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WSJ: Culture of Bling Clangs to Earth as the Recession Melts Rappers' Ice

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Ripclawe

Banned
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124329128994052323.html#articleTabs=article

* MAY 27, 2009

Culture of Bling Clangs to Earth as the Recession Melts Rappers' Ice


By MIGUEL BUSTILLO

After years of starring in rap-music lyrics and videos, "bling" is losing its ring.

The recession is cramping the style of hip-hop artists and wannabes -- many of whom are finding it difficult to afford the diamond-encrusted pendants and heavy gold chains they have long used to project an aura of outsized wealth.

In an attempt to keep up appearances, celebrity jewelers say rappers are asking them to make medallions with less-precious stones and metals. Some even whisper that the artists have begun requesting cubic zirconia, the synthetic diamond stand-in and QVC staple.

Hip-hop luminaries with the cash to keep it real are appalled. Bling aficionados fret that the art of "ice" is being watered down.



Rapper 50 Cent has relished the chance to accuse his musical adversaries of not glittering like gold. During a radio interview, the artist, whose real name is Curtis James Jackson III, taunted rapper Rick Ross for wearing faux and rented jewelry. "Everything that you see has to absolutely be fake," said Mr. Jackson. Rick Ross, whose real name is William Leonard Roberts II, has denied the claims. Mr. Jackson didn't return requests for comment.

"A lot of these rappers simply don't have the money for real stuff anymore," says Jason Arasheben, who crafts custom jewelry for wealthy clientele, including Saudi royals and Hollywood movie stars, at his California boutique called Jason of Beverly Hills. "It's to the point where they are wearing imitation jewelry, and that's ridiculous."

Mr. Arasheben designed the colossus of hip-hop jewels three years ago for rapper Lil Jon: an enormous gold necklace that spells out "CRUNK AIN'T DEAD" with 3,756 round-cut white diamonds (Crunk is a southern rap subgenre that Lil Jon -- real name, Jonathan Mortimer Smith -- has struggled to keep alive). The neck-straining piece, which weighs more than five pounds, was recognized in 2007 by Guinness World Records as the largest diamond pendant on Earth.
'Big, Chintzy Junk'

He also fashioned a pendant in the image of headphones bedecked in black and white diamonds a few years ago for rapper Biz Markie, whose whimsical jewelry hailed from a less self-conscious era in rap. The rapper -- whose real name is Marcel Theo Hall -- says he is saddened to see newer rappers favor big, chintzy junk over smaller jewels that illuminate personality.

"When I was wearing a big rope, it was a symbol that I was one of the elite," says Mr. Hall, whose 1990 hit "Just a Friend" is enjoying a renaissance on iTunes after being featured in a Heineken beer television ad. "These kids think size matters, but they be lyin'. It just makes them look silly."

Both Mr. Smith and Mr. Hall had planned to sell their pieces for charity last fall in an auction titled "Hip Hop's Crown Jewels." But in a sign of bling's fading shine, Phillips de Pury & Co. postponed the auction to March and then canceled it altogether due partly to insufficient interest from buyers.

From the dawn of rap music three decades ago, hip-hop artists have festooned themselves with gaudy ornaments to signify that they have risen above humble origins to become ghetto royalty.

English-American trailblazer Slick Rick sported a diamond-studded eye patch, portraying himself as the "Black Liberace," while the three members of Queens, N.Y.-based Run-D.M.C. rocked gold rope chains that seemed thick enough to hold a real anchor.

To be sure, phony or inferior ice has been around as long as rappers' traditional standard gear of two-turntables-and-a-microphone. But with Internet piracy cutting into musicians' record sales and the recession shrinking attendance for live shows, jewelers say the ersatz stuff has never been more widespread.



"Times are hard, ain't nobody rocking it like that anymore," says rapper and record executive Bryan "Birdman" Williams, who co-founded Cash Money Records in New Orleans in the early 1990s with his brother, Ronald "Slim" Williams. The independent label has sold more than 45 million albums.

The founders of the record label claim that its most famous artist, Lil Wayne, coined the term "bling" during a recording session to give a sound to blinding opulence. The word entered popular usage after the hit "Bling Bling" by then Cash Money artist B.G. and was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2003.


