Wild but true: some of Mary J. Blige‘s longtime fans would rather see her sad. Not that they wish for her to go back to her life as a depressed star in an abusive relationship with drug and alcohol problems, but the music that came out of that era is among her most memorable. The happy, dancing MJB of recent years just doesn’t seem to strike that same chord that she did in more troubled times. Much like many artists make their best work when they’re new and hungry, some do their best when real life is kickin’ them in the ass. Such was the case with 1994′s My Life.
Representin’ Is Illmatic…
04/19/201016 years ago today… hip-hop gained another classic. I don’t mean “classic” like “millions of people bought it and played it to death, then forgot all about it”, I mean “classic” like… well, just keep readin’.
DANJ! Presents Winter Six: 1994 (Relax Yourself, Girl)
02/05/2010Aight, so it’s Friday on DanjLovesThe90s, which means it’s about time for another Winter Six. This week, I go in on the great 1994. Adjust the Mega Bass on your Walkman and let’s do it…
In Love With A “Girl”
01/06/2010So here’s what happened: It was damn near 5 a.m., and I was half-asleep listening to “Strictly Hip-Hop” on Morgan State‘s 88.9. The show was coming to a close when they played a new song by Common Sense called “I Used To Love H.E.R.” It was a story about hip-hop in the metaphor of a girl, and I thought it was some of the most brilliant shit I’d ever heard. I still feel that way- in fact, I’d say it could be the best song of Common’s 18-year (!) career. But over time, this song has also become really ironic to me.
Big Plans, Ni**a… Big Plans.
09/23/2009
Speaking of ’94…
In September of that year, I was 14 and in the 10th grade. I rode the bus to and from school everyday with my cheap-ass Walkman turned all the way up, nodding my head and lip-syncin’ the whole time. I stayed with those headphones on everywhere I went- so much in fact, that I just recently saw one of my sister’s old friends at my nephew’s birthday party, and the first thing he asked was “where your headphones at?” In the process of playin’ the shit out of all the tapes I had, few spent more time in the Walkman than The Notorious B.I.G.‘s Ready To Die.
The first time I heard it, I was at Security Square Mall with the homie Ray and a few of his peoples. While in the mall, I stopped in the Waxie Maxie’s with no intentions of buying anything. About 10 minutes later, I walked out with RTD and been lovin’ the shit ever since. I prob’ly came off as an anti-social that day, but once I popped that tape in, that was all I was focused on. Everybody else was having convo amongst themselves; meanwhile, I was caught up in what Big was talkin’ about. Everything about that album seemed fresh and new to me, from the intro to the beats.

By that point, I’d already known about Big from when he dropped “Party & Bullshit” in ’93, but RTD was a whole ‘nother animal. Hearing him previously, I knew he was somethin’ to deal with on the mic, so that wasn’t the surprise about it. There was a lot of talented lyricists back then, and although he stood out, it wasn’t the shock of the hour to hear him destroy shit lyrically. The surprise was the extent to which he could, on songs like “Gimme The Loot” and “Unbelievable”. Prior to those, he had joints like “Party…” and “Dreams Of Fuckin’ An R&B Bitch” which were thorough in their own right, but only scraped the surface of how great he really was, which he proved with the album.
But it wasn’t ALL just about Big. Without the right musical accompaniment, it could’ve fallen on deaf ears, which is where the producers come in. With Easy Mo Bee, Trackmasters, Premier, Lord Finesse, Chucky Thompson, and the Bluez Brothas doing the work on the production side, RTD was also bringing heat on that level. This was around the time when producers started comin’ with a “bigger” sound, with more dramatic effect than what was then the norm. While there were some tracks on the album that were pretty standard for the time (“Machine Gun Funk”), there’s also some that pushed forward a newer feel/sound (“Me & My Bitch”).

