I like hip-hop music, but some of the lyrics make me want to cry.
Well, hip-hop is what makes the world go around.
This is hip-hop. If you've got something you want to rap about, just rap about it, man.
If you see something is going wrong within politics and the world today, then some Hip Hop artist is gonna come along and get straight with it. If they think that there's a lot of racism going on then there's another Hip Hop artist who's gonna come o...
Hip-hop is too young to put a definition on it.
Hip-hop is a cultural expression - it's embracing.
Hip-hop is supposed to uplift and create, to educate people on a larger level and to make a change.
I was playing hip-hop when everybody else was playing the giant rave music.
People underestimate the hip-hop audience and the capacity to understand politics when it's part of music.
My brother's been producing rap music and hip-hop for maybe 10 years.
My style is black. It's hip-hop. It's who I am.
I don't even listen to hip-hop anymore. All my friends are white and over 40.
Especially when I'm in the gym, I get really motivated by hip-hop.
I'm headed towards greatness. I think I'm making history in hip-hop.
I grew up in Chicago, so hip-hop has always been a part of my life.
I'm a huge hip-hop fan from way back in the day.
I want to plug back into the hip-hop audience. Whether it be fans who grew up watching 'Yo!', or people who have become familiar with the culture via the Internet.
Although I grew up as a fan of the culture from the disco D.J. era as a young kid and hearing the beginnings of hip-hop, I'm hearing it all from another borough in Brooklyn.
I'm a big fan of hip-hop, so it reflects in my approach.
I see myself as a hip-hop artist, but I never wanted to make music for a specifically white audience. That's not what I grew up around.
I'm a total hip-hop geek. That's my favorite kind of music to listen to while getting ready.