What XXXtentacion’s Death Says About Our Culture
XXXtentacion’s gunshot death this week has cemented his already-established status as one of the most powerful, misunderstood, and enigmatic voices of hip-hop’s newest generation. As an artist, as a mentor, he was an essential personality across SoundCloud verses and Instagram live videos in an emergent, counter-cultural movement of musicians and influencers taking to the internet to vent and air their expressions unspoiled by large corporate interests. X epitified this character: a ceaselessly working young man with the edgy charisma of an Iggy Pop, or a Charles Manson. Around his name are and always have been a whirlwind of controversies and alleged misconduct: a brutal assault of a girlfriend, a jailhouse beating, a deviant and disgusting personality. But those who knew X through his social media presence and through his art valued him for something that they felt superseded the personal allegations: his rawness. The tragic losses of X and Lil Peep serve as a reminder that this is exactly not the era of Tupac and Biggie. These artists have worn their emotions on their sleeves, and their faces, and have ushered in a profoundly new era of hip-hop fans who are encouraged to be in touch with their emotions, to express their existential suffering, their mental illness, and to shed themselves of the amoral machismo that has so long accompanied the rapper persona. And that is precisely why his death at the hands of gun violence is so poignant and so unfortunate. X was not a “thug” (read: n-word), in fact he was a troubled survivor of abuse and poverty that circumnavigated the gangster image to create something altogether new, and deeper. Allegations such has his have accompanied so many celebrated artists in our culture, from Alfred Hitchcock to John Lennon. Jidenna likened him to Malcolm X at the same age, leaving us all wondering what could have been. Our American culture stands at a tipping point between motivated, critical expression and desolate apathy. In the face of the Trump era, so many have elected to check out, to forget the world, to turn to opiates and pharmaceuticals to numb the emotions, to find empty solace in memes and mass media. X loathed that. So did Peep. They are both victims of this brutal culture and symbols of its inadequacy. It is my deepest hope as a hip-hop fan and scholar that this period of tragedy in our beloved genre serves as a kickstart to change that culture of apathy, of violence, and to make the changes in all our lives that X was so passionately advocating and working towards until the moment of his death. He was taken at only 20 years, but his voice and message echoes in eternity like Chatterton, Keats, Nat Turner, and Tupac’s have before him. Rest in peace, but there can be no peace without justice. -Danny












