The Total Package

10/27/2010

…Annnd as HipHopSoulWeek continues on DanjLovesThe90s

They always talk about those definitive R&B albums of the ’90s. You know-12 Play, 411, Motownphilly, Brown Sugar, My Life, CrazySexyCool, etc. And no doubt, they all did a lot to shape the sound as those years went on. But recently, when asked to name some of my favorite ’90s R&B albums, one of the first that popped in my head was one that rarely ever gets mentioned. It’s a personal classic of mine, and definitely one that represents the Hip-Hop Soul era to the fullest- the self-titled debut album by the “bad girls of Bad Boy“, Total.

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“Jeeeesus, The Notorious…”

05/21/2010

My name is DANJ! and the The Notorious B.I.G. is my favorite MC of all-time. I need y’all to feel me on this right now…

Maaaan, lemme tell y’all. When he was just the big guy with the gold fronts in that SuperCat video talkin’ ’bout “I love it when ya call me Big Poppa/ The show stoppa/ The rhyme droppa…”, I was rockin’ with that crazily. When I listened to DJ Celo‘s Saturday Night Megamix on WKYS in April ’93 and heard “Party & Bullshit”, I went out and copped the Who’s The Man? soundtrack the following week. When I’d read The Source and see how much they bigged him up, I had the feeling he was gonna be one to check for. And when Ready To Die dropped… well sheeeit, the rest was history.

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What’s Beef?

03/09/2010

So it’s March 9th, most remembered in hip-hop as the date on which Bow Wow was born in 1987 The Notorious B.I.G. was murdered in 1997. As a fan of Big, and as a fan of hip-hop in general, it was just as major to me as Tupac‘s death was six months prior. You’ve prob’ly read a million times over how huge of a loss those deaths were, and you’ll prob’ly read it a million more, so I’ll spare y’all that. Matter fact, at the risk of bein’ a lil’ strange, I’d rather do my B.I.G. entry on his birthday than the death anniversary (make a note of May 21st). But if there is one good thing that came out of those events, it’s that the whole East Coast/West Coast shit started coming to a close.

I know people have since said that the “East Coast/West Coast War” was an isolated incident that was blown up by the media and hyped for the sake of controversy. There’s a good deal of truth in that statement, but let’s keep it one-hunnid: March 9, 1997 was the climax of some shit that had been quietly building up for years. Let’s talk about it…

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DANJ! Presents Winter Six: 1993 (Black Hoodie Rap)

01/29/2010

So… as we come to the last post of January on DanjLovesThe90s, I hope y’all have been enjoyin’ this Winter Six thing so far. For this one, we slide into 1993, which was a transitional year both for hip-hop and myself.

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He Was Murder, P. Diddy Made Him Pretty…

10/19/2009

mase & puff mo money

Everything was all good just a week 12 years ago.

So… I’m here on a Sunday night, ready to call it an evening, right? Then, I come across a video of epic proportions. During an interview with Diddy and the Dirty Money girls on Atlanta‘s V103, the one and only Mase pops up and hits Sean with some papers to sign. After the papers are signed, Pastor Mason rejoices that he has finally been released from his Bad Boy Records contract.

puff n mase

Now let’s be clear here: I don’t think Puff did that out of no “goodness of his heart” shit. That paper got signed because Mase had a live mic and Puff wasn’t tryna get put on blast while on the air. After all, he’s already been caught out there on some bullshit once this month. This was probably the culmination of Mase making repeated phone calls, having meetings, walking up to Puff at parties and being told “my office hours… are from 9… to 5″ and all types of shit. Finally, he had to go and put homie on the spot. Now that’s what the fukk I call a Proactive Solution.

mase n puff

See, as much as I respect Poppa Diddy Pop and all that the Bad Boy brand was, I wouldn’t doubt that he’s blackballed or contractually handcuffed a few niggas in his lifetime. Being “LOCKED IN!” is all well and good when you’re just followin’ him on Twitter, but when it comes to your livelihood, it might be a different story. Ah well, both parties’ll be OK after this. Puff’ll continue doing whatever he’s doing, and Mase will continue to make records no one cares about, no harm done. But since we’re on the subject… let’s go back.

mase 24 hrs

Once upon a time, there was a rapper named Mase Murder who rolled with Big L and Children of the Corn (which also consisted of Cam’ron Killa Cam and Cam’s cousin Bloodshed). After realizing that yelling on the mic only works when your voice doesn’t sound like Benjamin Buford Bubba Blue, Mase decides to calm his shit down. After making this creative decision, he finds himself signed to Bad Boy in early-’96. I might be in the minority, or maybe I’m not… but I actually liked him a lot more in his prime Bad Boy years. Some people are much better at the street shit than the “commercial” side, but it goes the other way too, and M-A-dollar sign-E is one of those cases.

