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The Roots of Hip Hop in Washtenaw County

Flickr user Mike Licht
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https://flic.kr/p/pGGs9K

What do you think about Hip Hop music?  Do you know it has deep roots in African American culture and many of its messages can be inspiring and uplifting?

As part of Black History Month, Lisa Barry explores the roots and reputation of hip hop music in Washtenaw county and efforts to incorporate it into education and its impact on the community.

Some people think Hip Hop music has gotten a bad rap.

“My group the “Athletic Mic League” was really one of the first rap groups that were on stages in Ann Arbor, because there was a myth attached to rap at the time.  We dispelled that myth, we, you know, we sold out the Blind Pig, I don’t know how many times and we brought people out, and we had a good safe time.”

That’s Jamal Bufford, a hip hop artist who grew up in Ann Arbor and currently lives in Ypsilanti.  Bufford is considered one of the “originators” of the Hip Hop music scene in Washtenaw county and is also  currently part of the “Black Opera” community music and arts collective.

Roderick Wallace is the program director for Eastern Michigan University’s Upward Bound program, and explains why he thinks it’s  important to talk about the history of Hip Hop music during Black History Month.

“Hip Hop is blackness.  To, to be able to separate hip hop from blackness I just don’t see it being able to happen.  It doesn’t mean  that other people are not able to participate or create it, but it is a perfectly encapsulates the African American experience in the second half of the 20th century.”

Macala Evans  is a professor of Hip Hop lyricism at Eastern Michigan University, a class which explores a deeper understanding of what hip hop means and the history or purpose of hip hop  in today’s culture.  She says Hip Hop music has a deep connection to West African roots and calls Hip Hop artists the “Bards of our community”

“When we think about the different ways we tell history, especially black history and the truth about black history that is not being shared and told in a regular k through 12  curriculum we have to turn  to non traditional forms of education like Hip Hop and actually listen to the words and deeply analyze them to figure out what are the artists saying because those are the modern day historians.”

When not teaching at Eastern, Evans teaches a hip hop disability dance course at the Riverside Arts Center in Ypsilanti and says there are so many different ways hip hop can be used as a teaching and healing tool.

In between performing around the world Bufford also works at Tappan Middle School in Ann Arbor where he incorporates Hip Hop music into working with emotionally impaired students.

Even in college, Bufford continued to perform Hip Hop in Ann Arbor.  He earned a degree from the University of Michigan, studying while performing… adding that “hip hop music helped raise him.”

“My dad wasn’t around so I didn’t have a lot of male voices in my life, and a lot of it was rap.  And, you know, for better or for worse like you can say  well there is a lot of misogyny  in it , which it is…uhhh there’s a lot of violence and a lot of drugs.  But it kind of taught me what to stay away from.”

In addition to working for the University Wallace is also a PHD student at Eastern in the college of Education. He is studying ways to incorporate Hip Hop music as a tool to teach STEM to students.

“I believe that uh, Hip Hop has the capacity to engage the youth um, in a very valuable way.”

And he says he thinks Hip Hop music has the capacity to bring people together…

“I think that it’s a great opportunity to bridge a lot of gaps.  And I just would encourage those people who are participating to stay encouraged and continue to do it.  You have Kid Jay from Ypsilanti”

Kid Jay is a 19 year old recent graduate from Ypsilanti High School.  He says he’s been infatuated with Hip Hop for many years and noticed that rappers could tell a story without flashing money and jewelry.

“They look cool and they don’t even have to wear all that stuff.  Just when I heard J. Col tell a story but it was in a very different way, and it inspired me to write my very first song. And when did you write it, how old were you? I was 13 And what’s it called? It’s called Amazing.”

Kid Jay, who represents a new generation of rap, says he takes pride that he can write and perform Hip Hop music that is clean.

“I can write songs with no profanity, and um a lot of artists can’t do that.  I still feel like I want to have something that the older people can listen to but also that the children can listen to.  I don’t want them to be riding in the car with their family and have to turn my music off because it came on and their parents don’t want to listen to it.”

Comfortable with his skills and style, Ypsilanti’s Kid Jay free styled one of his rap songs in the WEMU studio.

Wallace says the Washtenaw county community supports Hip Hop music as an alternative form of thought and expression, and as a way to deliver a message.  Whether it involves  a current controversy or as a voice to be heard and focused on during Black History Month.