From its beginnings in hip hop culture, the dense rhythms and aggressive lyrics of rap music have made it a provocative fixture on the American cultural landscape. In Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America, Tricia Rose, described by the New York Times as a "hip hop theorist," takes a comprehensive look at the lyrics, music, cultures, themes, and styles of this highly rhythmic, rhymed storytelling and grapples with the most salient issues and debates that surround it.
Assistant Professor of Africana Studies and History at New York University, Tricia Rose sorts through rap's multiple voices by exploring its underlying urban cultural politics, particularly the influential New York City rap scene, and discusses rap as a unique musical form in which traditional African-based oral traditions fuse with cutting-edge music technologies. Next she takes up rap's racial politics, its sharp criticisms of the police and the government, and the responses of those institutions. Finally, she explores the complex sexual politics of rap, including questions of misogyny, sexual domination, and female rappers' critiques of men.
But these debates do not overshadow rappers' own words and thoughts. Rose also closely examines the lyrics and videos for songs by artists such as Public Enemy, KRS-One, Salt N' Pepa, MC Lyte, and L. L. Cool J. and draws on candid interviews with Queen Latifah, music producer Eric "Vietnam" Sadler, dancer Crazy Legs, and others to paint the full range of rap's political and aesthetic spectrum. In the end, Rose observes, rap music remains a vibrant force with its own aesthetic, "a noisy and powerful element of contemporary American popular culture which continues to draw a great deal of attention to itself."
She graduated from Yale University where she received a BA in Sociology and then received her Ph.D. from Brown University in the field of American Studies. She has taught at NYU, University of California at Santa Cruz and is now a Professor of Africana Studies at Brown University.
Professor Rose is most well-known for her ground-breaking book on the emergence of hip hop culture. Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America, published in 1994 by Wesleyan Press, has since become a classic. It is considered a foundational text for the study of hip hop, one that has defined what has eventually become a serious field of study. Black Noise won an American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation in 1995 and was also considered one of the top 25 books of 1995 by the Village Voice. In 1999, Black Issues in Higher Education listed Black Noise one of its "Top Books of the Twentieth Century."
A pioneering work in the scholarly research of hip hop. I still refer to it constantly, as does just about anyone in the field. One of the finest passages, I think, is her discussion of sampling practices - especially those of Public Enemy - as a postmodern composition device that preferences sounds and ideas to musical notes. It might change the mind of anyone who thinks making hip hop music is simple or mundane.
ENG393: JAMES HARDEN, TIANNA BUTLER, HARRISON CORWIN, ANNALEE KWOCHKA For some, the world of hip hop may be difficult to navigate through the various images it portrays, dense lyrical work, and bass thumping beats. Very few individuals have the skills to breakdown the components of hip hop and get to the heart of what makes this musical genre a successful and widely embraced culture. Tricia Rose’s Black Noise is an insightful book that provides an array of in-depth research and commentary on what makes hip hop, hip hop. Rose thoroughly discusses the origins of hip hop, the various elements of the culture, the politics involved, and even examines women’s roles in Hip Hop. Very few people know about the historical roots of Hip Hop as a movement. In Black Noise, Rose sets the tone for this informative book by framing the origins of Hip Hop as a voice for the oppressed. Rose states, “ Rap music is a black cultural expression that prioritizes black voices from the margins of urban America” (Rose 3). Beautifully interweaving the culture of the Caribbean youth and African American youth, with the beginnings of DJing, graffiti as the pulse of New York, and the widespread dance craze of b-boying and b-girling, Rose introduces her readers to the core of hip hop. Rose does a great job of incorporating specific hip hop heavy hitters of the early years like Run DMC and Whodini into her work and contextualizes them within that time period and their impact on music. The book also provides younger readers, who may not have been heavily into hip hop when the book was first published in 1994, with detailed descriptions of MCs and their songs that were making waves during that time. However, Rose at times tends to rush through the origins of b-boying, and graffiti rather quickly, focusing mainly on the MCs. While it is understandable that the main concern of a book about hip hop would be about the MCs who brought it to life, Rose could also go deeper into the importance of graffiti then and now, as well as b-boying then and now. Rose’s second chapter in Black Noise provides the reader with a contextual history locating the cultural and societal factors that led and shaped the growth of hip hop during the 1970s and 1980s. Following in the footsteps of other musical scholars, Rose traces the historical rise of the four major types of African American music (the blues, jazz, rhythm and blues and rap) to historical conditions linked to the larger political and social character