mase feels so good

So as the story goes, Mase pops up on 112‘s remix for “Only You” and takes off from there. While Jadakiss is busy crying about having to write Puff’s lyrics, Mase gladly does so, and is rewarded as a result. Before you know it, he’s not only on remixes left and right, but also on huge hits like Puff’s “Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down” and Biggie‘s “Mo Money, Mo Problems”. Then comes his own album, Harlem World, which goes on to sell units out the ass. Then… no sooner does he assemble a group named Harlem World (uhhh, Baby Stase!) and start work on his second album Double Up, Mase decides to “retire” and find God in ’99.

pastor mason

Not for nothin’, Betha had a good damn run for those two years or so. I know the backpack niggas wanted to break his jaw, but he was doin’ his thing. He had the radio shit down pat, he had the star quality, and he still found time to drop some hot verses in the middle of that. I might even go as far as to say that he’s somewhat underrated, due to the perception that he was just some goofy-doofy nigga in a shiny suit. I mean, sure he was- but in that package, he still had some memorable lines. Even on the most candy-ass songs (except for that awful Rugrats shit), there was a chance that some of his slickest shit slipped by those too busy bein’ mad to notice.

m a dollar sign e

All the fuckery that followed his exodus is a story all its own. From calling hip-hop “the devil”, to the weakest comeback album ever in ’04, to the strange G-Unit affiliation in ’05, to being caught out there with the tranny… all a bunch of madness. And now, after leaving the game again back in ’06, he’s decided to come back again for ’09. Only this time, he’ll be doing it without Diddy or Fiddy. I’m sure the world anticipates his project as much as they do the Dirty Money album.

In the meantime, I’ll just remember the old days, cause that’s just what I do. *waves wrist in the sky with no Rolie*

112 feat. Notorious B.I.G. & Ma$e “Only You (Remix)” (1996)

Puff Daddy & Ma$e “Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down” (1997)

Funkmaster Flex Freestyle feat. Ma$e & Puff Daddy (1997)

Ma$e “Feel So Good” (1997)

Ma$e “Lookin’ At Me” (1997)

The Lox feat. Ma$e & Puff Daddy “If U Want It” (1997)

Puff Daddy feat. Ma$e & Carl Thomas “Been Around The World (Remix)” (1998)

Ma$e feat. Puff Daddy “I’m No Killa” (1998)

Harlem World feat. Ma$e “I Really Like It” (1999)

-D!

EDIT (10/21): Because I’m not big on gossip-mongering, new info states that it wasn’t exactly what it was made out to be. It turns out that Puff actually signed a form that enables Mase to appear on other peoples’ records, but he remains a Bad Boy artist. That is the extent of the “freedom papers”, as they were called by Mason. Eh.


Big Plans, Ni**a… Big Plans.

09/23/2009

Ready-to-Die-1994

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.

biggie 1993

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”).

biggie-1

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.

biggie-2

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.

“Gimme The Loot”

“Warning”

“The What” (featuring Method Man)

“Me & My Bitch”

“Suicidal Thoughts”

-D!


L To The O To The X, You’ll See

08/12/2009

lettheloxgoooo

So… The LOX (I don’t call ‘em D-Block) are back on Bad Boy, eh? Can’t say I’m surprised, even if it is a lil’ comical.

Ten years ago, they got off the label after running a “Let The LOX Go” campaign that whole summer. They got back up with Ruff Ryders, who managed them prior to the Bad Boy deal, and were now gonna make the music they wanted to make before. They weren’t eye-to-eye with Puffy‘s creative decisions, and couldn’t handle having to rock shiny suits during that time. By ’99, hip-hop had moved back into a more “street” direction, and they were ready to make an album for the street audience that they let down with Money, Power, & Respect.

In my always-humble opinion, I still don’t know if it was a great move. The We Are The Streets album on Ruff Ryders was really no better (and in many ways weaker) than the MPR joint. Also, they were still getting their publishing percentage purged by Puffy anyway, because that was one of the conditions under which they got their release. Also, Jadakiss has even admitted in hindsight that he acted like a crybaby while on Bad Boy, frustrated over doing small tasks that could’ve furthered their careers. Either way, all appeared copastetic once they linked up with the Double-R.

loxpuff

BUT… by ’05, Styles, Sheek, and Jada were on Hot 97 yelling at the top of their lungs over the publishing money (and contemplating the odds of a stainless-steel double-door refrigerator fallin’ on Puff’s head from the top of a skyscraper). After Puff came to the station the next day and responded to their arguments, all was cleared up business-wise and they got on the same page again. And now, four years later, the first collective LOX album in 10 years is slated to arrive later this year on Bad Boy Records.

