by juelz21 » Mar 14th, '11, 19:32
The basis of rap is rhyme, and an emcee is just a painter
with rhyming words, a poet with flow. It might sound
obvious to some, but one of the best ways you can excel
as an emcee is by picking better rhyming words. It’s all
like Rakim says on “I Know You Got Soul”:
I start to think and then I sink
into the paper like I was ink,
when I’m writing I’m trapped in between the line,
I escape when I finish the rhyme
Reread that. That right there is the dopest, most
beautiful summary of what it is to be a rapper. You go
into your own mind, sink into the paper, you’re using
words but they trap you like bars in a jail cell unless
you conquer them with rhyme. It’s rhyming that sets
the emcee free and gives him control over his raps.
It’s rhyming that lets the emcee rock the microphone,
and get a crowd jumping. It’s rhyming that forms the
foundation of your flow.
As Rakim demonstrated, however, we’re not talking
about “Hickory Dickory Dock.” In rap, not every
rhyme has to be at the end of a line. Rhymes don’t
have to be in a certain order or a certain word length.
In fact, some of the most prevalent types of rhyme in
hip-hop don’t rhyme perfectly at all. They’re called
slant rhymes.
Slant Rhyme vs. Perfect Rhyme
Here are some definitions from the American Heritage
Dicitonary:
Perfect Rhyme (noun): Rhyme in which the final
accented vowel and all succeeding consonants
or syllables are identical, while the preceding
consonants are different.
This is what most people think of when they think
rhyme. Examples of perfect rhyme are: cat, hat, bat;
cake, bake, fake. Perfectly rhyming words don’t have
to be spelled the same way; it’s all about sound. For
example: great, late; height, fight; bought, knot. Those
are all perfect rhymes. And the words don’t have to be
the same length either. For example: rider, beside her;
dutiful, unbeautiful. Those are all examples of perfect
rhyme.
Perfect rhyme will work fine in a lot of situations. But
hip-hop innovators (and poets before them) found it too limiting. Rappers began using slant rhyme to
allow them more freedom to express themselves. Here
is the definition of slant rhyme from the AHD:
Slant Rhyme (noun): A partial or imperfect
rhyme, often using assonance or consonance
only. Also called half rhyme, near rhyme, oblique
rhyme, and off rhyme.
You could think of slant rhymes as “almost rhymes.”
Examples are: heat, heart; cow, no; dry, died; love, fluff.
Slant rhymes are words that sound somewhat similar,
but don’t really rhyme.
In the Rakim line quoted earlier, he rhymes the word
“rhyme” with “line.” Those words don’t actually rhyme
with each other. “Rhyme” rhymes with “time, dime,
mime, I’m, and crime.” “Line” rhymes with “mine, pine,
whine, and tine.” But the two words sound remarkably
close. So Rakim uses slant rhyme to “finish the line.”
When Slant Rhyme is a Must
When should you use slant rhyme? Anytime. But
there are moments when using slant rhyme isn’t an
option; it’s a must.
1. The word has no perfect rhyme
There are lots of words in English that don’t have perfect rhymes. Here are a few: silver, purple, month,
angst, sixth, breadth, ninth, pint, wolf, opus, monster,
dangerous, marathon, napkin, hostage, discombobulate
and many, many more.
As you’re writing raps, if you ever wanted to rhyme
with any of those words you couldn’t. Not unless you
used slant rhyme. That’s exactly what Nas does in “NY
State of Mind.” He uses the word “dangerous,” which
has no perfect rhyme, but he makes it flow anyway: I got so many rhymes I don’t think I’m too sane,
Life is parallel to Hell but I must maintain,
And be prosperous, though we live dangerous,
Cops could just arrest me, blaming us, we’re held
like hostages
He slants rhymes “prosperous, dangerous, blaming
us,” and “hostages,” to get his point across. And his
flow doesn’t suffer for it.
You can find a list of slant rhymes for words with no
perfect rhyme in Appendix III at the end of this book.
2. Avoid Tired Rhymes
The other time when slant rhyme is really crucial
is when you’re dealing with a rhyme that is really
stale and played out. For example, how many times
have you heard the word “knowledge” rhymed with
“college.” Damn! People overuse that rhyme like
skeezy businessmen use too much cologne. In order to
avoid that, all we need to do is use slant rhyme.
Knowledge – mall kids, honest, ballas, taller, Paul Wall
did, on it, admonish, cabbage.
The great thing about slant rhyme is that it helps you
avoid one of most dangerous pitfalls for beginning
emcees: obvious rhymes. If a listener can tell what
you’re going to say before you say it, that’s almost
always a bad thing. It basically means that you’re not
being creative, you’re just repeating tired rhymes. So
use slant rhymes to avoid falling into that trap.
For example, instead of rhyming “money” with “funny”
or “honey,” try using slant rhyme: gin rummy, Sunday,
dummy, crumbly, Tony, blunt be, hunt me, some tea,
plenty. Some artists use line after line of slant rhyme, but
because of their flow and the way they pronounce the
words, you don’t even hear the words as being slant
rhymes. Take a look at Tupac’s verse on “Changes.”
He slant rhymes “ask” with “blast,” “black” with
“snatch,” and “negro” with “hero.” It allows him more
freedom to determine the content of what he’s saying
(he has more words to choose from), and it makes his
lines innovative and creative. Practice This
Write a few bars using some very obvious rhyme words
(“cat, hat,”). Then go back and replace the rhyme words
with slant rhymes and rewrite the verse. See how it changes
your verse