'D-Quality Diamonds'

"People think these big pieces are blindin' but they be like D-quality diamonds, and when you try and sell them you learn they ain't worth a thing," says Slim Williams. "You can't be doing it like we did it no more."

In humid Houston, a Southern rap capital renowned as a mecca of ice, jeweler Johnny Dang says he is adapting to the changing climate by giving customers the less-expensive jewelry they want.

"The look is still big, it is still bling, but people are going with smaller diamonds and lower-karat gold," trading down from 18- and 14-karat alloys to 12k, which is only 50% gold, or less, says Mr. Dang. A Vietnamese immigrant, he started out at flea markets and now has a shop in the tony Galleria mall next to Neiman Marcus.

To survive, Mr. Dang is relying more often on machine-made versions of his jewelry that can cut the cost of a $10,000 handcrafted pendant in half.

Mr. Dang's "grillz" sales also have fallen off 60% in the recession. He and his business partner, the rapper Paul Wall, helped popularize the bejeweled dental retainers earlier this decade, when diamond-laced varieties molded with platinum were selling for tens of thousands of dollars.

Melting Down Grillz

Now the recession has so damped the extravagance that a Web site called sellyourgoldteeth.com is doing brisk business buying grillz for meltdown value. "It's a sign of the times," says Mark Porcello of Porcello Estate Buyers, which runs the site.

Hip-hop artists aren't eager to admit to thrift, and numerous rappers rumored to be trading down declined to talk about the trend.

"You gotta understand, it is every rapper's fear to be exposed as a fraud," said Gregory Lewis of Brooklyn, who posts conversations with artists on the Internet under the alias "Doggie Diamonds, the interview king." "If you admit you wear fake jewelry, it is over for you. It's like bragging you drive a Lamborghini when you really drive a Toyota."
 
" WSJ: Culture of Bling Clangs to Earth as the Recession Melts Rappers' Ice"

Proof that stodgy white guys should not try to talk in "hip" "lingo."
 

camineet

Banned
Let all those in society that think having 'bling' makes them worth a fuck, go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets. Fuck off from the television and radio airwaves.
RAP fucking sucks, let it die.
 

jon bones

hot hot hanuman-on-man action
camineet said:
Let all those in society that think having 'bling' makes them worth a fuck, go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets. Fuck off from the television and radio airwaves.
RAP fucking sucks, let it die.
:lol :lol :lol

you're pretty dense
 
camineet said:
Let all those in society that think having 'bling' makes them worth a fuck, go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets. Fuck off from the television and radio airwaves.
RAP fucking sucks, let it die.

banned-1.gif
 
camineet said:
Let all those in society that think having 'bling' makes them worth a fuck, go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets. Fuck off from the television and radio airwaves.
RAP fucking sucks, let it die.
U MAD
 

Cimarron

Member
"Lil Jon -- real name, Jonathan Mortimer Smith "

This was the best part of the article it made me giggle. He has the name of a trust fund baby. :lol
 

eznark

Banned
Ignatz Mouse said:
" WSJ: Culture of Bling Clangs to Earth as the Recession Melts Rappers' Ice"

Proof that stodgy white guys should not try to talk in "hip" "lingo."

MIGUEL BUSTILLO (he may be a stodgy white guy, but your conclusion seems premature)
 

KingGondo

Banned
Cimarron said:
"Lil Jon -- real name, Jonathan Mortimer Smith "

This was the best part of the article it made me giggle. He has the name of a trust fund baby. :lol
liljohnhighschoolpic.jpg


The name fits how he used to look, fo sho. :lol
 

dskillzhtown

keep your strippers out of my American football
camineet said:
Let all those in society that think having 'bling' makes them worth a fuck, go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets. Fuck off from the television and radio airwaves.
RAP fucking sucks, let it die.


Your entire post is full of ignorance. So you are saying all black people should go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets? Because that is what it looks like to me.

