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Talib Kweli's ‘Beautiful Struggle’
By Mark Anthony Neal
SeeingBlack.com Music Critic
Talk
about Talib Kweli and Black music here!
I speak at schools a lot cause they say I'm intelligent /
No, it's cause I'm
dope, if I was wack I'd be irrelevant.
— Talib Kweli, "The Beautiful Struggle"
To suggest that some of us romanticize
our favorite conscious rappers— I've regularly referred to them as "celebrity Gramscians"— is an
understatement. Indeed, in our efforts to claim a little space
in opposition
to that heinous thing known as mainstream hip-hop, we've invested
in these
highbrow expectations about some of these cats (and femme felines)
as if
they didn't get started in the first place just wanting to "roc
the mic."
So we look askance when the Roots back Jay-Z or totally
ignore the fact that
the video for Trick Daddy's "I'm a Thug" might be the
most sophisticated
popular analysis of black intra-racial class antagonisms since
Charles
Fuller's Pulitzer winning drama A Soldier's Story. But as Talib
Kweli explains on the title track of his new release The Beautiful
Struggle, "They
call me the political rapper / Even after I tell them I don't fuck
with
politics... I'm on some KRS, Ice Cube, Chris Wallace shit / Main
Source, De
La Soul, bumpin' '2Pacalypse Now'" — a not so subtle
reminder that no
matter what the content is, it's always about the "love of
the flow.” While The Beautiful Struggle celebrates
the joy and pain of the everyday, it might
also describe the travails of a righteous rapper who just wants
to get his
flow on.
As Talib Kweli's "Get By" began to blare regularly on
urban radio in the
spring of 2003 — easily programmed between Mr. Kelly's "Ignition
(remix)" and Beyonce's "Crazy in Love"— there was a real sense that he had made the
leap from the conscious-rapper ghetto into the land of bankable
commercial artist. Before that point, Kweli resisted the desire
to be labeled, riffing
on Me'Shell Ndegéocello's "Hot Night" —"I
feed my babies with music / I
tell the truth, now I'm a target in their market. Ain't that a
sommabitch." But given the critical and commercial
success of 2002's Quality, the stakes
were decidedly different this time around. As Kweli reflects on
The
Beautiful Struggle's lead single "I Try" (produced by
Kanye, blessed by Lady
Blige), "The label want a song about a bubbly life / I have
trouble tryin'
to write some shit / To bang in the club through the night / When
people
suffer tonight."
Some critics have reductively described the single as "Get
By, Part II" (more a comment on the Kanye's overexposure
I think -- the cat is all over the place and his production suffers
because of it).
For example
Village Voice reviewer Irin Carmon described "I Try" as
a "poor choice for a
flagship track". Regardless, "I Try", like its predecessor,
has cats getting
spiritual and cerebral (ebullient might be a good description)
all up in the
club and while rolling down the boulevard in the Escalade.
That Kweli is upbeat about The Beautiful Struggle suggests that
at least he
believes that he is making the kind of music he should make, no
matter what
critics think. Talking by phone from his Brooklyn home base, Kweli
notes
that the "reception has been different. I'm not getting the
critical acclaim
that I'm used to, but more than ever regular people on the street
are coming
up to me, telling me that they like this song or they like that
song, and
that never happened before." For an artist whose work is so
much about
connecting with the people, this is a welcome turn: "Before
I had all this
critical acclaim, but no one knew what the fuck I was talking about.
Now
real people are reaching out to me and the music critics don't
get it." When
asked about the difference between The Beautiful Struggle and his
previous
work, Kweli's response is surprisingly simple: "This album
I tired to let
the music decide what I was gonna write, instead of vice versa."
While Kweli's longtime partner Hi-Tek is in the mix, The Beautiful
Struggle also features beats from certified hit-makers such as Just Blaze
("Never
Been in Love"), the Neptunes ("Broken Glass") and,
of course, flavor of the
moment Kanye West. If there's something to be learned by Kweli's
production
choices, it's that today's conscious rapper need not be boxed in
like, say,
KRS-One, who for much of his career was saddled with production
that was
clearly outclassed by his lyrics (save when he handed over the
production
reins to Primo). According to Kweli, "Some [music critics]
are not prepared
for some of the music I'm coming with. I think they underestimate
my
intentions. They think I'm doing certain things to appeal to the
mainstream.
