Hip Hop High:
Mainstream Black Culture in the White Suburbs
Lauren Sandler
photograph ©
2002 Justin Lane
In the Dean's
office of Sachem High School in Ronkonkoma, Long Island, three clean
cut boys lean back on folding chairs that line one wall of the lemon-painted
room. One boy fidgets with strings of fine gold chain that hang around
his neck, another bends over to tie the laces of his Fila high tops,
another bounces one leg frenetically inside his huge Tommy Hilfiger
jeans. He slumps back, staring at a sign that hangs over the secretary's
desk. Written in blue script on 8x10 white paper, the sign reads: "NOT
Yo, I need... INSTEAD Hello, Mrs. Batterberry, may I please have...
thank you."
Outside the Dean's
office, the locker-lined hall teems with white boys swaggering to class
in baggy name-brand clothing and baseball hats pushed far back on their
heads. Girls toss their blow-dried hair, spewing giggles and reproachful
gossip from glossy lips, their gold chains sparkling at the necklines
of tight brightly colored tops. Thirteen studentsone of Sachem's
peer mediation groupstrickle into a classroom to discuss teen
issues. Today the students are talking about hip hop.
"Everyone
I know listens to hip hop," says Gina, a Sachem senior in a tight
purple sweater and iridescent eye shadow, sighing matter-of-factly.
Her classmates murmur and nod in agreement. Gina continues, "It's
not a statement. It's not what our lives are about. So I like Method
Man, Biggie, DMX, whatever. Who doesn't? This isn't political; it's
just what we all know."
For several years
now, a mass of suburban white teens has dedicated their allowances to
the consumption of hip hop. This group far and away leads sales of gangsta
rap, almost completely replacing rock as the soundtrack of choice at
rec-room parties, in borrowed cars, and in second-floor bedrooms across
America. Nightly news magazines hold segments on these kids they call
"wiggas" (i.e. white + "nigga"); parents run conferences
in high school cafeterias and auditoriums to discuss how hip hop colors
their children's behavior. White appropriation of black culture is hardly
a new phenomenon; the white jazz-cats of the fifties terrorized mainstream
culture with their hep vernacular and behaviors, as did white aficionados
of funk and blaxploitation films throughout the disco era. But for today's
suburban consumers, black culture pervades pop media with signifiers
from a truly distant ghetto.
"It's probably
what I get asked about most frequently, this baffled 'What's going on
with white kids and hip hop' question," says Tricia Rose, director
of African-American studies at NYU and the author of 1994's
Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary
America. "It's only a logical extension
of a kind of relationship that already existed. There's a long history
to this; it's not a new thing. What they did was borrow the slang and
dances in blackface and at some point they eventually severed their
recognition that those were black gestures, I mean, that's Elvis for
example. Much of fifties' rebellion is about white kids immersing themselves
in black culture and making those codes not just black. Which is precisely
what is happening now with hip hop."
But, of course,
adopting the codes of hip hop isn't the same as intellectually engaging
with the factors that sustain a culture while imprisoning it in a system
of inequity. There's Hip Hop the Revolution, and then there's Hip Hop
the Corporate Commodity (and a nebulous and frequently debated area
that bleeds between the two). As Bakari Kitwana, the author of the new
book The Hip Hop Generation,
wondered aloud about white suburban hip hop kids over the phone recently,
"How down are they, really? Isn't this more like a fascination
with Britney Spears?" With a devious chuckle, he answered his own
question. "I think we know the answer in many of these cases."
The hip hop mainstream of Sachem High hardly challenges his assumption.
But unlike mere attention to the style cues of teen pop, here hip hop's
goods pervade all aspects of quantifiable youth culture, from what Sachem's
teenagers say to what they drink to what they drive to who they worshipbut
yet who they never quite want to become.
*
"Yo, yo!
Shut up! My nigga's hittin' me up, yo!"
It is a chilly
spring Friday night. Eighteen guys huddle in tight circles, smoking
joints and cigarettes. Some lean up against their parents' cars, kicking
back swigs of Hennessey. Every one of them is white. A black Honda Prelude
rattles to the thumping bass of a Notorious B.I.G. track. A kid in an
oversized red down vest perches on the edge of an open trunk, sipping
from a bottle of Malibu he fished out from a clutter of Nike shoeboxes.
