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Illustration by Eric Drooker |
"The Secret Meeting that Changed Rap Music and Destroyed a Generation"
Posted at http://www.hiphopisread.com/
Posted by Ivan April 24 at 1:34 PM
This anonymous letter landed in my inbox about a minute ago:
After more than 20 years, I've finally decided to tell the world what I witnessed in 1991, which I believe was one of the biggest turning point in popular music, and ultimately American society. I have struggled for a long time weighing the pros and cons of making this story public as I was reluctant to implicate the individuals who were present that day. So I've simply decided to leave out names and all the details that may risk my personal well being and that of those who were, like me, dragged into something they weren't ready for.
Between the late 80's and early 90’s, I was what you may call a “decision maker” with one of the more established company in the music industry. I came from Europe in the early 80’s and quickly established myself in the business. The industry was different back then. Since technology and media weren’t accessible to people like they are today, the industry had more control over the public and had the means to influence them anyway it wanted. This may explain why in early 1991, I was invited to attend a closed door meeting with a small group of music business insiders to discuss rap music’s new direction. Little did I know that we would be asked to participate in one of the most unethical and destructive business practice I’ve ever seen.
The meeting was held at a private residence on the outskirts of Los Angeles. I remember about 25 to 30 people being there, most of them familiar faces. Speaking to those I knew, we joked about the theme of the meeting as many of us did not care for rap music and failed to see the purpose of being invited to a private gathering to discuss its future. Among the attendees was a small group of unfamiliar faces who stayed to themselves and made no attempt to socialize beyond their circle. Based on their behavior and formal appearances, they didn't seem to be in our industry. Our casual chatter was interrupted when we were asked to sign a confidentiality agreement preventing us from publicly discussing the information presented during the meeting. Needless to say, this intrigued and in some cases disturbed many of us. The agreement was only a page long but very clear on the matter and consequences which stated that violating the terms would result in job termination. We asked several people what this meeting was about and the reason for such secrecy but couldn't find anyone who had answers for us. A few people refused to sign and walked out. No one stopped them. I was tempted to follow but curiosity got the best of me. A man who was part of the “unfamiliar” group collected the agreements from us.
Quickly after the meeting began, one of my industry colleagues (who shall remain nameless like everyone else) thanked us for attending. He then gave the floor to a man who only introduced himself by first name and gave no further details about his personal background. I think he was the owner of the residence but it was never confirmed. He briefly praised all of us for the success we had achieved in our industry and congratulated us for being selected as part of this small group of “decision makers”. At this point I begin to feel slightly uncomfortable at the strangeness of this gathering. The subject quickly changed as the speaker went on to tell us that the respective companies we represented had invested in a very profitable industry which could become even more rewarding with our active involvement. He explained that the companies we work for had invested millions into the building of privately owned prisons and that our positions of influence in the music industry would actually impact the profitability of these investments. I remember many of us in the group immediately looking at each other in confusion. At the time, I didn’t know what a private prison was but I wasn't the only one. Sure enough, someone asked what these prisons were and what any of this had to do with us. We were told that these prisons were built by privately owned companies who received funding from the government based on the number of inmates. The more inmates, the more money the government would pay these prisons. It was also made clear to us that since these prisons are privately owned, as they become publicly traded, we’d be able to buy shares. Most of us were taken back by this. Again, a couple of people asked what this had to do with us. At this point, my industry colleague who had first opened the meeting took the floor again and answered our questions. He told us that since our employers had become silent investors in this prison business, it was now in their interest to make sure that these prisons remained filled. Our job would be to help make this happen by marketing music which promotes criminal behavior, rap being the music of choice. He assured us that this would be a great situation for us because rap music was becoming an increasingly profitable market for our companies, and as employee, we’d also be able to buy personal stocks in these prisons. Immediately, silence came over the room. You could have heard a pin drop. I remember looking around to make sure I wasn't dreaming and saw half of the people with dropped jaws. My daze was interrupted when someone shouted, “Is this a f****** joke?” At this point things became chaotic. Two of the men who were part of the “unfamiliar” group grabbed the man who shouted out and attempted to remove him from the house. A few of us, myself included, tried to intervene. One of them pulled out a gun and we all backed off. They separated us from the crowd and all four of us were escorted outside. My industry colleague who had opened the meeting earlier hurried out to meet us and reminded us that we had signed agreement and would suffer the consequences of speaking about this publicly or even with those who attended the meeting. I asked him why he was involved with something this corrupt and he replied that it was bigger than the music business and nothing we’d want to challenge without risking consequences. We all protested and as he walked back into the house I remember word for word the last thing he said, “It’s out of my hands now. Remember you signed an agreement.” He then closed the door behind him. The men rushed us to our cars and actually watched until we drove off.
