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Al Kapone
Al Kapone

The Memphis chapter of The Recording Academy had their Grammy GPS event yesterday at the Stax Music Academy in South Memphis, with an array of speakers that included Steve Jordan, activist rapper Talib Kweli, southern rapper and producer Fiend, and Mississippi poet and activist Charlie Braxton. The event also attracted a number of local Memphis artists, including Scott Bomar of the Bo-Keys, Al Kapone, Knowledge Nick, Cities Aviv, Miscellaneous, James Alexander of the Bar-Kays, Jason Da Hater and Montana Trax. Memphis TN, 9/29/12

The Memphis chapter of The Recording Academy had their Grammy GPS event yesterday at the Stax Music Academy in South Memphis, with an array of speakers that included Steve Jordan, activist rapper Talib Kweli, southern rapper and producer Fiend, and Mississippi poet and activist Charlie Braxton. The event also attracted a number of local Memphis artists, including Scott Bomar of the Bo-Keys, Al Kapone, Knowledge Nick, Cities Aviv, Miscellaneous, James Alexander of the Bar-Kays, Jason Da Hater and Montana Trax. Memphis TN, 9/29/12

187prod:

Dame Liz est partie rejoindre son ami Bambi et moi, par une association homonymique un peu tirée par les cheveux, je me suis ressorti des cartons le premier album des Taylor Boyz. Je parle des originaux bien sûr, ceux de Memphis, pas ceux de Chicago ni les gamins d’East Oakland ou le gang de Wiz Khalifa. S’ils ont apparemment disparu de la circulation aujourd’hui (retraite, prison, décès ?), K.O.Cane Wayne et Taylor Boy ont fait les belles heures d’Alkatraz Dope Muzik dans la seconde moitié des années 1990. Le label d’Al Kapone, au même titre que le Street Smart Records de Tommy Wright III ou le Hypnotize Minds de DJ Paul et Juicy J, aura contribué à définir ce son crapuleux si typique de M-Town à l’époque, mélange d’influences mobbish Westcoast et d’ambiances horrorcore, à base de boîtes à rythme TR-808 ou TR-909 poussiéreuses, de synthés cheap jouissivement stridants et de basses à déterrer les morts. Autrement dit, les prémices du “get buck get crunk” local qui, débarrassé de sa dimension crade et maléfique, se transformera ensuite au contact de la culture strip club d’Atlanta et d’un certain Petit Jean en party music survitaminée et caricaturale.

Mais pour revenir à 28 Gramz: Pure Dope, le clip ci-dessus et la track ci-dessous devraient suffire à vous rappeler à quel point ils blaguaient pas dans le Tennessee en 1996. Les flows véloces du duo et de leurs potos du Alkatraz Syndicate s’en donnent à coeur joie sur les prods de DJ Diz, J-Dogge et surtout la légende d’Orange Mound DJ Squeeky. Ça oscille entre le vaguement funky (cuivres et guitare wah-wah sur “Niggaz On Tha Block” ou “Kinfolk Shit”) et le carrément oppressant (le magistral posse cut “Tha Main Event”). Quant aux lyrics, vu l’artwork et les titres des morceaux, pas besoin de vous faire un dessin : poudre blanche, herbe verte et même un semblant de critique socio-politique au milieu (“Visions Of Poverty”), le tout sur fond de street réalité Mid-South. Seul bémol au final, la légère impression de redondance : “Big Bag Of Blunts” n’est qu’une version extended de “Big Bagz”, l’outro reprend l’instru de “28 Gramz” et le radio edit de “Catraggly” ne sert à rien.

Rarement cité parmi les classiques du gangsta rap sudiste, car trop méconnu sans doute et pas autant significatif que Da Resurrection, Deadly Verses, Mystic Stylez, On The Run ou encore On A Mission, incontournables du même genre, le joyaux brut des 2 rejetons lointains d’Elizabeth mérite pourtant lui aussi une place au soleil. Un soleil paradoxalement sombre, comme le premier grand chef-d’oeuvre de la Cléopâtre aux yeux d’améthyste. Et si vous trouvez ma comparaison Memphis devil shit/âge d’or du cinéma hollywoodien trop foireuse, allez taper un gangsta walk avec La Chat sur un toit brûlant et on en reparle après, ok ?

  1. Smoke A Blunt Intro
  2. Niggaz On Tha Block
  3. Big Bagz
  4. Illegal Substance
  5. 28 Gramz
  6. Kinfolk Shit ft. Al Kapone
  7. Get Cha Some ft. Al Kapone, Young Lo, Tom Skeemask
  8. Big Bag Of Blunts ft. Mac Brownie, Big Vince, Young Lo
  9. Rev. Butt Naked
  10. Catraggly
  11. Visions Of Poverty
  12. Bring On Tha Noize
  13. Tha Main Event ft. Young Lo, Big Vince, Gangsta Blac, Mac Brownie, 1st Degree, GK, Criminal Mane, Lil Grove, Yo Lynch, Thugsta, Al Kapone
  14. Out: Time To Re-Up
  15. Catraggly (Radio)

Although I can’t decipher all of this, it shows that Al Kapone and the Taylor Boyz have fans in France. The impact of Memphis rap looms large in the world. Memphis truly IS rising!

Al Kapone (@ALKaponeMemphis) Live at the Pop-Up Arts Festival, Melrose Stadium, Orange Mound, 2012

Al Kapone (@ALKaponeMemphis) is one of the founders of Memphis rap, and a man who has contributed generously and selflessly to the Memphis music industry. Among his accomplishments is being one of the first rap artists to perform with a symphony orchestra. At the Pop-Up Arts Festival in Orange Mound last Sunday, Kapone performed a brief excerpt of his longer performance with the Memphis Symphony Orchestra and the jook dancers from the U Dig Dance Academy. It was a great ending to a great day in Orange Mound. 

The R U Still Down Conference: The Career and Impact of Tupac Shakur was held on the campus of Jackson State University on Thursday, February 16. It was organized in part by noted Mississippi poet and activist Charlie Braxton, and featured a number of panelists, including myself, Memphis rapper Al Kapone, and Mississippi artists and DJs, including Skipp Coon, Kamikaze and DJ Phingaprint.

The R U Still Down Conference: The Career and Impact of Tupac Shakur was held on the campus of Jackson State University on Thursday, February 16. It was organized in part by noted Mississippi poet and activist Charlie Braxton, and featured a number of panelists, including myself, Memphis rapper Al Kapone, and Mississippi artists and DJs, including Skipp Coon, Kamikaze and DJ Phingaprint.

On January 29, 2012, we were asked to repeat a portion of the Al Kapone/Memphis Symphony show for local arts patron Rudy Sheidt for a celebration of his birthday at the Germantown Performing Arts Center.