Lil’ Wayne And Boundaries
The line in question appeared on Future‘s “Karate Chop (Remix)” and though Wayne has yet to speak on the controversy, Future assures that the Young Money superstar meant no ill will. “It was a hot song, we did it from a good place with great intentions, just to add some life on to the song,” Future told MTV News on Friday night, while he was out in Houston, Texas shooting a music video with Trae tha Truth. “The record it was done from a good place, good art, he ain’t have no bad intentions when he was thinking about it like that.”
That didn’t help, and it cleared nothing up. What would, though? Even using the just murderer’s name, Roy Bryant, would still invoke the victim. Sullying Till in this way is pretty much like telling a rape victim that they shouldn’t have dressed the way they did: a tasteless re-victimization.
It’s not just that the line was in bad taste because bad taste actually helps some music achieve some memorable lyrics. Especially ones dealing with sex. Look to the opening line of Lana Del Rey’s “Cola” (totally NSFW), and a lot of us are familiar with NIN’s “Closer” (absolutely NSFW)–these are at once tasteless and sexual and largely inoffensive (sexual morality notwithstanding). Lana is talking about her own private parts, and with “Closer”:
You let me violate you, you let me desecrate you
You let me penetrate you, you let me complicate you
You can have my isolation, you can have the hate that it brings
You can have my absence of faith, you can have my everything
Trent makes sure to include permissive words in every line. Whether who he offers it to accept it is another story, but “you let me” and “you can have” contrast with the way Lil’ Wayne invokes the situation of Emmett Till, a moment in history completely absolved of permission.
Some of you reading this may think those songs are pretty problematic as well. Maybe they are; a lot of what I do on this site is thinking out loud, but I personally don’t think they are for the reasons I mentioned. Also, in regards to Del Rey, Reznor, and Lil’ Wayne’s lyrics, I’m trying to understand this need we artists to say something through an image or a lyric that grabs your audience by the shoulders and gives them a shake.
Epic has since profusely apologized and said that they would make efforts to remove the offending lyric. And they did a good job of it, too, because I have been pretty much unable to find a version of the song where that line is clearly audible–that is, until I went to Hot New Hip Hop and found it. This decision by Epic to swiftly delete the lyric from the song may invoke discussions on free speech. I did think about free speech while writing this but, while I did, I also was thinking of Till’s family and his memory.
If this were a broader discussion on the appropriation of our community’s tragedies in music, I would bring the n-word’s tenure in rap into this. After all, so many rappers (and comedians, grumble) toss that word around like lyrical confetti. And “Karate Chop” (again, that version has the line in it) features the n-word no less than fifteen times. But there are plenty of discussions, especially on this site, that deal with that issue. My main goal besides telling you what happened, of course, was to ruminate on the whole situation: the equation of violence to sex, bad taste versus unacceptable bad taste, and the thought process of the artist. Or as I have found out, the lack thereof.
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