GET 51306 BIG PUN Capital Punishment LP

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

GET 51306 BIG PUN Capital Punishment LP CAPITAL PUNISHMENT SIDE A 1. Intro 2. Beware 3. Super Lyrical 4. Taster’s Choice (Skit) 5. Still Not A Player (feat. Joe) 6. Intermission 7. The Dream Shatterer Big Pun remains on the best rappers ever list to this day. SIDE B Reasons for this weigh largely on his debut 1. Punish Me (feat. Miss Jones) Capital Punishment. His commanding voice and rapid fire delivery make it clear there will never be another Big Pun. Pun 2. Pakinamac Pt. 1 (Skit) was New York. His confidence on the mic made him stand out 3. You Ain’t A Killer among his contemporaries. Similarly, the production -- by a 4. Pakinamac Pt. 2 (Skit) cast of many – remains ever so New York loyal. The close 5. Carribbean Connection (feat. Wyclef) cousins "I'm Not a Player" and "Still Not a Player,” may have 6. Glamourlife been the hits off this album but it is packed with so many more SIDE C that show Pun’s true abilities. 1. Capital Punishment 2. Uncensored (Skit) (feat. Funkmaster Flex) “Beware” and “Dream Shatterer” are great examples of Big 3. I‘m Not A Player Pun at his best, dark cinematic production with just enough 4. Twinz (Deep Cover) (feat. Fat Joe) room to let him breathe fire. On “Twinz (Deep Cover)” Big Pun 5. The Rain & The Sun (Interlude) is trading bars with his mentor Fat Joe over a remake of Dr. (feat. Dead Prez & Prospect) Dre’s classic beat. Here Pun delivers one of his most quoted 6. Boomerang verses that contains among others “Dead in the middle of SIDE D Little Italy little did we know that we riddled some middlemen (feat. Noreaga) who didn't do diddly”. There are numerous guest 1. You Came Up 2. Tres Leches (Triboro Trilogy) appearances, the best of which include afore mentioned Fat (feat. Prodigy & Inspectah Deck) Joe (on several tracks), the Roots' Black Thought on the MC 3. Charlie Rock Shout (Skit) showcase "Super Lyrical," Prodigy and Inspectah Deck on 4. Fast Money "Tres Leches (Triboro Trilogy)," and an extra-insane Busta (feat. Busta Rhymes) Rhymes on "Parental Discretion." 5. Parental Discretion CAT. NO: GET51306-LP UPC: 6 64425 13061 4 STREET: 07/24/15 Web: http://www.getondown.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/getondown Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/getondowntweets YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/getondowntv.
Recommended publications
  • Hip Hop Pedagogies of Black Women Rappers Nichole Ann Guillory Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2005 Schoolin' women: hip hop pedagogies of black women rappers Nichole Ann Guillory Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the Education Commons Recommended Citation Guillory, Nichole Ann, "Schoolin' women: hip hop pedagogies of black women rappers" (2005). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 173. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/173 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. SCHOOLIN’ WOMEN: HIP HOP PEDAGOGIES OF BLACK WOMEN RAPPERS A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of Curriculum and Instruction by Nichole Ann Guillory B.S., Louisiana State University, 1993 M.Ed., University of Louisiana at Lafayette, 1998 May 2005 ©Copyright 2005 Nichole Ann Guillory All Rights Reserved ii For my mother Linda Espree and my grandmother Lovenia Espree iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I am humbled by the continuous encouragement and support I have received from family, friends, and professors. For their prayers and kindness, I will be forever grateful. I offer my sincere thanks to all who made sure I was well fed—mentally, physically, emotionally, and spiritually. I would not have finished this program without my mother’s constant love and steadfast confidence in me.
