close




Browse Lyrics by Artist

Stay Connected to VH1



Also In Artists



Browse VH1 Artists

A B C D E F G
  H I J K L M N  
  O P Q R S T U  
  V W X Y Z #  




For The Love Of Ray J
Ray J
"Sexy Can I"
Buy It
Tough Love (Supertrailer)
Ingrid Michaelson
"Soldier"
Watch Now  Buy It
Sex Rehab with Dr. Drew
Carolina Liar
"Coming to Terms"
Watch Now  Buy It
My Antonio
Olivia Broadfield
"Holding On To You"
Buy It
Tough Love
Morningwood
"How You Know It's Love"
Buy It
news

Index



Barack Obama Gives A Shout-Out To Hip-Hop


 
Senator says artists are 'thinking about social responsibility and how they can impact the culture in a positive way.'
 
by Sway Calloway and Robert Mancini


Senator Barack Obama (MTV News)

Yes, hip-hop loves Barack Obama. From Weezy to Jeezy, Jay to 'Ye, some of rap's biggest names have saluted him in their lyrics, and he's inspired mixtapes, bootleg T-shirts and onstage


Sign up to receive FREE UPDATES for Index!

E-Mail this story to a friend
XML RSS Feed Add RSS Headlines

Add to My Yahoo Add VH1 News to My Yahoo
shout-outs.

But what does the senator think of hip-hop? Sure, he went all Jay and brushed dirt off his shoulder at an April campaign stop and referenced Lil Wayne during a speech in July. But he was also quick to admonish Ludacris for a particularly fiery freestyle aimed at George W. Bush and then-rival Hillary Clinton. And while stars like Oprah Winfrey, Usher and John Legend have turned up next to Obama at campaign stops, the hip-hop nation has been virtually absent from the senator's stage.

So how does Obama feel about the genre that has rallied around him?

"I enjoy it, but these days I don't have the time to listen to it all the time," he told MTV News. He said that he still finds time to shuffle through MCs like Jay-Z and Kanye on his iPod, but he thinks the genre's impact extends far beyond a few hot tracks.

"I'm a little older than hip-hop culture," he said. "I was there at the beginning, but I was already getting older. ... What I've appreciated, watching this hip-hop generation, is to see how entrepreneurial they've been. In the past, musicians oftentimes were commodities. They were just shuffled around. Obviously, they did well, but they didn't have the vision to say, 'I'm going to build a business. I'm going to build my own studio. I'm going to create my own production operations.' I think they're a lot more sophisticated than in the past, and that is a wonderful thing."

He went on to tell MTV News that he's still seeing growth in the genre and that he's optimistic about what's ahead for hip-hop.

"What I'm starting to see is them stretching out more and thinking about social responsibility and how they can impact the culture in a positive way," he said. "And I hope that continues."

And where does he weigh in on hip-hop's hottest issue -- the greatest of all time?

"Oh no, I'm not going to get caught up in all that," he laughed.



This report is from MTV News.


There was an error pulling related news.