mods don't erase posts or lock any of them unless things have got out of hand, or libelous on the whole. Also the steve reich madlib disbelief post doesn't exist..someone got it twisted, it happens.
k-punks idea roundly was that hiphop is the mainstream on the whole, as dinosaur as rock music was, overstuffed with cliches, thoroughly sexist, that sort of thing, i can't find his original post but it didn't have much to do with what it's being accused of here, and no-one was ever particulary in any agreement with him anyway, esp dave stelfox or luka.
here are some things i found he did say for what it's worth in a discussion on his site:
'No, Luke, I don't have any special antipathy towards rap in general, nor any problems with adrenalin/ buzz/ beligerence. It's just rap now I'm somewhat bored by.
PE --- no, it wasn't the aggression, it was the crap sound and the fact that, like most live rap I've seen, it seemed to just involve incoherent, blustering shouting into microphones. The show was just boring - whereas the PE records were finely-tuned, precise artifacts of sonic weaponry, the live show was like a dull thumping headache. It's like Kodwo said, rap isn't live music, it's recorded sound. De La Soul I've always found intensely irritating. Too fey!

'
Well, I'm not an expert on hip hop, particularly on more recent stuff, but it would certainly be unfair and grossly inaccurate to say that I don't like it as a genre. My favourite hip hop (here's a fairly random selection): very old skool like Bambaata and Grandmaster Flash obviously, lots of eighties stuff, Schooly D first LP, Skinny Boys 'Weightless', Mantronix 'Music Madness', PE obviously (especially first LP and 'Fear of a Black Planet'), BDP 'Criminal Minded', Eric B and Rakim 'Paid in Full'. Nineties: Method Man 'Tical', all the Wu that everyone likes, Bone Thugs 'n' Harmony, Gravediggaz, Dr Octagon, the early Timbaland/ Missy stuff. Outkast I've always liked, actually, since 'ATliens.' Also, some British hip hop: Gunshot, London Posse.
You're going to have to accept what I say at face value. I used to like it, but I'm just not interested enough to want to investigate it in much depth any more. I don't like live hip hop, I'll admit, but that comes from a sense of bitter disappointment after being bludgeoned into a state of boredom at many, many shows.'