The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Moment for gospel, rap crossovers is here

- By Briana Younger

WHEN Kanye West’s “Ultralight Beam” floated down from the heavens in February 2016, there was a palpable cultural shift. The song culled the feel-good elements of church - the music, the soul, the encouragem­ent - and isolated them on a hip-hop track to make what was arguably the most culturally consequent­ial gospel song since Kirk Franklin’s “Stomp (God’s Property)” 20 years earlier.

The release coincided with the rise of Chance the Rapper (himself, along with Franklin, prominentl­y featured on “Ultralight Beam”) and his championin­g of Christiani­ty both in and outside of his music. The two years since “Ultralight Beam” have show the opportunit­ies for genre exchange have never been stronger.

Just look at the charts. Yes, Nicki Minaj finds herself battling for the top of the Billboard Hot 200 with her new album, “Queen.” But she’s also on Billboard’s Hot Gospel Songs chart, along with the likes of Charlie Wilson, T.I., Timbaland and Snoop Dogg. Even a few years ago seeing those names on that chart would have seemed unthinkabl­e. But gospel has been undergoing a small and not-insignific­ant evolution that is playing out as an electrifyi­ng and reciprocal stylistic dialogue between different genres of predominan­tly black music.

The elements once considered emblematic of the sanctuary’s uptight convention­s - choirs, organs, meditative lyrics - are now powerful instrument­s of rap and R&B; meanwhile, trap drums and glossy production have infiltrate­d gospel. After all, there is nothing inherently sanctified about a choral arrangemen­t or inherently profane about an 808. And merging the two genres has proved to be a sound business strategy.

The top spot on the Hot Gospel Songs chart, Koryn Hawthorne’s “Won’t He Do It,” sounds like pristine pop music. The choral “oohs” on the introducti­on, thudding bass and plodding piano built into the production owe more to the way hip-hop reimagines gospel than to traditiona­l gospel arrangemen­ts.

“I think she’s just such a breath of fresh air. (“Won’t He Do It”) is young and vibrant, and people are looking for something new from gospel,” says Phil Thornton, the senior vice president and general manager of RCA Inspiratio­n, Hawthorne’s record label. “You’ll always have your praise and worship and your traditiona­l sounds, but I think just like with any other genre ... it’s part of the evolution. If we want to maintain relevance, you have to see different textures and hear different subsets and subgenres of gospel.”

Further down the gospel charts, a cut from soul singer Wilson’s “In It to Win It” album sits among tracks from gospel mainstays. “I’m Blessed,” which features rapper T.I., finds Wilson filtering his gratitude through his buttery vocals.

Elsewhere on the chart, Anthony G. Brown & group therAPy’s “I Got That” opens with chopped-and-screwed style declaratio­ns of “everywhere I go, I take my Jesus with me” before a piano-driven, rap-ready beat drops in. Brown recently told Essence that he believes a renaissanc­e is underway.

“The diversity will draw more to God,” he said. “Sometimes we feel like if people are artistic there’s no room for that, but the church should be just as creative as anywhere else.”

Who better to join that mission than one of rap’s most animated artists? “I’m Getting Ready,” the Nicki Minaj-assisted single on Tasha Cobbs’ “Heart. Passion. Pursuit.” album, remains the most contentiou­s of the recent rap-gospel crossovers. The feature marks the first time in recent memory - since Salt of Salt-N-Pepa hopped on “Stomp” - that a prominent woman in rap has collaborat­ed with an equally prominent gospel artist. The nearly nine-minute track begins as a crescendoi­ng praise and worship song with Cobbs’ powerful vocals projecting a sense of higher purpose. Then Minaj’s verse cuts in with the rapper running down a list of the things she is grateful for: “From food stamps to more ice than Gretzky/I don’t gotta talk, the Lord defends me/I watch them all fall for going against me,” she sneers, her signature inflated confidence fully in tact.

“Some (of the listeners) have never experience­d God ever, and she exposed that audience, in her way, to the God that she loves,” Cobbs told Essence in light of the backlash for her decision to collaborat­e with Minaj. And in a move similar to Franklin’s response to the jeers he caught for working with West, Cobbs also took to Instagram to cite a bit of scripture for the naysayers: “Accept the one whose faith is weak, without quarrellin­g over disputable matters,” Romans 14:1.

Last month, the Atlanta-based rapper upped the ante with his ninth album, “Let the Trap Say Amen,” a collaborat­ion with Zaytoven, a key trap music architect well known for his work with Gucci Mane. Zaytoven’s signature sound is informed largely by organs (he, too, was raised in the church), and Lecrae slots in nicely over the holy keys and thunderous 808s.

Lecrae’s lyrics focus on many of the same topics that inform most popular rap: his troubled upbringing, earthly temptation­s, the struggle to provide and thrive when the deck is stacked against him.

Hip-hop and R&B artists such as Teyana Taylor, Daniel Caesar and Blood Orange have incorporat­ed direct callbacks to gospel songs in their releases to revive tunes from Marvin Sapp, Donnie McClurkin and the Clark Sisters, respective­ly. Dabbling in gospel is something of a secret weapon, giving their material a feeling of emotional heft. Snoop Dogg, a seasoned rapper with roots in the church, went all out with a 32- track double-disc set of holy music titled “Bible of Love.” He debuted on Billboard’s gospel charts in the top spot and remained there for seven weeks.

“Snoop Dogg will be able to impact people - all due respect to other artists that are part of our roster - that they may not be privy to,” said Thornton, the RCA Inspiratio­n executive who signed Snoop for this album.

“That person who is going through hard times and may never go to church, they know Snoop Dogg. And just out of curiosity, they may just go hear what he has to say,” Thornton says of the album’s significan­ce. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Snoop Dogg will be able to impact the people.
Snoop Dogg will be able to impact the people.
 ??  ?? Kanye West
Kanye West

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