I think they're just now realizing what kind of artist I was."
What
we've always known about Talib Kweli the artist, is that he is
thoughtful, well-read, cerebral and committed to the best traditions
of
social justice. Of course, one of the great influences on Talib
Kweli the
person, is his mother, professor Brenda Greene, who directs the
Center for
Black Literature at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn. "She
made sure I
understood the power of language," Kweli explains. "Made
sure I understood
that I am nothing, if I don't attribute what I've gotten to the
community
that I've come out of."
Another of Kweli's influences has been the late jazz vocalist
Nina Simone,
as witnessed by Kweli and Hi-Tek's revision of Simone's "Four
Women" (from
Reflection Eternal), their name-drop of Ms. Simone on "The
Blast" and of
course the sanctified moaning that opens "Get By" (taken
from Simone's "
Sinnerman"). And Blackstar's longtime musical mentor, the
late Weldon
Irvine, was Simone's musical director for a time. "Nina Simone
was very
inspirational as a person to me," Kweli admits, seeing hip-hop
as fulfilling
the political and cultural role that Simone couldn't after the
mainstream
reaction to her groundbreaking political songs of the 1960s forced
her to
leave the United States. "Nina sort of removed herself from
the situation.
She left America and went to Paris. We're sort of the equivalent
of Nina
would do, if she chose to stay here." Simone who had a significant
following
in the late 1950s and early 1960s fell out of favor among mainstream
audiences when she began to lend her talents to the civil rights
struggle
and recorded songs like "Mississippi Goddam", "I
Wish I Knew How It Would
Feel to Be Free", and "Why? (The King of Love is Dead)",
her tribute to
Martin Luther King, Jr.
For an artist who so often distances himself from the "political
rapper" label, he is quite clear about the political
potential of hip-hop. Speaking
to William Jelani Cobb earlier this year, Kweli suggested a link
between
hip-hop and the civil rights movement, claiming "there are
a thousand
hip-hop songs that share those themes. They just aren't listening".
When
asked to elaborate, Kweli tells PopMatters, "Sometimes the
media perception
is that there's only one type of hip-hop made. Journalists and
artists have
to be careful when we talk about hip-hop, because there are two
different
worlds. There's a world that the media portrays as hip-hop and
then there's
what hip-hop actually is... It goes across the spectrum, when you
talk about
hip-hop in general. But when you talk about hip-hop in the mainstream,
there's only one type of thing." Kweli's comments, in part,
explain his
collaboration with Jay Z and Busta Rhymes on last year's remix
of "Get By" or his decision to feature radio friendly R&B
acts like Blige, Faith Evans
and Anthony Hamilton on some of the tracks.
According to Kweli, the title for The Beautiful Struggle came
from his
Blackstar partner: "Mos Def used to say all the time, 'Life
is beautiful,
life is a struggle, life is a beautiful struggle.' As I was putting
the list
of songs together, the songs all sounded like a beautiful struggle
to me."
In classic form, Kweli takes that theme and provides a sensitive
view into
the lives of black woman, as he did on tracks like "For Women" or
Blackstar's "Brown Skin Lady". The Beautiful Struggle's "Black
Girl Pain",
featuring Jean Grae, is the album's most striking track. On the
track he
smiles out loud about his relationship with his young daughter: "she
four
reading Cornrows by Camille Yarbrough / I keep her head braided,
bought her
a black Barbie / I keep her mind, she ain't no black zombie." "I
know I
can't write from a first-hand perspective, so I wrote to my daughter
or
about my daughter," Kweli says of the song. "My son and
daughter, they are
my reward and my inspiration at the same time."
There's a line that gets repeated throughout the title track: "you'll
try to
change the world/so please excuse me while I laugh." The lyric
in many ways
embodies Talib Kweli's apprehensions about be viewed as a political
rapper.
For Kweli, it's not about changing the world, but about changing
life up on
the block or changing his daughter into her pajamas after a busy
day playing
and reading with her father-and that is a beautiful struggle indeed.
— February 7, 2005

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