    [Show full text]
  • Most Requested Songs of 2019
    Top 200 Most Requested Songs Based on millions of requests made through the DJ Intelligence music request system at weddings & parties in 2019 RANK ARTIST SONG 1 Whitney Houston I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me) 2 Mark Ronson Feat. Bruno Mars Uptown Funk 3 Journey Don't Stop Believin' 4 Cupid Cupid Shuffle 5 Neil Diamond Sweet Caroline (Good Times Never Seemed So Good) 6 Walk The Moon Shut Up And Dance 7 Justin Timberlake Can't Stop The Feeling! 8 Earth, Wind & Fire September 9 Usher Feat. Ludacris & Lil' Jon Yeah 10 V.I.C. Wobble 11 DJ Casper Cha Cha Slide 12 Outkast Hey Ya! 13 Black Eyed Peas I Gotta Feeling 14 Bon Jovi Livin' On A Prayer 15 ABBA Dancing Queen 16 Bruno Mars 24k Magic 17 Garth Brooks Friends In Low Places 18 Spice Girls Wannabe 19 AC/DC You Shook Me All Night Long 20 Kenny Loggins Footloose 21 Backstreet Boys Everybody (Backstreet's Back) 22 Isley Brothers Shout 23 B-52's Love Shack 24 Van Morrison Brown Eyed Girl 25 Bruno Mars Marry You 26 Miley Cyrus Party In The U.S.A. 27 Taylor Swift Shake It Off 28 Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee Feat. Justin Bieber Despacito 29 Montell Jordan This Is How We Do It 30 Beatles Twist And Shout 31 Ed Sheeran Thinking Out Loud 32 Sir Mix-A-Lot Baby Got Back 33 Maroon 5 Sugar 34 Ed Sheeran Perfect 35 Def Leppard Pour Some Sugar On Me 36 Killers Mr. Brightside 37 Pharrell Williams Happy 38 Toto Africa 39 Chris Stapleton Tennessee Whiskey 40 Flo Rida Feat.
    [Show full text]
  • Rap in the Context of African-American Cultural Memory Levern G
    Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2006 Empowerment and Enslavement: Rap in the Context of African-American Cultural Memory Levern G. Rollins-Haynes Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES EMPOWERMENT AND ENSLAVEMENT: RAP IN THE CONTEXT OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN CULTURAL MEMORY By LEVERN G. ROLLINS-HAYNES A Dissertation submitted to the Interdisciplinary Program in the Humanities (IPH) in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Degree Awarded: Summer Semester, 2006 The members of the Committee approve the Dissertation of Levern G. Rollins- Haynes defended on June 16, 2006 _____________________________________ Charles Brewer Professor Directing Dissertation _____________________________________ Xiuwen Liu Outside Committee Member _____________________________________ Maricarmen Martinez Committee Member _____________________________________ Frank Gunderson Committee Member Approved: __________________________________________ David Johnson, Chair, Humanities Department __________________________________________ Joseph Travis, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee members. ii This dissertation is dedicated to my husband, Keith; my mother, Richardine; and my belated sister, Deloris. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Very special thanks and love to
    [Show full text]
  • He's Been Fighting for His Career for Near Fifteen Years. Never Afraid of Change, He's Sticking and Moving and Going For
    ! Ü HE’S BEEN FIGHTING FOR HIS CAREER FOR NEAR FIFTEEN YEARS. NEVER AFRAID OF CHANGE, HE’S STICKING AND MOVING " AND GOING FOR HIS. BUT TIME WEARS HARD ON THE BOOGIE DOWN STREETS. HAS HAD HIS HITS, BUT HE’S TAKEN SOME, TOO. SALTER S JEFFERY // IMAGE GOLIANOPOULOS THOMAS WORDS Ü " ! XXL MAGAZINE 000 ! Ü " " t’s seven o’clock in the evening, album past 500,000 in sales, earning him his and recent audience-expanding cameos with and Fat Joe needs a designated first gold plaque. Three years later, in 2001, Jennifer Lopez, Paris Hilton and Ricky Martin, driver. The 36-year-old rapper isn’t when Murder Inc. was dominating hip-hop he J.O.S.E. remains his only platinum record. inebriated, but he drives like Ricky released “What’s Luv?” a frothy Irv Gotti pro- Joe is well aware of his SoundScan struggles. Bobby after one too many Miller duction that propelled Jealous Ones Still Envy “The strangest thing in the whole universe,” Lites. He breaks too suddenly, ac- to platinum status. Today, the South runs hip- he says, “is Fat Joe being a household name, celerates too carelessly and nearly hop, and, of course, Fat Joe has noticed. making the biggest hit records in the history of crashes too often. He’s also eas- “Joe’s good at reading the future,” says mankind, and not selling that many records. It ily distracted by the radio (Nelly Miami-based DJ Khaled, who’s known him for will be reevaluated years from now.” Furtado’s “Promiscuous” brings more than 10 years.
