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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Age of hip-hop


Corey
Jonathan Landrum Jr. Associated Press

ATLANTA – Yung Joc appears on stage for a performance as an assembly of youths swarm toward him, screaming at the top of their lungs.

Only this time, the rapper delivers a message nothing like his raucous songs “I Know You See It,” “Dope Boy Magic” or his smash hit, “It’s Goin’ Down.”

“I’m not trying to be a preacher, but God is real in my life,” he says, while his 2-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter stand near him at an Easter Sunday event called Exodus, a soulful revival for youths.

After Joc’s testimony, the host of the event, Corey “CoCo Brother” Condrey, asks everyone to pray for the rapper. Many in attendance drop to their knees or stand in place, tossing their hands toward the sky.

It’s a scene that Condrey, who created the event, has longed to see.

He has set up a platform to marry hip-hop and gospel together through his syndicated radio show, “The Spirit of Hip-Hop,” and the yearly Exodus event.

“We’re trying to instill Jesus into them,” the Atlanta-based disc jockey says of young rap fans. “We’re making it cool, fly and showing them how they can go to their schools among their friends and love the Lord. And it’s coming from people who they can relate to.”

On his radio show, Condrey has held interviews and prayer sessions with rappers such as 50 Cent, Ludacris, Kanye West and Young Jeezy. The show has also featured guest appearances from gospel stars such as Kirk Franklin, Yolanda Adams and Smokie Norful.

“I’ve been through a lot of different things,” 50 Cent said on the show. “I feel like God is the only reason why I’m strong enough to get through those situations.”

Exodus, a free event, has grown over the past three years, drawing between 3,000 to 7,000 people. Condrey has changed the venue each time, holding it at a nightclub, a church and most recently a skating rink.

After all, it’s also an opportunity for fans to see their favorite artists.

“That’s how we reach them,” says Bone Crusher, who performed a rock-infused version of gospel. He is also known for his controversial hit “Never Scared,” which drew attention for its vulgar lyrics at an Atlanta Falcons home game a few years ago.

“To reach those type of kids, you have to go into the gutter and get them out of (difficulty),” he says. “Yes, some of it is unorthodox and derogatory. But it’s something I have to do to get the people out.”

Certainly, hip-hop could use the positive publicity – especially because the genre has been under increased scrutiny for its sometimes misogynist and violent lyrics.

“For popular artists to go down and speak to kids about God, righteousness and love for God is great,” rapper LL Cool J says. He recorded a rap gospel-type track, “We’re Gonna Make It,” featuring gospel duo Mary Mary, for his 2006 album, “Todd Smith.”

But Alabama activist/minister Orlando Bethel calls the movement hypocritical. He says youth shouldn’t be taught about God by rappers such as Joc, who faces a felony charge of carrying a concealed weapon at the Cleveland airport in December.

“There are people who say they’re saved, and they’re living in sin and think it’s OK,” says Bethel, who protested the Exodus event along with 15 others. “Then there is another category of people that are not saved. That’s not right.”

Dr. Bobby Jones, host of the long-running BET gospel show bearing his name, says he has mixed thoughts about how nonchurchgoers receive the message, but is open to mainstream rappers speaking more about their relationship with God.

“I think it’s very narrow-minded for someone to categorize another one’s relationship with their spirituality,” says Jones. “Who are we to say what’s right or wrong about what somebody develops?

“It doesn’t matter if five minutes ago someone sang about the love of their life in a very intimate position, then the next five their talking about their love of Jesus Christ.”

Gospel singer J Moss says a rapper’s testimony may be the only one someone gets.

“It could be their only church,” he said. “God is for everybody.”

Condrey would know. He switched from hosting a popular radio show where he only played secular music to a hip-hop gospel platform in 2005 (the show is in 15 markets and syndicated by Radio One). He changed his format after persuading a homeless caller not to commit suicide while on air, saying he “began to hear God telling him to shift into a different arena.”

Since then, Condrey said he quit drinking alcohol and vowed to be celibate until marriage, trying to lead by example.

After speaking at Exodus, Young Joc was inspired to record a track with R&B gospel singer Justin Clark.

“It was one of the defining moments in my life,” he says. “Somebody might say, ‘How can you talk to kids when you have a gun charge?’ But accidents happen and people make mistakes.

“With young men and women looking up to me, I have to let them know that I’m a man of God.”