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Black Collegian News & Views The Five Most Underrated MCs
By Josh Capers
Black College Wire
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What do these MCs have in common?
Hear the author.
When people talk about the greatest rappers, dead or alive, some great MCs
get lost amid the hype.
Here is one list of the five most underrated MCs.
Let me state outright that there are plenty of deserving underground MCs (Gift
of Gab from Blackalicious,
Del tha
Funkee Homosapien and MC Juice, even though he did rip Eminem in the Rap
Olympics), but this list isn't going to cover that genre.
Also omitted are "old-school" artists, such as Kurtis Blow, Big Daddy Kane
and Guru, as that is a separate category.
Joe Budden
It was said that
Joe Budden's
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| Joe Budden |
self-titled 2003 debut album flopped. His label, Def Jam, blames that on people
not knowing the artist's proper name.
In the early part of the 21st century, Budden was mainly called "Joe Buddens"
on mixtapes and even by radio stations. So when buyers went to look for the
album, they were looking under the wrong name.
Budden is on this list for the plethora of amazing songs he's put out on
mixtapes.
Budden is the type of MC that you have to find, because he's not going to
find you. But when you do, you truly feel like you've hit the hop-hop jackpot.
Sometimes that jackpot consists of a complex story that he's so ingenious in
generating, or something as simple as a freestyle at some random radio station,
where Budden will just spew some of the illest quotables, making a listener feel
cheated that other artists just aren't that nice.
Budden's versatility and ability to master any type of track or concept makes
him outrageously underrated.
There are an easy 15 story-telling tracks that Budden has compiled and
released since his debut album that are nothing short of amazing. Listen to
"Last Real Nigga Left" and his current freestyle over the "Boy Looka Here" beat.
"Dumbout" is still one of the most amazing songs I've ever heard. It's seven
and a half minutes of uninterrupted sickness.
AZ
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| AZ |
AZ
is one of the most lyrically gifted MCs to bless the mic. It pains me to put him
on this list.
AZ came on the scene with his boy Nas when Nas dropped what was supposed to
be the Second Coming with his album "Illmatic" in 1994. AZ's verse on Nas' song
"Life's a B****" was so well put together that it was only a matter of time
before the MC received a deal of his own.
In 1995, "Doe or Die," AZ's debut album, shook up the rap game like Nas and
Mobb Deep, AZ's counterparts in the gangsta group
the Firm and
native New York rappers. In 1997, he joined the group, which consisted of Nas,
Foxy Brown, AZ and Nature on the lyrics and Dr. Dre and the Trackmasters on the
beats.
But like the Firm, AZ's subsequent albums were disappointments numbers-wise.
Despite his stumbles, the Brooklyn rapper was able to sign with the legendary
Motown Records, despite its little-to-no success in the rap game.
AZ's lack of sales is thought to be due to his lack of big-name production
and the rather skimpy rosters of guest appearances on his albums.
AZ was able to resurrect his career somewhat when he dropped the album "9
Lives" in 2001, which was followed by what was known as his comeback album,
"Aziatic," in 2002.
"Aziatic" is amazing. Some of its songs surfaced on the radio and some of its
videos dropped. It had one of the most lyrically gifted tracks to bless the rap
game.
If anyone wants to learn how to put together a combination of lyrics mixed
with a combination of a vigorous rhyme scheme, "Re-Birth" is the track for you.
When you mix AZ's multisyllabic rhyme scheme with his delivery, flow and
content, adding in his witty, slick-talking ways gives you the components of the
complete MC.
AZ actually dropped two albums recently, "A.W.O.L" and "the Format."
Lyrically, they represent true hip-hop, even though AZ's status never grew like
the guy he came into the game with, Nas.
Big Pun
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| Big Pun |
Another New York rapper who scaled heights and broke down barriers with a
skill set never seen on the mic was
Big Pun.
Pun was the first Latin rapper to go platinum, and he came a long way before
his debut album, "Capital Punishment," was released.
Pun first appeared on a couple of Fat Joe tracks before showing up on a
Funkmaster Flex mixtape, making an underground name for himself.
When Pun emerged with "Not a Player" in 1997, he had the streets going wild.
In 1998, the MC released his debut album with the hit single that truly launched
his career, "Still Not a Player," featuring Joe. Those who haven't heard Pun's
"Capital Punishment" are in for something they're not ready for.
Pun's in-your-face style, with his long-winded, tongue-twisting, high-energy
flow and witty lines, was unmatched and unheralded in his time.
It's amazing that Pun had the breath control he did. One's breathing is
influenced by one's stomach muscles and diaphragm, and Pun's weight caused
breath problems. His weight fluctuated from 450 to 700 pounds over his last
years.
Pun came to North Carolina to get on a special weight program, in which he
lost about 80 pounds on what seemed like a road to recovery. But he continued
his overeating when returned to his Bronx home, and health issues finally get
the best of him seven years ago, at age 28.
Big L
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| Big L |
Big L, shot and killed at age 25, passed less than a year before Big Pun.
Like Pun, Big L's potential never got a chance to peak.
Big L was absolutely ahead of his time, and he was not afraid of telling that
to the world. His boisterous style was one of cocky confidence, but he was sure
to back it up every time he got on the mic. His label is indicative of that,
Flamboyant Records.
Big L shone in several groups with big names. He was in DITC, Digging in the
Crates, and in Children of the Corn, with Killa Cam (now known as Cam'ron) and
Murda Mase, before they achieved the full-blown status they have today. Even
before Cam started making up words to rhyme with.
Big L also dropped amazing tracks like "Ebonics" and "No Endz, No Skinz," but
those are not even the biggest tracks L is known for.
Many hip-hop heads will say Big L's "'98 Freestyle" was simply too sick for
words. This is one of the greatest freestyles of all time, and the way he works
this form is one reason some acclaim Big L as the dopest MC to grace the mic.
His early death hindered him from reaching his potential.
To hear how far he was ahead of his time, listen to his freestyle with Jay-Z
in 1995, on his debut album, "Lifestylez Ov Da Poor & Dangerous," and hear how
much he outshone Jay.
Royce Da 5'9
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| Royce Da 5'9 |
Like the other MCs, Royce
Da 5'9, out of Detroit, is cocky in style. He has every right to be. With a
rhythmic flow that often syncopates to the beat, Royce is not an MC to be taken
lightly, as he quickly showed D12 a couple of years ago.
Royce single-handedly dismantled the D12 crew with a verbal lashing in
"Malcolm X" that cut so deep that it caused physical violence.
"Malcolm X" was such a viciously crafted spit of excellence that many
couldn't believe he was going at some cats that he was cool with, especially
since Royce rolled so tightly with Eminem in his early years in the game.
Royce recently said on his mixtape "the Bar Exam" that no one has ever
outshone Eminem on a track like he has.
Royce eventually got off the mainstream tip and went independent. A lot of
people think that independent artists are broke because they don't move as many
units, but they can earn 15 times as much as a mainstream rapper per unit sold.
Royce's "Independent's Day," released in the summer of 2005, shows his
versatility. Since that album, Royce has surfaced on the hip-hop scene with
plenty of tracks on mixtapes, Royce-driven or not.
Royce's punches and wordplay are some of the sickest in the game today, and
punch for punch, he can spar with anyone in the game.
Josh Capers, a student at North Carolina A&T State
University, writes for the A&T Register.
Posted May 28, 2007 |