Rhymes and beats aside, there’s a bigger impact that Ready To Die had in the years that followed. As I mentioned a couple weeks back, East Coast artists were having a lil’ trouble getting their music to hit outside of those areas. RTD was one of the few that were able to hit on both the street and mainstream levels without losing either side. Even though it’s a normal thing now, most artists back then weren’t coming with R&B-style joints and super-gutter shit at the same time. The impact of that took shape quickly, with everyone from Fat Joe to AZ taking note and applying the same approach to their albums that followed. Nas has also cited that RTD‘s success put him in another mindset once he went to work on It Was Written.
That said, it wasn’t an approach that Biggie himself wanted, as he came into the project just wanting it to be strictly hard (the original intended title of it was Teflon Don). Once under pressure from Puffy to deliver something for the masses, Big created the hits that propelled the album (“Juicy” and “Big Poppa”) and made it happen. Despite how some people may feel about Puff’s hand in that creative process, without that bit of input, RTD could’ve easily been a good album that couldn’t move off the shelves for shit. Even Big later acknowledged that despite his initial resistance, he understood once it translated into the massive success it was.

It might be cliche to say, but 15 years after the fact, Ready To Die is still one of hip-hop’s greatest albums. Even the things that may seem minor now (like the “oh shit… you got a red dot on your head” ending of “Warning”) played as important parts that made it the classic it is. Whenever I listen to it today, I still feel the same about it (and even moreso) as I did when I was 14 walking thru the mall. From killin’ it with Method Man on “The What” to killin’ himself on “Suicidal Thoughts”, Biggie put in work for this album and it paid off through its sales, influence, and endurance. I don’t even know if artists are aiming for all those things today, but anyone who is could still learn a thing or two from Ready To Die.
“The What” (featuring Method Man)
-D!
Fall Back!
09/21/2009
So now that Fall has arrived… DanjLovesThe90s sets it off with more classic mixtape shit, this one coming from 1994. ’94 is considered as one of hip-hop’s pinnacle years, if not THE year (a title that was once unanimously held by ’88). It’s kinda hard to argue with all the love that ’94 recieves, considering all of the major breakthroughs and new arrivals that took place during those 12 months.
Incidentally (and I’m sure some others can attest to this), even with it being such a monumental year, it really wasn’t on our minds as it was going on. I don’t recall ever feelin’ like “wow, this is ’94, such a classic year!” or nothin’ of that nature. In that moment, it was just a normal year that happened to pump out a lot of good damn music on a regular basis. There wasn’t an element of amazement about it because that was the norm back then, but in hindsight, ’94 was even great by those standards.

Doo Wop was one of the top mixtape DJs during that era, after going through a rivalry with Kid Capri a few years earlier. By ’94, that was a wrap, but Wop was still doing his thing, along with his crew of MC’s known as The Bounce Squad. They’d always open his tapes with a freestyle intro, which was often a highlight, and influenced a number of DJ’s to start their tapes in the same fashion. And of course, after the intros, Wop always showed and proved with the music- ranging from the hits to the underground records, all in one ball.
Fall Flava ’94 is one of his most revered tapes, along with the ’95 Live series, Bad Boy Vol. 2, and others that followed. The playlist here speaks for itself: Method Man, Biggie, Outkast, GangStarr, Pete Rock & CL Smooth, Mary J. Blige, Redman, Keith Murray, Craig Mack, Da Bush Babees, and more. But don’t take my word… get it for yourself right here:
Fall Flava ’94: Side A & Side B
-D!
AND IN CASE YOU MISSED ‘EM: classic mixtapes by DJ Clue and Ron G
Summer Seven Series: 1994
07/20/2009
Here in 2009, not much about me has changed over a three-year period. I’m pretty much the same dude I was in 2006. But as a teenager, shit changes every year, to the point where we become completely different people over the course of just three years. Take for instance, me in ’94. I had gone from a lil’ fat boy who wanted to someday write for a wrestling magazine in ’91, to a skinny kid who wanted to be a rapper and/or DJ.

I was coming off of a half-ass freshman year in high school, and was in need of an attitude adjustment. I had to get my wits about myself coming into 10th grade, because I spent most of the 9th trying way too hard to impress everybody. I was that kid that you saw when you were a senior and wanted to slap the shit out of, not even realizing you were the same way. By the end of the year, I had realized where I went wrong, and was ready to restart.
In addition to that, I got my first summer job in ’94, which was at a rec center. I was in no way cut out to deal with children, and actually wanted to quit after the first day, but I settled into it within a week. I also wasn’t mad at the paycheck. The first one I got was only like $80, but that was the best $80 I ever had at that point. I remember blowing the whole thing that very weekend, on one trip downtown. I bought a Nervous Records t-shirt (???), two tapes, ate at Lexington Market, and copped a ticket to a Wu-Tang/Nas show at the Arena. Came home, had about $7 left… POW.

