I think that's very positive too. It just opens the market. W: So do you see the market opening up in that way? F: Well, as people become interested in the music they purchase the album. I don't know if everyone's so conscious of the fact that they're buying an independent label's artist as much as record stores are responsive to seeking out these smaller labels. They're stocking more on their shelves then ever before. W: So why don't you talk a little bit more about what you do and how what you play helps this entire process of promoting rap. F: Well, I would like to think that I'm helping in the sense that I'm offering the music. Because even with rap music's tremendous sells and its popularity, its not really offered. I mean you have "Yo MTv raps" for thirty minutes twice a day, or something like that. And radio still plays only the largest rappers, the most popular. So most is still not offered. I'd like to think that I'm giving something to people with its messages too, whether it be rap or hip hop. W: People have said to me that white people shouldn't listen to rap, specifically a group like NWA. What do Blacks mean when they say that about rap music? F: Well, I think that when that's being said it relates to what I was talking about before. Some people listen and only take the anger and emotion out of it and enjoy that, whether its some power chord in rock or whatever. They just get this feeling for it. But they're not interested in what is being talked about. I mean, NWA is telling their experience in Compton. People hear the angst, profanity, and great beats, but I think they rarely look at the album as a testimony to a severe social problem occurring each day for many Blacks. W: Do you think people sometimes misconstrue what rappers are saying? F: Yeah, I think people often take the wrong attitude toward rap. I mean all I would want someone to say if they heard a song that was controversial is to just ask questions. Hopefully, they would be encouraged to seek out what's happening. And I'm not saying that people should take a notebook around with them. But if its something that you're going to speak out about, find out the other side before you spout. And as far as "you shouldn't be listening to..." it doesn't mean that as much as it mean you're not concerned about what we're saying. You're not ready to act on it. You haven't expressed a desire to understand. W: How do you think people generally perceive rap music? F: Well, I don't think rap receives the respect it deserves. I think first of all its very important to know that there's all different kinds of rap. As I'm sure you know, there's party rap not concern about anything. Just comedy silly rap like DJ Jazzy Jeff. And I think its interesting to see that those which are not concerned with issues have been the ones to cross over and make it "In Xar pleasure d Samue "Ifyou' paradise, y United Sta Writer on drugs. I was g Back in F had beenI instinct fo been des myself ch forcing ot lane as I t shockingr drenched smiling fa That a US-1, and Key West on the tw was pretty climbed i to sleep ra staring in station wa I was t had heard zany, free great seaf at the bac Jimmy Bu The bestt be foundi Dublin. T SherlockI figured M, good plac best Marg Whate Key West how to bu Largo onw hue, ands looking b bridges as in your ha can match the conve operate at wait until King in M This wast cured han got to Key out and gi way the n We ch walked d must-drin Duval Str gay bars cf straighter section. T yuppies"t street cor shouting" who stare wearing V t-shirts, L Timberla us, glanci passed by guys all l moustach anthropol bushes w material Half of search DI Margaritav.ille nadu did Kubla Khan a stately are owned by gay people, and they ome decree..." are integrated into the community 1 Coleridge rather than tolerated. For all the talk of liberalism in Key West, there is an re looking for tropical ongoing effort to get the campier you can do no better in the element off the streets. rtes than Key West..." Down at Mallory Square, the street for Let's Go America, also entertainers were gearing up for the night's performance. The motel manager had insisted that we watch the sunset there before going lad to get on the highway. drinking; "the best sunset in ort Lauderdale, my driving America", he said, as if a different sun getting erratic. My normal set in North Dakota. The crowd on r breakneck speed had the pier were mainly tanned college crting me, and I found students and older couples with white ugging along by the beach, legs and enormous wraparound post- her traffic into the passing cataract sunglasses, who were staying ook in the sights - the in the expensive hotels just above the neon colors, the sun pier. We arrived about an hour early, flesh, and the pretty and listened to the juggler go through ces. his routine about six times, by which ll passed when we got to time I was seeing about the same 1 the determination to get to number of suns. They have a fine kicked in again. Overtaking way of embellishing their stories o lane Overseas Highway down there - I was expecting the sun y hairy, and Kara had to do a Mary Lou Retton routine, nto the back seat and gone before it plunged into the ocean. ather than spending the trip Instead, it just dropped as it always to the grilles of oncoming does. The crowd wandered back to gons. the bars, as the juggler counted his hinking over all the things I takings and loudly announced "I I about Key West - wacky, think I got screwed this evening". and easy, footloose, liberal, The evening was still warm, and Food and excellent bars, and we sat outside and watched the action k of my mind was a trip to around Sloppy Joe's. Some cretin iffet's Margaritaville bar. appeared to have done a group deal to Guinness in the world can supply the Greek system with in Donoghue's pub in mopeds. Entire frater1.ties and Che best bitter is at the sororities were cruising down the Holmes in London. I street, honking their horns to largaritaville might be a announce their presence, until they :e to start looking for the reached Sloppy Joe's, where they aritas. crept past the stony-faced Harley ver else they do down in bikers in muted deference. , they definitely understand Occasionally, a couple of bored ild anticipation. From Key bikers would hop on their hogs and wards, the water changes in lurch off down the strip, gunning strange birds with dangerous their engines but watching the caks stare at you from the 25mph speed limit, and giving the you flash by with the wind finger to the men