Hip-Hop Is Old But Your Favorite Rapper Is Too Young to Die

Reckoning with the mortality of music gods

Scott Woods
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Photo Illustration: Save As/Medium. Source: Getty Images.

In the span of two weeks in April, hip-hop lost DMX, Black Rob, and Shock G. Their ages were 50, 52, and 57, respectively. Fans could barely show proper respect for one fallen rapper before the next one passed. I won’t belabor the specific details of their deaths here, as the circumstances behind them are only now becoming fully documented—but also because the telling of them is painful. Besides, this isn’t a eulogy. It’s a plea.

For a time, the fatal shootings of Tupac Shakur and The Notorious B.I.G. seemed to have a chilling effect on hip-hop, drawing a line at what was an acceptable cause of death for iconic, game-changing rappers. But when you die before the age of 60, there are no acceptable causes of death. There are causes, but we cannot reason with them. They make no sense.

As fans, in our hearts, we fix our idols at an age based on their album covers; in our minds, we know that if we’re aging, they must as well.

This is probably why conspiracy theories about the aforementioned deaths in the hip-hop community are so abundant. Those who knew the deceased want to believe that they could’ve saved…

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