The Economist
September 5th 2020
71
1
T
wo
cars
, one silver and one black,
pulled up in a busy shopping street in
the Gold Coast, Chicago’s glitziest neigh-
bourhood, one afternoon last month. Four
passengers, weapons drawn, stepped be-
tween shoppers and fired off a hail of bul-
lets. Their target was a chubby man in a
blue tracksuit who stood outside a luxury-
goods boutique. The 26-year-old slumped
to the ground as shop windows shattered
behind; his two companions were wound-
ed. Passers-by filmed the aftermath of the
shooting, posting footage online as he lay
dying in the road.
The murder was unusual. Gun deaths
have surged of late: by the end of August
500 killings had been counted in Chicago,
as many this year already as in all of 2019.
Overwhelmingly these occur when gang
members intrude on each other’s turf in
troubled districts on the South or West
sides. Bullets rarely fly in Gold Coast. For
participants in gang conflict, excursions to
such wealthy, central places had previously
seemed relatively safe.
Nor was the victim run-of-the-mill.
Carlton Weekly was a minor celebrity who
performed drill, a form of rap music that
arose in Chicago a decade ago and became
popular in London, New York and beyond.
Performing under the moniker FBG Duck,
his tracks were ominous, repetitive and
catchy; his last music video, “Dead
Bitches”, released in July, has 11m views on
YouTube. As with many drill videos, the
star posed in a shadowy room, flanked by
gun-toting friends, smoking joints while
waving wads of cash.
Some speculate FBG Duck was killed for
the music, as that last song was a “diss
track”. His lyrics crudely celebrated the
murders of several members of an infa-
mous Chicago gang, the Black Disciples. In-
sulting other rappers—and the gangs they
associate with—is not new, nor unique to
drill. It is a means to digital notoriety,
though it may invite a bloody response.
Such musical clashes online are amplified
by bloggers who relish details of these ver-
bal conflicts because they mirror real-
world gang confrontations. FBG Duck had
abused others in song for years, beginning
with insults of Chief Keef (pictured), an
early star of the drill scene.
Social media probably helped cause FBG
Duck’s death. Chicago’s mayor, Lori Light-
foot, suggested his enemies monitored his
posts on Facebook as he carelessly bragged
to fans about his shopping sprees. Rivals
routinely “lurk on” others—studying their
social-media feeds and hoping, in the
words of gangster rappers, to “catch opps
lacking”. That means getting a chance to
shoot or humiliate a rival, for example by
forcing him, on camera, to diss his own
gang or fellow rappers.
For years police in Chicago have said
this online sparring, often expressed
through music, spurs deadly violence.
Confirming that is hard. How could anyone
prove FBG Duck’s songs directly led to his
death, asks Forrest Stuart, an ethnographer
at Stanford University who embedded with
drill rappers on Chicago’s South Side for
over 18 months. The musician had ties with
the Tooka gang, an outfit linked to the
Gangster Disciples, which has long vied
with the Black Disciples. His elder brother,
another drill rapper who worked as FBG
Brick, and a cousin were shot dead on the
same day in 2017. As a rapper he was a
tempting target, but he would have been
one anyway, even without uttering a word.
Mr Stuart’s recent book, “Ballad of the
Bullet”, is an often gripping account of
what he learned from his association with
teenage members of an up-and-coming
drill group—he dubs them the Corner
Violence and music
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