    [Show full text]
  • Not R&ß Airplay
    Billboard. DECEMBER 5, 1998 Billboard DECEMBER 5, 1998 R &B SINGLES A -Z TITLE (Publisher - Licensing Org.) Sheet Music Dist. 96 '98 THUG PARADISE (Michael Moody's Universe. BMI /Jumping Bean, BMVLongitude, BMI) WBM Not R&ß Airplay.. 48 ALL MY LIFE/DONT RUSH RAKE LOVE SLOWLY) (EMI Not R&ß S April, ASCAP/Cord Kayla, ASCAP/Hee Bee Dooinit, ASCAP/2 Singles Compiled from a national sample of airplay supplied by B oadcast Data Systems' Radio Track service. 102 R &B stations Big Prod., ASCAP/WB, ASCAP) HL/WBM Compiled from a national sub-sample of POS (point of sale) equipped key R &B retail stores which report number are electronically monitored 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Songs ranked by gross impressions, computed by cross- 9 ALL THE PLACES (I WILL KISS YOU) (Tenyor, BMVNate of units sold to SoundScan, Inc. This data is used in the Hot R &B Singles chart. referencing exact times of airplay with Arbitron listener data. This data is used in the Hot R &B Singles chart. Love's, BMI/MCA. ASCAP/Jamron, ASCAP/BMG, SoundScan® ASCAP/Slack A.D.. ASCAP) HL "" 53 AS LONG AS I UVE (Mike's Rap, BMI) I'll 34 BETTER DAYS (Base Pipe, ASCAP/Wooptewoo, z w w z w z wx z ,;-1 o o ASCAP/Copyright ControVAmazement, BMI/BB, ASCAP) w x 92 B.O.B.B.Y. (Ramecca, BMVCareers-BMG, BMI) 3 3 o Ñ 3 T , TITLE H a w TITLE v 40 THE BOY IS MINE (EMI Blackwood, BMIBran -Bran, `a TITLE h W TITLE ARTIST (IMPRINT /PROMOTION LABEL) ARTIST (IMPRINT/PROMOTION : 5 3 IT 5 3 LABEL) BMVEMI April, ASCAP/Fred Jerkins III, BMI/Ensign, g 3 ARTIST (IMPRINT /PROMOTION LABEL) g= 5 3 ARTIST (IMPRINT /PROMOTION LABEL) BMVHench, BMI) FIL HEARTBREAK HOTEL 66 BREAKFAST IN BED (Frierson, BMVEMI Blackwood) YESTERDAY 38 I 1 38 36 13 -wool NO.