"Who's that?"
he asks his friend, who peers out from a huge hooded sweatshirt and
matching baseball cap, both emblazoned with Nautica's ubiquitous brand
name.
The friend holds
a cell phone to his ear and fiddles with a gold chain around his neck.
"Yo, it's Manny," he says to the crew. "He wants to know
where the party's at."
"Where the
party's at" means "what parking lot are you claiming as territory
tonight." And tonight, like many nights, the party's in the main
parking lot at The Colony, an upscale gated development in Holbrook.
Holbrook, which
this group jokingly refers to as "Holbrooklyn," is a middle
class community in central Long Island. Holbrook is familiar American
terrain, a landscape of two-lane highways and small neighborhood streets
that twist their way into cul-de-sacsthe manicured deadends of
suburbia. Strip malls dot the landscape at semi-regular intervals, interchangeably
offering insurance offices, florists, and fast food joints.
The Colony lies
off the expressway on a barren, newly developed highway, tucked away
from Holbrook's suburban grid; to enter, you must be admitted by a guard
in a white shingled guardhouse. The entrance is paved in cobblestones.
To the right of the guardhouse is a landscaped pond. The development,
a maze of white shingled siding and stucco, houses professionals and
their children. The only non-white person on the grounds of the Colony
tonight is the security guard.
Tonight, at The
Colony, like in suburban parking lots all over America, the biggest
problem is where to get beer. The supply of Malibu is drained, and the
crew has already been turned down at the three nearest liquor stores.
But while chugging a 40 would be nice, there's always a plentiful stash
of weed to smoke instead. The group struts across the asphalt ribbon
that winds through The Colony over to the basketball court, which lies
about ten yards from the first clump of white townhouses. Under the
lamplight, the guys gather to pass a couple of joints around. Their
sneakers form a snug circle. Smoke curls and hangs over their short-cropped
hair, sweatshirt hoods, and baseballs hats, lingering in the light like
in a shot from a rap video. For a moment the mood is silent, somber,
ritualistic. Then Tom cracks up, giggles leaking out of his nose with
plumes of smoke, deepening into a belly laugh. The circle joins in;
chortles crescendo to whoops and high fives.
"Yo! This
is the dope shit, yo!"
"Nigga gettin'
me all fucked
up!"
"Yo, who
wants to play some ball?"
An impromptu
three-on-three breaks out, more a shoving match with occasional shots
on net than a basketball game. The guys yell insults at each other's
mothers and girlfriends, laughing hysterically. When a bottle shatters
through the sound, everyone looks up more to see who was hoarding the
stash than who made the mess. And then, the sound of the inevitable.
The whiny creak of a screen door.
A bearded, heavy-set
man in his early forties lumbers out to his back steps from the closest
home to the basketball court.
"Shit. Not
this motherfucker again," the guys quietly rumble, shifting from
foot to foot.
"Hey,"
Mr. Grown-Up calls out. "I'm just here to warn you that I've called
the cops. And if you don't want to get in some serious trouble, I urge
you guys to get out of here. The cops will be here momentarily. I mean
it."
Chris, a tall
kid in a baggy red Eddie Bauer sweatshirt, lopes out from one of the
circles. Chris is the star kickerall-county, all-leagueof
Sachem's football team. He's an icon at the Sports Authority, where
he works, at his high school where he is admired, and in this parking
lothis parking lota stone's throw away from the condo where
his parents are currently sleeping. His stride is confident as he approaches
the enemy. "Yo! Hey! I live here! I have as much right to hang
with my friends as you do. Who the hell are you to call the cops on
us? We're just hanging out."
"Yeah? Smoking
pot and yelling and blaring rap all night? Just hanging out?" Mr.
Grown-Up turns to go back inside his house. He hesitates, then tosses
one last puzzled, angry comment over his shoulder. "Where the hell
do you think you are? Where do
you think you are?"
A black Acura
Integra rolls into the parking lot, to whoops and hollers. A baby-faced
kid in a Gap baseball hat and a yellow puffy vest gets out grinning.
"Let's get this party started right," Manny declares.
