Rapper Ice Cube leads rap defiance – Wonder urges people to choose ‘love over hate’

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US singer Fergie performs at the Wireless Festival in north London on July 10. (AP)
US singer Fergie performs at the Wireless Festival in north London on July 10. (AP)

QUEBEC CITY, July 11, (Agencies): Ice Cube co-wrote one of the defining protest songs against police brutality and, at a moment of soaring tension with US law enforcement, the rap legend did not hold back.

“The police tried to tell us what we can’t play!” Ice Cube, likely referring to past rather than present bids to muzzle him, told a rain-soaked crowd Saturday night at Quebec City’s summer music festival.

Ice Cube ripped into “Police” and, to the delight of the predominantly youthful and white fans, asked them to raise their middle fingers as images of armed officers flashed on a screen.

The 1988 song by his former group, gangsta rap pioneers N.W.A, initially stunned listeners with its merciless indictment of police treatment of African Americans yet has become one of the best-known songs in hip-hop.

But Ice Cube’s decision to play the song was especially defiant two days after a sniper shot dead five officers in Dallas amid demonstrations over the latest two killings of African Americans by police.

Ice Cube on social media has kept the focus on police brutality, sharing stories of abuses and urging President Barack Obama to rein in police, declaring his campaign with the hashtag #Theorisation.

Entertaining

Yet Ice Cube relegated “Police” to early in his set in Quebec City — which he affectionately called “QC” — as he focused more on entertaining and proving his bona fides.

“I don’t care about the rain; I can do this all night!” the 47-year-old rapper turned actor said.

Ice Cube invited “the ladies” of Quebec City to dance to Kool and the Gang’s infectious “Jungle Boogie” and, after performing his classic “It Was a Good Day,” left the stage to James Brown’s “The Boss,” an appropriate closing song with its blend of funk and audacity.

The Dallas killings have brought condemnation from the Black Lives Matter movement and a number of artists who have championed the protesters.

Pop superstar Beyonce — who had urged fans to contact lawmakers to end the “war on people of color and all minorities” — voiced grief for the slain officers, saying, “No violence will create peace.”

“To effect change we must show love in the face of hate and peace in the face of violence,” she wrote to her more than 77 million Instagram followers.

Snoop Dogg, who like N.W.A. emerged from Southern California’s gangsta rap scene, led a peaceful march to the Los Angeles Police Department and appealed to new recruits for dialogue.

“Let’s talk about it, because once the talking is over with, there ain’t nothing to talk about,” he said.

Professor Griff of Public Enemy, along with N.W.A. a defining political force in hip-hop, forcefully declared that he does not advocate killing police after a photo, apparently a selfie, emerged of him with Dallas shooter Micah Johnson.

Public Enemy frontman Chuck D voiced outrage at the suggested connection, saying it was no different than blaming The Beatles after California commune killer Charles Manson seized on their song “Helter Skelter.”

“Personally I have always had some respect for police officers as humans. But their system of law is flawed,” Chuck D tweeted.

The festival, known in French as the Festival d’ete de Quebec, runs for 11 days across the historic city. The coming week will feature pop star Selena Gomez, funk rockers Red Hot Chili Peppers and British pop all-stars Duran Duran.

Devoted

Saturday was devoted to hip-hop, with other acts including Mississippi brothers Rae Sremmurd who managed to put on their fast-paced, leg-contorting dance routine amid persistent rain.

The evening began with Belly, the Palestinian-born, Ottawa-bred rapper who in May canceled a coveted appearance on late-night US show “Jimmy Kimmel Live” because presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump was present.

Belly — who would be affected if Trump is elected and goes ahead with his vow to close the United States to foreign Muslims — invited the Quebec crowd to raise their middle fingers and shout a profanity against the billionaire.

Among the lesser-known but hardest-working acts at the festival, Toronto punk band The OBGMs also led a chant against Trump as frontman Densil McFarlane assiduously whipped a mostly uninitiated crowd into a frenzy.

Also:

LONDON: Stevie Wonder urged his fans to choose “love over hate” and expressed dismay over the troubles in the world at a concert devoted to one of his classic albums.

The legend performed Sunday in Hyde Park for the British Summertime Festival. He opened his concert by telling fans he loved them all in these difficult times, and asked them to live in positivity.

“I encourage you to choose love over hate. It’s just that simple. Choose love over hate, right over wrong, kind over meanness. Hope over no hope at all.”

The 66-year-old’s Grammy-winning, 1976 album “Songs in the Key of Life” was the focus of the concert; Wonder played the album in its entirety..

Before launching into the set Wonder went on to say that he was happy that the album was still significant almost forty years on but also unhappy that “the songs and the words that we talk about, those conditions still exist in the world and that hurts my heart.”

He also referenced the Black Lives Matter movement, telling the crowd: “all life does matter, but the reason that I say black lives matter is because we are the original people of this world. So in essence, everyone here has some black in you. You’ve all got some soul in you so stop denying your culture.”

Wonder played for over two hours to a sellout London crowd of 65,000 people, closing this year’s British Summertime series.

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