Speaking of music, as it always had, it continued to play a big role in my life during the ’94 summer as well. Many hip-hop enthusiasts consider that year to be of epic proportions, and as a person who was there, I can say they’re absolutely right. It is an amazing feat that I was able to narrow this week’s songs down to seven, because there was a LOT of shit out that summer. I could’ve turned this into the Summer 27, because much like ’92, I prob’ly had a new favorite song every few days. It also didn’t help that I’d discovered Strictly Hip-Hop on Morgan State’s WEAA (88.9), and stayed locked in every Friday night from 12 to 5 a.m. without fail.
By the time September arrived, I was ready to roll to 10th grade, focused. I was still a gigantic hip-hop head, I was still a joker, and my lil’ 14-year-old hormones were still out of control… but I was a lot more tactful. I also had my own money (as little as it was), so I was kinda feelin’ myself. And still, there was even more change ahead…

The Danj! Summer Seven of 1994 (I’m serious, shit was like pulling teeth)
Nas “The World Is Yours” (Q-Tip Remix): In addition to Illmatic, Nas also had some solid damn remixes for the singles. Here, Tip adds a new track and the “la-la-la” hook for another in the win column.
The Notorious B.I.G. “Juicy”: You already know…
Craig Mack “Flava In Ya Ear”: Bad Boy starts off with a bang. Quite possibly the ugliest rapper of all-time drops quite possibly the hottest single of the year.
Janet Jackson “And On And On”: Penny‘s forgotten B-side to the “Any Time, Any Place” single. I wasn’t rockin’ with much R&B during that summer, but this was a noteworthy exception that I couldn’t get enough of.
Crooklyn Dodgers “Crooklyn”: The team of Buckshot, Masta Ace, and a returning (at the time) Special Ed rep their hometown for Spike Lee‘s 70′s joint.
Mad Lion “Take It Easy”: With the dancehall reggae/hip-hop connection still going strong, Lion reps BDP with a banger.
Ahmad “Back In The Day”: My appreciation for a song about Ahmad’s good ol’ days of middle & high school… possibly the seed that later spawns this very site? Hmmm.
AND IN CASE YOU MISSED ‘EM: 1990… and 1991… and 1992… and 1993
-D!
“Yeah, My Name Is Trayshawn And I Wanna Dedicate This Song To Juwakatema…”
07/17/2009
So… I’m the only one who used to listen to the slow jam show at night? Nah, y’all listened to it too. Truthfully, I spent a good part of my teenage years being more interested in “GTD-ing” than bein’ in love and all that ol’ bullshit. But of course, there’d be those times where so-called “love” would take over and I’d be in my tight-ass room with the radio on at 10 p.m., checkin’ out the Love Zone.
All of these songs that I usually wouldn’t listen to would suddenly make all kinds of sense. I’d be sittin’ there really feelin’ these niggas’ plights, even though you couldn’t have forced me to listen to three hours of slow joints the week before. It was especially serious when it’d be a song that spoke specifically to the situation that was goin’ on. I’d be noddin’ along with the song and agreeing, on some “yeah, why she can’t see that?” shit.
But you KNEW it was serious when you’d call and do an on-air dedication. I’ll admit, I did a couple before. When you think about it, there’s always a song for just about any situation. Allow me… and as usual, if you want ‘em, click ‘em:

For That Time You Were Just Tryin’ To Impress Her… TROOP “All I Do Is Think Of You” (1990): You prob’ly had other shit on your mind, but she didn’t know that. It was very ego-catering to believe she was all you thought of, so you really couldn’t lose with this one. If you really did happen to look forward to seein’ her in school everyday (hopefully in a non-stalker way), this helped get that across. Also, yet another reason why The ’90s Loved Michael Jackson.

For That Time You Just Wanted To “GTD” Her… H-Town “Knockin’ Da Boots” (1993): Or “KDB”, either/or. This was that undeniable one right here: it was smooth enough to be a slow joint, but still ig’nant enough to say “I’m tryna take that”. I learned in time that blatant is just the way to go sometimes. I took a hot minute to realize this, but better late than never I guess.