"'Sup, brother?"
says Chris, pulling Manny into a headlock. "We're waiting for the
cops to show up. Bust this shit up. But we ain't leaving, aight?"
Manny nods, and with a wide smile, turns up the track already blaring
and thumping from his speakers.
Manny's uncle
gave him a copy of Public Enemy's It Takes
a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back when
he was five. "I was hooked," he says. "I was this little
hip hop kid. Everyone thought it was ridiculous." While rap connects
Manny and his buddy Dave, who have both been devoted to hip
hop since they were children, it's at the same time the source of a
mellow rivalry. It's the old showdown, Larry versus Magic, John versus
Paul. For these guys it's two slain rappers: Biggie versus Tupac. And
while Dave's reverence for the Notorious B.I.G is quiet ("just
let Biggie play, man, it speaks for itself"), the crew crowds around
the open windows of the car to taunt Manny as he preaches the gospel
of Tupac.
"I really
do think, I swear to God, I really do think he's alive." Manny's
face is set in earnestness, his mouth tight, his gestures poised in
contrast to the guys leaning casually into the car.
"Manny's
wack, yo! Resurrecting Tupac. You're wack, boy!"
"Yeah, well
he's got all these verses about resurrection, right? Like how he's coming
back like Jesus?" Manny shakes his head, pushing his buddies out
of the car. "You have to believe it. He's like the most emotional
rapper. He's the realest." He starts thumbing through Dave's CDs,
pausing quizzically when he finds one by Fleetwood Mac in a collection
chock full of gangsta rap.
"That's
for the other
people, yo," Dave says, suppressing a shy giggle.
Manny laughs,
but isn't distracted from his passion. He emotionally gestures at the
pages of hip hop albums. "There's so many rappers who like talk
about being like being the bad gangsta right? He's what's real. Everyone
else pisses me off, like they know about thug life. But he's like the
only one who grew up, he was poor, he was so poor it wasn't even funny
and then like how he got into art and stuff like that, that's the Mac,
man."
"Biggie's
for real, too," Dave scowls, as Brian, the kid in the puffy red
vest, climbs into the back seat.
"Yeah, but
check out this track." Manny rolls up the windows, and turns up
the volume. The three boys sit silently, nodding gravely to the beat
in perfect unison. This isn't good-time music. This isn't a rock and
roll party. It's funereal, foreboding, a sermon in a dark and thunderous
church.
Automatic gunfire
makin' all my enemies run.
Who should I
call when I'm shot and bleedin'.
Indeed the possibility
has part a chase in cream.
Dope got me hatin'
fiends. Scheme wit my team, just a chosen few.
My foes victim
of explosives. Come closer. Exhale the fumes.
We got memories
fadin' fast. A slave for cash.
Accelerate, mash,
blast, then dash.
Don't look now.
How you like it, raw.
Niggas ain't
ready for the wrath of the outlaws. Never surrender.
"Awesome,"
Manny whispers at the end of the track. "I mean, I don't relate
to it at all. I know it doesn't have anything to do with me. I mean,
like a while ago, like two years ago when he died, I was really caught
up in it. I was like way into it. I wasn't
acting like a thugwell not too much, but it was a phase of me
really wanting to be black and dressing like it and shit like that.
But I couldn't be farther from this. I mean, look where we are. Right?"
He flips off
his baseball cap and ruffles his short-cropped brown hair. "But
it's not like I would trade my life in for Tupac's life. Hell no. Not
for a minute. No way. I have it made. I get everything I want except
for a car. That's the only thing that's holding me back right now. I'm
getting paid for college, and I didn't even do good in school."
Manny doesn't feel like he has a lot to rebel against. Unlike Dave and
most of these guys, he's close to his parents, even occasionally opting
to spend evenings with the family instead of with his friends.
Although Manny's
parents are both professionals and his suburban lifestyle is secure
and comfortable, they are a world away from the envyspawning material
excess of your average hip hop videoexcess that generates swells
of admiration in the hearts of these young consumers. "The only
reason we like them so much is look how they prosper, right?" Manny
says, looking to Dave for assent. "They have everything. Check
their videos. It's crazy. The cars, boats, bitches. I mean, the
hottest cars, yo.
It's so like you just want
it. You figure listening to it, getting into itnot like you wanna
be like themjust like you envy them. It's awesome."
