African Americans and Mother Essay

Total Length: 761 words ( 3 double-spaced pages)

Total Sources: 2

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Songs

The Way It Is, Tupac

Tupac's rap line "Cops give a damn about a negro? Pull the trigger, kill a n*gga, he's a hero," speaks of the provocative subject concerning African-Americans, more generally how African-American gentlemen are being made target by the police, and that in case an African-American gentleman is killed by a cop then there is noreal big issue. Tupac aspires to encourage his society to unite with him and express their opinion and stand against the issues that are keeping them apart. As expressed earlier, the opportunities available to African-Americans do not equate the opportunities available to other races. Tupac also blames his own ethnicity for the composite emotional background of hate and range they are hemmed in. "I got love for my brother, but we can never go nowhere unless we share with each other. We gotta start makin' changes, learn to see me as a brother 'stead of two distant strangers," he raps (Estimable, 2013).

Kanye -- Spaceship

"Spaceship" took the bright lights off the "All Falls Down" unwed and burdened mother to line it on the rapper himself, summarizing Kanye's formers years as a Gap retail employee before being known as a rapper.
If the "single black female addicted to retail" prod in "All Falls Down" was overly unkind, "Spaceship" plunges in to bare an MC understanding of the struggle, for the reason that he was once there too. "Spaceship" is resonant of bitterness for those who call the shots and paid pennies and regarded Kanye like a cheap crook, while emphasizing his color to mock diversity. It enhances The College Dropout's weighing of self-denouncing humor with sharp social observation, inserting a splotch of "Take This Job and Shove It" in the opening couplet with an intense I-quit illusion (I'll Fly Away" / "Spaceship, 2014).

Billie Holiday- God Bless the Child

The song was a product of a squabble over money between Billie Holiday and her mother. She revealed that in the course of the argument her mother uttered the line, "God bless the child that's got his own." Billie's exasperation about the confrontation steered her to make that string of words into a beginning point of a track which she did in union with cowriter, Arthur Herzog, Jr. In 1990, Will Friedwald suggests that the song is "sacred and wicked" in his book, Jazz Singing, as it cites the Bible….....

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