    [Show full text]
  • Considering the Worthy Sacrifice Hip Hop Artists May Need to Make to Reclaim the Heart of Hip Hop, Its People
    It’s Not Me, It’s You: Considering the Worthy Sacrifice Hip Hop Artists May Need to Make to Reclaim the Heart of Hip Hop, its People by Sharieka Shontae Botex April, 2019 Director of Thesis: Dr. Wendy Sharer Major Department: English The origins of Hip Hop evidence that the art form was intended to provide more than music to listen to, but instead offer art that delivers messages on behalf of people who were not always listened to. My thesis offers an analysis of Jay-Z and J. Cole’s lyrical content and adds to an ongoing discussion of the potential Hip Hop artists have to be effective leaders for the Black community, whose lyrical content can be used to make positive change in society, and how this ability at times can be compromised by creating content that doesn’t evidence this potential or undermines it. Along with this, my work highlights how some of Jay-Z and J. Cole’s lyrical content exhibits their use of some rhetorical strategies and techniques used in social movements and their use of some African American rhetorical practices and strategies. In addition to this, I acknowledge and discuss points in scholarship that connect with my discussion of their lyrical content, or that aided me in proposing what they could consider for future lyrical content. I analyzed six Jay-Z songs and six J. Cole songs, including one song from their earliest released studio album and one from their most recently released studio album. I examined their lyrical content to document responses to the following questions: What issues and topics are discussed in the lyrics; Is money referenced? If so, how; Is there a message of uplift or unity?; What does the artist speak out against?; What lifestyles and habits are promoted?; What guidance is provided?; What problems are mentioned? and What solutions are offered? In my thesis, I explored Jay-Z and J.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Raquel Z. Rivera Hip Hop/ Reggaetón Collection
    Guide to the Raquel Z. Rivera Hip Hop/ Reggaetón Collection Archives of the Puerto Rican Diaspora Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños Hunter College, CUNY 2180 Third Avenue @ 119th St., Rm. 120 New York, New York 10035 (212) 396-7877 www.centropr.hunter.cuny.edu Descriptive Summary Resumen descriptivo Creator: Raquel Z. Rivera, 1972- Creador: Raquel Z. Rivera, 1972- Title: The Raquel Z. Rivera Hip Hop/ Reggaetón Título: The Raquel Z. Rivera Hip Hop/ Reggaetón Collection Collection Inclusive Dates: 1977-2008 Años extremos: 1977-2008 Bulk Dates: 1995-2003 Período principal: 1995-2003 Volume: 9 cubic feet Volumen: 9 pies cùbicos Repository: Archives of the Puerto Rican Diaspora, Repositorio: Archives of the Puerto Rican Diaspora, Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños Abstract: The Raquel Z. Rivera Hip Hop/ Reggaetón Nota de resumen: La Colección de Hip Hop y Collection helps document Puerto Rican contributions Reggaetón de Raquel Z. Rivera, documenta la to the creation and development of hip hop and contribución puertorriqueña a la creación y el reggaetón both in the United States and Puerto Rico. desarrollo del hip hop y el reggaetón tanto en los Highlights of the collection include an extensive Estados Unidos como en Puerto Rico. Parte importante audiocassette and compact disc collection, essays de la colección incluye una extensa compilación de written by Rivera on hip hop and reggaetón and paper cintas de audio y discos compactos, ensayos sobre hip documentation on numerous artists. hop y reggaetón escritos por Rivera y documentación en papel sobre varios artistas. Administrative Information Información administrativa Collection Number: 2005-07 Número de colección: 2005-07 Provenance: Raquel Z.
    [Show full text]
  • Evolution of the Usage of the N-Word in Popular American Rap Music (1990-2019)
    FACULTY OF ARTS Evolution of the Usage of the N-word in Popular American Rap Music (1990-2019) Bachelor's thesis FILIP LEITGEB Supervisor: Jeffrey Alan Vanderziel, B.A. Department of English and American Studies English Language and Literature Brno 2021 EVOLUTION OF THE USAGE OF THE N-WORD IN POPULAR AMERICAN RAP MUSIC (1990- 2019) Bibliografický záznam Autor: Filip Leitgeb Filozofická fakulta Masarykova univerzita Department of English and American Studies Název práce: Evolution of the Usage of the N-word in Popular American Rap Music (1990-2019) Studijní program: FF B-FI Filologie Studijní obor: Chyba! Nenalezen zdroj odkazů. Vedoucí práce: Jeffrey Alan Vanderziel, B.A. Rok: 2021 Počet stran: 126 Klíčová slova: hip-hop, n-word, evolution, usage, rap, American, USA, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s 2 EVOLUTION OF THE USAGE OF THE N-WORD IN POPULAR AMERICAN RAP MUSIC (1990- 2019) Bibliographic record Author: Filip Leitgeb Faculty of Arts Masaryk University Department of English and American Studies Title of Thesis: Evolution of the Usage of the N-word in Popular American Rap Music (1990-2019) Degree Programme: FF B-FI Philology Field of Study: Chyba! Nenalezen zdroj odkazů. Supervisor: Jeffrey Alan Vanderziel, B.A. Year: 2021 Number of Pages: 126 Keywords: hip-hop, n-slovo, vývoj, použití, rap, Spojené státy americké, 1990, 2000, 2019 3 EVOLUTION OF THE USAGE OF THE N-WORD IN POPULAR AMERICAN RAP MUSIC (1990- 2019) Anotace Tato bakalářská práce se zabývá rozborem textů populárních amerických rapových skladeb v letech 1990-2019 za účelem zjištění, jakým způsobem se v nich měnilo pou- žití tzv. n-slov (nigger, nigga, negro) a jejich derivátů.
