Los Angeles Times

Right fit for Tupac Shakur

Rock Hall nominee popularize­d a sound — gangsta rap — and became a legend.

- By Lorraine Ali

When it was announced Tuesday that rapper Tupac Shakur was among the 19 acts nominated for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, there was little argument among rap fans that the voting committee had made the right choice.

Shakur, who was killed two decades ago in a driveby shooting on the Las Vegas Strip, is still regarded as one of the most influentia­l and prolific rappers in hip-hop history.

A study in contradict­ions, Shakur helped popularize a raw form of hip-hop known as gangsta rap while adding poetic insight and sensitivit­y to a new subgenre that often lacked such depth.

His lore among millennial­s was never more apparent than at the 2012 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, when a projected image of the late rapper appeared onstage with Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg. The audience cheered in reverence.

His place in the Rock Hall is ultimately up to a voting body of 700-plus music profession­als. The outcome of that vote will be announced in December, and the induction ceremony will take place in April. Other nominees include L.A.’s own Jane’s Addiction, as well as Pearl Jam, Journey, Depeche Mode, Joan Baez and Janet Jackson.

Few, if any, have developed a myth on par with that of Shakur.

Shakur became symbolic of an era in rap when East Coast and West Coast weren’t descriptor­s of where you were from but proclamati­ons of who you were, what you stood for and where your alliances — no matter how deadly — were rooted.

The announceme­nt by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame turns the focus squarely back on Shakur’s music. It also comes at a moment when West Coast rap is getting its due after years of being obscured by the East Coast in conversati­ons about the artistic evolution of hip-hop.

This year, Compton gangsta rap pioneers N.W.A were inducted into the Hall of Fame, making them the first West Coast rap act to achieve such status. It came on the heels of a critically acclaimed biopic, “Straight Outta Compton,” and the rise of a new generation of Los Angeles artists, led by Kendrick Lamar, who considers N.W.A and Shakur a critical piece of his musical lineage.

But before N.W.A joined the Hall of Fame, it was the hip-hop luminaries from New York — Run-D.M.C., Grandmaste­r Flash and the Furious Five, Public Enemy, the Beastie Boys — that made it into an institutio­n dominated by rock greats such as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Bruce Springstee­n and the Beach Boys.

Shakur, arguably, is now rap’s equivalent to those giants.

Though just 25 at the time of his 1996 death, Shakur had already released four albums. His last non-posthumous release, “All Eyez on Me,” still ranks as one of the highest-selling rap albums of all time.

Shakur stood out from the pack: He was prolific, charismati­c and able to deftly walk the line between gangster braggadoci­os and thoughtful, perceptive lyricism. His dramatic and machismo tales of multiple women and gun-toting violence were often offset by social commentary on racism, poverty and street life, and a deep sentimenta­l streak attached to his childhood, his mother and even the hip-hop artists that came before him.

Shakur rose to fame in the early ’90s, ushering in a golden era of hip-hop alongside contempora­ries Biggie Smalls and Sean “Puff Daddy” Combs, and slightly more establishe­d artists like Dr. Dre (who came from N.W.A) and Snoop Dogg.

But it was also an era that ushered in a bicoastal rivalry that saw artists taunt one another in their music, harmless posturing that eventually evolved into personal beefs, then threats and, finally, deaths.

Record labels were also part of that senseless war. Death Row was the West Coast label run by Marion “Suge” Knight (now in jail awaiting trial on charges stemming from a fatal hitand-run near the set of “Straight Outta Compton”). Bad Boy Records was the New York label run by Combs.

Bad Boy rapper Biggie Smalls (a.k.a. Christophe­r Wallace) was killed in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles less than a year after Shakur’s similar slaying, and the still-unsolved homicide was widely thought to be part of the East CoastWest Coast feud.

Shakur was born in Harlem, N.Y., and was drawn early to the arts — he acted at a young age — before relocating to the Oakland area. It was there that he linked with Digital Undergroun­d and began making inroads into hip-hop.

Shakur’s 1991 debut album, “2Pacalypse Now,” was not a commercial success, but those in the rap world recognized raw talent, and it marked the beginning of Shakur’s unparallel­ed trajectory. By the time of his death, he was the country’s most recognizab­le, and perhaps successful, rapper.

He was also rap’s greatest paradox. Though he rapped about his love and respect for his mother and the plight of kids growing up in the ghetto, he was convicted in a sexual abuse case (for which he served time in prison) and had a history of violence, some of it while partnered with Knight’s Death Row label.

But gangsta or not, his mere associatio­n with hiphop will surely ignite the perennial argument — does rap belong in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?

Earlier this year, inductee Gene Simmons of KISS complained to Rolling Stone that rap had no place in the Hall of Fame. He was reacting to N.W.A’s nomination.

N.W.A’s Ice Cube addressed Simmons from the stage of the induction ceremony. “You … right we rock and roll,” he said. “… Rock and roll is not conforming to the people who came before you, but creating your own path in music and in life.”

Shakur may have an easier road simply because of his wider appeal than N.W.A. While they pioneered the genre of gangsta rap, he popularize­d it.

 ?? Ken Nahoum Edge Film ?? TUPAC SHAKUR, who was killed in 1996, is still regarded as one of hip-hop’s most vital artists.
Ken Nahoum Edge Film TUPAC SHAKUR, who was killed in 1996, is still regarded as one of hip-hop’s most vital artists.
 ?? Paramount Pictures ?? TUPAC SHAKUR was the focus of a 2003 documentar­y, “Resurrecti­on.”
Paramount Pictures TUPAC SHAKUR was the focus of a 2003 documentar­y, “Resurrecti­on.”

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