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Monday, July 24, 2000
Friday, July 21, 2000
Wednesday, July 19, 2000
I know I'm kind of late in getting this, but I finally got Ego Trip's Book of Rap Lists yesterday. I got home from the bookstore about 8:30 PM and just started reading. Hilarious and on point, I read almost the entire 352 pages and when I finally got around to putting the book down, it was after 2:00 AM. This book is a must have.
Tuesday, July 18, 2000
Monday, July 17, 2000
A good time was had by all last night as Heather, Ed, Lee Morgan and I shared dal, puris, pakoras and date chutney.
Sunday, July 16, 2000
Guru Purnima today. All glories to Sri Guru and Sri Gauranga!
Saturday, July 15, 2000
Thursday, July 13, 2000
But Baltimore? Hmm...[scratching head]...nothing. That, of course, is not to say there was never any Baltimore hip-hop. Baltimore has a tradition of hip-hop that is arguably as long as anywhere outside of New York as current Def Jam/Def Soul president and former Baltimoron Kevin Liles will tell you. In the 80s, Liles was a member of a local mixing crew that spun records at all the local parties. When hip-hop started to rear its head, Liles along with MC Cool Rod formed Numarx, which became "one of the city's premier hip-hop collectives." "We had the whole thing," Liles says by phone from Los Angeles, still a little bleary from being up all night at a video shoot for Def Soul diva Kelly Price. "We had battle crews, and we'd go against each other--from DJ battling to MC battling to who made the hottest records. Whenever touring acts like LL Cool J, Salt 'n' Pepa, and Run-DMC would come through, we'd open for them. We used to be able to fill 5,000, 6,000-seat arenas ourselves." There were other crews, of course. We Rock Crew and Z3 MCs top name a few. But what about now? Noted stand outs are Labtekwon, Pork Chop and new up and coming emcee Norm Skola. While Labtekwon is probably Baltimore's most prolific emcee, Pork Chop has had singles on the Box and BET as well as making the Billboard charts briefly with his single "Wit It or What?" Labtekwon is the more rounded emcee being diverse, articulate and intelligent. Pork Chop is more street if you know what I mean. Frankly, I don't know how someone can get big with a handle like "Pork Chop," but if some kid can call himself "Puffy" and make a bunch of wack, but high-selling, records I guess anything is possible. But with all due respect, the Chop does have skills. Norm Skola has had a couple of self-released singles and has quite buzz forming around him. With his hard working nature, look for Norm Skola to be verge of something big in Baltimore and possibley reaching farther than the beltway and is readying a tour with hip-hop legend Doug E. Fresh. For local crews it seems that Charm City Records Crew has things lock, stock and barrel. So there is a definite hip-hop presence in Baltimore. That much has been established. Why isn't Baltimore hip-hop big? And more importantly, why isn't Baltimore hip-hop big in Baltimore? Labtekwon will quickly tell you quickly it has a lot to do with club music. As hip-hop in Baltimore was emerging as the Baltimore sound in the clubs, actual club music, as in booty-shaking club music, was rearing it's head in nearby DC. Eventually, club music took Baltimore over and still has the city in its grip to this day. Hip-hop, for the most part, is nonexistant in Baltimore clubs. Baltimore radio is a sorry thing to begin with and hip-hop on Baltimore radio is even worse. In Baltimore, hip-hop gets surprising little play on the radio outside of Top 40 crossovers or dance mixes. WERQ 92.3FM, better known as 92Q Jams, is a sad excuse for an urban radio station, but it does have Rap Attack. Rap Attack is the stations dedicated hip-hop show. Though it's only a weekly show, Saturday nights 7-9PM (what a horrible timeslot, ugh), Rap Attack is one of two radio shows that has local talent. The other is Morgan State University's (WEAA 89.9 FM) Strictly Hip-Hop, which is on Saturdays nights 12 midnight to 5 AM. Another major drawback for Baltimore that it has never had a steady hip-hop fixture as New York did with the Rooftops, the Latin Quarters, Tramps (all of which have been gone for sometime, save for Tramps which closed it's doors last year) and more recently with the Lyricists Lounge. With no place to really hear hip-hop live or otherwise, Baltimore's hip-hop scene, well, never happened. With no air play, no regular place to meet, how can a culture such as hip-hop grow anywhere? It can't and it didn't. This gives no reason for anyone outside of Baltimore to look at Baltimore for hip-hop. People would come from all over the tri-state area to go to New York. Master P and that whole Cash Money/No Limit thing put the South on the map. There were similar obstacles to over come there as there are in Baltimore. Nobody cared about Louisana except for the people there, people like Master P. When the locals care about hip-hop, hip-hop will flourish and grow, eventually catching the eye or ear in this case to those outside of Baltimore. More than launching individual artists, Labtekwon insists, Baltimore needs to concern itself with nurturing a scene that values skill and entertainment value over clique affiliations and making a big noise, a scene that has something original to offer. Achieve that, he theorizes, and national attention will come.
There will always be hip-hop in Baltimore. But for Baltimore to gain respect it has to nuture it's own scene. Luckily it seems that people like Labtekwon, Pork Chop, Norm Skola and the Charm City Records Crew are on the right track. Recently, a new club on Eutaw Street has opened called the Tunnel and features national and local hip-hop acts. With Sisqo and Dru Hill gaining notoriety, more focus will hopefully be shifted Baltimore's way. Hopefully that will water the hip-hop seeds that have already been sewn and perhaps something will grow. Thoughts?