Dave nods. "Exactly."
Manny continues.
"But I'd never even go to the hood. Anywhere like that. Fuck that.
Especially being white. "
Dave keeps nodding.
"No way. I'm with you. Why would I go there?"
Shyly, Brian
says, "I'd go. I would. I wouldn't walk around, but I'd drive through.
Wouldn't you check it out?"
Dave furrows
his brow and pauses to see if Brian is serious. "Hell, man. No
way." He sweeps his hand over his CDs. "I've got it all here."
What other art
form than musicwhether high-brow, low-brow or no-browspins
such a web of cultural codes? The intensive co-mingling of music and
lifestyle, paired with white America's fascination with black America,
has led a previous generation down this path of slang and subversion.
In the fifties, legions of clean-scrubbed white kids shocked their parents
with their mania for jazz, and all the late night, reefer-smoking carnality
and danger that such music represented. But in the decades since, the
dissemination and consumption of urban culture has entirely changed.
For Manny, Dave, and their generation of suburban consumers of urban
experience, black culture comes shrink-wrapped and consumerready at
chain stores like Coconuts and on MTV. One needs to venture no further
than the local mall or the family den to access neatly packaged urbanism.
In the fifties, when white youth famously explored the jazz dens
and blues bars of America, the experience was a radically different
one. Exploration mandated a literal departure from familiar suburban
enclaves.
Norman Mailer
was hip to the differences between detached consumption and active participation.
In his 1957 essay "The White Negro: Superficial Reflections on
the Hipster," he wrote: "In such places as Greenwich Village,
a ménage-à-trois was completedthe bohemian and the
juvenile delinquent came face-to -face with the Negro." Mailer
clarifies, "So there was a new breed of adventurers, urban adventurers
who drifted out late at night looking for action with a black man's
code to fit their facts. The hipster had to be absorbed in the existential
synapses of the Negro." For today's suburban hip hop kids there
is largely no such physical co-mingling of black and whiteno literal
adventuring. Instead the immersion takes place in a media existence
of black culture that functions as a sort of virtual tourism.
Likewise, the
techno-explosion of mass media, and consequently the successful mass-marketing
of hip hop, has placed this commercialized arm of urban black youth
culture squarely in the mainstream. "The music is really at the
center of American youth culture now in a way it hasn't been,"
says Tricia Rose. "As opposed to being simply black American youth
culture, [hip hop] actually has usurped rock as the ubiquitous symbol
of white male youth." For Mailer's hipsters, an obsession with
black culture was significant precisely because it was obsession with
a subculture. This is exactly what he saw as fundamental to what he
perceived as the radicalism of that generation of white youth. Mailer
lamented an era imprisoned in conformity, "where security is boredom
and therefore sickness"; he suggested that the escape from that
prison was through immersion in a kind of outlaw black culture. It is
easy to update his descriptions of the hipsters of the fifties to the
hip hop kids of modern-day suburbia; superficially, the antecedents
are uncanny. Yet, according to Mailer, these hipsters were radicals,
engaging not just in recreational teenage rebellion, but in a full-out
ideological assault on middle class values.
Of course, this
sort of cultural immersion is hardly synonymous with political radicalismand
Mailer's black culture fetish has provoked cries of racism from readers
(including this one) since the publication of his controversial essay.
However, Mailer's ethic represented a start; at least back then there
was face-to-face appeal, a desegregating of the physical space of the
club, not just an expensively shot and edited lifestyle viewed as pixels
in the comfort of a suburban development. And at this point in hip hop's
narrativetwenty years since its birth as an underground culture,
ten years into its commodification as mass culture, it is hard to see
much power lying in what Mailer describes as subcultural subversion
of conventionality. "Almost any kind of unconventional action often
takes disproportionate courage," he
wrote. Hip hop's commercial ubiquity vacates today's white teens of
what Mailer deemed to be the source of revolutionary power. Because
today's white suburban hip hop devotees seem largely to know nothing
about the politics of how their heroes land in jail, for example, hip
hop represents no social subversion in gated communities like those
in which the Sachem crew parties.
