Tuesday, March 4, 2014


Representing success in the economics involved in life within the rap game in his song “Chasin' Papers”, Curren$y uses fluent rhyme, covert personification, and rapid assonance to explain how he found the “Big bucks...down on the road less travelled”.

Curren$y is renowned for his ability to use rhyme not only as a tool for making his bars sounds clean, but to create a sense of word play within the lyrics. Ending lines with phrases like “pedaling my bike... Car into a trike” institute a common sense of youth, something Curren$y boasts about. He claims that since he was a little kid, he knew he wanted the money. He enforces this again with the simple rhyme “ I know what its like to want it all, I was born to ball”. The way these words are similar draw the words ball and all together. This gives the listener the idea that through balling, he got it all.

The underlaying personification found in Curren$y's lines give money the identity of a living being that will try its best to evade the ballers and remain free and unclaimed. He does this first by stating the “Big Bucks lay down the roads less traveled”, giving us the idea that the money is in fact hiding in the place least likely to be found, and that Curren$y is that much more of a baller for uncovering the cash. He also masks his motivation for getting the money with the personification involved in him physically “chasing that paper like it stole something of [his]” and later explaining it was for the death of his friends.

Curren$y likes to boast about money, but not until he is sure his audience knows the struggle he has been through first. To give us an idea of the hectic and dangerous life he lived, he fits the assonance in “murdering, bur glaring..dashing, cashing,...madness” within two lines, to represent the violent and fast paced nature of his previous life, as the assonance gives us multiple images in short succession. This device is used to create contrast between the poverty in his past to the success he enjoys now.

Curen$y is a rapper that remains unique in the way that he uses common literary devices to add complexity to his verses. Hidden within the rhyme, personification, and assonance are the innuendos and pieces of irony that set Curren$y out from the rest. He uses these devices to tell the story of his life, and to display the polarity of the past and present, poverty and wealth.

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