A million things were going through my mind as I drove away and I eventually decided to pull over and park on a side street in order to collect my thoughts. I replayed everything in my mind repeatedly and it all seemed very surreal to me. I was angry with myself for not having taken a more active role in questioning what had been presented to us. I'd like to believe the shock of it all is what suspended my better nature. After what seemed like an eternity, I was able to calm myself enough to make it home. I didn't talk or call anyone that night. The next day back at the office, I was visibly out of it but blamed it on being under the weather. No one else in my department had been invited to the meeting and I felt a sense of guilt for not being able to share what I had witnessed. I thought about contacting the 3 others who wear kicked out of the house but I didn't remember their names and thought that tracking them down would probably bring unwanted attention. I considered speaking out publicly at the risk of losing my job but I realized I’d probably be jeopardizing more than my job and I wasn't willing to risk anything happening to my family. I thought about those men with guns and wondered who they were? I had been told that this was bigger than the music business and all I could do was let my imagination run free. There were no answers and no one to talk to. I tried to do a little bit of research on private prisons but didn’t uncover anything about the music business’ involvement. However, the information I did find confirmed how dangerous this prison business really was. Days turned into weeks and weeks into months. Eventually, it was as if the meeting had never taken place. It all seemed surreal. I became more reclusive and stopped going to any industry events unless professionally obligated to do so. On two occasions, I found myself attending the same function as my former colleague. Both times, our eyes met but nothing more was exchanged.
As the months passed, rap music had definitely changed direction. I was never a fan of it but even I could tell the difference. Rap acts that talked about politics or harmless fun were quickly fading away as gangster rap started dominating the airwaves. Only a few months had passed since the meeting but I suspect that the ideas presented that day had been successfully implemented. It was as if the order has been given to all major label executives. The music was climbing the charts and most companies when more than happy to capitalize on it. Each one was churning out their very own gangster rap acts on an assembly line. Everyone bought into it, consumers included. Violence and drug use became a central theme in most rap music. I spoke to a few of my peers in the industry to get their opinions on the new trend but was told repeatedly that it was all about supply and demand. Sadly many of them even expressed that the music reinforced their prejudice of minorities.
I officially quit the music business in 1993 but my heart had already left months before. I broke ties with the majority of my peers and removed myself from this thing I had once loved. I took some time off, returned to Europe for a few years, settled out of state, and lived a “quiet” life away from the world of entertainment. As the years passed, I managed to keep my secret, fearful of sharing it with the wrong person but also a little ashamed of not having had the balls to blow the whistle. But as rap got worse, my guilt grew. Fortunately, in the late 90’s, having the internet as a resource which wasn't at my disposal in the early days made it easier for me to investigate what is now labeled the prison industrial complex. Now that I have a greater understanding of how private prisons operate, things make much more sense than they ever have. I see how the criminalization of rap music played a big part in promoting racial stereotypes and misguided so many impressionable young minds into adopting these glorified criminal behaviors which often lead to incarceration. Twenty years of guilt is a heavy load to carry but the least I can do now is to share my story, hoping that fans of rap music realize how they’ve been used for the past 2 decades. Although I plan on remaining anonymous for obvious reasons, my goal now is to get this information out to as many people as possible. Please help me spread the word. Hopefully, others who attended the meeting back in 1991 will be inspired by this and tell their own stories. Most importantly, if only one life has been touched by my story, I pray it makes the weight of my guilt a little more tolerable.
Thank you.

Great story. I remember two of the most popular rap acts ever in an interview. When the leed of the group mentioned that the whole east vs west was an act, his "partner" gave this look like " what the f@#$!" . Later the leed act was dead and the acts "friend" can now be seen in videos showing off million dollar bonds.
ReplyDeleteWhoa! I'm glad so many blogs like yours have popped up so people like this have an outlet.
ReplyDeleteViolence and fear are the favorite tool of manipulation for profit. Ask the Vatican, this has worked for them for 2 thousand years. As Pope Leo V ( or X ?) said "What profit has not that fable of Christ brought us!" ( some say Alexander VI (1492-1503)actually coined it )
ReplyDeleteRegardless who actually said it, many millions have been butchered to control the masses, a combination of first threat, then redemption IF YOU ONLY DO THIS.... The world has well learned that profit & power belong to the most immoral and murderous. Look at almost any show on TV, even mainstream 'news,' where regular shouting matches erupt - a la Gerry Springer. Disgusting. It is no surprise that the music industry is using this same idea to profit from prisons filled with youths anxious to be powerful. The above blog also explains why the USA has the highest per capita prison population of the 'civilized' world. MONEY !
woah. I had no idea...this is a really eye-opening story. It makes a lot of sense.
