Showing posts with label Big Boi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Boi. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

ALBUM REVIEW: Big Boi - Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors


I should let you know this up front: this review is biased.  Anyone who knows me will definitely know one thing about me – that dude is an OutKast fan.  I have been down with the ATL duo long before I could vote, buy cigarettes, or drink alcohol.  In high school and college, I was their biggest promoter, letting people know well in advance when an OutKast album would be released.  The easiest way to piss me off is to say, “OutKast is wack!”  I had no problem getting in your face to let you know the absolute falsity of your statement, and I will not let up until you are defeated.  Well, not really.  Most friends usually said just to rile me up because it was funny to them.  Nevertheless, no one who knows can deny OutKast’s impact on my life, and I am not alone.  Since their debut, OutKast has released six albums selling at least a million copies, released a handful of hit singles, and won multiple awards.  Critics often praised their work for their originality, lyrical substance, and song writing abilities.  In fact, OutKast is also one of two hip-hop artists to win the Grammy Award for Album of the Year.  It was a proud moment as a fan, even though I did not watch the Grammys that year (still think that they are full of shit).

Despite OutKast’s commercial and critical success, the group has struggled to get respect from their contemporaries.  Since their debut album Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik in 1994, many hip-hop enthusiasts dismissed OutKast as not being “real hip-hop.”  Big names in the industry (Def Jam founder Russell Simmons initially comes to mind) did not look at them as being part of the culture.  At the time, OutKast seem to have a lot going against them.  First, they used mostly live instruments as opposed to jazz and funk samples to craft their music.  Second, many of their choruses had more of an R&B influence, which ended up being largely ahead of its time.  Third, they were on LaFace Records, a predominately R&B record label based in Atlanta, Georgia.  In addition, OutKast was not from either New York or Los Angeles, two of the major media hubs of the country.  They were straight Southern-fried and did not hesitate to embrace their Southern roots. 

However, because they sounded like nothing else on the radio, OutKast lived up to their name and became “outcasts” of the industry.  It was never more apparent after the infamous 1995 Source Awards where OutKast was booed when accepting an award and Andre made an ominous prediction of the South’s eventual rise to prominence.  Even though, Andre’s prediction came true in the late 1990s, no one gave OutKast props for opening the door for the Southern hip-hop.  Critics paid more attention to the gimmick groups like Master P/No Limit, Cash Money, Pastor Troy, Miracle, Drama, and other forgettable artists that came out.  Instead, many critics tried to separate them from their Southern roots due to their tendency to experiment with different sounds on each album and their dedication to lyricism.  In other words, people did not consider them “southern.”  Luckily, the lack of respect just motivated them to make better music.  Even now, the media does not acknowledge the group’s accomplishment, at least compared to other rappers.  Why?  I blame the bias New York and Los Angeles media that always prop up their hometown heroes, whether good or bad.  I also blame OutKast themselves, for they have remained humble throughout their career and have not made narcissistic pleas to the media to consider them the greatest rappers in the world (unlike Jay-Z, Kanye West, Dr. Dre, among others).  As time marches on, more new artists are citing them as influences, but with so many forces against them in the beginning, the chip on their shoulder still remains visible.