
The list of rap artists who have been accused of not having lived the lives they rap about is long, from Rick Ross to Akon to Plies. But hip-hop has a way of bringing out the gangsta (or the cartel boss, or the criminal) in lots of people. And though much of his music has a romantic, existential, or aspirational bent to it, it has long integrated hard-edged lyrics and tracks, like 2011’s Headlines: “Tuck my napkin in my shirt ‘cause I’m just mobbin’ like that/ You know good and well that you don’t want a problem like that/ You gonna make someone around me catch a body like that.” Particularly forceful is his most recent work, If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late, which addresses real-life beefs involving hip-hop players and moguls with gang ties.ĭrake is a tremendously talented rapper and singer, and one suspects that, in a different atmosphere, the tilt of his songs might be much different.

Growing up in Toronto with his mother, they weren’t wealthy, but before high school was over he had a part on Degrassi: The Next Generation. He wasn’t involved with drug dealing or gangs. Gangsta rap these days is, for many, synonymous with hip-hop itself. But you don’t have to be a gang member to be a gangsta rapper, or even come from a depressed neighborhood. Eazy-E and MC Ren were members of the Crips.
Eazy e boyz n the hood lyrics crack#
Its members came from Compton and South Central, two areas devastated by Reagan-era economic stagnation, corrupt policing, and the emerging crack epidemic.

The likes of Bobby Shmurda, Lil Durk, Young Thug, Fetty Wap, and St Louis upstarts 3 Problems, all draw from that same well.Įazy-E’s Boyz-n-the-Hood wasn’t the first gangsta rap song, but its popularity upon its 1987 release paved the way for the first great gangsta group: NWA. In this decade and the last, the music has splintered into subgenres such as trap and drill, but though the production styles may differ, the songs tend to draw from the same lyrical milieu. Yes, hip-hop has many more styles than just these, and yes plenty of artists cross between them, but you know gangsta rap when you hear it: threats against rivals, boasts about dope money and weapons. As opposed to styles like the party-flavored, four-elements hip-hip of the 70s and 80s, the golden-era conscious stylings of the late 80s early 90s, and the hipster/backpack/whatever-you-want-to-call-it current wave of emotional rappers, as popularized by Kanye West and Drake. (In fact, many of those rappers referred to the genre as “reality rap”.) I’m talking about any hip-hop that’s focused on street bravado, drugs, guns and often gangs. When I say gangsta rap, I don’t just mean the hip-hop of the east coast/west coast rivalry in the 1990s.

In fact, despite claims to the contrary, and the fact that Eazy’s one-time arch rival Suge Knight is likely facing a life sentence, gangsta rap remains as popular as ever, in one form or another.įirst, some etymological clarification.

Though the Compton rapper and label impresario’s name doesn’t ring out these days as loudly as, say Biggie’s or Tupac’s (both of whom he directly inspired), his influence does. Last week marked the 20th anniversary of Eazy-E’s death.
