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Chilled Mix #37 Raphael
Here’s an overview of the music video for It Is What It Is by KRS‑One featuring Fabolous & Cassidy, along with some thoughts on themes, style and context. While exact credits for the director and production details are sparse in my sources, it aligns with KRS-One’s late-2000s era of output.
The video features each rapper — KRS-One, Fabolous and Cassidy — in a number of performance-set shots: standing, moving, delivering lyrics directly to camera, often with minimal distractions.
There is a strong “old-school hip-hop” aesthetic: simple backgrounds, dark/neutral lighting, occasional cityscape or studio elements, giving emphasis to the lyricism rather than flashy production.
Cuts between each rapper’s verse highlight their individual styles, while maintaining a visual cohesion (e.g., similar colour tones, handheld vs stable camera work).
The video avoids heavy narrative storylines; rather it is performance-driven, focusing on the rappers themselves and the message of the track.
The chorus/intro emphasises “This is what it is … we gon’ flow with you … you know it’s true, hip-hop” — signalling a declaration of what hip-hop means and what the artists stand for.
KRS-One’s verse (as available in lyric sources) critiques false notions of what being hip-hop is, pushes for community, culture, and truth:
“A man once said that the streets are watchin’ us … we must keep hip-hop in us … They’ll never topple us …”
Themes: authenticity vs superficiality, the legacy of hip-hop, the role of MCs, staying true to the roots.
By featuring Fabolous & Cassidy, the video also bridges multiple generations in hip-hop: veteran (KRS) + mainstream (Fabolous) + lyrical (Cassidy). The visual style reinforces this unity.
KRS-One has long been a voice for “hip-hop culture” rather than just commercial rap, and this video continues that narrative.
The minimalistic video production emphasises that the message and lyricism take priority. It’s less about spectacle and more about substance.
The collaboration suggests a passing of the torch, or at least a recognition of the continuum of hip-hop.
Visually and thematically, the video can be seen as a call-back to early 90s boom-bap style — which aligns with KRS’s roots — yet with enough polish to fit the late-2000s market.
If you’re a fan of lyricism and hip-hop culture, this video gives you a raw, focused feel rather than overproduced.
Good for seeing how hip-hop veterans collaborate with slightly younger peers while maintaining credibility.
A solid example of how a performance video can communicate culture, attitude and message without relying on heavy narrative.
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