Hip Hop Is Dead (song) explained

Hip Hop Is Dead
Cover:Nas-hiphopisdead28200629.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Nas featuring will.i.am
Album:Hip Hop Is Dead
Released:November 5, 2006 (U.S.)
January 29, 2007 (UK)
Recorded:2006
Length:3:45
Producer:will.i.am
Chronology:Nas
Prev Title:Blindfold Me
Prev Year:2006
Next Title:Can't Forget About You
Next Year:2006

"Hip Hop Is Dead" is the first and title single taken from Nas' 2006 album of the same name. It is produced by and features will.i.am. It peaked at number 48 on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart,[1] as well as number 41 on the Billboard Hot 100. On December 31, 2007, the music video for "Hip Hop Is Dead" appeared at number 93 on BET's Notarized: Top 100 Videos of 2007 countdown, even though the video was released in December 2006.

Overview

The lyrics deal with the idea of hip-hop's death as artistically viable music, as explained below:

Nas decries hip hop's commercialization and pledges to stay true to its origins, as in the last line of verse 1, where Nas mentions MC Shan and MC Ren, by saying "So nigga, who's your top ten, is it MC Shan is it MC Ren." Nas also mentions NBA commissioner David Stern.

Original samples

"Hip Hop Is Dead" contains samples of "Apache" performed by the Incredible Bongo Band, and their cover version of "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida", originally performed by Iron Butterfly. Nas previously used the same sample on "Thief's Theme". In the second verse Nas uses the line "the bigger the cap the bigger the peelin'" which was used in Ice Cube's tracks "Steady Mobbin'" and "No Vaseline" off his 1991 album Death Certificate.

Censorship

On the album, both original and edited, the lyrics have been altered to remove profanities and gun references. The parts of the song when he says the word "nigga," that term is removed and replaced by other words, but it still keeps some words which are censored, including "ganja". The original one can also be heard censored, when Nas says a profanity, the disc is scratched on words like "AK, ganja, nigga and ass" but has less censored words than the censored version, which blanks out the profanity. Some lines are changed into another line because it originally had profanity in it, when Nas says the line "Rich ass niggas is ridin' with three llamas", it is changed to "Quick fast trigger fingers on the llama". Also when Nas says the line "Cuz we love to talk on ass we gettin'" to "Cuz we love to talk on nasty chickens". The unedited version can be found on various mixtapes. The main part of the song that is constantly changed is the hook. The different versions of the hook are:

"If hip hop should die before I wake / I'll put an extended clip inside of my AK / Roll to every station, murder the DJ / Roll to every station, murder the DJ"

"If hip hop should die before I wake / I'll put/load an extended clip and body 'em all day / Roll to every station, wreck the DJ / Roll to every station, wreck the DJ"

For the MTV version, "clip and body 'em" is censored, along with words like smoke, die, grindin', hittin', behind, stick-ups, and killings.

Sampled

Track listing

  1. "Hip Hop Is Dead" (clean)
  2. "Hip Hop Is Dead" (instrumental)
  3. "Where Y'all At" (explicit)

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2007)Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[2] 84
Australia Urban (ARIA)18
US Pop 100 (Billboard)[3] 35

Year-end charts

Notes and References

  1. Allmusic: Hip Hop Is Dead?
  2. Web site: The ARIA Report: Issue 887 (Week Commencing 5 March 2007) . . May 29, 2022 . 4 . https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20080222222431/http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/23790/20070320-0000/issue887.pdf . dead . February 22, 2008.
  3. Web site: Nas – Awards . . https://web.archive.org/web/20160317045930/https://www.allmusic.com/artist/nas-mn0000373634/awards . March 17, 2016 . May 29, 2022.
  4. Urban Club Chart. Music Week. 16. January 12, 2008. August 6, 2023.