I have written for years about women and Hip Hop and culture, but I don’t think I’ve ever said more than a few words about Lauryn Hill. Like a lot of sisters my age, a couple years younger and a bit older, I have a great deal of attachment to the singer. But I haven’t always quite known what to say about her.
My thoughts on Hill regarding Blunted On Reality, The Score, and The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill was “awesome,” “awesomer,” and “OMFG, she’s not even a real person, how can she be THIS awesome?”—in that order. I needn’t say much more. Oh, and I took my acrylic nails off and stopped pressing my hair when “Doo (Wop That Thing)” came out. I was 14.
But after the “2001 MTV Unplugged” I was no longer a part of the group of women (and men) who seemed blindly loyal to, and almost obsessed with, the sister. I remember watching the concert with a group of my classmates as we prepared to perform For Colored Girls at our high school. We were on our deeply philosophical “we waz grown” Black girl shit at that time, and here was our Black shining princess—our spiritual big sister—on MTV doing about 30 songs that all had the same three chords. And her eyebrows weren’t groomed. And she had on a baseball cap. And she had on a boy’s shirt.
I was dismayed: “The fuck is wrong with her?” A couple of my cast mates were quick to defend her artistic choices and maintained that she was likely doing something that was too deep for us to comprehend. (Note: if you are on some Black power and/or artsy shit and keep your hair natural, many people will give you this same very pass . . . a fact I have taken advantage of for years. Thank you for letting me be mice elf.) I wasn’t with it.
“Something’s not right with her. I’m not gonna pretend to like these songs and I hope she’s okay, because she seems really…sad? Upset? Something’s not right.” So I was one of the few be-Afroed sisters around the way who didn’t cop “Unplugged.” I did download a few tracks from Napster. That’s about it.
As the years wore on, we all heard the rumors about Lauryn demanding to be called “Ms. Hill” by fellow musicians, and other less-than-sisterly behavior. And the stories of her blessing out her fans for not liking her new material . . . or for just showing up to see her in the first place. I was done. I thought The Miseducation was a happy accident. She was mad at us for co-opting her boho style? Well, someone shoulda told her she was hardly the first person to cut up some denim and add a little kente cloth to swag it out. Lauryn didn’t like singing the songs that made us love her? This wasn’t Lil Kim coming forward and saying she can’t stand behind “I used to be scared of the dick/now I throw lips to the shit”—you telling me you got all this resentment for “Heavy like the mind of Sister Betty?” Girl, bye.
To some level, I was hurt. Offended. We loved her and she was not trying to love us back. Combine that with some music I didn’t like and I was over her. Over. Only recently did I realize something: we may have crushed this woman with the weight of our expectations. Lauryn was in her early 20s when she became the biggest name in Pop music . . . for making songs talking about Black girl pain, and hood life, and struggle. That was a BIG deal. While I won’t engage all the foolishness of the rumor mill, she and Wyclef have both confirmed that they had a relationship outside of his marriage. She had a child with the son of one of the most famous musicians to ever live. Lauryn had a full and complicated life of her own, coupled with the weight of our expectations on her back. How many of us could balance all of that? At 25? Ever?
It’s been hard for people to accept that Lauryn is human as a motherfucker, just like us. Perhaps prettier (we won’t talk about my “Why, God, did you not make me look just. like. her?” period), more talented, uniquely insightful . . . but absolutely human nonetheless. And we hitched too many of our hopes and dreams to her. We didn’t ask “Who’s the next Lauryn?” We didn’t go out by the droves and support other female emcees (Can’t tell me there’s nobody out there at all like her so long as Mystic draws breath).
A whole lot of folks looked at Lauryn and expected her to tell them who to be, what to do, and how to dress along the way. And they wanted her to make sick ass music while doing it. Did Lauryn break down? Did she lose her head and get too egotistical? Did she simply say “Fuck this” and choose to put her family first? Did the pressure to match the success of The Miseducation render her unable to do another studio album? I don’t know, and I don’t know if we’ll ever know exactly why she was gone so long after putting out one of the greatest records of all time.
As Hill has allegedly returned to the studio to do a new record, it’s worth asking: what are we owed, if anything, from our artists? What are reasonable expectations when it comes to fan/performer relationships? When does our love for someone hurt them and make it hard for them to do what it is that we came to love them for in the first place? If Lauryn isn’t who we thought she was or who we want her to be, is it her fault for growing and changing, or ours for getting SO attached in the first place?
I think Lauryn is one of the most talented and beautiful women of her generation, and I sincerely hope that she makes a return to the global stage and blows us all out the water. I will not, however, hold my breath. I won’t sit in a concert and let her yell at me from behind the guitar about how she doesn’t want to perform “Killing Me Softly” unless she’s added indigenous Ethiopian percussions. Nor am I gonna tell her that she needs to perform what I want her to hear.
I appreciate the impact Hill’s earlier music had on me as a young woman, and what her words said to the world about our people and my gender. But I’m not gonna pretend she’s a goddess above and beyond the rest of us. She’s a human being and I think the best way we can show her some love is to treat her like one.