ReplyDeleteI'm gonna be reeling from this for a while.
This all makes sense! in our country we usually idolize whatever trend western culture churns out so it happens that we like what you like, think its cool what america think is cool and so on. So apart from believing skull tattoos, tongue/nose piercing, cigarette smoking, demonic looking accesories, premarital sex and immoral hand gestures are macho, foul mouthing rap lyrics are also way to go thus ever contributing moral degredation to our impoverished class C & D......I always felt that year by year our younger generations grows up more defiant, unruly, disrespectful with the kind of influence our society has become with all this mimicking but i never thought there was a grand design to induce such behaviors for profits. Im certainly glad that within this year the cabal will be wiped out once and for all in one sweep, thank god its about time!
ReplyDeleteI disagree that our youth are any worse than we were. I've watched the kids my daughter goes to school with and they give me great hope for the future.
DeleteRap music, like Ska, Reggae, Calypso, Blues and Jazz have been outlets of expression for people living in difficult circumstances. Rap music is astonishingly honest. What's surprising to me is that there was a deliberate plan to promote and galmorize music (and that is done with money - bling costs big bucks) that urges destructive behavior over artists in the same field who had more positive messages. I am not a huge rap fan but there are some songs I really like. Its a style and genre of its own and very American in its origins.
I am so glad the author released this story. I am a musician and listen to a great variety of music, but hip hop has a power and positive energy that is unparalleled. The entire hip hop culture is centered around self-betterment, community, and exposing the truth, yet this seems to have been cancelled by the mid nineties. If you ask most people about the late rapper Tupac Shakur, R.I.P., they will recall the images of some thug flashing guns and gold chains in pictures. The subject matter in his music is the poor, and those affected by the poverty, violence and desolation in urban Black communities...the oppression of women, the drug epidemic, etc. His narratives often centered on hopeless youth who had been forced to sell drugs and commit crimes to put bread on the table for their families, further oppressing their own while trying to survive. Before he was famous he didn't have a criminal record; after the first hit record he was shown in court and in handcuffs on the television constantly. He was set up in a rape case, and served many months in prison. The real message of his music was overpowered by the media's focus on violence. To most people his legacy is his murder, which is still "unsolved". Tupac comes from a family of Black Panthers, and is named after Tupac Amaru, the last indigenous king in Incan Peru, hung by the Spanish. I hope this article is distributed far and wide. Thank you for posting it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this article. That was indeed what i was thinking for some time. I am not a big fan of rap or hip hop, but some of the artists tend to be very honest. Again it was sad to see that they overshadowed by gangsta rappers, who glamorize blings, crimes, drugs etc. Not just rap music, but mainstream music as well is overly corrupted. We got Justin Biebers choked down to our throats instead of real artists, everything is definetely overly manipulated. Well i can feel that there is something very very wrong going on.
ReplyDeleteThis is why I only listen to hip hop artists like Talib Kweli, Mos Def, The Roots, Tribe Called Quest and such.
ReplyDeleteThere's a reason everyone in the game admits that these guys are lyrically superior, yet record labels and radio stations won't play their music.
Mainstream hip hop, even if you don't believe in this story, is drugs for the brain. Repetitive beats and lyrics that brainwash people to believe that being poor, ghetto, violent, evil and unwise with money is somehow a positive set of traits.
I don't think we should ban gangster rap or other mainstream forms of it but I do think that we need to teach our youth to distinguish which type of hip hop they want to listen to.
Too Short Says There Was An Industry-Wide Plot To Shut Down Conscious Hip Hop
ReplyDeletehttp://www.hiphopdx.com/index/news/id.18861/title.too-short-says-there-was-an-industry-wide-plot-to-shut-down-conscious-hip-hop
Great article Thankyou. This goes deeper into the music industry, you only have to look at what passes as top 40 music (and the filmclips) these days - they are outright brainwashing young people.
ReplyDeleteA search on illuminati or cabal music industry shows many articles that are relevant to this story.
Good article,I'm surprised anyone noticed, most people don't notice this sort of thing,(of course rap being the most blatant example) the industry doesn't care about talent or skill,they want to keep the masses confused & insecure (easier to control). I've been noticing this sort of thing in all forms of popular music, art, film, & literature since I was a teenager in the late 70's....... ( I could be totally nuts/wrong- but it looked to me like they once had to invent "punk" in order to try & control all the weird, angry experimental bands that were publishing their own material)
ReplyDeleteThat is very fascinating and believable because it fits and makes sense. Even some of the hip-hop community have been speaking out about gangster rap over the years.
