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By Matthew Kantor
KRS-One is arguably the most powerful voice ever heard in Hip-Hop, as far as both his literal voice and in his ability to move people. For evidence, check him out while he shouts “Jesus was an African” on the 1991 Boogie Down Productions release Live Hardcore Worldwide amidst a slew of the hardest BDP anthems. Still a busy man, KRS recently dropped Maximum Strength 2008 on Koch and has revived the Stop the Violence movement. In celebration of the movement’s 20th anniversary, the teacher is coming around with lectures, an updated all-star anthem called “Self Construction,” and a series of concerts highlighted by an appearance at the Brooklyn Hip-Hop festival on July 12th and the Stop the Violence Movement No Crime Day Fundraising Concert at Madison Square Garden on August 26th . AllHipHop spoke to KRS about Stop the Violence and ended up getting spiritually minded, and more. AllHipHop.com: You’re bringing back the Stop the Violence movement, which started twenty years ago. Violence continues to affect our communities, quite often amongst youth. What do you see as the cause of youth violence? KRS-One: Violence is human nature. Violence is a part of the reptilian brain. Why is there an escalation of violence, why are we wilin’ out, these are 10,000, 20,000 year old questions. The issue here is this. Why are our children so angry? Why are people so hostile, why are adults so hostile, why are they so depressed? Why are people suffering the way they are? You ask what causes violence. The UN says poverty causes violence. Stanford University says illiteracy causes violence. I say boredom causes violence, boredom not just in having nothing to do, but where you have a purpose and you know what you wanna do but you can’t do it. And that’s where you hit poverty—I don’t have the money to do what I want to do—and finally you start getting angry and restless and a violent situation occurs. The Stop the Violence movement also deals not only with homicide but suicide. These too are acts of violence. AllHipHop.com: Why is Hip-Hop equipped to address these issues? KRS-One: Hip-Hop rules the world whether you like it or not. We’re not begging we’re not pleading we’re not asking. When you come to the inner city, this is the s**t right here. Every inner city around the world, the urban life is governed by Hip-Hop and that is a huge responsibility. Not just a privilege and a power but a responsibility because you can lose that power. Those that claim to lead Hip-Hop have to start thinking about that our kids are bringing guns to school, our society is depressed and angered, war is going on across the sea. Like Run-DMC said, war going on across the sea [starts rapping “It’s Like That”], kids killing the elderly, whatever happened to unity? All of that is going on right now. So I can’t sit back. Like I said, I am Hip-Hop. When it comes to Hip-Hop, we have a voice in the inner city, we can explicitly influence young people and working people to consider peace over revenge, forgiveness over revenge. We’ve got the loudest voice. AllHipHop.com: But when you talk about influence, you’ve reached out to 50 Cent, the most successful rapper with violent content ever, and the Game, who brags on the Internet about how he knocked Ras Kass out in a club. Does having rappers with explicitly violent lyrics or who have had violent incidents dilute the message at all?
“I’m not gonna call no names but I called everybody to come out, conscious rappers included. You know what the conscious community said? “Oh KRS again, stop the violence, he needs to just retire, why is he still rhyming?” But the thugs, the gangsters, the pimps and the hoes are putting real money down, real rhyme skills down, and are showing up.”
KRS-One: No, it would dilute the message if it was just a record but it’s a movement. The goal of the movement is not to get Common or Talib or even KRS to say “stop the violence,” it’s to get 50, Fat Joe, and Game to say stop the violence. If we’re really gonna stop the violence, it’s Game who has to rhyme on the record or take a pledge for the movement. You’re not gonna cure a person overnight. Game has entered the rehabilitation center. So, okay, he had a relapse, he knocked Ras Kass out or fought with Ras Kass. That doesn’t contradict the movement. He still committed to the movement and when we called on him to rhyme for peace he showed up. I know exactly what you’re talking about, like it looks that way, why would these guys be on a peace record, they’re not even pushing peace. But the real truth is that they are. 50 Cent is a father, he don’t want guns going off every five minutes, he wants [an end to violence]. Game-same way. Game is an intelligent black man period. And when the call went out he was there. Now let me tell you this—I’m not gonna call no names but I called everybody to come out, conscious rappers included. You know what the conscious community said? “Oh KRS again, stop the violence, he needs to just retire, why is he still rhyming?” That’s what I’m getting from the conscious community. But the thugs, the gangsters, the pimps and the hos are putting real money down, real rhyme skills down, and are showing up at the Garden. These people on the record, I want the most aggressive artists to be involved. I need 50 Cent and Fat Joe to come together, that’s what I need.
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