Who knows how it’ll turn out? Neither the Bad Boy brand or the LOX name are what they used to be, and Puff doesn’t appear to be as interested in pushing his artists as he is with pushing his projects. If everyone is focused on not dropping the ball and making it worthwhile, I could see it producing a solid album- no more, no less. I’m no entertainment lawyer, so I can’t call how good or bad a business decision it is (though I’d imagine they didn’t do some kind of peanuts deal similar to the one they had a fit over the last time).

the_lox_mpr

In the meantime, to hell wit’ it: I’ve been on nostalgic mode lately (imagine that), and I thought back to when The LOX were on my radar as one of the new groups to watch for. Their style was familiar but it still felt fresh at the same time. They weren’t the most complex rappers you ever heard, and still, they definitely weren’t slouching. I was locked in to their music until the album came out, which to me was “ehhh“, although it does sound a lil’ better in retrospect. One way or another, that initial buzz they had was by all means justified.  Let’s reflect:

“You’ll See” (feat. The Notorious B.I.G.) (1996)

C.R.E.A.M. Freestyle with The Notorious B.I.G. (1997)

Live on Hot 97 with Mase & Puff Daddy (1997)

“Life Shit” (featuring Rufus Blaq) (1997)

“Thumbs Up” (featuring Richie Thumbs) (1996)

“Chest 2 Chest Freestyle” (1997)

CRU feat. The LOX “Live At The Tunnel” (1997)

The Notorious B.I.G. feat. The LOX “Last Day” (1997)

Puff Daddy feat. The LOX “I Got The Power” (1997)

“Money, Power, Respect” (featuring DMX & Lil’ Kim) (1998)

New LOX Order coming in late ’09! Maybe.

-D!


Vibes And Stuff

07/03/2009

vibe1992

The only surprise about VIBE magazine closing its doors earlier this week… is that it didn’t happen to The Source first. VIBE’s been over for a hot minute now, if we wanna be real about it. It went from subscribe-worthy, to buy-it-if-it’s-a-good-issue-worthy, to thumb-thru-it-in-Rite-Aid-while-you-wait-for-your-laundry-to-finish-worthy.

Two months ago, I recieved my neighbor’s new issue in the mail by mistake and kinda sorta forgot to give it to her (hope she’s not readin’ this). I remembered when VIBE was taller than the other mags, thicker than the other mags, and had quality interviews. THIS thing I was looking at was about 90 pages deep, half of which were ads, and the best article was about ya man “Boogaloo Shrimp” from Breakin’. No dis to those who were still workin’ hard on the ship as it sank, but shit’s been wack for a minute. I still don’t know how I feel about that time they had Pliiiies on the cover and called him “The Future of Rap”. Bonkers!

janetvibe

But my intent here is not to maliciously dump on the final days of VIBE. Lord knows, I don’t need anyone calling me “retarded” again, like I give a fuck. I’d rather talk about the better days. From the early-to-mid-’90s, VIBE came through my mailslot every month, and I’d spend at least a good 90 minutes reading it from cover-to-cover. It was a more diverse (although not better) version of my favorite mag at the time, The Source. Whereas I could count on The Source for the best articles on the hip-hop artists, VIBE had the best on the singers, the movies, TV, and other random “urban pop culture” shit.

rkelly cover

There, I could read about things like Prince‘s reasoning behind “the symbol” or Chaka Khan‘s unfavorable opinion of Mary J. singing “Sweet Thing”. When the R. Kelly/Aaliyah story broke, they had the marriage license and some mo’ shit. I’d even read the mini-articles about stuff I didn’t know about. One feature that stood out to me was the story of DJ Larry Levan- I had no clue who he was, but I was interested in his story once I got to the end. Nowadays (and for the better), we can hop on the net and get the full story about everything, and immediately at that. But at that time, the magazines had all the stories for people like myself, who were interested beyond the music.

vibedeathrowOne thing that VIBE will be remembered for is the role it played in the East Coast/West Coast Bad Boy/Death Row beef. Almost every seed in that situation was planted in their pages. From 2Pac describing the Quad Studios shooting, to Puffy questioning the authenticity of “Thug Life”, to ‘Pac hinting on that he smashed Faith. When Dre left Death Row, they had the first interview. When Puff expressed plans to put out his own album, they covered that. And of course, when the biggest stars from each label got killed, they had the story on those. For better or worse, VIBE was the mag that had a crucial part in that whole ’95-’97 stretch.

tonivibe

But, after VIBE lost its initial relevance, they never got it back. Personally, I blame that lame talk show they had. They meant well, but that shit died fast. Most people stopped checkin’ for VIBE by the early part of the 2000s, and before long it was about as relevant as Right On! is. And now, it’s officially a wrap. Quincy Jones has been discussing trying to bring it back in digital form, but even he realizes that the power of the pages is gone. Matter fact, it likely won’t be the last mag to go under this year (just like it wasn’t the first). Good read while it lasted, though. Rest well, VIBE.