ReplyDeleteI have absolutely noticed that rather sharp change in rap music as I was a fan of it back in the days. My last rap album was Dr. Dre's debut album, The Chronic. This was in 1992. That was one of the major turning point in rap and it pretty much all became gangster rap since then.
I don't think a lot of younger kids know that rap back during the 80s was nothing like what it is today. Some famous acts during that time were Public Enemy, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul etc. Go listen to them if you haven't. They are nothing like gangster rap. Gangster rap isn't the only kind of rap there is!
The connection to private prisons really blew me away. It makes sense. It's chilling. I'll even dare to add that the demographic is clearly biased toward blacks which is just perfect for elitists isn't it? Whether you are skeptical or not there are scathing books based on eugenics talking about how blacks are unfit to rule themselves. It's all there and I firmly believe the people at the top still hold those views. They just don't say it upfront anymore. So you have a kill two bird with one stone thing here. Lock up the blacks and profit from it. Talk about evil genius!
I have also thought about the supply/demand thing. People do have a choice, but it's not an easy choice when there is only one major avenue for music or media. If the record is not sold at your local major record store where else can you get it? If the music is not being played on that one major local radio station then where else would you listen? I'm sure a lot of people aren't like myself that take the extra mile to find stuff. Going out of my way to tiny, hidden record stores because the stuff I wanted usually wasn't sold at Virgin or that I would hunt down those hard to get college radio stations that were usually superior, but had poor signals. Much easier with the internet now of course, but you still need to know other things exist and then to find it.
Whether this meeting really happened or not the possibility and plausibility is there.
Illuminati – The Music Industry Exposed [Full Length]
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=-iDq0Tdja4A
Just came across it this morning. Does much to corroborate the above message. The rap world has been heavily affected, but the lies and deception go much deeper.
This video contains content from SME, UMG, IODA, Azteca, Redeye Distribution, INgrooves and EMI, one or more of whom have blocked it on copyright grounds.
DeleteWhy,ofcourse
One question...que bono? Who benefits; who stands to gain? I'll just about bet the farm the one pivotal individual in that secret meeting and that is none other than Dr. Dre; formerly of the group N.W.A. How ironic his current label name is, "Aftermath". The only one to emerge at the top of the heap of gangsta' rap as their premier rapper-producer leading the gangsta' rap genre. He may not know exactly who murdered Tupac and Biggie Smalls and quite possibly countless other lesser known "artists", but it wouldn't surprise me if he dropped a couple names and hit the target bulls-eye. The whole thing is hiding in plain view. Trust me...start with Dr. Dre and begin following the money-trail. Who is he connected with through business deals. Follow this trail and you will know who off'd Pac, Biggie, the architects of gangsta' rap and, their labels, distributors, executives, so on and so forth. Making the leap to privatized prison ventures would take some doing...nonetheless, get past the money laundering and you'll have your birds-eye view of all the players. Let's get busy people... Excellent blog-post!
ReplyDeleteThis comes as no surprise to me. I have always believed that this was the reason behind all the video and now the wii games. They are racially targeted. I live in England and London is a hotbed of violence amongst the blacks there.
ReplyDeleteHas anyone else noticed that nature programs/nature documentaries are going the same way? They focus a lot on the kill and mainly the negative side of nature, showing a lot of baby animals being torn apart. Also, mothers losing their young but blatantly showing the mother watching her baby being killed. I guess it's all to lower your energy. I don't watch them anymore because I find it so obviously illuminati but my partner (who is TOTALLY asleep and thinks I know nothing) thinks they are the only thing on tv worth watching because they are 'intellectual', LOL.
ReplyDeleteThiis really saddens me yet confirms some suspicions.
ReplyDeleteThe genre started out very fun with Rappers Delight, got more serious with Public Enemy, and then descended into a plethora of dark and violent subject matter. Some of the music was still awesome, but a good chunk of it came across as further polluting a segment of society clearly still recovering from slavery.
Makes since the same powers that be who benefitted from slavery would use everything they could to further enslave and imprison this segment of the population.
Explains my three walking while black incidents in a month when I dared be outside my very diverse neighborhood. Some of us still feel the effects of this!
Sorry bro. May Jesus' spirit rest upon you.
ReplyDeleteOne thing that has survived the aftermath of the hip hop battleground are teeth grillz. Keep the spirit of hip hop and rap and buy grillz.
ReplyDeleteRap and hip hop beats are a kind of music that makes you charming and delete all kind of mesiries your mind.Creating these beats can be complicated; you can buy rap and hip hop beats online. In most cases, youwill find any beat or tempo you are looking for, and you can match any lyrics to it.
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