calendarlive.com
  Latimes.com | Entertainment News Submit Events | Advertise | Print Edition | Archives | Help  
 
calendarlive
 
  ART & MUSEUMS
BOOKS & TALKS
FAMILY & FESTIVALS
MOVIES
MUSIC
NIGHT LIFE
RESTAURANTS
THEATER & DANCE
TV & RADIO
 
 PARTNERS
vindigo zap2it opentable
April 25, 2004 E-mail story   Print  

SONGWRITERS SERIES

Five songs for the ages

*Written when rap wasn't accepted by most pop fans as an art form, these five Ice Cube songs helped win a begrudging respect for the genre
 

(Flash)


 RELATED STORIES
Rage Into Rhyme
 
Five Essential Songs
 
Five Essential Albums
 
 
AP
Genaro Molina / LAT
 
 
 ICE CUBE'S SONGS
Clips require RealPlayer.


 
Songs with commentary by Robert Hilburn





 

 INFLUENCES
Clips require RealPlayer.
        Grandmaster Flash

        Sugarhill Gang
 

 SONGWRITERS SERIES
  
Bob Dylan
 
  Ice Cube
 
  Lucinda Williams
 
  Merle Haggard
 
  U2
 
  Joni Mitchell
 
  Conor Oberst and   Jack White

 

 Most E-mailed

Clips require RealPlayer.


Written when rap wasn't accepted by most pop fans (especially anyone over 25) as an art form, these five Ice Cube songs, in order of preference, helped win a begrudging respect for the genre as well as lay down a blueprint for storytelling that influenced everyone from Tupac Shakur to Eminem.

(Audio samples feature commentary by Robert Hilburn)

1. 1992. This fantasy about 24 hours when everything in the 'hood goes right was so eloquent and affecting that it didn't lose Cube any street credibility, even though it made the Top 20 on the pop charts.

2. 1988. Co-written by MC Ren, this song launched a movement in rap. A lot of the gangsta rap that has followed has been clichéd and exploitive, but the best (by Cube and others) explored a raw social nerve.

3. 1991. There were charges of racism leveled at Cube after this tirade against some Korean merchants in the African American community, but the rap was social commentary and observation at its rawest.

4. 1990. Even before "It Was a Good Day," Cube was showing a poignant side. Here, he looks at the senselessness of gang violence.

5. 1992. This demonstrates Cube's skills as an entertainer and commentator. He gets beaten up, Rodney King-style, by police and hopes someone with a camera will come to the rescue
— R.H.



 
 


Copyright Los Angeles Times
By visiting this site, you are agreeing to our Privacy Policy
Terms of Service