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Drake's Middle Class Problem: Why The Rapper Is Stuck On The Struggle Story

Drake’s Middle Class Problem: Why The Rapper Is Stuck On The Struggle Story

Written by Shamika Sanders, Staff Writer
Published on March 6, 2013

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There’s nothing glamorous about the unanswered grumbles of hollow stomachs; wearing hand-me-downs; and poverty’s unparalleled ability to steal one’s livelihood without ever being charged with manslaughter–unless, of course, you’ve never been there. If that’s the case, you may think it’s something to brag about.

I often joke about Drake‘s “struggle,” which could also be described as “middle class people’s problems.” Despite my status as die-hard Drake fan, I’ve given myself permission to respectfully question his alleged crawl from poverty’s trenches into the rapping stardom, where he currently reigns–birthing ubiquitous phrases like ”YOLO”.

Drake was born to a Jewish mother named Sandi Graham–an educator, and Dennis Graham, an African-American drummer who worked with Jerry lee Lewis. In the sixth grade Drake says he and his mother moved to Forest Hill–”an affluent neighborhood in central Toronto, Ontario, Canada,” where census data shows “an average income for all private households in Forest Hill to be $101,631.”

MUST READ: Drake Wins Grammy For Best Rap Album & Drops ‘Started From The Bottom’ Video

In an interview with  Complex Magazine Drake spoke about his mother, “She wanted the best for her family. She found us a half of a house we could live in. The other people had the top half–we had the bottom half. I lived in the basement, my mom lived on the first floor. It was not big, it was not luxurious. It was what we could afford.”

For many this is not descriptive of a particularly harsh or uncomfortable upbringing but Drake continuously emphasizes his relationships with poverty through his music, and, in interviews. “Say I never struggled/wasn’t hungry/Yeah, I doubt it n***a,” he raps while jogging beside a white Mercedes-Benz in latest video “Started From The Bottom”.

Drake’s Middle Class Problem: Why The Rapper Is Stuck On The Struggle Story  was originally published on ionehellobeautiful.staging.go.ione.nyc

At the crux of hip-hop’s foundation is the ‘rags-to-riches-straight-outta-Compton’ story. The majority of the hip-hop greats: Jay-Z, Biggie, DMX, Lil Wayne all boast their own “started from the bottom” personal narratives. Peddling drugs through the halls of Marcy projects provided Jay-Z with the content to create his classic debut albums Reasonable Doubt, and the rest of his career follows this suit.

It only makes sense that Canadian born Drake seeks to tell his own version of this fundamentally hip-hop narrative.  But since Drake did not grow up in the projects, sell drugs or gang-banging, Drake’s identifiable “bottom” feels inadequate. His story goes something like this: he grew up in middle class Toronto; landed a role on a hit TV series at age 15; then set his sights on a lucrative career in the hip-hop music industry. A few short years later he was “25 sitting on 25 mil”. Not bad considering he just wanted to be successful.

How can you blame Drake for bludgeoning us with his watered downed version of the hip-hop dream when his mentor Lil Wayne’s  had already inherited his street cred by age 9, growing up on the tough streets of the 504?

Drake’s struggle to identify as authentically hip-hop or “hood” likely explains why he tries so hard to live the image. It perhaps, sheds a little light on the bottle-throwing incident at Club Wip that left mostly bystanders injured, rather than Chris Brown, who was his target; or explains why he chooses to spend $50,000 in strip clubs on any given night.  It may all just be an attempt to overcompensation for his lack of street cred. Gangsters don’t have Bar Mitzvahs.

Drake’s Middle Class Problem: Why The Rapper Is Stuck On The Struggle Story  was originally published on ionehellobeautiful.staging.go.ione.nyc


To diminish Drake’s relative bottom is unfair. As he has mentioned, he saw struggle through his father, who was in and out jail throughout his life.  His single mother worked hard her to raise him on his own before falling ill, leaving a young Drake to become primary caregiver and head of household.

“We were very poor, like broke. The only money I had coming in was off of Canadian TV, which isn’t that much money when you break it down,” he said. “A season of Canadian television is under a teacher’s salary, I’ll tell you that much. It’s definitely not something to go f**king get.”

“I’d say it’s relative and almost everyone has a “bottom,” at some point in their lives because few of us start at the top of our desired endeavors,” wrote Alisha Tillery of Ebony Magazine.

And I agree. But, Drake’s upbringing is so far from my perception of the “bottom,” it’s insulting to be constantly reminded of it. “Affluent” isn’t and has never been a term used to describe any neighborhood where I’ve lived. I grew up with two working parents, who could barely pay the rent to the tenement where the four of us called home for years. The kitchen, beds we shared and closets were all right there–in one room. We shared a bathroom with the rest of the residents on our floor. Because of countless evictions, we were nomads. My sister and I shared a bed until we moved a two-bedroom place in the projects. We shared a room, where I slept in a twin size bed until I was 22-years-old. Spending money was a myth, cable—huh? Police didn’t even patrol my neighborhood because they rather let Blacks kill each other with illegal guns, drugs and hood mentalities that don’t go farther than limited images of success.

“What does it matter where I came from?” he asks. It doesn’t. But, it wouldn’t be a problem if he didn’t make it one. If Drake didn’t constantly reference his struggle, it wouldn’t be the topic of conversations.

I understand his infatuation with the old school hip-hop mentality that puts the strife on a pedestal. He grew up in a time when it was necessary to have a back-story leveled in the streets, to be considered a credible rapper, but it isn’t a requirement anymore.

Hip-hop was once a robust diary filled with rags to riches stories from gangsters. We are now at crossroad in the genre, where rappers like Kanye West– whose mother was an English professor at Clark Atlanta University, and father the first black photojournalists at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution—are judged by their talent rather than their street cred.

“I think people in the hood can still connect with what I’m saying even though I’m not saying ‘yeah I got crack in my pocket’ ’cause that wasn’t my struggle necessarily, [but] I speak from a place that’s just human emotion,” Drake once told ABC News.

What he doesn’t seem to understand is that he will never earn the street stripes he seeks. Instead, he should focus on being the dynamic, multi-talented artists that he is–it’s time to drop the act. Sure, if you’re clever enough, you can write about the struggle you’ve never lived, but that doesn’t mean we ever are going to believe you actually did. It’s time Drake stop trying to convince us (and himself) about his bottom dwelling roots, and just continue to produce incredible music.

MUST READ: Rihanna, Drake & Frank Ocean Make Forbes ’30 Under 30′ List

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Drake’s Middle Class Problem: Why The Rapper Is Stuck On The Struggle Story  was originally published on ionehellobeautiful.staging.go.ione.nyc

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