Like Manny says,
these teenagers grew up with rap; they were born in the days following
the first turntable scratches of the late seventies. Growing up with
rap takes away the thrill of discovery, of dangerous liberation, that
accompanied freestyling, break-dancing, graffiti-spraying b-boys who
are now well into their thirties. White writer and performance artist
Danny Hoch describes the difference between discovering hip hop on subways
and in underground clubs back in the day, a stark contrast to discovering
it at the mall. "It used to be that you had to get up on the train,
get into a fight, run from the police, just to get your groove on. It
was an active resistance," he recalls. MC Serch of the white rap
duo 3rd Bass talks about the death threats he received just for dressing
in a hip hop style and speaking hip hop slangbefore he even deigned
to pick up a microphone. These experiences speak to the sort of cultural
risk-taking Mailer describes as central to any cultural revolution;
in many cases, they supercede his idiom. When one is actually immersed
in someone else's social sphere, it's difficult to ignore the systemic
political and economic issues that spawn that culture of resistance.
Not so with our
current "white negroes." Driving Dad's car to the mall for
the new DMX CD promoted on the cover of
Rolling Stone at newsstands everywhere
is hardly a previous decade's equivalent of jumping a barbed wire fence
in the projects to be one of the only white kids at a word-of-mouth
rap show. Being chased by cops from one parking lot to the next represents
no significant civil disobedience for teenagers like Manny.
Saturday night
we come as close as we'll get to Mailer's world of interracial immersion
in these Long Island suburbs. The convoy of parentowned cars speeds
past Carvel, past Ronkonkoma Plumbing and Heating Supply, and down a
maze of dark suburban roads that bear storybook names like Tulip Street,
Magnolia Avenue, and Prince Charming Road. The cars pass near a recent
addition to the Sachem district, a tree missing a significant chunk
of its trunk, where a car plowed into it several months before, taking
the lives of the kids in the car with it. The tree is adorned with bandanas,
their color streaked and faded by wind and rain. The bandanas represent
solidarity among Sachem's "gangs," who wear different colors
to claim their "set," a declaration modeled on the behavior
of innercity gangs across America. In the past year, Sachem has lost
thirteen members of its graduating class.
The group pull
their cars up in front of a two-story house with a gigantic white Lincoln
Navigator out front. Screams and yells compete with the hard thud of
the bass pumping from the living room.
"Yo! Keep
it down! We can't have the cops coming!" yells a tall, heavy-set
black kid with an unkempt short afro, in a white and burgundy Colorado
State football jersey. "They call my parents and I'm fucked, man!
All of this," he yells, "means I don't get this"he
gestures to the golddetailed Navigator in the driveway.
"What up,
Ariel," the gang passes by their host, beating him with back-slaps
and high-fives. "Yo, yo, my nappy-haired brother," one of
the guys giggles. "Shit, brother, it's a PAAARTYYYY!"
Cherry red shag
carpeting runs through every room on the first floor including
the kitchenand up the stairs to the bedrooms. A wroughtiron gate
separates the entryway from the cluttered living room, where a faux-Victorian
couch and side chairs dominate, upholstered in sky-blue velvet and covered
in plastic. The room is crammed with houseplants in macramé planters,
a marble coffee table, an organ, a wheel chair, an exercise climber,
shelves of family pictures, and stacks of unmarked cardboard boxes.
Rhymes from an Onyx CD bounce off the wallsthree stucco, one mirrored.
Three black guys
gather around an old plastic boom box next to the foyer. With the exception
of their nervous host, they are the only black kids at the party. They
lean into each othertheir shoulders forming a tight oval that
blocks out the frenetic behavior of the white kids around themand
start freestyling over the Onyx track. Shaqwan leads the group. He is
a perpetually sober and reassuring but threatening presence at these
parties. As one kid says, "Shaqwan is peaceful, but he'll kill
ya to keep the peace." He picks up
the beat, staring fixedly at his hands that slice the air before him
in punctuating gestures. His rhymes speak directly to what surrounds
him:
Respect the race
in your face
United front
I never ever smoke a blunt
Never take a
drink and never will I got my fill
And word up look
around the room at these kids with their pills.
This circle seems
oblivious to the other kids in the room; they're separated from their
screams and giggles. "YEAH, I'M THE REAL PIMP," a beefy white
guy in a baseball hat hollers over the heads of the circle of freestylers
to a pasty-faced friend on the other side. The friend raises his beer
and yells over their rhymes, "YOU KNOW IT, NIGGA."
