White, Female…and a Rapper, Sunday Style Australia
Transcription
White, Female…and a Rapper, Sunday Style Australia
White, female and a rapper Ruby Warrington checks out the rest of the new breed of hip-hop queens When 14-year-old Iggy Azalea was busting out rhymes in her bedroom in Mullumbimby, dreaming of becoming the next Lisa ‘Left Eye’ Lopes, it seems she wasn’t alone. The first wave of female interlopers to have successfully occupied the very male world of gangsta rap in the 1990s has spawned a whole new generation of wannabe lyrical stylists, with Azalea tipped most likely to succeed from the get-go. And if having ovaries meant the likes of Missy Elliott, Eve and Lauryn Hill thought they had a lot to prove – try being white, to boot. “I can’t tell you the double standards I’ve been subjected to since I started performing, but I knew going in what preconceived notions I’d have to battle,” says Brooke Candy, a former stripper from LA and the other leading figure in the all-new white female rapper line-up. Other artists coming through, meanwhile, include K.Flay, Kitty Pryde, Dessa and Kreayshawn, whose single Gucci Gucci is a YouTube sensation with more than 42 million views to date. But no matter that Candy’s lyrical flow and ghetto stance have been likened to her idol Lil’ Kim (“Imagine Siouxsie Sioux dressing up as Kim,” wrote one music blogger), the hip-hop purists are having a hard time accepting these “vanilla vixens”. Writing on ‘The false rise of white female rappers’ for ahoodie.com, the site’s editor, Butchaz, describes Azalea and her ilk as “a plague of shallow, self-absorbed white chicks that believe talking monosyllabically about the contents of their wardrobe over a synth-heavy beat qualifies them to be called rappers. When did it stop being about the music?” Even hip-hop presenter Touré Neblett gave them a hard time when he wrote in The New York Times: “Hip-hop coming from a white woman is almost always an immediate joke,” citing Gwyneth Paltrow’s cringe-worthy rendition of NWA’s Straight Outta Compton on a British TV show, and Natalie Portman “furiously” spitting rhymes on Saturday Night Live. Anybody who’s witnessed MC Dusk, aka actor Abbie Cornish, in action (yes, seriously – the debut album is in the works) will get the idea. Believing they lack the ability to fully embody the “celebration of black masculine power” that’s at the heart of the genre’s gangsta appeal (which he says some white men and some black women have been able to carry off successfully), “It’s seen as cute and comical, like a cat walking on its hind legs,” he concluded. Try telling that to Brooke Candy. Having described herself as “an aggressive, angry person,” she says rapping has been an outlet for the rage she’s felt at being marginalised for being female. “I realised, what does fighting and screaming and being crazy ever achieve? I’m lucky to be able to get it all out on-stage now.” Like Azalea, she raps about female sexual empowerment, subverting the traditional PHOTOGRAPHY: GeTTY imAGes, FiLmmAGiC (trend) Optus16581/8/L MSM14JUL13p022 22 7/5/13 6:13 PM