AND JUST ON G.P.:

A Tribe Called Quest “Vibes And Stuff” (1991)

R. Kelly & Public Announcement “She’s Got That Vibe” (1992)

Zhane “Vibe” (1994)

Boyz II Men feat. Treach, Craig Mack, Busta Rhymes, & Method Man “Vibin’” (Remix) (1995)

P.S. Damn shame THIS had to be the final physical issue:

aavibefinalcoverI mean, got-damn: even KING got to go out with Tahiry‘s iconic ass on the cover. Does it get any more anti-climactic than this? I’m just sayin’…

-D!


It’s The Posse!

06/05/2009

theposse

Oh HELL nah, this ain’t about that movie. The only thing worth writing about from that is Salli Richardson being ass-nekkid. Sorry, film buffs. Now that I’ve introduced myself and then revealed an embarrassing secret, I’ll now proceed to go in on some things that made me love the ’90s. This is about a certain kind of track that would always cause some kind of debate amongst those who heard it. They’re commonly referred to as “collabos” now, but up until about ’97-‘98, they were called “posse cuts”.

The posse cut is the one where the main artist features two or (many) more guests on the same track. The reason why a lot of these are so popular is because they’re always bound to spark a “who had the best part?” discussion. I’ve literally taken part in convos that lasted as long as a full hour about this kinda shit. Posse cuts usually consisted of spirited performances by all parties involved, because likely, they all wanted to be “the one with the best verse”. After all, even in camaraderie comes competition.

With all due respect to “The Symphony”, “Buddy”, and others from the great ‘80s- here’s a few of my personal favorites from the ‘90s:

scenariovideo

“Scenario”- A Tribe Called Quest feat. Leaders of the New School (1991): This is one that I was stuck on from the first time I heard Tribe’s Low End Theory album. It’s known today as the song that made Busta Rhymes a star, and probably led to the late-’93 breakup of the Leaders. After this joint, LONS became “Busta n’nem”. That said, “Scenario” is no one-man show. ATCQ’s Q-Tip and Phife, as well as LONS’ Charlie Brown and Dinco ALL had quotable verses. Everything about this is classic, including its video AND the equally-classic ’92 remix (featuring a new MC named Kid Hood, who was murdered days after recording his verse). For The Win: BUSTA (on both)

“Niggaz Done Started Somethin’”- DMX feat. The LOX & Mase (1997): These five were part of a new movement in late-’97/early ’98. They were all up-n-coming artists from NY whose street fanbases were cultivated through mixtapes, and were now heading toward more mainstream exposure. The LOX’s Jadakiss and Styles held it down as they were known to do at all times, while Sheek’s verse was… well, Sheek-like. But all three LOX members take the back seat here, as I gotta declare this one a dead-heat between X (who was 100% on fire back then) and Mase (who rarely gets half the props that he should- another blog, another day).

flava vid

“Flava In Ya Ear (Remix)”- Craig Mack feat. Notorious B.I.G., Rampage, LL Cool J, & Busta Rhymes (1994): This joint is so major, people tend to forget how much of a SMASH the original “Flava…” already was. From Puffy’s Warriors-inspired intro, all the way to Busta (again) closing things out strong, this song and video was a template for many all-star remixes to come. Sadly for Craig, his biggest record ever had an even bigger remix, on which he got outshined by everyone… even that totally nonsensical LL verse. The nod on this one, however, goes to BIGGIE for “gettin’ more butt than ashtrays” and letting failed rappers know that their future was with UPS.

“Head Banger”- EPMD feat. K-Solo & Redman (1992): This one represented somewhat of a turning point for everyone on the track. For one, it was Redman’s first high-profile show-stealing appearance. It was K-Solo’s last time being involved in something of particular relevance (unless you wanna count being told to suck DMX’s dick on “Get At Me Dog” a few years later). It was also EPMD’s final single before they split at the end of ’92. Over a beat that (according to Erick Sermon) was originally intended for Ice Cube, everyone did their thing, but Red walked away with it. Show me a nigga who thinks one of the other three had the best verse on there, and I’ll show you someone just tryin’ to be different for the fuck of it.

In trying to avoid droppin’ super-lengthy entries, I’ll end it here for now. But it DEF. won’t be the last of this topic, as I have some others that I’ll be biggin’ up tomorrow. Stay tuned…

You Want ‘Em? CLICK ‘Em.

A Tribe Called Quest feat. Leaders Of The New School “Scenario” (1991)

A Tribe Called Quest feat. L.O.N.S. & Kid Hood “Scenario” (Remix) (1992)

DMX feat. The LOX & Mase “Niggaz Done Started Something” (1998)

Craig Mack feat. The Notorious B.I.G., Rampage, LL Cool J, & Busta Rhymes “Flava In Ya Ear (Remix) (1994)

EPMD feat. K-Solo & Redman “Head Banger” (1992)

-D!


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