For That Friend You Liked Who Was Bein’ Mistreated By The Dude She Was With… Shai “Comforter” (1993): Not that you were preyin’ on her vulnerability, but you really liked this got-damn girl. This could only go one of two ways. She was either gonna end up fallin’ for you the more she confided in you (possible), or she was gonna completely miss the hint and continue to be with the dude she cried to you about (likely). And on the off-chance that she did get with you, she wasn’t gonna take half the shit from you that she accepted from him. But hey… it’s a good song.

For That Time You Actually Had A Chance Of Pullin’ Someone Who Was Taken… Joe “All The Things Your Man Won’t Do” (1996): Realistically, you weren’t gonna do anything that much different from her man, but it sounded like some true stuff to say. And with Joe, these “tryna pull another dude’s girl” songs don’t just stop here. I’ll never forget the “I Wanna Know” video- the girl was havin’ an argument with her man, and this nigga Joe couldn’t even wait ’til it was over before he was already headin’ towards her, talkin’ bout “ya man givin’ you trouble?” But uh, yeah!

For The Time When It Was Over And You Were Sad As Shit… Aaron Hall “I Miss You” (1994): We’re all adults here, right? It’s OK to admit it. You put on a front in public, you told ya mans n’nem that you weren’t sweatin’ it cause you don’t luh dem hoes, you mighta even told her you weren’t gonna miss her ass. But when you got home and her number wasn’t poppin’ up on that Caller ID anymore, you heard this song and shit got REAL.
And there’s definitely more. I’m not done with these, as I’ll surely be adding on to this topic at least a few more times in the future. I used to think love songs were all the same, but as I’ve gotten older, I realize that it’s a lot more complex than it gets credit for sometimes. In the meantime, stay tuned… and feel free to add your own here.
-D!
’90s Girls
06/24/2009
RANDOM THOUGHT: Call it being in touch with my feminine side or whatever (stop/rewind), but I’ve never believed in “girl songs”. I definitely know there’s music that’s aimed more toward women, but I’ve never looked at it like that when it came to liking the music itself. In fact, I never knew anybody did until maybe a few years back. Only in recent years have I known dudes who don’t even listen to female artists’ music, because to them, it’s “for the girls”. I don’t know if that’s a generational thing, or if they just say that and then dance to Beyonce in private… all I know is that some of my favorite songs have happened to come from the fairer sex. And it doesn’t hurt that they were (usually) hot as all hell.
I say that to say this: today’s entry is dedicated to some of the female R&B groups of the ’90s. The ones I’ll be covering here weren’t necessarily the most successful or the most long-running, but they had their moments in time while inside of the decade.
Zhane had a nice lil’ run around ’93-’94. Their unique look and upbeat style gave them a presence at a time when a lotta new girl groups were out there looking mad similar. I also rocked with their midtempo-bouncy sound, mostly produced by Naughty By Nature‘s KayGee. Their big screwup came when they dropped their follow-up in ’97 with a single that was waaay too close to “Hey Mr. DJ” for comfort. It was called “Request Line”, and everything from the subject to the beat sounded awfully familiar to their first hit. Bad move there, but that’s the music industry for ya. They split up the following year, and that’s pretty much it.
Brownstone sounded like they were gonna be one of the groups who could go the distance. They came out the box with what (to me) is still one of the strongest R&B songs of the decade, “If You Love Me”. They had the vocals and the songs to go with them… they just couldn’t stay together. One member left before the first album’s run was even over, and then the Version 2 edition split up almost right after the second one came out.
A lot of these girl groups couldn’t make it past that second album, no matter how big that first one was. It happened to Zhane, it happened to Brownstone, and it happened to Jade. They were off to a solid start with a platinum album and single, but they were one of those groups who didn’t have that extra-standout shit to move past the rest of the crowd. And then of course, once the second album started floppin’ like a dying fish, they called it a wrap.
Alas! XScape managed to make it to the third album. Actually, they managed to endure a lot: pregnancies, changing musical tastes, and being forever branded “them ugly-ass XScape bitches”. They had a nice bunch of hits before going their seperate ways, and neither member has done particularly bad following the split. None of them have matched (popularity-wise) what they did with the group, but they’ve all been associated with successes in one way or another… even it was something as simple as poppin’ out babies for T.I.
When it comes to one-hitta-quittas of the girl groups, I don’t think it gets any better than MoKenStef. The chorus of “He’s Mine” has gone from being a staple of arguments between dumb wives and mistresses in ’95, to being the status of a million MySpace chicks to this day. I’ve always said that there’s not a chance in hell that a male artist EVER drops a song like this, because that’s just not the way we do business. Naive as it is, it’s a classic song that’s seen a shelf life way longer than the group itself, who only dropped one more single afterward and disappeared.
So, there they are- just a few of the female groups who made R&B happen during the ’90s… shoutout to tennis skirts, Reeboks, and acrylic nails.
Oh, and of course:
Brownstone “If You Love Me” (1994)
XScape “Who Can I Run To?” (1995)
-D!
The Genesis (Intro)
06/01/2009


