Mine has ebbed. I'm not 14 anymore I guess.
Honestly, the music is still great, but when I see an old interview what strikes me is that he's not the wise and idealistic person I once thought he was. Now that I'm an adult, I can see that Tupac was just a hugely talented rapper with a wickedly misplaced sense of injustice. Like many black men in America, he was terribly disturbed by an establishment he saw as unjust--but only in very broad terms.
I wish Tupac had lived, but what if? Where would he be in today's world? That's not the thread I'm making, but it's easy to picture him rapping for pepsi or becoming marginalized because of his lack of actual, statistical knowledge about his causes, whatever they may be today.
My verdict on Tupac now is this: he was a gifted rapper--that's the most important part of him--and a fiery, outspoken critic of nothing in particular. I never thought of him as an empty head. Now I kind of do.
What do you think?
Honestly, the music is still great, but when I see an old interview what strikes me is that he's not the wise and idealistic person I once thought he was. Now that I'm an adult, I can see that Tupac was just a hugely talented rapper with a wickedly misplaced sense of injustice. Like many black men in America, he was terribly disturbed by an establishment he saw as unjust--but only in very broad terms.
I wish Tupac had lived, but what if? Where would he be in today's world? That's not the thread I'm making, but it's easy to picture him rapping for pepsi or becoming marginalized because of his lack of actual, statistical knowledge about his causes, whatever they may be today.
My verdict on Tupac now is this: he was a gifted rapper--that's the most important part of him--and a fiery, outspoken critic of nothing in particular. I never thought of him as an empty head. Now I kind of do.
What do you think?