This Is Now (Again)

“He’s also piercingly smart about his place as a white observer in a Black art form.”


(Jayson Greene, on Daniel Levin Becker)

Before you-know-who was president, I encountered something called Twitter, ran with it for maybe six weeks. That was in what — oh-nine? I’d been reading about hip-hop in The New Yorker, a starkly pale conveyance into the zone some would say, but well written by I forget who. The rappers’ go-by’s intrigued me: X goes by the name Y, performs with Z who goes by the name A.

Going by names held charm for me. An ecstasy of gnarly monikers. I had fun with it in a couple of tweets. Said something like “I’m so-and-so and go by High Plains Drifter.” Bad idea. Somebody went shut the fuck up. I may have been, what they say in football, offside. I dropped Twitter like a hot potato.

One good thing came of the putdown; I bumped into Earl Sweatshirt. Not for any gainful purpose, just that the name was genially ripe, had staying power. Wouldn’t you know? Earl is in my head again via The Times: 

Often, Earl has appeared to be hiding in plain view, an accidental superstar trying to stay grounded. Over the past decade, he’s been one of the most visible makers of lo-fi, subterranean, lyrically abstruse rap music, a style that has both earned him a fervent following of connoisseurs and kept casual peekers at bay.

Look, I read poetry — more of it than I understand. Anything “lyrically abstruse” is catnip for this pussy. If only someone called Earl’s songs something like “muddily intricate and knotty.” 

After crash-landing into the spotlight, he’s been inching his way out of it… one muddily intricate and knotty song at a time.

That does it, my heart leapt. Memo to High Plains Drifter: There’s a book* by a guy. Buy. Read. Learn. Listen. And zip it.

*What’s Good: Notes on Rap and Language, by Daniel Levin Becker (City Lights Books, 2022).

(c) 2025 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved

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About JMN

I live in Texas and devote much of my time to easel painting on an amateur basis. I stream a lot of music, mostly jazz, throughout the day. I like to read and memorize poetry.
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4 Responses to This Is Now (Again)

  1. azurea20's avatar azurea20 says:

    Mira, leo poesía, más de la que entiendo. Cualquier cosa “líricamente abstrusa” Yo también.

    Liked by 1 person

    • JMN's avatar JMN says:

      Un saludo, Azurea20! Es grato escuchar tu voz. Eres un espíritu poético por lo que veo yo en tus escritos. Voy atrasado en leer los mensajes por la fiebre de garabatear mis tonterías.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. azurea20's avatar azurea20 says:

    El libro que citas está traducido al español?

    Liked by 3 people

    • JMN's avatar JMN says:

      Oye no, que sepa yo no está traducido. Pero tampoco he investigado el tema. Lo pedí hace poco y he abordado sus primeras páginas. Sería un proyecto de traducir muy interesante, me parece, aparte de desafiante (challenging?)

      Liked by 1 person

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