Psycedelia and the musings of Lil’
Psycedelia is an oft times overlooked ingredient in modern day hip hop: while rock has cultivated its links to altered states of being, the drug culture within hip hop has been limited to copious amounts of marijuana smoke and ignores the implications of the use of heavy drugs. Maybe this is for the best; I wouldn’t want to encounter a cultural analogue to the ceaseless doodling and creative abandon of jam bands, which is the unfortunate nadir of rock music experience with pharmacology. Still, the effects of the use of the hallucinogenic stimulant ecstasy and prescription medicine have forever changed what can be said in rhyme.
This isn’t to imply that hip hop hasn’t dabbled in expanding your mind, dude. Reports have recently come out about Redman experimentation with acid during his most productive periods of recording, Cam’ron openly talks about his love affair with scripts, and how else can you explain “The Greatest Pac Man Victory in History” by Aesop without mushrooms as a starting point. Then you always have
Then Lil Wayne started his ascent into rap respectability and we can only hope the kid keeps taking ecstasy, xanax, and whatever else he can get his hands on. Non sequiturs spill out of his mouth: wait, he already said this better than I can by saying “when I open my mouth all bullets come out.”
Apparently this upward trend will continue on The Carter Three, if the leaks are to be believed. Two tracks in particular lend themselves to this discussion. “I Feel Like Dying” directly addresses drug use, with a distant female vocalizing that she feels like dying when the drugs are gone. It’s a song that explores the dark corner of pharmacology that any heavy drug user knows. Meanwhile, “La La La” is more staightfoward I love the hood song, but could also be used as an analogue for a more meaningful life gained through reflection.
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