Ice-T

Ice-T has shown his support for creating a retirement fund for ageing rappers after Swizz Beats brought up the idea earlier this month.

Swizz suggested setting up a programme to support rappers who needed financial assistance in their retirement, noting elder members of the hip-hop community may not be as financially stable as the younger generations.

Ice-T has now shared his thoughts on the idea, saying he agrees with it. ā€œIā€™ve always looked out for people like [Grandmaster] Caz and [Melle] Mel ā€“ those have been my friends,ā€ he told HipHopDX.

ā€œI donā€™t have a problem with it. I donā€™t expect the young kids to be involved in it, but then you do have enough people like myself and Swizz and people who have been very successful, you know? Thereā€™s no retirement for rappers. There is nothing. A lot of them have fallen on hard times.ā€

Ice-T
Ice-T CREDIT: Aaron J. / RedCarpetImages.net

Ice-T acknowledged that setting up a fund would require something more sophisticated than having one person hand out money to people. ā€œI think what theyā€™d have to do is create a board of people ā€“ maybe like the Universal Hip Hop Museum ā€“ that would be able to handle the funds and get it out to people in need,ā€ he suggested.

He continued: ā€œThe first generation of rap is unrecorded rap. Itā€™s before records. So all the hip hop that happened in the streets, it was only on cassette tapes. Thatā€™s the first generation. By the time people heard Melle Mel, [Grandmaster Flash &] the Furious Five, Sugarhill Gang, hip hop was already a culture. So, how far do you go back? I mean, Run-DMC was like the first rap group to get paid.







ā€œI think there should be some kind of an insurance plan something people can donate to. See, certain people from that era are OK. Like, Iā€™m OK, Chuck Dā€™s OK. Russell [Simmons] is OK. Jay-Zā€™s OK. Puffā€™s OK. LLā€™s OK. Thereā€™s a lot of people that are OK, but a lot of people arenā€™t. Itā€™s worth investigating. I would be part of it. I definitely would donate.ā€

Meanwhile, Ice-Tā€™s Body Count band ā€“ which features members of Hatebreed, Evanescence and Power Trip ā€“ released their seventh studio album ā€˜Carnivoreā€™. In a review, NME said: ā€œā€˜Carnivoreā€™ is a depressing reminder of how little has changed and how far we still have to go [ā€¦] They might not be the worldā€™s most dangerous band anymore but as long as thereā€™s social division and terrible politicians calling the shots, thereā€™ll always be a place for Body Count.ā€

The post Ice-T supports retirement fund for ageing rappers appeared first on NME Music News, Reviews, Videos, Galleries, Tickets and Blogs | NME.COM.

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