I loved the Unplugged album, it wasn’t a polished finish product, it felt like a personal jam session from Lauryn. I loved the lyrics
Great article! Lauryn Hill is talented: singer, songwriter, actress (Sister Act 2) and even though she was capable of doing so much I think our generation felt we could relate to her. She was singing about things we could relate to with so much passion. I don’t know if the pressures of the world made her leave the spotlight, but I do know that the pure music should brought is definitely missing. As someone who still has “MisEducation of Lauryn HIll” rotating on the iPod , I’m hoping she makes a comeback. A lot of people in our generation do; we just need to accept that what we hear will not be the same Lauryn Hill we heard years ago and that’s something I think will be hard for us to accept.
I think we expect too much from people who are essentially entertainers. The fact that they may happen to drop some science makes people put them in some kinda prophet category. If they buy into their own hype at all it makes for disaster. Lauryn is a musician, and damn talented one. She is missed and would be welcomed back by her fans. For us to put any kind of expectation on what the come back entails is ridiculous. It’s art, enjoy it for what it is.
I must have been 10 or 11 when Miseducation… came out and I loved Lauryn Hill and thought she was a goddess. I have her Unplugged and I don’t much care for it!
Hate to be so blunt but it seems Hill snookered a lot of people with her fake ‘social’, ‘conscious’ and ‘political’ lyrics since 2005 found her on the BET Awards rocking a shiny mushroom wig and the same “hair weaves like Europeans” she sung against.
One thing I will never understand (well, yeah, I do understand it) is why some still put Lauryn on some earth-mother-savior-of-the-world type pedestal yet rip Beyoncé up, down and every chance they get. I respect them both and find them both beautiful and talented but Lauryn cheated with a married man (Wyclef, possibly the father of her first) then proceeded to have a passel of other children by another married man (Rohan). Methinks the drama, pain and confusion that comes with pursuing those types of men may be the source of her checking out and turning into a nut.
Role model or someone to look up to? Hardly! Human and artist that used to be worth listening to? Yes!
You sisters have some stern but solid criticisms.
This.
I love this article. I think it was ultimately her ego that destroyed her. It’s that ego that led to the dimise of the fugees (along with Clefs massive ego), that ego that led to her relationships with married men (both Rohan and Clef), that lead to her beyond ridiculous treatment of writers and musicians that assisted on Miseduaction (check the law suits) and her on going Diva antics of the last 5 or so years have been well documented. We can all agree that Ms. Hill is talented, but let’s call a spade a spade.
I also think it’s comical how all an artist has to do is have natural hair, have some faux political diatribe and wear kente and all of a sudden their so deep and wise. People jump all over Alicia for sleeping with a married man but refer to Lauryn as a “queen” why? Her behavior has never been “queen-like”. Ever. I love her and wish she could get it together, but again call a spade a spade here.
Lauryn Hill became the Sinead O’Connor of Hip Hop with her ego and outlandish antics so ditto, Monie!
Time and again Lauryn stans criticize and claim Bey writes/wrote none of the songs she’s been credited with, when the claim that Lauryn wrote 13 of the 14 tracks on Miseducation was a lie. She played dirty with the musicians that helped her and that’s why New Ark (co-writers/producers on Miseducation) sued and received $5 million in 2001.
If I’ve said it once, I’ve said it 1,000 times: natural hair is just that…natural hair. It does not make a chick more real, deep, enlightened, politically and socially conscious, mentally healthy, or (as in Hill’s case) honest, fair or any other bulldonkey than a woman who straightens.
This again. I think putting anyone up on a pedestal, no matter how talented they are, is dangerous. Whether or not the artist asks for it, it’s important to remember that they are humans like you and I, and are therefore imperfect. Fame and fortune doesn’t make you invincible.
No offense, but…if I hear one more person lamenting about the return of Lauryn Hill, I’m going to puke. This was a woman who has done a whopping 1.5 solo albums – an overrated piece of judgmental dreck, and whateverthehell Unplugged was – and her stans keep acting like music has not moved on since her departure from the scene. Her “comeback” has been, what…10 years and counting? And let’s not act like she disappeared and never came back. Lauryn has tried to come back; we keep hearing about how every time she does a show, she’s eight hours late, all out of tune, and performs for about 20 minutes. This is what happens when you don’t have your right hand man (Wyclef) or your ghostwriters (New Ark). Let it go, girls! Geez!
Well…I appreciae the pure honesty of this post. Hhhmmm But I must say…I absolutely LOVED her MTV UnPlugged Album. Altho the cords were the same, each song represented a different struggle…a different meaning. It spoke to me so deep that the album leaves me in tears every time I listen.
Its unfair to put all of these expectations on artists…They are only human. But Yes…She is one of the best artists and she is a beautiful strong black woman…I respect her talent and appreciate her ability to bare all and let us in :-)
MTV Unplugged was INCREDIBLE..Loved it..the lyrics were beyond genius!!!!!!!! To each their own i guess.
