Chuck D Quotes About Hip Hop

We have collected for you the TOP of Chuck D's best quotes about Hip Hop! Here are collected all the quotes about Hip Hop starting from the birthday of the Rapper – August 1, 1960! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 29 sayings of Chuck D about Hip Hop. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • If you want to speak about different ethnicities and diversity, rap and hip-hop are all over the planet. Every country, from Turkey to Australia, now has tons of hip-hop artists. The music and artistry have moved way faster than the corporatization of the music. You do need organization and opportunity for these artists to express themselves, and I don't think it has to come from a corporate co-signing.

    Interview with Antonino D'Ambrosio, progressive.org. July 20, 2005.
  • Bass! How low can you go? Death row...what a brother know. Once again, back is the incredible, The rhyme animal, the uncannable "D!" Public Enemy Number One. Five-O said, "Freeze!" and I got numb. Can I tell 'em that I really never had a gun? But it's the wax that the Terminator X spun.

  • The powers that be are trying to meld, shape, and corral the culture of hip-hop into another speaking voice for the government.

    Hip Hop  
    Interview with Antonino D'Ambrosio, progressive.org. July 20, 2005.
  • The biggest thing that has happened to hip-hop is the clinging on to the corporation as the all-mighty hub of the music.

    Hip Hop  
  • They [US Administration] have exploited hip-hop and some of the culture around it - magazines, videos, etc. - to recruit people into the military. The Army says it will give out Hummers, platinum teeth, or whatever to those that actually join.

    Source: www.progressive.org
  • I got a letter from the government the other day I opened and read it...it said they were suckers.

    Hip Hop  
    Song: Black Steel In The Hour Of Chaos
  • It's not about what you get out but what you put into hip hop as a genre.

    Hip Hop  
  • For a long period of time, the media covered rap music and hip hop the same way they cover a lot of black people, people of color, you know, the bad news happens to be news. They used to have these little stupid colloquialisms that pop up like, "You know what? No news is bad news!" They trick the masses into thinking that any news is great for you. And I just think that's a piece of crap.

    Interview with Maranda Pleasant, www.marandapleasantmedia.com. May 12, 2012.
  • People are so confused about race and hip-hop that people didn't even consider the Beastie Boys one of the greatest rap groups of all time because they were white.

  • And when I say it, they get alarmed... 'Cause I'm louder than a bomb.

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • Rap comes from the humble beginnings of rebelling against the status quo. Now, rappers have become the status quo themselves. You can't rebel against the Queen and then become the Queen yourself. I attribute much of the blame to testosterone-male dominance and patriarchy.

    Interview with Antonino D'Ambrosio, progressive.org. July 20, 2005.
  • I think hip hop should be a living word. And what I mean by the living word is like yo, you gotta have the words that provide life.

    Hip Hop  
  • It's weak to speak and blame somebody else ...When you destroy yourself.

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • I never live alone, I never walk alone. My posse's always ready And they're waitin' in my zone.

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • McDonald's offers a king's ransom to any hip-hop artist who is able to put Big Mac into a song. MTV - and more to the point, Viacom - is succeeding in extending a teenage life to twenty-nine or even thirty-one years old. It is about extending this market and removing any intelligent substance in the music.

    Interview with Antonino D'Ambrosio, progressive.org. July 20, 2005.
  • Our freedom of speech is freedom or death, We got to fight the powers that be!

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • Hip-hop is a part of rock & roll because it comes from DJ culture. DJ culture is the embodiment of all genres and all recorded music, if you actually pay attention to it.

    Hip Hop  
  • These days you can't see who's in cahoots, Cause now the KKK wears three-piece suits.

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • Excuse us for the news, You might not be amused; But did you know White comes from Black? No need to be confused.

    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • It ain't this big I, little You. Music is to be shared. Music is not a hustle. [Hip hop's become] cultural stripmining [by the major labels]. Some people get into this music to make a killing but music is a way to make a living.

    Hip Hop  
  • One of the problems with hip hop is lack of infrastructure and not being able to control its own course. I don't like that hip hop is full of infantile 35-year-olds. Hip hop cannot afford to be lazy.

    Years   Hip Hop   Lazy  
  • All I want is peace and love on this planet. Ain't that how God planned it?

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • I'm envious of the way that electronic dance music has organised itself. It has been able to understand what it ain't rather than what it is. And I think that slipped away from hip-hop as soon as the DJs lost the majority of the say so in the direction of the music.

    Hip Hop  
  • No matter what the name, we're all the same pieces in one big chess game.

    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • Comin' from the school of hard knocks, Some perpetrate...they drink Clorox. Attack the black, cause I know they lack exact The cold facts, and still they try to Xerox.

    Hip Hop  
  • Public Enemy is the security of the hip-hop party.

    Hip Hop  
  • Burn, Hollywood, burn, I smell a riot goin' on, First they're guilty, now they're gone!

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • Cause I'm Black and I'm proud I'm ready and hyped plus I'm amped Most of my heroes don't appear on no stamps

    Hip Hop  
    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
  • Many have forgotten what we came here for, Never knew or had a clue, so you're on the floor. Just growin' not known' about your past... Now you're lookin' pretty stupid while you're shakin' your ass.

    Chuck D, Yusuf Jah (2007). “Chuck D: Lyrics of a Rap Revolutionary”, Y & G Communications
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