Monday, December 29, 2008
Rap's Scottish Roots?
While most don't associate rap with a bunch of white guys in skirts, a University of New Mexico professor traces the music’s roots back to the barrooms of medieval Scotland, the London Telegraph reports. “The Scots have a lengthy tradition of flyting—intense verbal jousting, often laced with vulgarity, that is similar to the dozens that one finds among contemporary inner-city African-American youth,” Professor Ferenc Szasz argues.
As the logic goes, Scottish settlers in America brought flyting with them, passing the notoriously obscene custom on to their slaves; later, flyting turned into rap battles, and a genre was born. "Two people engage in ritual verbal dueling and the winner has the last word in the argument, with the loser falling conspicuously silent,” another professor says, comparing the two contests.
I read this article a couple of times trying to find the professor's logic. However, I find his arguments to be flawed on many levels. It is true that rap lyrics have increased in their vulgarity but its origins do not stem from "flyting".
Source: Daily Telegraph (UK)
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