Posts Tagged ‘too $hort’

The T.R.O.Y. Blog Presents: Funk-O-Rama V5

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010
Volume 5.
Check previous Funk-O-Rama compilations.
Enjoy!

01. The Beatnuts – We Got The Funk
02. Cypress Hill – The Funky Cypress Hill Shit
03. DJ Quik – Way 2 Fonky
04. Lords Of The Underground – Funky Child
05. The D.O.C. – It’s Funky Enough
06. Common – Food For Funk
07. Pooh-Man – Funky As I Wanna Be
08. Lord Finesse & DJ Mike Smooth – Funky Technician
09. Tragedy Khadafi – Pump The Funk
10. Too Short – Short But Funky
11. Rascalz – Funky Migraine
12. Fast Eddie – Yo Yo Get Funky
–Markshot

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Producer Highlight – Pee Wee

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Damn, I really miss detailed credits on albums.

Credits are what made me keep an eye (ear) open for The Beatnuts, Battlecat and Sam Sever. But in the late 80′s, the producer’s role still wasn’t really prominent, it was usually a list of musicians that could tell a story before you even heard the song. So going to my bay area favorites, as long as it said Shorty B on bass, I KNEW it was going to be deep, slow and funky.

Another name that kept popping up in the bay area was Pee Wee. Mainly this was because I have always been a big “Digital Underground” fan, and by 1991, Pee Wee was a mainstay in the group.

Once you popped in their third album “Sons of the P” into your yellow sony walkman, the first verse we heard was Pee Wee’s:

DIGITAL UNDERGROUND – THE D-FLO SHUTTLE

Let me give your ears a baptismal
Dip into the pool and let me chisel
Chunks of ignorance out your brain system
As I implant wisdom in the name of d-flo
Here we go with this, let me flow with this
Holy glory, how the dolio flow in this

He came off as a new Digital Underground MC, since they are known to add new MC’s on each album. But, a quicker look to the credits would prove that he also a major player behind the boards, ass he grabs the Producer credit for “D-Flo Shuttle”, and to be behind the sounds that came out of that album was, and still is, quite impressive. I had to dig deeper.

It wasn’t too hard, because Pee Wee and hiphop’s deepest baritone voice ever, Big Money Odis, got together to put out “A Day In The Life of a Player”, as the duo “Gold Money”. It lacked charisma, but still had some absolutely ridiculous tracks in between, starting with the funkiest motherfunken pimp track ever “Youngblood” (everything played by himself!) and finishing the track with the most “pwnest” track ever recorded. It was a one on one conversation between Pee Wee and the group called “The Young Black Teenagers”. They get served. then chilled. And are never to be heard of again. Throughout the production of the album Pee Wee really takes full control and let’s the album slide through hundreds of genres within 11 tracks. “Mnniiggaahh” starts with Beethoven – Fur elise and crashes into a heavy-rock induced track, while “Nothing” starts funky, goes into jazz, and then just gets deep into some “Pink Pantherish” finger-snappin’ nouveau jazz movements.

GOLD MONEY – YOUNGBLOOD

Now, this was a GREAT time for Digital Underground, because just a year before Raw Fusion came out with “Live From the Styleetron” and Tupac debuted with “2Pacalypse Now”. I liked both albums equally at first, but every time I realized that Live From The Styleetron was kickin harder, I would be held back to the fact that “Trapped” was slowly becoming my favorite rap song, so that would keep my interest for Pac’s album. The credits on his album were disgusting and fucked up beyond belief. For example, I could clearly hear Pee Wee rapping on “I Don’t Give a Fuck”, but nothing in the credits. So for many years I thought that Pee Wee was just MCing and probably lending a hand in production. And not bad, his lyrics BLASTED the cops and became Pac’s anthem for his second album.

Niggas!, isn’t just the blacks
also a gang of mother-fuckers dressed in blue slacks
They say niggas hang in packs and their attitude is shitty
Tell me, who’s the biggest gang of niggas in the city

When I grabbed that “Trapped” single from someone’s record crates, the credits were much clearer. It said in three words. Produced by Pee-Wee.

TUPAC – TRAPPED

Pee Wee’s voice would pop out again on the Dangerous Crew’s album “Don’t Try This At Home”. The track “Gone With The Wind” was so dope that it must have been on every mixtape I made during the next 8 years.

