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Monday, May 13, 2024

Dan Wohl


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Honorable Mention - Missy ""Misdemeanor"" Elliott

In the male-dominated universe of '00s hip-hop, Missy ""Misdemeanor"" Elliott broke through. She did so while rejecting hip-hop's submissive role for women while neither erasing her gender identity nor draining her persona of sexuality in the least. And just as significantly, she did it all with a body that was far from the fallacious female ""ideal"" that continues to be pumped into Americans' consciousnesses by male rappers' videos. Elliott emerged from the '90s with a few mostly down-tempo hits like ""The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)"" and ""She's a Bitch"" under her belt, but beginning with So Addictive, the Missy Elliott of the '00s was more club anthem-oriented. The beats were provided by pre-superstar Timbaland, a childhood friend, and Elliott's rapping was inspired and, as in ""Work It,"" occasionally done in an apparently made-up language. Plus she was capable of singing without embarrassing herself, which can't be said of Jay-Z, Eminem or most other huge '00s rappers who tried it. Her videos also did their part to keep things strangely interesting in MTV's TRL era, like in ""Pass That Dutch"" when she appears as a scarecrow and performs under a flying saucer, or the phenomenal ""Get Ur Freak On"" when her head jumps off her body via a serpentine 20-foot neck. In that song, Elliott raps, ""Ain't no stopping me / Copywritten so don't copy me."" In the '00s, no one could.

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Honorable Mention - System of a Down

Combining Deftones heaviness with Frank Zappa weirdness (not to mention a generous sprinkling of Rage Against the Machine political activism), System of a Down inhabited a unique spot on the Venn diagram of '00s hard rock. Not many bands could say they were featured on the soundtracks of both ""Fahrenheit 9/11"" and ""Tony Hawk Pro Skater 4."" They scored some success from their 1998 self-titled debut, particularly with ""Spiders"" and its Mansonian video. It was 2001's Toxicity, however, that presented a mass audience with the fully-realized bizarrefest that featured a pharaoh-goateed bassist, a guitarist who coated his torso with elaborate henna and a Borat look-alike for a singer. Much like the Dead Kennedys, the absurdity was a front for a serious message of social justice, and System was at their best when directly taking on issues like the punishment of non-violent offenders (""Prison Song"") or the commercialism of political movements (""Hypnotize""). They embedded their viewpoints into a musical package that was raw, and at various times, droningly deliberate and mathematically fast. It's also worth mentioning that System's members—all four of whom were first-generation Armenian-Americans—gave the country an image of the immigrant experience that was gladly liberated from the inner-city stereotype. In the beginning of the twenty-first century, new Americans just as often end up in endless suburban Sun Belt wastelands, and, to believe vocalist Serj Tankian's bemoaning of ""the toxicity of our city,"" they hate them as much as anyone.

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