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One of my favorite scenes in the new Austin Powers
movie, Goldfinger, was his parody of a hip hop video,
complete with the bling bling bought on eBay, flippin'
hundreds, hangin' in a fancy car with his booty bitches
and Cristal. I think I was laughing louder than anyone
in the theater because I hate those cliché videos
with a passion. There's so much more to hip hop music
that what the masses see, hear, and buy. So much more
than the O.G.'d medallions and FUBU jerseys, and the
men of Atmosphere are shining examples of compelling
songwriting as heard on their new release, God
Loves Ugly, filled with deep beats and bass
that pull at your hip strings and raw lyrics of life
and love that pull on your heart strings.
On Sunday, the Atmosphere crew strolls into town not
in a Bentley, but in a tried "Keepin' it Rural"
tour van - the latest name for the tour that Slug,
the front man with the rhymes and the rhythms, came
up with on the fly as we spoke during their drive through
the mid west's flatland. They started with "All
of Our Girlfriends Are Going to Leave Us and It's All
Your Fault Tour," but as Slug explained, "We
have about twelve working titles for the tour. On the
way to ever show we come up with a new one," then
calls to the back of the van to be reminded of what
they came up with recently, "We Blew Your Ass."
I'm getting the scoop at the beginning of their tour,
"Last night was much better the first night. The
first show we were just getting our grinds back. So
by the time we make it Denver we're going to be pretty
tight," he says. Sunday the 15th they'll be
at the Ogden in Denver, and at the Aggie Theater on
Monday the 16th, performing with Colorado's Dialektix.
This rural bound van has DeeJay Bird at the wheel, and
according to Slug is, "the brains behind the operation,"
in addition to Mr. Dibbs, Blueprint, Murs from Living
Legends, Brother Ali with BK One.
The other half of the songwriting team, ANT,
creates the sound behind Slugs words, "It's a pretty
hardcore collaboration. I don't specify what I want
from him and he doesn't specify what he wants from me
lyrically. I just show up with what I got and we sit
down with two skeletons, then push them together to
see if we can make something out if it." Making
music together since 1997, the duo from Minnesota have
three prior releases including Overcast, Lucy
Ford, and Se7en, in addition to tracks on
a number of Headshots tapes and the Sad Clown
Bad Dub series 1-3. Yet another refreshing discovery
was Slug's humble, almost self-deprecating facet of
his personality, "We make a lot of stuff that never
gets turned 'cause it sucks. The ones where the moods
actually do connect
we usually know when we're
on to something." The relationship began in 1995
(he was a bit foggy on the year since he claims to use
the number of Budweisers he drank as his way to track
time, so it may have been 1994) through Slug's introduction
to ANT by a green bud businessman who, "was a rapper
too. So me and him became friends. One day he told me
he was going to ANT's house to mix his beats and we
wrote a song together. Then ANT and I clicked as well
so I started working with him."
If you listen to his lyrics or ever get a chance to
chat with him, you'll soon realize that Slug will be
first to the punch in terms of dissing himself. But
he's still got the suave and de-boner moves of a ladies
man, perferring to take interviews with women versus
men, and serenading me with a bit of "Guantanamera".
So why this gender preference? "Because I'm in
a van with seven guys. All these phone calls are going
to come while I'm driving, so I thought I would try
to take advantage and be able to at least talk to girls
on the phone," Slug explains. This hasn't always
worked out though. A guy has slipped through the crack
in his plan, "One guy did call the other day, so
I told him he had to raise his voice a couple octaves.
He was down. He was role playing so it was fun."
In the tradition of Def Leppard, they even put JayBird
in charge of the solid gold female search, "he
hooks up the girls for after the show."
Those other five guys that share the stage and van
with Slug each have their own musical careers. Starting
with Mr. Dibbs, the turntable conductor known
to throw skate punk kids into a frenzy while garnering
recognition from other DJ luminaries, including DJ Craze
who used his track, Unearthed Volumes 1-3 to
win 3 consecutive DMC World Championships and by Mixmaster
Mike of the Beastie Boys' who included the same track
on the vinyl recording of 3 Emcees. Blueprint
gave up a lucrative career as computer analyst to provide
back up vocals for Atmosphere on this tour (a very good
move, IMHO). While he's not getting harassed in the
van, he performs as the other half of Soul Position
and runs his own record label, Weightless Recordings
based in Ohio. Brother Ali is a Rhymesayers Entertainment
label mate and collaborator with Atmosphere, previously
releasing Rites of Passage, and has plans for
Shadows on the Sun to come out this month, which
is produced by ANT and features Slug on vocals. Last
but not least is Murs, who is also part of the
Living Legends west coast team, putting out a solo E.P.
last week entitled, Varsity Blues: for colored boys
who've considered suicide when Hennessy and Chronic
ain't enough, along with a new project with Slug
from Atmosphere called, Felt that was released
this week.
Although he's stoked to have sold 30,000 copies of
God Loves Ugly since it's release, Slug seems
uncomfortable with media attention, "It's kinda
weird. It adds to the neurosis of everything. It just
seems that the more that stuff happens, there's
more that's expected of you. It just adds to the pressure."
The success of the album is no surprise to fans of his
previous work or those discovering him for the first
time. Filled with clear and concise thought and feeling,
Slug takes the pain, emotion, and passion of every day
life, crafting lyrical harmony that's sewn intricately
into ANT's fabric of soulful rhythms and jam gyrations.
As much as his sense of humor and self-analysis takes
center stage within his personality, Slug takes a hard
look at people, places, and things that impact him positively
and negatively, making his opinions known in a blunt
fashion. This is evident on every track, including "Bass
and Movement," he throws down, "Give the kid
a nipple 'cause he sucks. Take the microphone from his
fist, he doesn't know how to clutch
get your pride
hurt when I tug on your skirt, shut the fuck up, professionals
are trying to work." On "Lovelife," he
reflects on his own mortality, being thankful for those
in his life and his ability to make an impact on the
world around him, "Lovelife, it's quite a cliché,
but I guess that's me. A ball of pop culture with arms
and feet
and when I let them carry me to a cemetery,
I want to be buried with a pocket full of clarity
love
life to the death and keep planting my seed." With
Valium injected drum and bass beats and Indian sitar
as a backdrop on "Flesh," he versus on the
city where he lives and those cloaked in a disguise
to serve and protect, "The world is a vampire.
She eats her kids
it's difficult to figure out
who to fear
will the hunger disappear, metabolism's
slow. World domination is the goal."
For Atmosphere, the title for God Loves Ugly
came about because, "it made sense. It kinda describes
what we got going on right now. It describes the reason
why we've been able to start
apparently God must
love ugly because we suck, we're not that talented.
There's no reason for this. We're gonna ride it until
the wheels fall off." Those 30,000 people who bought
the CD would highly disagree with Slug's reasoning,
and so would I.
See the "Keepin' It Rural" tour at the Ogden
on Sunday, September 15 and the Aggie on Monday, where
he'll be at the bar if he's not on the stage - no Cristal,
no bling, bling, just himself and his van mates hangin'
out, drinking a Bud. Just don't start on the Wuz Up
jokes. Please.
-Kim Owens, kim@kaffeinebuzz.com
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