In Rap, The Mexican South Has Got Something To Say

Kap played basketball and met a lot of people who were into music. He started rapping when he was 14, putting together a makeshift studio with a neighbor from his apartment complex. “At first I was just talking about things like looking nice, girls, regular stuff. I was always proud of my culture. But I never really spoke about it at first. When I tried I was like, this don’t really sound cool and I know for a fact people are not gonna really like this,” he said. But as he practiced and developed skills, he began to push his Mexican identity to the foreground of his lyrics. “When I got better, it got easy for me to talk about my life,” he said. “The things that mom and dad have been through, I just like talking about it. There’s a lot of stereotypes about Mexicans, things like cutting grass, being trapped in the house or like being illegal, all that. But it’s not like we just do all that for fun — there are reasons why. I know some people don’t understand that. There’s a story to tell that people haven’t told yet, and I feel like it’s very needed right now in hip-hop.”

Musicians like Miguel and Selena Gomez sometimes talk about the significance of Mexican culture in their lives, but Kap G unabashedly pushes his experience as the America-born kid of Mexico-born immigrants to the center of his mixtape, which is called Like A Mexican, an intentional flip of what’s often a derogatory term. He talks about standing alongside immigrants outside Home Depot looking for work, says he has trouble trusting federal authorities, and brags that he’s got a girl who makes him chorizo in the morning. He talks about relatives that reside in the U.S. illegally, too, but grants that his experiences with deportation have been largely secondhand: “I was the younger person in my family, so I was never the person who would be talking to the person who got deported — they would be older than me.” A generation later, though, he acknowledges the emotional toll that non-citizenship can take. Talking about a relative, he says, “He has a family here, he’s started a whole life. But he don’t got no license so every day he wakes up paranoid.”

If he aims to amplify the voices of Mexican-Americans, Kap insists that he’s also talking to everyone else: “I wanna go everywhere. I would definitely love to tour in Mexico, but I wanna be diverse. I wanna be accepted by everybody.” And he thinks his message of determination is universally appealing, because “everybody has to work.” Kap raps about working hard and not bothering with designer shoes because they cost too much, then admits he buys too many Jordans, then prays he’ll never go broke. “When OutKast first came out they was just youngins, rapping about how it was in the South,” he says, drawing a line between himself and his hometown’s heroes. “I’m rapping about how it is to be a youngin, too,” Kap said.

The music industry has noticed, and in Kap G’s triumphant first-generation story, sees an opportunity to reach a new, profitable audience. Major label Atlantic has signed him and put him in the studio with big-name producers like Pharrell. “Pharrell was saying I’d be the voice for the Mexicans,” Kap said. “The Mexicans who work at the hotel, who do the housekeeping, who work in the kitchen, he’s like, ‘You’re putting on for them, the people who get disrespected who gotta wake up and do that every day.’ He was telling me like, ‘They gonna love you, cause you’re really speaking out for them.’”

 

Article Appeared @http://www.buzzfeed.com/naomizeichner/kap-g-like-a-mexican-interview

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *