Stylish piece from The New Yorker on why Dizzee Rascal and The Streets can teach American hip-hop a few lessons, in their sheer artful-dodgerly Britishness:
Despite having invented the English language and those clever TV shows, Britain hasn’t withstood our cultural colonization any better than the rest of the world. In the eighties and nineties, British m.c.s generally sounded like variants of their American counterparts. Having an adorable accent didn’t disguise the fact that you’d borrowed your style from Rakim, or Run-DMC, or Nas. The debt is finally being erased. The music coming out of Birmingham and London today sounds nothing like American hip-hop. You can’t even call it hip-hop—though it wouldn’t exist without hip-hop.Dizzee Rascal provides the intro quote to the Soulitarians chapter of the book: "I come from the Playstation generation... I love creating, creating beats, messing about with flows".
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