Home Books Rap Capital: An Atlanta Story

Rap Capital: An Atlanta Story

Rap Capital: An Atlanta Story

by Joe Coscarelli

Simon & Schuster ·2022 ·448 pages ·Music
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
I Index
42/99
Maybe Someday

46/99

Critics

Maybe Someday

39/99

Readers

n/a

Scholars

27/99

Rating

66/99

Volume

44/99

Rating

34/99

Volume

Sign in to add to your shelf, rate, or review this book.


About This Book

A modern epic about the most consequential music culture today, Atlanta rap—a masterful, street-level story of art, money, race, class, and salvation from acclaimed New York Times reporter Joe Coscarelli. From mansions to trap houses, office buildings to strip clubs, Atlanta is defined by its rap music. But this flashy and fast-paced world is rarely seen below surface-level as a collection not of superheroes and villains, cartoons and caricatures, but of flawed and inspired individuals all trying to get a piece of what everyone else seems to have. In artistic, commercial, and human terms, Atlanta rap represents the most consequential musical ecosystem of this century so far. Rap Capital tells the dramatic stories of the people who make it tick, and the city that made them that way. The lives of the artists driving the culture, from megastars like Lil Baby and Migos to lesser-known local strivers like Lil Reek and Marlo, represent the modern American dream but also an American nightmare, as young Black men and women wrestle generational curses, crippled school systems, incarceration, and racism on the way to an improbable destination atop art and commerce. Across Atlanta, rap dreams power countless overlapping economies, but they're also a gamble, one that could make a poor man rich or a poor man poorer, land someone in jail or keep them out of it. Drawing on years of reporting, more than a hundred interviews, dozens of hours in recording studios and on immersive ride-alongs, acclaimed New York Times reporter Joe Coscarelli weaves a cinematic tapestry of this singular American culture as it took over in the last decade, from the big names to the lesser-seen prospects, managers, grunt-workers, mothers, DJs, lawyers and dealers that are equally important to the industry. The result is a deeply human, era-defining book. Entertaining and profound, Rap Capital is an epic of art, money, race, class, and sometimes, salvation.


Preview


Reviews

"Atlanta is as central a character as the artists in this narrative, but it's also the glue that holds it all together—the backdrop against which stories of success, demise, historical wounds, pride, and legal proceedings play out."

Alessandro Cimino· Library Journal Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"an epic of music history ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Both the music and the best writing about it embody the same credo: You either go hard or go home."

Joan Morgan· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Yet Coscarelli brings empathetic detail to his coverage of those who continue to struggle, not just winners; he's alert to a deeply entrenched pattern of young, frequently poor, overwhelmingly Black musicians being taken advantage of by an industry that has long seen those artists solely as fonts of talent and revenue, only to promptly turn away when one or both appear to run dry ..."

Jack Hamilton· The Atlantic Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Coscarelli was embedded in the Atlanta scene for several years, making his storytelling feel both historic and immediate as it places the reader right there with him."

Kathy Sexton· Booklist Read review ↗ Near the Top

"If Coscarelli truly wanted to illustrate the ways that Black art gets obscured and unacknowledged even in the heart of the rap industry, he'd focus on producers rather than rappers and business executives, but they are largely peripheral to the story he tells ..."

Stephen Kearse· Bookforum Read review ↗ Bottom of the Pile

Reader Reviews

0 reviews

Sign in to write a review.

No reader reviews yet. Be the first!