Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Beats, Rhymes, and Life.

About 2 months ago, I noticed my facebook news feed bombarded with people doing the "30 day song challenge". Since it had to do with music/songwriting, It caught my eye. It's pretty basic, within the course of 3o days, you pick out a song every day based on whatever criteria the "challenge" calls for, i.e; your favorite song, a song you hate, a song by your favorite band, etc. many of the criterion were basic, subjective, or juvenile at first but began to get a tad bit more complex as the days went on. (For the record, I still haven't done it, the rules are contained in a facebook fan page you can "like" if you so desire) One of the day's criteria is to name a song that reminds you of your childhood. I immediately came to this:





If we go back in time, the best place to stop the Mental delorean would be the summer of 1991. I kept seeing videos for "Check the Rhime" and, if I recall correctly, "Buggin Out" on Yo! MTV Raps. My musical tastes were just starting to develop, and I had for one reason or another embraced hip hop as my go-to genre. When I heard the song embedded therein, the warm, ephemeral horn refrain, the echo-y snare, the rhymes, ...It changed my life. I hadn't heard anything like it up to then, and I'm not yet convinced there's ever going to be another piece of music that'll make me feel the way I did the first time I heard this song. I wanted to go to linden boulevard and rock starter jerseys w/ tip and phife. Record company people were shady. The marriage between old and new was somehow subtle and understated while creating a sense of urgency at the same time; The Low End Theory as a whole seemed to beckon a "This is our time" call. I always knew this but I don't really think I knew how to say what I've just said until now. The timing couldn't be better. Michael Rappaport's doc Beats, Rhymes, and Life hits the streets in just a few short days, as it's set to premiere here in Austin on July 29th.

When I take my seat around midnight next friday morning, It'll all come full-circle. Not just my love for Tribe, but my love for Hip-Hop, not as genre but as an artform. For definition, not just of the music we love but of the childhood/adolescence/adulthood of the dude writing this blog post; It's a heavy-handed statement to say that tribe made me who I am, but as I look at the screen next week it'll be every bit as reaffirming.

-Marty.

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