Lauryn… Everybody has their own struggle and their own story to tell. The fact of the matter is life isn’t easy for anyone and no one is perfect. Sometimes, it important that life and society allow people to be themselves. There is far too much emphasis on what a person looks, where they go to and what they’re wearing like and not so much what a person stands for, believes in or is.
Everybody makes mistakes, everyone goes trough things, life is a learning experience and everyday is a lesson. Judge not lest yourself be judged.
interesting article :)
AMEN
We as fans, listeners, and consumers are so quick to judge artists for “wanting” to be who they really are. We didn’t give her that opportunity (or space). From her recent interview with NPR a month or two ago, she shared her reasons for her hiatus, etc. People just choose to believe what they want to believe. I do agree with some of your points about letting her be who she is, despite our expectations. Unplugged was beautifully stripped, honest, and the “Lauryn” no one wanted to digest. If the people that were so quick to condemn her truly listened to the album (including her interludes), they would hear her pains (which were re-addressed in her NPR interview this year). I’m looking forward to her return as well.
Excellent again Jamilah.
I think I followed the same trajectory. Transitioning from rabid loyal fan building high anticipation over the possibility of what was to come, only to feel quietly disappointed. I felt closeted, and I don’t think I’ve ever fully admitted I didn’t really love the unplugged album til now. However, as an artist and a voice I’ve consistently appreciated her words and refusal to compromise, though admittedly I also wasn’t very clear on what she was banging against since her music was very well received and loved, even in presenting the very heavy and relevant topics she did. I just chalked it up to my not being very familiar with the industry though.
I never took the time to think about it all from her vantage though, the human that she of course is. Would be awesome to have a discussion with Lauryn about what you’ve highlighted here. Brother can dream.
I still have a sense of admiration for Lauryn Hill. She had a innovative way of weaving together soul, hip-hop, with a bit of spiritual resonance for our time. Yes she didn’t write her own records and crashed and burned with the Unplugged album. But still even with that album: when I heard her, and watched her I saw something raw. I saw and heard something that hadn’t been polished, packaged up and served on a popular music platter. It was amazingly transparent, like she was showing us her viscera. So despite the lack of chords, and creativity I felt something. In some ways she reminds me of Nina Simone. I don’t think that we should judge her. Later it was revealed that alot of Nina Simone’s antics were due to bi-polar disorder. I’m not making any assumptions on behalf of Lauryn Hill but I am saying that we should allow her space and allow her to be human. I would be lying if I didn’t say that her Miseducation album was not trasformative, or apart of our culture of the 90′s it was and it will always be. I pray that she resurfaces, and is in good health and brings that soulful voice back to the world again!
Hear, hear!
AMEN~! As Lauren so eloquently put it, “forgive them father for they know not what they do” and as a culture, as a group of followers behind her – the phenomena of Lauren Hill – maybe we didn’t know what we were doing to ourselves or to her! You said it best, she is human and though what she has done for many of us can be considered divine, she is human, has faults, flaws and imperfections and has to be accepted for just who she is..L Boogie
I admit I tend to romanticize Lauryn. I was a youngster but when I saw that video for ‘the sweetest thing’ from the love Jones CD I thought ‘now that was the ideal woman right there’.
[...] an essay about my conflicted feelings about the singer and her fans appears at Clutch this week. Click here to read “Notes On [...]
i was a lauryn stan when i was kid, and when i saw her appearance and heard the songs from unplugged i had the same thoughts as you “what the hell is wrong with her?” and “why are her eyebrows so bushy?”, lol. and i began to look at her with a more critical eye, and as more human and falliable. some of her actions in the ensuing kind of proved my hypothesis something wrong ( the unprofessional performances, and her ridiculous get ups at some of these performances) kind of proved my hypothesis that something was wrong, but i still appreciate her for her artistry, her BEAUTIFUL voice, and imagery and affirmation she brought to me as a young girl that all shades of black and natural hair were beautiful. her lyrics still resonate with me today, and that’s what i’m looking for when this new album comes out, music that i can sit with that can help me to reflect on my life and the human condition.
* in the ensuing years kind of proved my hypothesis that something was wrong
I have to say I was one of the few that stood by Lauryn Hill through it all, from “Sister Act 2,” to “The Score” to her chastising the Pope and Christianity. All too often we watch our artists rise to fame, fall by the waist side, hit rock bottom, recover then rise again. We don’t support them as they crash from the stress of fame and immense wealth. We dog their name in beauty parlors and backyard BBQs but we don’t stand by them. I knew, going through changes myself, that Lauryn was coming to terms with her power, her gift, her womanhood in the public eye, feeling like she owed a certain amount of loyalty to record companies that gave her a platform to speak on in the first place but wanting to speak the truth anyway. As a community, we watch the train wreck happen, stand over the mangled bodies shaking our heads then rejoice in the resurrection but never do or say anything along the way. We have to learn how to stand by each other through good times and bad, even if we don’t know or understand what is going on. Who will support us Black women if no one else will? And yes, I will be at Rock the Bells cheering Lauryn Hill’s return but she never left in my eyes.