Wednesday, July 12, 2000
Tuesday, July 11, 2000
In an unrelated note, Fred tells me that my suspicions were correct. Rahzel has not performed with the Roots since dropping his solo record, Make The Music 2000. Thanks Fred.
Jurassic 5 has been added the following dates on the Beastie Boys/Rage Against the Machine Rhyme and Reason Tour.
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Monday, July 10, 2000
SURPRISE, SURPRISE: My God. I'm juicy and good. Who would have known? (Thanks to NTD)
Went and saw the Perfect Storm on Friday. The beginning was sentimental and sappy and then boring as nothing was happening as they fished. However, once the storm was actually raging, it was pretty good. Clooney was good, but not stellar as a kind of crazy fishing captain. No one else really stuck out, I'm mean Clooney didn't really stick out much either. Winner of the Sappiest Line: Murph's son, "Can we talk about something else?" all teary-eyed of course. Who recognized Karen Allen? "MARION! Close your eyes! Don't look!" "INDEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!" ;-)
Friday, July 07, 2000
Thursday, July 06, 2000
Wilson's plight of whether or not he's selling out to whitey by taking a high paying job as editor for a white-owned hip hop magazine (XXL) after his own magazine (Ego Trip) went belly up. Ego Trip, although dead as paper magazine lives on as an online zine, a book and record compilation. Wilson has been sucessful in turning around XXL, but still has doubts whether he's being true to hip hop when he states, "My magazine isn't some white-boy magazine, though...It's black, too. I'm not sacrificing what XXL stands for," but adds, "it can't be totally black if a white man is signing the check." Upski, who embraced hip hop and black culture at an early age in Chicago graffing and b-boying, touts hip hop as a means of bringing the different races and classes together in this country. He has written two books on the subject, No More Prisons and Bomb the Suburbs. Upski caused a stir in the world of hip hop in 1993 when he wrote what has become to be known as the "wigger article" for the Source that essentially added up to telling blacks don't let whites take over hip hop. Upski also deals with his own demons when he has an encounter with a black woman at the laundromat. Sometimes, he said, he believed that black people were dumber than whites. Sometimes he felt the opposite. Now, as the washers ended their cycles, he hauled the wet clothes to the dryers. A stout black woman stood beside an empty cart. He asked if she was using it. She stared at him, bewildered. He asked again. Nothing.
It's interesting to read of Wilson's and Upski's successes, failures and hang ups in their attempts to preserve hip hop culture. I can identify with Upski's plight of being the white kid in a hip hop world. Though unlike Upski, I didn't "act black" (not Upski's words). I listened to hip hop and rap (still do, albeit judiciously). I breakdanced a little. I even rapped for a while. I didn't need to mock anyone by proving that I was down to gain acceptance. But I never felt like I had to prove that I was down. Was I accepted? Usually, but there were those who blew me off because I was white. Did that bother me? Sometimes. But, I figured that was their hang up and not mine. If that's their problem, did I really want to be friends with them? Nope. I saw no reason to be on anyone's jock in order to be down. Anyway, there's a point here somewhere. What do you think?
Wednesday, July 05, 2000
Sunday, I went and saw the Roots at the 9:30 as I briefly mentioned here. Monday, was a totally disasterous day at work with our sys admin gone and two guys (which I am one of that two) who don't know as much as they should trying to fix things and make things work. We eventually made it through the day relatively unscathed (possible security compromise and stupid stuff like /var/spool/mail being at 100%) and I went to see the Roots again and this time a certain someone showed up and, yes, it was aces. The Roots were better on this night, even though the were great the night before. It might of had something to do with the fact that ?uestlove was in house and behind the drum kit with his big ol' fro. This time I was sort of towards the back of the club and this guy who thought he was dancing on MTV, i.e. he danced the same way with the same rhythm to every song despite the actual beat and rhythm of what the band was playing, was hitting me all night (the night before it was this guy who could pass for ReRun from What's Happening!? fame). The set was slightly different from the night before. They even busted out some Ol' Dirty Bastard, Run-DMC, Jay-Z, Boogie Down Productions and Suger Hill Gang among others adding in some Roots Crew flavor. Spent the rest of the night with Heather talking about lesbians and gay men. ;-) The Fourth of July was duly celebrated with a call to Lila at 7 something-er-other in the morning because I had something to tell her, laundry with one load being messed up in the dryer, napping and hanging out with Heather watching bits and pieces of Road Warrior, Bulworth ("Bulworth, you know yo' my nigga") and some strange French movie ("Yes...gently"). There was also some Magic 8 Ball and Slinky action.
So far today is not so bad, but not so great either. Tired. Too many late nights in a row. Work is hectic this morning but starting to slow down a little bit. Today, Lila is busting my ass.
Sunday, July 02, 2000
I was supposed to go with a certain someone, but for whatever reason it didn't work out. I tried to get some other people to go when that certain someone was MIA to no avail. I had no trouble getting rid of the ticket and even sold it for less than what I paid, because I'm either a nice guy or an all out sucker. You be the judge. Tonight was a good practice run for tomorrow night's show. Hopefully I can get that certain someone to go with me. That would be aces.
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