Ewan has lost his edge. So many shit lines in this article. Even the title is overlong and makes no sense - permeated to the core of what sport?
How hip hop is making a real impact on Irish youth culture
UNA MULLALLY
A while back, the MC God Knows announced on Rusangano Family’s track Lights On : “I landed in Ireland in 2001/ About the same time that Dre dropped 2001/ Thirteen years later the album’s done/ Rusangano presents Non-National with an Attitude Volume One.”
Let the De ad Bury the Dead , which won the Choice Music Prize for 2016’s best album, can now be seen with a couple of years’ perspective as a tipping point, rooted in its brilliantly honest articulations of finding one’s artistic identity and voice: “Thought I had to be American, thought I had to be English, everything else but Irish/ Before it’s the black boy from Caimin’s school surrounded by white like my iris/ I just wanted to be Harlem, I just wanted to be London, I just wanted to be Trench Town, now it’s time to be Shannon/ Now it’s time to be Limerick, get used to my surroundings.”
On December 28th in the 3Arena, Ireland’s biggest indoor concert venue will be the setting for a crowning moment of the popularity of rap and hip hop in the country. The RTÉ Concert Orchestra and MCs and singers will play the Story of Hip Hop Part 2, a production that became a hit at the Electric Picnic and Longitude music festivals. Hip hop has been the dominant youth culture in Ireland for some time, but we’re only really seeing now how big it might become.
I thought about this at the Black Jam party on Saturday night in the basement of Fibber Magees on Parnell Street. Black Jam is run by Fried Plantains Collective, led by Osaro/Yemi, “one Dublin-based ex-asylum seeker African woman doing community development work by creating deadly social events.”
The location in itself is significant. Still a stronghold of rockers, Fibbers now also hosts parties such as Black Jam and Club Comfort. The energy and rawness of the night gleefully holds on to an underground of a generational moment that has become mainstream.
The scenius that has emerged in Irish hip hop, where mutual appreciation thrives along with a collective celebration and ownership of success every time someone does something decent, has also enjoyed both a bubble of isolation away from the industry, and a global interconnectedness where genre has fractured.
There is Kojaque’s eight-track release Deli Dreams , one of the finest albums of the year, traversing rap, jazz and spoken word, with brilliantly wry observations: “I came from the land where everything from the common cold straight to cancer can be treated with a flat 7Up as the answer.”
Cartoonish machismo
Kojaque’s label name, Soft Boy, defies the cartoonish machismo that often withholds vulnerability from artistic expression. There is Mango x Mathman’s end-of-year gig at Wigwam in Dublin on December 27th, titled No Surrender. “I’m grand, I’m grand, with a pint of black and a mic in my hand,” Mango raps on Rapih . There is Rejjie Snow’s skittish approach to genre and Soulé’s R&B and Hare Squead and Jafaris’s pop sensibilities.
The Irish summer of 2018 will also be remembered for the landmark moment in festival booking that was Longitude, which largely dispensed with bands in the traditional sense, instead featuring wall-to-wall hip hop, echoing what has occurred in the UK, with grime and British hip hop becoming the default popular culture.
While the tools and platforms the internet provides for music to be created, visualised and disseminated has assisted hugely, outlets such as District Magazine deserve credit for consistently positioning the spotlight again and again on hip hop. At their last magazine launch in the Sugar Club in Dublin, the lineup featured a conversation with Kojaque and his friend, collaborator and label partner Kean Kavanagh (who also played later that night), and the excellent Dublin artist Gemma Dunleavy, whose output often defies categorisation, alongside two activists from Take Back the City, finishing off with the neo-soul of Biig Piig.
Hip hop is rooted in storytelling, and perhaps nowhere is its compatibility with Irish fireside chats more expertly displayed than on one of the finest tracks of the year, Paul Alwright’s The Auld Chinaman , a stunning piece of storytelling about the legendary Dublin pub in the title. “These are real stories, real places and real people,” the song declares.
We can talk about how scenes thrive away from radio play and industry interest, or how immigration contributes invaluably to a nation’s creative and cultural output. We can also talk about how pride in multifaceted identities has taken hold in Ireland’s music scene elsewhere too. Electronic music and rock music is thriving, and emerging bands, including Pillow Queens and Fontaines DC, reject mid-Atlanticisms, even overemphasising their Irish accents, the distorted rounding of vowels becoming a declaration of place.
I recently came across a photo posted online by the clothing label DBLNR, who co-opted the Palace streetwear logo for a T-shirt declaring “The Auld Triangle”.
“There’s nothing wrong with being a bit cocky”, declares one of their images, text overlaid on a black-and-white photo of Phil Lynott. No there is not. How brilliant it is to see – and hear – a generation walking forward with such endearing swagger and excellence.
Jesus that’s some rubbish,it’s not even written in english
Una trying her utmost to stay down with the kids.
explains how the nightspots she loves are all closing down
Is that even an article? I can’t make any sense of the first few paragraphs
I guess the Rusangano lads still have to do the day job. Being “big” in Ireland means fuckall anymore. Do the Coronas make a few bob? Or Picture This?
Una really needs to get out beyond the M50 and not just to Other Voices or the EP…
Brian Dobson on morning Ireland. The former Brexit secretary David Davis there who is seven to one with the bookies. his predecessor Dominic Raab is 6 to 1 but the clear favourite is Boris Johnson is now 13 to 2 at least according to the bookies
6 to 1 is shorter than 13-2.
So Raab is clear favourite?
Ah for fuck sake.
I don’t know why I bother sometimes.
Neither do I
I wouldn’t say clear favorite if its 6/1 the field
This is some pile of horseshit.
Do your research, find an interesting stat, contact person relating to said stat and create an article around quotes from person.
Have entire premise of article ruined by the first comment in comment section.
Feelings > facts all day every day
Big spending 20 to 37 year olds in Britain spend a whopping £9.07 a day on such frivolities as clothes, food, an odd cup of coffee and socialising.
The article comes complete with Barclays bigwigs (who are famous for their frugality in terms of personal finances) telling them how to be more responsible, or something, in their spending.
I guess the biggest problem with British society is entitled young people, what with their delusions that they should be able to eat and not freeze to death.
https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/uk-news/millennials-spend-more-3000-year-15854345
I’d have that gone by breakfast.
National service needs to be brought back for snowflakes in Europe .
A handy stag party in my Celtic Tiger years .