I took a class from Bryonn last year about the importance of Hip Hop to youth culture. Here are some ideas from my notebook:
- Many Hip Hop artists incorporate socially responsible themes into their music; however, the music industry capitalizes on stereotypes of gangs, guns, drugs, and misogyny.
- 70% to 80% of Hip Hop consumers are white, suburbanites.
- Rap is something you do. Hip Hop is something you live.
- The components of Hip Hop are the DJ, the graffiti artist, the B-Boy or B-Girl breakdancer, and the emcee (also known as the spoken word poet or rap artist).
- Bain's Hip Hop lesson ideas for schools have been greatly influenced by Paulo Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed. For an excerpt of Freire's book, click here.
Click here to watch a five-minute clip about Bryonn Bain.
View a music video of Byronn's song "Ancestor's Watching."
For more information about Bryonn, visit his website bryonnbain.com.