Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Changes
Music by: D. Evans
Written by: Tupac Shakur & Bruce Hornsby
Performed by: Tupac Shakur

We gotta make a change. It's time for us as a people to start makin'
some changes. Let's change the way we eat, let's change the way
we live and let's change the way we treat each other. You see,
the old way wasn't working so it's on us to do what we gotta do,
to survive.

Back in the early '90s, hip hop was beginning to spread like wildfire from one city to the next throughout the United States. Whether it was Notorious B.I.G. and LL Cool J representing the East Coast or their rivals, Snoop Dogg and Tupac, throwin' it down for the West Coast, the cultural movement had kids, teens and adults alike blasting a boom box with these artists' poetic rhymes in their tape deck. These rappers generally targeted African-American and Hispanic audiences, but anyone who had been discriminated against, caught up in gang violence, grew up poor and hungry or had sunk into the position of making a living illegally could relate to the lyrics of most hip hop songs. These issues were all too familiar for, arguably, one of the greatest rappers of our time, the late Tupac Shakur.

Mainstream rap today is primarily about money and sex. The 21st century rapper wants you drapped in the latest fashion, blowing money on expensive cars and cribs. They want you to go out and drink, dance and have a one night stand. At least, that's what they enjoy sharing with fans through the mic or in a music video. Most rappers today aren't as driven on reaching their audience through a personal testimony or offering advice from experience; instead, it's become a money-grubbing, power trip. But back when hip hop was making it's debut, artists didn't hold back. They rapped about their lives in the ghetto and how they prayed for change.

Around 1995-1996, Tupac rewrote and remixed Bruce Hornsby and the Range's 1986 hit, The Way It Is, in order for the song to better relate to Tupac's lifestyle and his fans'. It was titled, Changes, and released posthumously on his Greatest Hits album.

Tupac used the song to explain what it was like living as a Black man. He discussed the struggles Blacks faced and continue to face: oppression because of their skin color, police brutality, racism, drugs and growing up as a hustler. He knew what it was like to see friends and family members fall in the street from gang violence. I commend Tupac on writing his own lyrics. He's a storyteller. You can feel the passion behind each line he raps. His words are powerful. It was almost as if he was attempting to create a movement with his song, Changes. He rapped to express his anger and hatred toward evil. He had grown weary of it. Tupac wanted something different for himself and his people--for everyone.

I see no changes. Wake up in the morning and I ask myself, "Is life worth living, should I blast myself?" I'm tired of bein' poor and even worse, I'm Black. My stomach hurts so I'm lookin' for a purse to snatch. Cops give a damn about a Negro, pull a trigger, kill a nigga, he's a hero. Give the crack to the kids, who the hell cares? One less hungry mouth on the welfare.

I'm not condoning the actions Tupac raps about, but he had a way of putting himself out there--raw and real--and that's admirable. He was trying to change and help others in the process. He didn't fear opening up through his music. He wasn't scared of what people thought; he spoke the truth. He rapped about what he knew from past and current experiences. He taught other races what it was like being Black. He encouraged Blacks to dismiss the stereotypes they had always been belittled to and make something of themselves. But in the song, a recurring phrase is argued that "That's just the way it is." Bein' real don't appeal to the brother in you. You gotta operate the easy way. "I made a G today." But you made it in a sleazy way, sellin' crack to the kid. "I gotta get paid." Well hey, well that's the way it is. Just as many adults wish they could revisit their childhood with old friends they have lost touch with, Tupac, on the other hand, raps about the death of fallen "brothers" or now opposing gang members he once grew up with, and how he would "love to go back to when [they] played as kids, but things change, and that's the way it is."

He explains to the hypocrites how Blacks aren't the only ones out smoking dope and that it takes patience and devotion to better yourself. People need to listen to each other instead of acting on their anger by pulling out a gun to kill someone. Take the evil out the people, they'll be acting right. 'Cause both Black and White is smokin' crack tonight. And only time we chill is when we kill each other. It takes skill to be real, time to heal each other. He makes statements about the Black's present, as the listener translates Tupac's hope for the future. We ain't ready, to see a Black president. It ain't a secret, don't conceal the fact the penitentiary's packed, and it's filled with Blacks. From Tupac's perspective, he sees all of his fellow Blacks filling up prisons, dealing drugs and living the life of gang members. He knows that's not going to get anyone anywhere except one step closer to sleeping six feet under, much less a presidency. He wants Blacks viewed equally to Whites and the only way that will happen is if they start making some changes.

The lyrics still apply to many young African-Americans involved in gangs today. And as long as I stay Black, I gotta stay strapped and I never get to lay back. 'Cause I always gotta worry 'bout the pay backs. The same questions people ask in our nation nowadays, Tupac asked in the past. Can't a brother get a little peace? It's war on the streets and war in the Middle East. Instead of war on poverty, they got a war on drugs so the police can bother me. He tells us that misplaced hate makes disgrace to races.

The theme Tupac created within the song is obvious. Your present situation will remain the same unless you take action and make a change. Share with others. View strangers as friends, not foes. Don't be afraid to trust others. Take the time to listen. Don't judge people because of what you were taught; take initiative to learn the truth. Don't give up on yourself if you're unable to see change; stick it out and help others make changes for good as well.

Because rebuking change only leaves us with the excuse, "Well, that's just the way it is."


1 comment:

  1. Hi Jayme!

    I enjoyed reading your entry on Tupac. I was a big fan of Tupac in high school.. I listened to him a lot. I would say the best album that he came out with was Me Against The World. I didn't enjoy his newer stuff as much as the older. Have you ever read a poem by him? Here is a poem that he wrote that I learned when I was 16 or 17 it's called Sometimes I cry..

    Sometimes I Cry

    Sometimes when I'm alone
    I cry because I'm on my own.
    The tears I cry are bitter and warm
    They flow with life but take no form.
    I cry because my heart is torn
    and I find it difficult to carry on
    If I had an ear to confide in
    I would cry among my treasured friends
    but who do you know that stops that long
    to help another carry on?
    The world moves fast and it would
    rather pass you by
    then to stop and see what makes you cry
    It's painful and sad and sometimes I cry
    and no one cares about why.

    I learned this poem because I could somehow relate and appreciated the emotion he put in his work. Very raw as you said. Again good post.. hope to read some more from you.. Do some reviews on Staind!!!

    Take Care Jayme

    Justin

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