of America (Rose, 23). For Rose, the process of urban deindustrialization in the 1970s and the postindustrial urban landscape in the 1980s were integral in the formation of hip hop culture. The gradual loss of federal funding towards social services for cities across the country as well as the decline of industrial factories led to crippling effects across urban areas, especially affecting minority communities in these areas. New York particularly felt the effects of the nationwide economic decline. The city’s bankruptcy, combined with disastrous city policies and deteriorating neighborhoods, fostered a sense of abandonment amongst Black and Latino communities. Hip hop emerged as a source of cultural identity in a “hostile, technologically sophisticated, multiethnic, urban terrain” (Rose, 34). Utilizing different platforms, such as breakdancing, rapping and graffiti writing, urban youths fostered a new identity within this urban landscape. The chapter continues by focusing categorically on the different ways in which graffiti, breakdancing and rapping existed stylistically, forming cultural identities. While Rose does an admirable job tracing the methodology of each platform and attempting to tie each together, it is questionable whether or not individual artists were truly multilateral in their accumulation of a hip hop identity. Although the emergence of hip hop cannot be discussed without tying in graffiti, breakdancing and rapping together into a broader movement, there was most likely a separation of spheres in terms of artistic expression that ought to be discussed and acknowledged. Moreover, the diversity of each category, especially graffiti is exceptionally important in understanding its growth internationally. Regardless, Rose’s second chapter illuminates the social conditions that shaped and fostered hip hop into an urban cultural movement. Rose also explores the cultural contestations through lyrical analysis of the critiques in rap music. She eloquently addresses issues of institutional and ideological power over rap music, including the responses from artists and fans to these external constraints over rap. She does a wonderful job of elucidating the hidden politics within insurance policies, pubic space policing of rap fans, media coverage of violence at rap concerts, and rappers’ collective responses to the media’s interpretations. Her evaluations of elements that merit resistance to rap maintain validity even today. She brings attention to the perception and construction of young African Americans as dangerous and threatening and in need of policing, using anecdotal experiences to illustrate the denigrating approach of oppressors to control and regulate open spaces of black youth and minorities. She also gives the readers insight into the exclusionary business practices of venue owners and insurance companies that deny bookings to rap shows on the premise of negative images and stereotypes depicted in society. All of this is to say that Blacks cannot be let to roam free and Rose speaks to the dehumanizing nature of this policing. She further delves into the one-sided mystifying view of Blacks in places like the media and the detrimental misinterpretations of rap by scholars and critics. For instance she raises the issue of the “black on black crime” label that is often a term relayed in the news but often distorts the view of crime as some innate by-product of blackness. Consequential to this racial grammar, Rose enlightens us of how the Stop The Violence movement, modeled after KRS-ONE’s song, was off base from the rapper’s original intention since it did not redefine the problem but instead subjected to constraints of “self-destruction” ideology without considering the external economic, social, and institutional factors burdening marginalized Blacks. Her analysis of the external factors limiting the expression of rap and influencing its perception is well-rounded and promotes critical thought of hip-hop as a product of the environment it arose from. Finally, in chapter five of Black Noise, Bad Sistas: Black Women Rappers and Sexual Politics in Rap Music, Tricia Rose examines the complicated dialogue between black female rappers, male rappers, and the rest of the music industry. From a relatively impartial standpoint, she considers the ways that “black women rappers work within and against dominant sexual and racial narratives in American culture.” Rose highlights three key themes in this discourse, all in dialogue with both male rappers and with broader social conversations: heterosexual courtship, the importance of the female voice, and power in women’s rap and black female public displays of freedom (both physical and sexual). Although Rose’s analysis of this conversation is both thorough and insightful, the context and time period that she discusses is rather out of date (the book was published in 1994), and the conversation has changed somewhat in almost twenty years.
I thought this book gave an in depth look at the cultural background and reputation of rap music in the early 90's. There were a lot of interesting things I learned (like the development of graffiti, urban decay in New York City, the big power outage of the 70's, early production techniques) but some of the chapters about oral tradition just went on and on. I enjoyed what she wrote about institutional prejudice about rap music (such as insurance companies dropping venues that would book rap concerts and journalists inflating fights during concert reviews) and the chapter about women in rap was well done.