I doubt this
party is what Norman Mailer had in mind when nearly fifty years ago
he imagined the effect of mainstreaming black urban youth culture. "With
this possible emergence of the Negro, Hip may erupt as a psychically
armed rebellion," he wrote, "and bring into the air such animosities,
antipathies, and new conflicts of interest that mean the empty hypocrisies
of mass conformity will no longer work." Now there's simply a new
hypocrisy of mass conformity in baggy pants and identitycrashing slang.
Yet Danny Hoch
sees possible redemption in this generation of white hip hop fans: he
regards black mass culture as the closest shot at radicalism in today's
suburbs. "Because there is no apparatus in education in suburban
locales for activism, for rebellion, they have to create their own
sense of revolution.
The only tool they can find is a cultural tool, it's picking up the
new Jay-Z album. And through accessing hip hop cultural tools they are
at least opening a resistance to the status quo." Hoch also sees
how hip hop has positively influenced the actions of his generation
of X-ers. "I don't think we knew metaphors of resistance until
we started to read the Village Voice
or went to college. But now my peers and myself
are lawyers and teachers and are trying to make collective change alongside
black and Puerto Rican people who also have gone through this, who are
now editing magazines and directing firms," he says. "My hope
is these kids who don't understand the political relevance of banging
DMX in Dad's Audi, thinking that they are keeping it real, my hope is
that when these kids go to college they will organize, take the spirit
of resistance and not be passive."
Hoch's vision
for the future of white hip hop fans does not necessarily correspond
with their own sense of the next stage of their lives. Jena girl
whose face is often set in the grimace of an exasperated homeroom teacherhas
the frustrated expectation that her time at SUNY Cortland will
be a replication of her high school experiences. Maybe high schooland
even collegesimply does not provide the intellectual tools to
deconstruct the constant strobe of the media world. To Rose, this is
just the issue. "The hope is limited to meespecially by the
access of any public education on black people," Rose says. "Do
they actually have any sense of the history of race in the United States
in relation to the largest issues in history? Any idea? And if the answer
to that is 'no,' then I don't see how the music can underwrite that
level of ideological domination....If they don't understand why there
is a ghetto in the first place, why it keeps getting reproduced,"
she shakes her head and laughs bitterly, "if they don't have any
knowledge about that, what's Jay-Z gonna
do about it? "
Jen checks her
beeper, adjusts her jacket, and applies lip gloss. Her pale blue eye
shadow and dark eyeliner draw attention to her moonshaped face. She
cuts an athletic figure at just under six feet. Like many of the guys
in the crowd, Jen is an athlete; tennis in the fall, basketball in the
winter, and volleyball in the spring. Her gas and lipstick money comes
from working at Lady Foot Locker in the Smithhaven Mall. Smoking her
cigarette, she weaves through groups of guys to a patch of her friends
shivering in Ariel's backyard. "Did you catch how Jim like totally
ignored me at Taco Bell? I just tried to talk to him and he totally
blew me off. I can't wait 'til he calls me and says come over and sleep
with me baby. Manny, you oughta try to talk to him and get him on track.
I tried to talk to him, but he wouldn't even look at me."
The guys look
around, shuffle their feet. She tries again. "Anyone check out
the new Black Rob CD?"
Matt perks up.
"Yeah. It's the hype."
Stoney shuffles
up to Jen and Matt, grinning. "Hey, anyone got a menthol cigarette?"
"Sorry,
honey," Jen says.
"Where you
going to school, anyway?" asks Stoney.
"Cortland,"
she replies. "Who isn't? Shit, we're leaving Sachem to go to Sachem.
It won't be no different. Wherever we go we'll find parking lots and
get drunk and rap and the cops will show up and we'll go home. Right?"
Jen shakes her head and surveys the party. "Hell, what do I know.
My dad never finished college and my mom never went. They're not exactly
letting me know what to expect. I'm on my own."
"Yo, whatever."
Stoney ambles over to the next clump of kids, his baggy khakis dragging
on the ground. "Yo, what up, brother? You got a menthol cigarette?"