Every 30 seconds the heart of hip-hop is dying as the true culture of hip-hip gets blurred. The most popular rapper or rappers in the 1980’s were the notorious gangster rap group N.W.A (Niggaz Wit Attitudes) which consisted of Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Eazy E, MC Ren, and DJ Yella . They were rapping in hip-hop’s “Golden Age” when you had to have real rhymes just to get your record to be played on the radio. Ice Cube raps, “A bitch is a bitch/ So if I'm poor or rich/ I talk in the exact same pitch/ Now, the title bitch don't apply to all women/ But all women have a little bitch in 'em” in the group song “"A Bitch Iz A Bitch". Qauvo, Offset, and Takeoff are a part of is the most popular rap group of today, the Migos. Offset raps “Pour a four, …show more content…
The “Golden Age” era of the hip-hop was the late /80s and /90s, this is when the new popular form of music made their mark in the music industry. In this era we have the greatest of all time, somewhat pioneers besides the ones who created hip-hop in the first place. Rappers of the “Golden Age” such as Kurtis Blow, KRS-One, Rakim, LL Cool J, Public Enemy, N.W.A, 2pac, and Biggie put hip-hop on another level. Before these rappers and others influenced the hip-hop scene, the lyrics were considered to be somewhat PG-13. Most of the music then consisted of topics about partying and what goes on the inner cities of the ghetto. These topics continued to be covered during the 80’s, 90’s, and today. The difference between the 70’s hip-hop and the “Golden Age” hip-hop was not the lyrics/rhymes, but the how rappers would deliver them. Many of their rhythms contained less audacious words. Unlike when people like N.W.A and 2pac appeared in the industry, ever other word would be a “fuck” this or “fuck” that. During these times artists in the hip-hop industry was giving awareness of what was going in their lives, no matter how difficult the situation was. They were not a fan of sugarcoating the truth and could tell the real from the fake. Even though hip-hop throughout the 80’s and 90’s was more vulgar when it came to lyrics and how they carried themselves, the 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s still had things in common, they had the rhythms and self-respect, and morals. In regards to having rhythms, self-respect, and morals, the new era does not quite mean the