    [Show full text]
  • Hip-Hop Realness and the White Performer Mickey Hess
    Critical Studies in Media Communication Vol. 22, No. 5, December 2005, pp. 372Á/389 Hip-hop Realness and the White Performer Mickey Hess Hip-hop’s imperatives of authenticity are tied to its representations of African-American identity, and white rap artists negotiate their place within hip-hop culture by responding to this African-American model of the authentic. This article examines the strategies used by white artists such as Vanilla Ice, Eminem, and the Beastie Boys to establish their hip- hop legitimacy and to confront rap music’s representations of whites as socially privileged and therefore not credible within a music form where credibility is often negotiated through an artist’s experiences of social struggle. The authenticating strategies of white artists involve cultural immersion, imitation, and inversion of the rags-to-riches success stories of black rap stars. Keywords: Hip-hop; Rap; Whiteness; Racial Identity; Authenticity; Eminem Although hip-hop music has become a global force, fans and artists continue to frame hip-hop as part of African-American culture. In his discussion of Canadian, Dutch, and French rap Adam Krims (2000) noted the prevailing image of African-American hip-hop as ‘‘real’’ hip-hop.1 African-American artists often extend this image of the authentic to frame hip-hop as a black expressive culture facing appropriation by a white-controlled record industry. This concept of whiteÁ/black interaction has led white artists either to imitate the rags-to-riches narratives of black artists, as Vanilla Ice did in the fabricated biography he released to the press in 1990, or to invert these narratives, as Eminem does to frame his whiteness as part of his struggle to succeed as a hip-hop artist.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 1—Introduction
    NOTES CHAPTER 1—INTRODUCTION 1. See Juan Flores, “Rappin’, Writin’ & Breakin,’” Centro, no. 3 (1988): 34–41; Nelson George, Hip Hop America (New York: Viking, 1998); Steve Hager, Hip Hop: The Illustrated History of Breakdancing, Rapping and Graffiti (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1984); Tricia Rose, Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America (Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press, 1994); David Toop, The Rap Attack 2: African Rap to Global Hip Hop (London: Serpent’s Tail, 1991). 2. Edward Rodríguez, “Sunset Style,” The Ticker, March 6, 1996. 3. Carlito Rodríguez, “The Young Guns of Hip-Hop,” The Source 105 ( June 1998): 146–149. 4. Clyde Valentín, “Big Pun: Puerto Rock Style with a Twist of Black and I’m Proud,” Stress, issue 23 (2000): 48. 5. See Juan Flores, Divided Borders: Essays on Puerto Rican Identity (Hous- ton: Arte Público Press, 1993); Bonnie Urciuoli, Exposing Prejudice: Puerto Rican Experiences of Language, Race and Class (Boulder, CO: West- view Press, 1996). 6. See Manuel Alvarez Nazario, El elemento afronegroide en el español de Puerto Rico (San Juan: Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña,1974); Paul Gilroy, The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (Cam- bridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993); Marshall Stearns, The Story of Jazz (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1958); Robert Farris Thompson, “Hip Hop 101,” in William Eric Perkins, ed., Droppin’ Sci- ence: Critical Essays on Rap Music and Hip Hop Culture (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1996), pp. 211–219; Carlos “Tato” Torres and Ti-Jan Francisco Mbumba Loango, “Cuando la bomba ñama...!:Reli- gious Elements of Afro-Puerto Rican Music,” manuscript 2001.
