

Former Sixth Grade Teacher Calls for Death of a Musical Genre, Blacks Outraged
By The Allah Team Mar. 19, 2016 3:08 PM EDT
LOS ANGELES (AT) — A former sixth grade teacher and reality television star, Chaim Witz, 66, wished for the death of rap music in a recent interview which sent shockwaves through the Black community.
Witz, a rock bassist known for glamorizing macroglossia, wearing seven inch heels, and performing in make-up and leather, lamented, “I’m looking forward to music coming back to lyrics and melody, instead of just talking. A song, as far as I’m concerned, is by definition lyric and melody … or just melody.”
For reasons unknown, members of the loosely affiliated Hip-Hop community took offense to the statement from the senior citizen who made the inflammatory remarks while being interviewed by Rolling Stone Magazine, the former voice of popular music.
Witz, whose career was at it’s zenith when 8-tracks were new technology, realized that he wanted to stand on stage, bite heads off bats, and have simulated blood ooze from his mouth back in 1973 while teaching sixth graders on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.
Rap music, one of the components of Hip-Hop culture, had yet to emerge from New York during that time but has since gone on to grow into a $10 Billion dollar industry.
Neither Witz nor a Hip-Hop community spokesperson could be reached for comment.