I. Tricia Rose is a popular author in the black community, and I look forward to reading her books and learning more about her. I also study Black Music, and have posted what I’ve learned about Rap music below: 1. In America after the Civil War, blacks moved from the south to the north, to the big cities, and they adopted different styles, so now blacks from the south have different music styles than blacks from the north. 1-B. "Like other contemporary (or mostly black) traditions of music in America, hip hop music is a hybrid form traceable to speech and songs of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, at least, and perhaps to traditions that are much older. Traditions of eloquence in black America.” 1-C. Hip hop, or rap, the terms can be used interchangeably. 2. In African American literature, the vernacular refers to church songs, blues, ballads, sermons, stories, and, in our own era, hip hop songs that are part of the oral, nor primarily the literate (or written-down) tradition of black expression. 3. Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century observers, black and white, recorded their fascination with black oral forms. Thomas Jefferson, for example, observed that musically the slaves "are more generally gifted than the whites with accurate ears for tune and time." Nearly fifty years later, a Mississippi planter used conventionally racialized language to inform Frederick Law Olmstead that "niggers is allers good singers nat'rally. I reckon they got better lungs than white folks, they hev such powerful voices."
4. Hip hop music also comes from the stylized talk between verses that is characteristic of blues and rhythm and blues (and, some observers say, of all black American) song forms... It derives from playground, pool hall, barber shop, and beauty salon narration and argumentation and from the highly competitive boasts and toasts and from the dozens. 5. More immediately, hip hop sprang from the streets of uptown New York City in the late 1970s. According to historian Nelson George, it arrived 'via block parties and jams in public parks, sparked by the innovative moves of a handful of pioneering men.'
6. It was not long before the highly cadenced and highly competitive extended verbal play brought a new level of word artistry to the hip hop experience... hip hop music elicited a national excitement that soon spun through the Americas to Europe, Africa, and Asia. 7. Once "Rapper's Delight" by the Sugar Hill Gang--released on vinyl in twelve-inch sleeves and sold in store as Birdel's in the Bronx--unleashed a hurricane of enthusiasm among buyers, hip hop music elicited a national excitement that soon spun through the Americas to Europe, Africa, and Asia. The title of this first hit fastened the name rappers onto the performers, but old-school artists and new ones alike seem to prefer hip hop, and in the case of the oldest old schoolers, the performer's correct title was not rapper but M.C. 8. …But, as Nelson George and others have argued, if the themes of hip hop lyrics are often intense, do they not also echo such themes in U.S. culture at large?...by detailing in rivetingly raw terms life in the no-exit realm of the black urban poor. At times there is a political critique embedded in the lyrics...raises issues that our nation is still struggling to address. 9. In one section, indicates that sometimes blacks, like many other races, can be an insular people, that is, they can be unwilling to accept other people. 10. Other hip hop artists are explicitly progressive in their critiques of the socio-political systems that surround them. They even tap into the black prophetic tradition by urging listeners to awaken to new levels of political and spiritual consciousnesses, to read, and to prepare to take forthright action in a far-downfallen world.
11. It is vital to note that hip hop music began and to some degree still thrives not as an isolated phenomenon but as part of a larger hip hop culture. Like its parents, rhythm and blues and jazz, hip hop is at once an in-group ritual music, a performance music, and a dance music designed to make listeners move together. Hip hop culture includes social dances associated with its incredibly athletic spins, turns, robotic movements, and even possession-like trances. Hip hop culture embraces graffiti artists. Hip hop affects styles of dress, haircut, and self-decoration. Hip hop language influences everyday spoken language as well as formal writing: journalism, poetry, fiction, drama. 12. Usually eclipsed in discussions of hip hop's sociologiccal implications is this styles value as music and poetry. In the work of some, the alliteration is as startlingly inventive as the rhyme schemes, which depend on end rhymes and complex interlocking internal rhymes. This is an art of what one performer calls "verbal fire and ice," performed with and against a background of sounds pulled from any and every previously recorded music. Such sampling has given the music a self-conscious postmodern mix. 13. Omitted. 14. At times there is a political critique embedded in the lyrics: for all its vulgarity and violence, N.W.A.'s "Fuck da Police" raises issues of racial profiling and other forms of harassment that our nation is still struggling to address. 15. When hip hop is at its best, its lines vary in length without seeming forced or distended. The sense of humor--the impulse to parody and to signify--drives the work at least as much as its impulses to detail the lives of the urban underclass.
