100 this fall with “Like a G6,” a musical high-five to better living
through beautiful women and bottle service, probably didn’t strike most
pop-music listeners as pioneering. It’s just the latest in a long line
of hits celebrating playboy partying and living stretch-limo large.
But for
Koreatown neighborhood and are of Chinese, Japanese Korean, and
Filipino ancestry, is the first Asian-American hip-hop act to break
through to a wide audience.
Nakamura compares it to
“I didn’t know when it was going to happen but I
knew it was going to happen and they made it happen this year,” he
enthuses. “These are amazing times. There’ve been amazing changes.”
The track has also soared on the rap, pop,
dance/club play, ringtones, and digital-download charts and helped
their latest album, “Free Wired,” get into the Top 25.
Their success has even inspired other Asian-American performers who’ve been around much longer.
“For a long time, I felt like I was out there on a desert island,” says Japanese-American rapper/singer Lyrics Born (
who has been active in the music business since the early ’90s and has
just released a new disc, “As U Were.” “Across the board, in pop
culture and in the arts in general, I hope to see more of this … When
I’m doing a “
But it remains to be seen if “Like a G6” acts like a
wedge — propping open the doors of pop success to let other
Asian-American hip-hop acts through — or is a fluke, an answer in some
future version of Trivial Pursuit.
“I would consider it a fluke but, then again, I’m a rap purist,” says
of Columbia who teaches a course on hip-hop and is the author of the
upcoming book, “The Responsible Use of Hip- Hop in the Classroom.”
He feels it’s similar to what happened in 2003 with
the British Indian Panjabi MC, whose collaboration with Jay-Z, Beware
of the Boys, became a global hit.
“Some folks felt that the artist would break
through. It never happened,” he says. “Someone who has done well is
(British Sri Lankan) MIA but she doesn’t really rap nor is she
mainstream.”
“I’m not sure I can say it’s a movement,” says
Nakamura. “Are there 10 groups behind them who are ready? They could be
underground and coming up. I just don’t know.”
current success proves to be a fluke, they’d still represent a
breakthrough for Asian-Americans in pop music,” he says in an e-mail.
“While the Billboard charts don’t mean as much today as they used to,
there’s never been an all Asian-American group who’ve enjoyed a hit
single as big as ‘Like a G6’ in well over a generation.”
While
time many have been exposed to Asian-Americans in hip-hop, they are
hardly the first. Going back to the early ’90s, such acts as the
Mountain Brothers, Asiatic Apostles, Yellow Peril, the Seoul Brothers,
Chops (formerly of the Mountain Brothers) and Jin (who earned a
fearsome reputation with rap battles on
flood of Asian-American rappers over the years, that doesn’t mean
Asian-American kids haven’t partaken in hip-hop culture. “I think they
were just into different elements of it. The breakdancing scene in D.C.
and
However, unlike some of those acts that preceded them and despite their name,
— whose biggest lyrical concerns revolve around which club to go to
next — stay away from topics dealing with racial consciousness or
politics. “We never really made race our basis,” says
“We just grew up as L.A. kids … 95 percent of the kids just want to
party rock and they don’t care about race. They just want to wild out.
That’s refreshing to us.”
While the band has been involved in the
Asian-American community — whether it’s organizing a benefit show in
L.A.’s Koreatown or staging International Secret Agents concerts
featuring other up-and-coming Asian artists — Nish says that’s not what
they want to sing about. “We keep it separate,” he says.
He’s also the first to admit that, musically,
is anything but hardcore hip-hop, that its pop-electro sound pulls from
a variety of styles. “What we do we call ‘free wired,’ an alternative
style with dance-style beats,” he says. “We’d go to hardcore electro
clubs and later a rock bar, we would take all that in, hit the studio
after we’ve had a good night and put it all together.”
This is why Wang thinks
is the one that broke through. “Earlier Asian-American rap artists were
aiming for a different audience,” he says. “Those older rappers wanted
to resonate with conventional hip-hop listeners … FM took a page from
the Will.I.Am playbook and instead went after a slightly younger, more
pop-friendly audience.”
In fact, Wang thinks to consider
hip-hop at all is mistaken. “It could absolutely be the case that FM’s
success inspires other Asian-American artists,” he says. “But they
won’t be creating a new space in hip-hop for Asian-Americans; they’ll
be carving out a space in the dance/electro scene instead and that
follows a different historical path, one where acts like Jin or Lyrics
Born are less the forebears and it’s more like 80s freestyle singers
like
But, however the music’s defined and whatever happens now, it seems that
“I am so proud of those guys personally,” says
Lyrics Born. “We don’t necessarily do the same style but, from my
perspective, I’ve always said I was rounding the bases for everyone
else. But those guys hit it out of the park.”
———
A BRIEF HISTORY OF ASIAN-AMERICAN HIP-HOP
hip-hop act but they’re far from the first. With a little help from the
Music In Asian America blog (musicinasianamerica.blogspot.com), here’s
some of what came before:
1991 — The Mountain Brothers, a group from
1993 — The Japanese-born,
1995 — The rap twosome of Key-Kool and DJ
Rhettmatic, Japanese-American and Filipino-American respectively,
release the album “Kozmonautz.”
1998 — A big year for Asian-American hip-hop with
releases from Filipino-American DJ/turntablist Qbert, Korean-American
rapper Jamez?, and the Mountain Brothers.
2000 — “Hybrid Theory,” the first album from rap-metal outfit
2001 — The debut disc, “In Search Of …,” drops by N.E.R.D., the critically lauded collaboration between African-American
2004 —
Chinese-American rapper Jin, the first solo Asian rapper with a major
US deal, releases his debut, “The Rest Is History,” after making
memorable appearances on
became a rap-battle champ. His first single, “Learn Chinese,” is
produced by Wyclef Jean. He now resides in
2010 —
———
(c) 2010, Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
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