Talib Kweli Offers His Take On Eminem & Lord Jamar's Feud

BYMitch Findlay66.1K Views
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Talib Kweli, Eminem
Talib Kweli reflects on Eminem's past and present.

With every development in the ongoing feud between Lord Jamar and Eminem, so arrives a new Vlad TV interview. This time, Vlad picks the brain of the almighty Talib Kweli, a man with no shortage of wisdom and insight into hip-hop culture. While Em's latest shot in Abu Dhabi wasn't acknowledged, Vlad took it back to "Fall" to get Kweli's take. 

"It's tough to hear a white dude call a black guy 'bitch' in hip-hop," begins Talib, after Vlad recites a few bars from the Kamikaze track. "Eminem is a fantastic lyricist. Those are pretty dope lyrics. I've been around Eminem but I don't have a relationship with him." On the topic of Eminem using "the house you own" as an analogy to hip-hop, Talib offers up a new perspective. "It's pretty brazen," he reflects. "I'm all for Eminem staking his claim and saying look, I belong here. I don't necessarily disagree with that. Lord Jamar is an OG. As him, as a member of Brand Nubian. Because I respect hip-hop culture, I gotta respect who this man is."

Talib Kweli Offers His Take On Eminem & Lord Jamar's Feud
Bryan Bedder/Getty Images

"Even if I disagree with my OGs, that's not something I do publically," he continues. "Lord Jamar made some very valid points about hip-hop culture and culture vultures. I think the culture vulture conversation surrounding hip-hop has to move away from the race discussion. Clearly because of white supremacy, it's more likely for a white person to be a culture vulture than it is for a black person. But there are plenty of black culture vultures. I personally do not feel like Eminem is a guest in hip-hop because he's a white guy. People might disagree with me on that. That wording doesn't give credit to how Eminem participates in hip-hop."

He does, however, look back to Em's infamously surfaced demo "Foolish Pride," which was unearthed by Benzino and The Source during their bitter feud. "I feel like that absolutely was a racist lyric," says Talib. "I feel like as a man, my default is sexism. I can be sexist by default just by being a man. Same with white people, I feel like they can be racist by default, without even knowing it." He reveals that he has forgiven Em for the lyric, "because of what Eminem has brought to hip-hop and the world...I seen Eminem in the streets of New York battling actual rap lyrical killas, and besting them. I saw that with my own two eyes."

Check out some thoughts from Talib Kweli, himself a respected lyricist and contributor to the game. 


About The Author
<b>Feature Editor</b> <!--BR--> Mitch Findlay is a writer and hip-hop journalist based in Montreal. Resident old head by default. Enjoys writing Original Content about music, albums, lyrics, and rap history. His favorite memories include interviewing J.I.D and EarthGang at the "Revenge Of The Dreamers 3" studio sessions in Atlanta and receiving a phone call from Dr. Dre. In his spare time he makes horror movies.
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