“Whatever music you was listenin’ to when you first started gettin’ laid is always gonna be your favorite music!“- Chris Rock
I wish I could start off by telling some elaborate story of how I contemplated and formulated some grand idea for this blog. Closer to the truth, I suddenly decided that I’d create one and then wondered what in the hell I could base it around. After giving it (very) brief thought, I decided that the thing I’m best at talking about is the thing I love most: the music I grew up on.
Props to movies and TV (which I’ll also be covering), but music was THE thing for me, first and foremost. As a child in B-More, I grew up in a house where the radio STAYED on. At 8:02 a.m., I got dressed for school with music in the background. At 3:57 p.m., I’d come home and hear it before I got in the door. At 7:45 p.m., I came in from playing outside to the sounds of whatever song V103 was playing. As a result, it was only a formality for me to become hooked on music myself. By ’87, I’d taped so many videos, my upstairs neighbor referred to me as “Video King”.
I loved (and still love) a lot of ’80s music of all genres, but I REALLY got locked in during the ’90s. It was the decade in which I not only listened to music… I also made it, spun it at parties, read about it, wrote about it in my school newspaper, talked about it, and simply LIVED it. I woke up and went to sleep to it. I got smoked out and intoxicated to it. And YEP, I even got laid to it. There’s music of other genres that occasionally struck me, but the Hip-Hop and R&B of that decade was (as they say) the soundtrack of my life during the coming-of-age stage.
I’ll be quick to admit, I’m not as crazy about it as I once was. I’ve long ago reached that point that most adults eventually reach, when they’re nowhere near the fans they were at say, 15 or so. I do feel like there are some things SORELY missing from today’s Urban music that shouldn’t be. On the other hand, I’m not as concerned with “mourning the death” as are many who prefer to ride the lame-ass “Hip-Hop Is Dead” train. If it is, in fact, dead- I’d rather do just as they implore us to do at funerals: celebrate the life.
Annnnd so, here is DanjLovesThe90s. I hope that you find it entertaining, reflective, celebratory, critical, comical, and anything else it happens to be depending on the entry. Whether you were a Hip-Hop Head or an R&B Swinger, a pre-teen or an adult, East Coast or West Coast… this is for those who either remember the decade fondly or are curious as to what was so great. I plan to chronicle not only my youth, but that of many others like myself who experienced some of these things firsthand. From calling up videos on The Box to seeing Menace II Society in the theater, I will be speakin’ on it.
In honor of the jumpoff, here’s 10 to grow on (if you want ‘em, click ‘em). For the record, I coulda gone a lot harder than this, which I will in many coming entries. Butt In The Meantiiiime…
LL Cool J “Around The Way Girl” (1990)
The Notorious B.I.G. “Guaranteed Raw” (1991)
Mary J. Blige feat. Grand Puba “What’s The 411?” (1992)
Snoop Doggy Dogg “G’z Up, Hoes Down” (1993)
Aaliyah feat. R. Kelly “At Your Best” (Remix) (1994)
Faith Evans feat. Puff Daddy “You Used To Love Me” (Remix) (1995)
Crucial Conflict “Hay (Smokin’ On)” (1996)
Christion “Full Of Smoke” (1997)
Mya feat. SisQo “It’s All About Me” (1998)
DMX feat. Drag-On, Jadakiss, Styles, & Eve “Ruff Ryders Anthem” (Remix) (1999)

Posted by Danj! 