Rappers flaunt their money. Guess what, other people who are filthy rich flaunt their money too. They just don't happen to have videos. I know a woman who constantly wears over 80k of jewelry on at all times. That is what some people do. Hell, not even all rappers do it. I would
 

eznark

Banned
dskillzhtown said:
Your entire post is full of ignorance. So you are saying all black people should go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets? Because that is what it looks like to me.

Rappers flaunt their money. Guess what, other people who are filthy rich flaunt their money too. They just don't happen to have videos. I know a woman who constantly wears over 80k of jewelry on at all times. That is what some people do. Hell, not even all rappers do it. I would
Seems more anti-materialism than anti-black, post didn't specify black people.
 

LCGeek

formerly sane
eznark said:
Seems more anti-materialism than anti-black, post didn't specify black people.

One can see that from the job comment that was made both are valid assumptions, but that post of camineet full of fail. Camineet what's up, usually your post on the gaming board are reasoned that post was full of hate?
 
camineet said:
Let all those in society that think having 'bling' makes them worth a fuck, go back to scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets. Fuck off from the television and radio airwaves.
RAP fucking sucks, let it die.
wow

The title of the article is hilarious.
 

Flo_Evans

Member
I remember when rap was about societal problems and struggling to survive. These dudes have lost the plot.

It's exactly like the metal > hair metal meltdown. Sad to see but they made their grave. No one really gives a shit about superficial music, it's meaningless.
 

Uncle

Member
Cimarron said:
"Lil Jon -- real name, Jonathan Mortimer Smith "

This was the best part of the article it made me giggle. He has the name of a trust fund baby. :lol


I found picturing a fight between Curtis James Jackson III and William Leonard Roberts II more amusing. I imagine gauntlets and seconds would be involved. Probably top hats as well.
 

APF

Member
Ignatz Mouse said:
" WSJ: Culture of Bling Clangs to Earth as the Recession Melts Rappers' Ice"

Proof that stodgy white guys should not try to talk in "hip" "lingo."
Stodgy white guys are unlikely to be headline writers.
 
Flo_Evans said:
I remember when rap was about societal problems and struggling to survive. These dudes have lost the plot.

It's exactly like the metal > hair metal meltdown. Sad to see but they made their grave. No one really gives a shit about superficial music, it's meaningless.

This.

I'm glad this bling culture has begun to erode.
 

Pimpwerx

Member
DeaconKnowledge said:
Nope.

It comes from Martin Lawrence.
I actually thought it was something closer to this. Was it from one of his standup routines? That totally predates Wayne, if so. PEACE.
 

djtiesto

is beloved, despite what anyone might say
Flo_Evans said:
I remember when rap was about societal problems and struggling to survive. These dudes have lost the plot.

It's exactly like the metal > hair metal meltdown. Sad to see but they made their grave. No one really gives a shit about superficial music, it's meaningless.

There's nothing wrong with superficial music... some music is made just to have fun, not every rap song needs to be (or should be) about struggling to make it in an oppressive society, hell even in the older days of hiphop there were lots of whimsical party songs.
 

Brannon

Member
Only the idiot retarded-type rappers will feel the effects of this. Smart ones will re-market themselves as being 'above the bling' and stuff like. Maybe this will make regular radio a bit more listenable.

I approve.
 

ice cream

Banned
Flo_Evans said:
I remember when rap was about societal problems and struggling to survive. These dudes have lost the plot.

It's exactly like the metal > hair metal meltdown. Sad to see but they made their grave. No one really gives a shit about superficial music, it's meaningless.
Well then you should also know that original hip hop started as PARTY music. Something to dance to and have a good time, not all philosophical and serious. And there's still plenty of rap out there about societal problems and such you're just not looking properly. Stop generalizing hip hop as what a lot of the mainstream media sees it as.
 

Flo_Evans

Member
ice cream said:
Well then you should also know that original hip hop started as PARTY music. Something to dance to and have a good time, not all philosophical and serious. And there's still plenty of rap out there about societal problems and such you're just not looking properly. Stop generalizing hip hop as what a lot of the mainstream media sees it as.

What do you think metal started as? Something to thrash around and get drunk to. Yes I am generalizing, and of course there are exceptions. I am not talking about the people who continue to produce good hip-hip, I am talking about these idiots crying over their diamond chains.
 
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