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Adidas Def Jam Ghostface

Adidas have teamed up with Def Jam to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the iconic hip hop label by launching a Def Jam themed line of trainers. The range will include adi favourites like Superstars, Stan Smiths, Sambas and Forums sporting the Def Jam logo as well as a number of exclusives named and themed after Def Jam artists.

Some of the names getting the adidas treatment are a little underwhelming like ‘Young Jeezy’ for example (I hear tumbleweed) but never fear there’s a beautiful blue pair of Ghostface Forum’s to save the day and steal the show. They come embossed with a nice big golden G on what looks like suede but is probably nubuck knowing Adidas and are definitely essentials for sneaker freaks and Wu aficionados alike.

Ghost also gets a second helping of Adi love with his own pair of Superstars which have black shelltoes which is a nice touch. Not as visually imposing as the blue colourway but they appear to have spent a lot of time on small details and premium materials. Oh and you can just make out a ‘Tony Starks’ epithet under the trefoil on the back of the shoe which is dope.

Method Man also gets in on the act with black and yellow Wu killa bee style Stan Smith in his honour embossed with a M on the rear of the shoe. They look to be suede with a leather tongue but no ‘Johnny Blaze’ moniker to be seen, minus points for that Mr Dassler.

Meth also gets a second helping with his own version of the Superstar in two tone blue with his original Wu styled inverted W on the rear of the shoe. I can’t for the life of me read what it says under the trefoil but I like to think it says ‘Ticalion Stallion’ but I doubt it.

Finally is the Redman Stan Smith in baby blue with an R and possibly ‘Funk Doc’ (what happened to spock did it infringe Star Treks copyright?) scrawled on the back heel under the adi logo. Personally I think Red got stiffed in the celeb sneaker stakes but maybe he’s on baby blue or worse still is a closet Man City fan…

Popularity: 20% [?]

Edited: July 22nd, 2009

90’s wiki: EPMD ‘Business as usual’

EPMD – Business As Usual (1990 Def Jam recordings)

After going gold with their debut and sophomore albums EPMD still hadn’t made bank thanks to some typical financial mismanagement and exploitation by those good people over at Sleeping Bag Records, but with their contracts ripped up, and the ink barely dry on a new deal at Def Jam, they came out with another typically classic album: Business as Usual. As the name suggests they wanted to reassure their fans that nothing had changed and they were still the funkified rap pioneers they knew and loved, except for one thing – they were now ‘bigger and deffer’.

By 1990 the sound of hip hop was noticeably maturing and this album was another quantum leap in terms of production, with EPMD illustrating the move away from the simple ‘two turntables and a drum machine’ style to making themselves at home in a modern studio. The production values are elevated on this album; the bass lines are crisper and louder, the drums are tougher, the mastering adds to the clarity and the samples drop like anvils, even the scratches are getting more tech.

Rather than rely on one clever sample looped over a programmed beat, Erick and Parish cut and pasted a plethora of classic soul and funk soundbites over sampled and filtered drum loops. You just have to listen to the hook on my favourite track ‘Manslaughter’ and try to decipher how many different samples are being used to see what I mean. The left and right panning on the James Brown intro to Gold Digger is yet another sign of the improved technology that the Def Jam studios offered to the rap duo.

The soundscapes are also noticeably darker as illustrated by the fact that both ‘Brothers on my Jock’ and ‘Underground’ were later reworked into moody New York mid-90s classics by Wu Tang and Black Moon respectively. The flow patterns are perhaps the only thing that remained true to their two previous installments, but any criticisms of the duo’s rap style can be offset by the shrewd choice of a then unknown youngster from Newark. No, it wasn’t Shaq! It was Redman of course, and his unique style drags the two tracks he is featured on into firmly into the 90s style that we would become so accustomed to over the next few years.

Trivia

First album on Def Jam

First official appearance by Redman

Singles

Gold Digger

YouTube Preview Image

Rampage

YouTube Preview Image

Give the People

Slang dictionary

Fly, Wack, Jock, Bozack, Phat, Jam, Props, Lampin, (Mom/Pop) Dukes, Daddy mack, Booty

90s Guy says

I was about 13 when I first heard this album as it didn’t make it into my world until 1991/2 when I lent it off my best mates older brother after he called me a ‘bozack’ and I still don’t think I worked out what ‘Mr Bozack’ was until about a year later. A bit like the quickening in ‘Highlander’ lots of things seemed to make sense after I realised these guys were talking about their dicks. In fact all hip hop of the time was a kind of code that you didn’t quite understand but were desperate to decode.

Sometimes this was for slang or colloquial reasons but often for transatlantic reasons – we weren’t aware of some of the people Rappers were referencing (Tony Danza, Karl Malone, Urkel, Vanessa Del Rio weren’t exactly household names in the UK), but that also made you lot cooler if you could dig it. Its hard to imagine nowadays people not understanding hip hop slang and not being exposed to the worldwide dominance of American pop culture but Hip Hop was still underground music back in the nine oh.

90s Guy Favourites

Manslaughter

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Brothers on my jock

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Underground

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Funky piano

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Rampage, Give the people

Review

Rap Reviews back to the lab

Link

Listen for yourself

On the DL

Popularity: 21% [?]

Edited: September 4th, 2008