where have you gone, dana dane (with fame)?
"It could almost work here like hip-hop works for Brits — as a fantasy," he said. "For Americans it could be like: 'Who's he? He says geezer all the time! He's got this weird lifestyle.' And that's what could make British rap more powerful ultimately, because American rap today is a TV show — really conservative."To read now: "The British Can't Rap, Haven't You Heard?"
To read later: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's "Sing praise" series on Atlanta's black gospel music scene.