Compare and Contrast
By: Mike • Study Guide • 1,179 Words • December 1, 2009 • 1,052 Views
Essay title: Compare and Contrast
What’s with the Music?
> Musicians have the freedom to express themselves in their music,
but
>when do musicians start to abuse this privilege? There are many
different
>styles of music. Most styles try to target a specific group of people.
>Country Music, for example, targets (the) white rural population.
Another
>example ( )is rap, or ( )rhythm and blues (R&B), which
targets
>(the) black culture. Rap is considered to be a very controversial type
of
>music, and I can see why. Rap tends to disguise the nasty,
inappropriate
>lyrics with a cool beat that most teenagers and preteens love. Rap has
>evolved throughout time, starting with the blues. At first, the
producers
>wrote their music, but today most of the musicians control their own
music.
>In all type(s) of music, musician try to reach out to their listeners,
but
>when does the attempt to reach out to the audience start to cause a
>problem?
> Rap music today( ) is causing (problems) throughout the United
States.
>What started out as a simple attempt to express the African American’s
>hardships has turned into an expression of greed, wealth, and sex.
Today
>everyone is considered equal. Besides the actual pigment of our skin
color,
>our biological make-up is the same. The hardships are over, and in
today’s
>world to get anywhere you must climb a latter to success. Respect
isn’t
>earned by what happened in the past. To build a nation of leaders, our
>music, television, and the easy to access web sites should focus on
the
>good old morals( ). They should make it sound cool to become
successful
>instead of making it sound cool to have sex. Sometimes when I’m
listening
>to the radio, I wonder if I’m listening to porn in the form of rap!
> Kids between the ages of eight and thirteen are effected most by
rap
>music. They are just beginning to learn the important issue(s) of
life. Rap
>music seems to confuse what is right and what is wrong when it comes
to the
>opposite sex, the peer pressures of drugs and alcohol, and language.
First
>of all, you can hardly understand what any rap singer is saying. They
will
>rhyme anything even if what they’re rhyming is made up. They make up
words
>like “fo shizzle.” These made up words are place(d) in the made up
>dictionary of “slang.“ The “slang” terms that are made up in rap songs
are
>usually used to disguise the meaning of what they’re really trying to
get
>across. For example, “don’t phunk with my heart” is phrase from a
popular
>song that uses the word phunk