Opinion: Tupac at 50: Why His Era Was A Different Universe From Hip-Hop Today
As far as hip-hop is concerned, age 50 might as well be age 150.
Itâs always been a young personâs genre â the perfect medium through which to channel angst toward adults, corporate America, and navigation of relationships at an age before we possess the maturity to properly do so.
As a teenager of the 1990s, itâs been something of a mixed bag watching some of my favorite rappers reach that half-century mark. On one end, you have folks like Jay-Z ,51, who has eternal cachet as a living hip-hop G.O.A.T.
On the other end, you have gangsta rap pioneer Ice Cube, 52, whose classic AmeriKKKaâs Most Wanted is unlikely to be duplicated. You also have several still-active legends like Nas, Eminem and Snoop Dogg soon looking at a half-century. DMX died at 50 while finishing up his recently released eighth album Exodus.
Tupac Shakur wouldâve been 50 today (June 16). Having succumbed to gunshot wounds at age 25 on Sept. 13, 1996, heâs been gone almost as long as he was here.
Itâs hard to imagine âPac as a quinquagenarian because he left us as an avatar of 90s Black urban youth. He died something much deeper, more meaningful than just another rapper â he was a young Black icon; a beloved yet complicated hero of his zeitgeist...hip-hopâs preeminent anti-hero.
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âPac as he existed then wouldâve had problems in the current era of social media and social enlightenment. Thereâs that 1994 sexual abuse conviction. There are the various other allegations involving assault with various weapons. And thereâs âHit Emâ Up,â to this day arguably the most caustic hip-hop diss track of all time, aimed primarily at The Notorious B.I.G. and full of every -ism you can muster. Drake, for example, could not get away with this.
But âPac also demonstrated a duality that I think would be less acceptable from an artist of his caliber today. Through his interviews and his music, he shined a harsh light on a society that created space for young, Black misfits to thrive and die. âPac was not a dumb man, and he spoke more intelligently on the social ills than anything I would expect from almost any rapper currently on the Billboard Top 40 (and thereâs plenty to talk about these days).
It didnât hurt that he was a product of a socially aware, more culturally robust era of hip-hop: When his debut, 2Pacalypse Now, dropped in 1991, the Black kids in my elementary school were rocking Malcolm X hats and leather Africa patches â whether or not we truly understood Brother Malcolm at the time, we thought it was cool because mainstream rappers made it cool.
Further contrasting how different things were then, Nancy Reaganâs anti-drug movement was still very prominent in schools and in music, while todayâs young rap fans worship the music of drug abusers their age.
Visit a high school and youâre likely to find at least a couple kids who are happy to dismiss the music of Lilâ Whomever Du Jour and who also appreciate âPac. But it will never be the same for them as it was for me: Iâm almost exactly 10 years younger than âPac, so I remember the man as he existed in my Sony Discman and on MTV while he was still drawing breath, and I remember how his death during my sophomore year of high school shook everyone to their core.
As a 40-year-old, I look at 25-year-olds and see how much they donât know yet. But to me, âPac will always loom large in his wisdom despite not getting enough of that natural wisdom that comes from clocking some years on Earth.
Whether Tupac is the greatest rapper of all time has been a matter of hotly-debated discussion for a quarter century to the point of annoyance. Whether heâs one of the most influential rappers of all time is not up for discussion.
Itâs tempting to conjecture about what âPac would be doing if he were alive at 50, but thatâs the only good thing about his life being cut short at such a young age â we donât have to think about it.
Dustin J. Seibert is a native Detroiter living in Chicago. He loves his own mama slightly more than he loves music and exercises every day only so his French fry intake doesnât catch up to him. Find him at wafflecolored.com.