DANGEROUS CREW – GONE WITH THE WIND

When I had the opportunity to ask him about this project with the Dangerous Crew, he told me that the crew was actually him, Shorty B and Father Dom:

“We used that album to feature Ourselves, Bad Influence (for some reason didn’t make the album), Father Dom, Goldie, the Lunies (ended up going to another label) and all of the groups on Shorts new Dangerous Music Label. That’s why every body thought the DANGEROUS CREW WAS ALL THOSE PEOPLE. Hey if you have that album and you look at my picture, that’s NOT ME. Somebody switched the pictures at the label. I still don’t know if it was done on purpose or if it was an accident. But, I guess that “gone with the Wind ” was my pre-warning to get out of there. I’m still cool with Short and Shorty B and all the Rappers”

This all sounds typical of the Industry Rule #4080.

You will hear Pee Wee poppin’ up all over the place during the years that Bay Area rap was running things. “Menace II Society” has his sounds on Ant Bank’s “Packin a Gat” and Too Short’s “Only the Strong Survive”. Goldy, a Too Short affiliated MC, also had quite a few tracks with Pee Wee’s production. He got busy on the white and black keys all over Too Short’s albums “Cocktales” and “Get In Where Ya Fit In”. I am sure his guitars got some licks on those too. A few tracks on Spice 1′s “Black Bosalini” album got the Pee-Wee treatment too.

As the Bay Area lost it’s “hiphop clout”, Discogs.com slowly loses trace of any more current things Pee Wee’s on.

The last time we chatted, he didn’t mention anything specific, but this was quite a long time ago, so I’ll shoot him a quick message and let’s see if he adds his two cents to this piece!

For now, I hope you enjoy the Gold Money album, VERY rare, but sadly I think that my CD Rip skips on one track. I will add a few other tracks mentioned here to the zipped file.

– cenzi stiles

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The 90′s Bay Area Obsession

Monday, September 28th, 2009
The 90′s Bay Area Obsession

I can remember it just like yesterday, my bedroom was draped in red and gold to match my Joe Montana poster that my mother had got framed for me to go with the room. She was good like that, always made sure her son always had coordination game on lock. It’s probably one of the reasons I’m real finicky today about matching colors. Life was good back then, the Oakland A’s were fresh off a World Series sweep against their cross-town rivals, the San Francisco Giants. My childhood idol Rickey Henderson was setting himself up for a career year, in which he later won his first and only MVP award.

At the time the biggest selling hip-hop album “Please Hammer, Don’t Hurt ‘Em” was dominating the airwaves and officially put Oakland on the hip-hop map. Despite years of hustling by Todd Shaw, it wasn’t until Hammer’s success that Oakland started receiving national attention. I suppose selling 10 million records will do to a town. If you ask me every Bay Area rapper owes a debt of gratitude to MC Hammer.

At twelve you’re still very impressionable and I remember trying to memorize every lyric in D. U.’s Sex Packets album while listening in my bedroom. My room was filled with stacks of Playboys that were given to me by Hector, a 40-something Puerto Rican guy who used to do maintenance work in my apartment complex. Come to think of it, it’s disgusting to think that I even touched those magazines after Hector had his way with them. God bless Hector though, he always laced me with some of his KFC when he couldn’t finish it. Kinda disgusting to think about that too.

Even though I was obsessed with Playboy magazines back then, I still refused to grow up completely because I was still collecting baseball cards. Back then David Justice and Frank Thomas rookies (both former A’s players) were the most sought after cards and I remember starving myself at lunch just so I could use that money to cop packs of ‘90 Leaf.

Little did I realize most of these things were Bay Area related. Subconsciously I was forming a marriage with apart of California in which I’ve never visited growing up. As the years went on I noticed some of my favorite music came the Bay Area. You had Spice 1, Too $hort, The Coup, Mac Mall, JT The Bigga Figga, Ray Luv, Andre Nickatina, Dru Down, Mac Dre, Young Lay, Rappin’ 4-Tay, Celly Cell, The Luniz, E-40, Digital Underground and 2Pac just to name a few.

The production was also phenomenal because you had Ant Banks, Studio Ton, Mike Mosely, Sam Bostic and the forever underrated Khayree.

Below are some of my favorite tracks for this era. What are some of your favorite Bay Area artists? Albums? –Philaflava

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