Reviews

Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation by Jeff Chang

brynarch's review

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informative medium-paced

4.0

heykstan's review

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3.0

I'm kind of torn about this book. I learned a lot and liked the way it was written. But he literally didn't write about female rappers until the last chapter. That's not ok. Women were mentioned throughout in other capacities, but it's a book about rap. Where are the girls??

dvry216's review

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5.0

Ever need a primer on the roots of hip-hop and primary people that took on the form within the early years and newer generations, start here.

elbarton312's review

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4.0

I originally got this book as an ARC when I was working in the book business. What I thought might be of a little interest ended up becoming a textbook of my development in my musical taste as a youth and teenager in the late 70s and early 80s. I was Phase I of the Hip Hop Generation and I guess this was how my mother felt when she first saw The Beatles: you were witnessing something completely NEW and it was going to change not just your life, but the world in general. I'm still Old School East Coast and rarely listen to the corporate sludge poured out for mass consumption, but when I encounter a rapper like Cakes Da Killa, it reminds me of the days when rap/hip hop was all about originality and setting yourself apart from the pack. I'm writing this now as I'm about to re-read my ARC copy as a kind of 10th Anniversary to the book and the excellent writing of Jeff Chang. ~BRC

dustcircle's review

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informative reflective slow-paced

3.5

 I read this book at the same time as The Come Up, and found it awesome to follow the timeline of hip-hop culture and rap music. 

sde's review

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2.0

I'm not sure what audience this book was aimed at. It wasn't really an academic work - the tone was conversational and assumed a fair bit of knowledge of the main players in hip-hop in the past. It would not really appeal to younger fans of hip-hop, though, because although it did discuss a lot of the founders of the movement and how they affected social culture, it did so in a superficial way without, again, really explaining to an outside/younger audience why these players were important. I would have liked more information on the context of any of the players - for instance, the South Bronx gang leaders.

My second gripe is purely personal - the font is the sort of font that the "feel good" books of the early 70's were written in. Perhaps that was purposeful - to be evocative of the time that a lot of the action was taking place - but it made me take the book less seriously.

OK, I know I'm in a minority in my views on this book. Perhaps that was part of the problem - I was expecting too much after reading the reviews.

mfcotter's review

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5.0

Should be required reading for all.

dbjorlin's review

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5.0

4.5 stars. It tends to flag a little towards the end, but the first 3/4 is brilliant.

alexcmbk's review

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informative reflective slow-paced

3.0

duncanvb's review

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challenging dark emotional informative inspiring sad tense medium-paced

5.0

It's not a history of hip-hop! It's a history of the hip-hop generation! That's a very important distinction!