whistling at them ir. There are few things that from the door of the 801 bar. Ten the thrill of trying to get minutes later, they would arrive back, rtible top on a rental car to sweating and revving as if they had 80mph, but Kara made me just pulled an overnighter from San we had pulled into a Burger Fransisco, and back their bikes into arathon. I didn't mind. the neat rows outside the bar. It was the sort of weather that like Venice Beach in California (Let's govers, and by the time we Go America's other "wonderfully y West, I had decided to go wacky" destination) - people who et one, so I could cure it this knew they were supposed to behave text morning, strangely no matter what the ecked into the motel, and incongruities. owntown armed with a list of I heard a cheer and looked up to k-there bars. Carnival-like see a trio of couples on huge Honda eet runs east-west, with the Goldwings hauling motorcycle n the east, becoming trailers, immaculately outfitted in as it ends up in the touristy matching gear, and staying in touch Fwo men (wearing "I hate over radios built into their color- t-shirts) were standing on a coded helmets. They looked like a ner grinning at passers-by, bunch of Star Trek fans who had read "Yeah, we're gay!" at those Zen and the Art of Motorcycle d too long. Three students Maintenance and decided to organize luarnet shades, Greek Week their lives around it. The Harley .L. Bean shorts and bikers were cheering them, for nds were walking in front of reasons that remain unclear - perhaps ng into the gay bars as they because they were the truly wacky . "Jesus!" said one, "these ones, people who had forever ceased ook the same - they all have to be cool, but remained dangerously es!" I half expected an unaware. ogist to jump out of the Sloppy Joe's modestly advertised ith a tape recorder, but none itself as 'Hemingway's favorite bed. watering hole'. Inside, the noise was the businesses in Key West ferocious - the band seemed Ievermined to drown out any conversation, to lure people to the dance floor. Bikers mingled with gay men and women and drunken college students, all sizing up the opposition. A young woman wearing only a pair of shorts and a bikini top three sizes too small for her ample chest sidled onto the floor, and was magically joined by every male college student south of Miami Beach, trying to slow dance with her despite the thumping beat, glad to get a chance to display their heterosexuality. At the bar, a sunburned student spotted two gay men holding their cigarettes the same way he was, and immediately gripped his cigarette between his thumb and forefinger, Clint Eastwood style. Hemingway would have fled back to his cats. The bars showed no signs of closing, and we wandered back to the motel. Along the way, we gave vague directions to hordes of drunks, young and old, gimping through their streets in search of their motels, stopping only to throw up or empty their bladders. At the motel, the car park was empty, although it was three in the morning. We drove down to the beach, and sat on the shore, taking in the fresh air and finishing off some beer we had left from the drive down. Not more than five minutes later, a police car pulled up and a cop climbed out and walked towards us. "Okay, folks, beach is closed. Time to find a room", he said. I looked around as soon as I buried the beer can only to see six students climbing out of the boats behind us on the sand, clutching their sleeping blankets and rubbing their eyes. I laughed, and the cop turned and squinted in our direction. "You too", he said. We trudged back up to the car, which I had unwittingly impaled on the curb. "Let's wait for a bit so he won't notice the car," I said. "Okay," said Kara. "I'll wait in the car." I shuffled around the car, watching the cops beating their night sticks on the parked cars, and sending the occupants off in search of paid accommodation. Kara cracked the door. "Don't worry about the beer cans, I threw them into the back seat", she said. "Shit! They were half-full!" I whispered. I got into the car, and listened to the beer gurgling onto the back seat while the cops manhunted the beach and park for half an hour, When they- finally left, we drove slowly back to the motel in the early dawn. We spent the next day at the beach, where I got severely burned as usual, and spent the afternoon propped up under a tree watching the Park Rangers roaming the beach in search of topless women, a difficult and demanding job. I was in too much pain that evening to go bar- hopping, so I sat in Crazy Daizyz watching the police watching the students and listening to the locals - grumbling about the 'foreigners', as they call tourists. 'Place sure isn't the same as it used to be", said a white haired old man at the bar beside me. "Used to be we had all sorts of arty folk, they'd come here for the peace and quiet. Good folk, too. Great drinkers, great talkers." He smiled and nodded as if he had said the line a thousand times. "Well, they bring good money with them, I suppose", said the barman, nodding at a bunch of students buying postcards across the street. I nodded in agreement. Key West was not a cheap place to get to, or stay in. "You a student then?" the barman asked. I shook my head, and said nothing. "It's a good town for them", he said. "Bands in all the bars, dollar drafts, 99c schapps." "Yeah, all the comforts of home on the beach", I said. He gave me a quizzical look, turned, and rambled off down the bar. I paid up my tab, and walked down to Margaritaville. To my EDUCATION DISCOUNTS AMIGA 500 with 1 Mb RAM, 2 disk drives, color monitor $1696 list With Education Discount-- only $799 AMIGA 2000 with 1 Mb RAM 3 disk drives (two 3.5 one 5.25"), color monitor. IBM XT compatibility -- $3196 list. With Education Discount-- only $1599 OTHER PACKAGES AVAILABLE surpri dingy neon floor' whok like a the b; me. sir", s "I bar", there "You gift sI I t onto t crowd path s from to the and n in the by MMMW successful. W: What about the idea of promoting Afrocentricity? Is that sort of what your talking about in terms of the Black experience? F: Yeah, I think so. I think its encourages the advancement of Blacks. I think after the civil rights movement there was sort of a lag there. And this generation has seen things steadily go down hill during the seventies and eighties. They've looked back at the civil rights movement and I think they've picked there heroes from it and they've become the subject of many songs. 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