Jump to content

Hurt Me Soul

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 173.73.185.73 (talk) at 01:35, 14 February 2017 (I don't normally do this but "One of the greatest hip-hop tracks of all time" is missing one of it's citations (which was from a random blogspot anyway) and wasn't even implied by the Washington Post one. Seems a little hyperbolic, to say the least.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

"Hurt Me Soul"
Song

"Hurt Me Soul" is a song written by rapper Lupe Fiasco. The Needlz-produced track was released in September 2006 on his debut album Food & Liquor. Before the opening verse, you can hear Lupe say "Astaghfirullah".In the opening verse, Lupe first acknowledges his own hypocritical tendencies during his younger years, and even more so the over-bearing presence of hypocrisy in the modern rap scene. Afterward, he makes reference to the fact that contemporary rap music is being flooded with the glorification or subliminal promotion of misogyny, drug-dealing, materialism and violence. However, this kind of rap music can be metaphorically viewed as the world in general, for these vices still continue to exist universally, even in societies where rap is absent. Despite his evidently strong opposition for such distasteful music, Lupe contradicts himself by questioning whether or not hip-hop should be criticized for such things. In doing so, he explains how rap legends such as 2Pac, Nas, Too Short, and Jay-Z (who are frequent sources for such glorification) rap about these subjects as they are in reality "coming true", despite the vulgarity of it all.

As the track arrives at the last verse, Lupe lists a lengthy catalog of what he believes corrupts the world. Consequently, in the three different hooks, Lupe speaks as a representative for numerous anonymous people suffering from this corruption, still bearing the general theme that virtually everyone on earth is susceptible to misfortune. He mourns for the world as a result, hence the title "Hurt Me Soul." This title involves a slight play on words of the common phrase: it "hurts me so".

References