16. Hip hop is a music that makes room for young black performers to address black audiences concerning serious matters of disempowerment and the urgent need for fundamental change. Some of the most intriguing questions about this music involve its quest for authenticity; its relation to postmodernism; its geography beyond the confines of New York City and the urban northeastern United States; its international appeal; and its attractiveness to middle- and upper-class white Americans. To what degree is hip hop a youth culture as it is a black culture? How are these lines drawn? And again, how do we measure the art of musicians who play no instruments (in the conventional sense), vocal artists who generally do not sing, and poets whose rhymes are not written to be read on a page and that, alas, are generally too profane for anthologies such as this one." 17. Some artists and albums listed in this anthology include: A. Gil Scott-Heron: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised B. Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five: The Message C. Public Enemy: Don't Believe the Hype D. Queen Latifah: The Evil That Men Do E. Eric B. & Rakim: I Ain't No Joke F. Biggie Smalls (The Notorious B.I.G.): Things Done Changed G. Nas: N.Y. State of Mind H. N.W.A.: Straight Outta Compton 18. Refers to "City Madness", or the steep increase in crime and unlawful activity that sometimes occurs in the inner cities, within a small amount of time. Source: The Norton Anthology of African American Literature, by Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Nellie Y. McKay. 19. Please visit my blog, www.scholarlyinformation.com for more university-level book reviews, food ideas, and more.
Uh-mazing. Everyone should have as nuanced and valued an understanding of rhythm and repetition in rap/hip-hop as Tricia Rose. Any given aesthetic taste aside, the cultural value of the music and the expression of continuity and fluidity/change is utterly fascinating, meaning-making.
Rose's depiction of hip-hop origins and its central role in the cultural representation of minorities embedded in an adverse context is rather complete and more than just a history lesson. It establishes a clear view of socio-cultural and economical factors that go into the whole rap context. From its conception, establishment and the battles it faces at all levels including commercial, political and in the media. It also theorizes in a solid fashion the elements that underlay its discourse and the role this has in the black-american day-to-day experience and the longstanding battle with stigma, discrimination, prosecution and structural racism.
Now, as I read this book I could not stop thinking of latin American cultural products and how the multiple similarities to the Hip-Hop movement have led to comparable platforms that do not land in product of that dimension, extension or power. Across all different LATAM countries, you can find musical products that represent the fight against imperialism, racism and economical negligence, however there are very little ones that can match the platform, exposure and universality of Reggaeton in 2025. Thinking of James Scott's work on Resistance, the public social transcripts are clear and directly solidify the imperialist experience por all people across the americas, so if there is such platform that has been highly influenced by traditional sounds, language and mediated through movement and dance. What reggaeton missing for to exploit this in favor of resistance? How could it translate into hidden transcripts that impact the domination relationship through a discrepancy in the social order? I then turn to think in Bad Bunny's latest album currently topping #1 in the world and how it now gets people singing, dancing, dressing and expressing with love against topics such gentrification, American subjugation and love for the roots, people that would not openly discuss this topics, and think of this can become possible. It's coming, now.
I love a book that gets me to think into other topics and introduces me to both theory and history. I truly appreciate this book and can openly say I see things differently upon reading it.
"Barulho de Preto", da autora Tricia Rose, é uma relíquia dentro do escopo teórico se o assunto for hip-hop, rap e suas tensões. Obra de remixes, faz questão de avançar, retornar e avançar mais uma vez, em uma busca incessante por tudo aquilo que significa o hip-hop como movimento cultural, um beat interminável em que cada pausa é uma descoberta, cada tom é um assombro. A partir desse trabalho, o leitor pode compreender o surgimento do hip-hop nos Estados Unidos e criar paralelos com a realidade deste movimento cultural em outras organizações socioculturais, especialmente aquelas em que a diáspora é a real força motriz. Além disso, é possível depreender o que movimenta o rap, como seu ciclo se move, quem o acompanha e para onde ele se encaminha, refletindo características constitutivas do gênero musical quando feito por pessoas negras de diferentes gêneros. Obra inescapável — para uma compreensão aprofundada do hip-hop e do rap, é como um sample de Johnny Alf em uma música da Drik Barbosa.
