The
rapper Kendrick Lamar’s historic milestone—becoming the first hip-hop
artist to win a Pulitzer Prize for music—figures in the grander,
affected consecration of blackness within élite spaces.
In 2015, the journal Royal Society Open
Science published a witty evolutionary history of pop music, based on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart from 1960 to 2010, in which the authors treated
elements like timbre, chord, and speech as if they were impressions on a
fossil, and genre as if it were a living, evolving organism. “We identified
three revolutions: a major one around 1991 and two smaller ones around 1964 and
1983,” the report says. 1964 corresponds to the coalescing of rock and soul,
and the peak in 1983 accords with the rise of synth pop and New Wave and the
kaleidoscopic fadeout of disco and funk. 1991 signals the dominance of hip-hop
and its medium, rap. In an interview with BBC, the head researcher, Matthias
Mauch, said, referring to the homogeneity of arena rock in the late eighties,
“I think that hip-hop saved the charts.”
We know this, and we knew it in 2015, but the
novel lure of the study came from its dispassion, which called attention to
hip-hop as a historical institution. As we approach the fiftieth anniversary of
hip-hop’s invention—in the South Bronx in the early seventies—the announcement,
on Monday, that Kendrick Lamar has been awarded the Pulitzer Prize for music,
for his 2017 album, “DAMN.,” triggered a similar kind of double take. Lamar is
the first rapper to win a Pulitzer, and “DAMN.” is the first hip-hop
composition to be honored since the establishment of the music prize, in 1943.
In the Times, Joe Coscarelli surveyed the road to the decision, and jurors
revealed that that the vote for Lamar was unanimous, and that the deliberations
over “the best piece of music” had become a conference on the ethics of
gatekeeping. The history of the music prize has been a long march of classical
compositions. In this, Lamar’s win refracts that of Wynton Marsalis, who became
the first jazz musician to win a Pulitzer, in 1997, for “Blood on the Fields.”
Dana Canedy, the board’s administrator, framed the decision as a larger flash
point: “It shines a light on hip-hop in a completely different way. This is a
big moment for hip-hop music, and a big moment for the Pulitzers.”
I would argue that the award is a bigger event
for the Pulitzers than it is for Lamar, or for hip-hop’s morale. “Fate is being
kind to me. Fate doesn’t want me to be too famous too young,” Duke Ellington
said in 1965, when he was sixty-six, after the Pulitzer Prize Advisory Board
denied a recommendation that he receive a special-citation recognition for his
contributions to jazz. With Lamar, just thirty years old, likely sitting on
future compositions that will outdo the odysseys on “DAMN.”—and on “To Pimp a Butterfly”
and “good kid, m.A.A.d. city,” which came before it—the Pulitzers push a
reformation campaign, finding a canny opportunity to stake a place ahead of the
curve. (The win bears some relation to Bob Dylan’s Nobel Prize in Literature,
in 2016, although in that case the referendum had to do with what constituted
literature.) Most glaringly, it sets the stage for the argument that the prize
of the intelligentsia, which has been disinterested in the flow of popular
music, may have a shrewder grasp on cultural impact than the Grammys, which for
its top honor, Album of the Year, has snubbed not only Lamar—this year and in
the past—but every other black hip-hop artist other than Lauryn Hill and
OutKast. I certainly did not expect the Pulitzers to be what finally proved the
Grammys irrelevant. David Hajdu, a critic at The Nation and one of the Pulitzer
jurors, told Coscarelli that recognizing “DAMN.” meant recognizing that rap
“has value on its own terms and not just as a resource for use in a field that
is more broadly recognized by the institutional establishment as serious or
legitimate.” Rap has not primarily depended on the recognition of traditional
bodies to flourish and to change. It’ll be fun to hear how Lamar finesses a
verse to include the word “Pulitzer.”
Lamar’s
historic win figures in the grander, affected consecration of blackness within
élite spaces—exemplified, I think, by the “thousand flowers of expectation”
blooming in Kehinde Wiley’s portrait of Barack Obama. It was Obama, with his
caucuses of rappers in the White House, who accelerated the conclusion that
hip-hop had earned a prestige as a great American art. In its long and
perplexing lurch toward acclaim, did hip-hop sacrifice its edge? Lamar is a fascinating
and brilliant non-answer. He is a complicated artist because he sits at the
nexus of forces that seem misaligned: he is an alert political gadfly who will
happily curate a soundtrack for the commercial juggernaut “Black Panther”; he
is a literary virtuoso who understands the charisma needed to make songs you
can play in a club. He is hip-hop, which means that he skirts categorization.
The Pulitzers got it right.
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