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Rapper
Releases Masterpiece
Songs Focus on
Bitches, Hos
The critical and commercial
flop "gangsta" rapper Ice E has released what will surely be considered
one of the great albums of the past 40 years- White Cherry and Malt
Liqa [sic] Hos. The work is wildly experimental,
but well-controlled.
The music itself, without
the lyrics, is brilliantly simple, yet paradoxically complex. E uses
advanced technology- a synthesizer, a device rarely (if ever) used in rap
music- to create simple, repetetive, but inescapable driving bass lines.
Almost every song features dominant (and exclusive) bass- a diversion from
the melodic qualities of common rap, but an important step towards the
evolution of the developing art form.
The lyrics are aggressive
and uncompromising. E often uses unconventional and just plain improper
grammar, but it is understandable. He is an artist, a poetic visionary,
and a master of language; and like Hemmingway said, once one has mastered
the language, one may alter it, when justified. So, when E says "We
be soakin' brew/Be jokin' like Jew," he is using the infinitive 'to be'
to emphasize that I, you, he, she, and even it are included in the gathering.
Ice E is a proverbial
river to his people (the "gangstas");
therefore he must speak accordingly.
There are no weak tracks
on the album. In fact, all the tracks are excellent, but it may take
a few listens for some rap fans to swallow E's liberal use of offensive
words like "fuck" and "shit" (especially in "Git [sic] Yo' [sic]
Beotch [sic] On Da [sic] Phone 'Fo' [sic] I Break
Ya [sic] Azz [sic]"). Once one gets past the initial
shock of the words, the deep symbolism becomes evident. E speaks
of a world know to few, but relevant to all. He sings of murdering
white cops and raping white women, but does so only to bring across underlying
themes of anger and frustration. Contrastly, in songs like "Clams On My
Grill," E communicates gleams of happiness of life on the streets through
simple pleasures, in this case oral sex. In fact, each song on the
album mentions either "bitches" or "hos," known in the white community
as "women" or "ladies." Females, who
"be jumpin' my jimmy (penis)," are
the primary oasis in the desert that is the outer inner city.
The forceful, virtually
unaccompanied bass, coupled with prophetic visions of the drug-riddled,
crime-addled world rap forgot of
White Cherry and Malt Liqa Hos
serve as stepping stones toward the freedom of artists everywhere.
Finally, someone has spoken. All across the world, throughout all
mediums of art, barriers have been shattered- the truth has been released-
and it be important.
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