    [Show full text]
  • How Urban Planners Can Learn from Hip-Hop Music
    More than noise: Employing hip-hop music to inform community development practice By Justin Hollander, PhD Associate Professor Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning Tufts University 97 Talbot Avenue Medford, Massachusetts 02155 USA tel: (617) 627-3394 fax: (617) 627-3377 email: [email protected] http://www.tufts.edu/~jholla03 Jennifer Quinn email: [email protected] Abstract: The quality of information which a community development professional has access to will limit her ability to understand the issues, concerns, and desires of a community. Artistic expression, specifically hip-hop music, can provide a novel level of understanding of community dynamics to community development practice and research. This research established a methodology that would enable practitioners and researchers to effectively extract relevant details embedded within hip-hop music. We employed a microanalysis approach to study 100 hip-hop songs to extract the relevant themes and codes. We found key relationships in the music between the artists and how they relate to their physical surroundings. Keywords: community art; hip-hop; microanalysis; practitioners 1 More than noise: Employing hip-hop music to inform community development practice Sometimes the best way for a community development professional to understand what is happening in a community is to pay attention to the kind of music community members are listening to. Community development revolves around many complex, multifaceted problems, and gaining insight into those problems—what ordinary people in a community are facing—can be daunting. Conventionally, government censuses, academic journals, anecdotal observations, and real estate trends are used to establish a base understanding of an issue or problem facing a community.
    [Show full text]
  • Journal of Hip Hop Studies
    et al.: Journal of Hip Hop Studies Published by VCU Scholars Compass, 2017 1 Journal of Hip Hop Studies, Vol. 4 [2017], Iss. 1, Art. 1 Editor in Chief: Daniel White Hodge, North Park University Senior Editorial Advisory Board: Anthony Pinn, Rice University James Paterson, Lehigh University Book Review Editor: Gabriel B. Tait, Arkansas State University Associate Editors: Cassandra Chaney, Louisiana State University Jeffrey L. Coleman, St. Mary’s College of Maryland Monica Miller, Lehigh University Associate & Copy Editor: Travis Harris, Doctoral Candidate, College of William and Mary Editorial Board: Dr. Rachelle Ankney, North Park University Dr. Shanté Paradigm Smalls, St. John’s University (NYC) Dr. Jim Dekker, Cornerstone University Ms. Martha Diaz, New York University Mr. Earle Fisher, Rhodes College/Abyssinian Baptist Church, United States Mr. Jon Gill, Claremont University Dr. Daymond Glenn, Warner Pacific College Dr. Deshonna Collier-Goubil, Biola University Dr. Kamasi Hill, Interdenominational Theological Center Dr. Andre Johnson, Memphis Theological Seminary Dr. David Leonard, Washington State University Dr. Terry Lindsay, North Park University Ms. Velda Love, North Park University Dr. Anthony J. Nocella II, Hamline University Dr. Priya Parmar, SUNY Brooklyn, New York Dr. Soong-Chan Rah, North Park University Dr. Rupert Simms, North Park University Dr. Darron Smith, University of Tennessee Health Science Center Dr. Jules Thompson, University Minnesota, Twin Cities Dr. Mary Trujillo, North Park University Dr. Edgar Tyson, Fordham University Dr. Ebony A. Utley, California State University Long Beach, United States Dr. Don C. Sawyer III, Quinnipiac University https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/jhhs/vol4/iss1/1 2 et al.: Journal of Hip Hop Studies Sponsored By: North Park Universities Center for Youth Ministry Studies (http://www.northpark.edu/Centers/Center-for-Youth-Ministry-Studies) Save The Kids Foundation (http://savethekidsgroup.org/) Published by VCU Scholars Compass, 2017 3 Journal of Hip Hop Studies, Vol.
    [Show full text]