I enjoyed this book more and more as I read it. The beginning chapter was boring and repetitive, but I blame this on the fact that I’ve always been an avid rap fan and I’m also a musician in hip-hop, so I know a lot about the genre and it’s history. Rose, given that she’s an academic writing an academic account of Black music + culture (hip hop in this case), has to spend time defining the genre and laying out information for those who don’t know, and I understand that. After this chapter, she really gets going in her analysis of different areas of the culture. I especially enjoyed chapter 3, “Sonic Soul Forces,” in which she dissects sampling and the meaning of the practice. As a beatmaker this hit home. Overall, a good read.
tells a linear history of hip-hop and rap music while analyzing it through sociological, cultural, feminist, and anti-capitalist frameworks. the language of this books is extremely accessible, and can be a great introduction to some theoretical concepts. this is great, for especially those who seek this book solely for its historical documentation of contemporary societies most visible and audible Black cultural production. it’s analysis of hip-hop and rap still holds even to the contemporary period, despite missing some key changes and productions in rap that shaped it. this stands as a testament to the books thorough cultural and historical analysis, making it a seemingly essential book for hip-hop and rap history and studies
I found this to be a very intelligent and eye opening analysis. I have never been a big fan of rap music, but this book completely changed my understanding of it. Rose tackled so many different angles on the hip hop movement. Her writing style was easy to read, yet insightful. I thought Rose did a particularly good job at challenging sexism in the music industry and challenging hegemonic tactics in the media. Though the beginning of the book didn’t immediately capture my interest, I flew through the last two chapters, completely enthralled.
This is an incredible look at Rap and Hip Hop at both a musical level and a cultural one, getting into the musical tradition that predates and leads into Rap as well as how that music is engaged with at a media level but also how it slots perfectly into Black culture. She references Angela Davis, Michael Parenting, and even Antonio Gramsci to indicate how media and mainstream culture gain from portraying the average Rap listener as a misogynistic criminal while breaking down the crucial role Rap has in making public elements of the average life of a young Black person in the 80s and 90s.
Cultural analysis on the order of the responsible & comprehensive best that includes full intersectionality. Though the language is a bit inaccessible as it is an academic study, the last half is a brilliant Black feminism breakdown of where rap and hip hop culture was at in the early 90s, and gives you the critical thinking tools to understand how our society still encounters Black musics & expressions with deeply prejudiced eyes & ears. Read it & listen to the music referenced along the way!
Feels weird to slap a rating on an academic text, like I'm marking it or something. Just as fascinating for what has changed since this was written (rap is still just about level with the other elements, MTV is still on the upswing, sampling as they knew it is just starting to implode) as what hasn't (more or less everything related to race, class and gender).
In all honesty, I didn't finish this one. With that being said, I gave it two attempts. I read this to learn a little bit but I think I wasn't as interested in the subject matter as I needed to be to get through how wordy this book is. I'm sure that it is insightful and has great information, but it was a little beyond what I was looking for to just gain some basic information.
Excellent sociological and intersectional history of rap. Really enjoyed the comparison with “Western” music and the proliferation of rap exacerbated by mixing & recording technology.
Outstanding analysis of Black women rappers, including the weaponization of white feminism and dialogue between Black men and women.
I am currently working on a dissertation on Hamilton, which draws heavily on the era of rap and hip-hop discussed in the book. This book gives me a better idea of the cultures of the time and insight into rap and hip-hop I would not otherwise have.
Overall good review of Hip Hop. A dense read that is not for the faint of heart but for those interested in the intersectionality of culture and blackness in America and how one defined the other.
Rose is amazing at bringing awareness to the movement of hip-hop culture. As a Black mother of a Black son, I needed this information to understand our youth and their generation's challenges.
Excellent close readings of rap repertoire, and sociological / ethnomusicological analysis of rap music. Though written in the mid-90s, the text still reads really well one quarter of the way through the 21st century.
The best book to read if you want to know more about hip hop's history and biggest challenges. The chapters on hip hop as resistance (Prophets of Rage) and hip hop's history of seizing urban spaces (All Aboard the Night Train) were incredibly revealing. The narrative Rose tells is comprehensive, easily understandable, and oftentimes poetic.
The book was, however, published in 1994 and desperately needs a new volume. Then again, I also haven't been exposed to much analysis of 80s/90s hip hop, and watching Queen Latifah/MC Lyte/Public Enemy music videos was really entertaining.
Delving into hip hop's history is so revealing. It always leaves me frustrated at how far the genre has deviated from the narratives of resistance and empowerment that hip hop once engendered, and how (if?) we can progress past the misogyny, racism, and violence that dominates American radio waves today.