Homophobia was there as well: “But she keep cryin’ ‘I got a boyfriend’/Bitch, stop lyin’, Dumb-ass hooker ain’t nothin’ but a dyke,” on ‘Gangsta Gangsta’. Lines like: “There’s a slight chance if I fuck she might burn me, and then I might have to shoot the ho,” on ‘Just Don’t Bite It’ and “So what about the bitch who got shot, fuck her/You think I give a damn about a bitch? I ain’t a sucker,” on the title track serve as microcosms of just how fast and loose hip-hop as a whole plays with misogyny. That didn’t matter: Straight Outta Compton was huge, at least in part due to its vicious swipe against traditional morals and conservative beliefs. Due to the profanity-laden tendencies of the songs, these singles and videos wouldn’t get played on mainstream stations, and clean versions of songs were either impossible or indecipherable. The video for the title track, for example, takes place on the actual streets of Compton. The album spawned videos that took care in bringing the visuals that the band’s lyricists – mainly Ice Cube, MC Ren, and future Death Row Records founder The D.O.C. Within a year, the album went gold in America, and by July of 1989, it was certified platinum. Straight Outta Compton was released on August 8, 1988, and made an immediate impact on popular culture. The point wasn’t whether every little detail or lyric of Straight Outta Compton actually happened because, to a kid, everything feels real. White kids who had no basis with which to contextualise Straight Outta Compton took it at face value, as did their terrified parents, whose vehement disapproval only made the album more desirable and enthralling to the hordes of kids whose imaginations were now filled with the exploits of these “gangstas”. Sitting in cosy suburban homes far away from Compton, California, kids all across the United States, and indeed all over the world, began to gravitate towards the hyper-threatening and highly specific atmosphere conjured by MC Ren, Ice Cube, Eazy-E, Arabian Prince, DJ Yella, and Dr. It turned rap music away from the party and into the streets, where violence, gangs, and blood ruled. It was education, incendiary, extremely controversial, and highly successful. use hyperbole to get their point across, but never once does it seem like the contents of Straight Outta Compton were anything but stark truth. The next hour would be dedicated to aggression, power, control, and the reality of life in the impoverished black ghettos of southern California. Dre, giving you the entire ethos of Straight Outta Compton in eleven words. A straight shot to prepare yourself, as much as you can, for what’s about to come: “You are now about to witness the strength of street knowledge.” That’s Dr.
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