Freeway and Jake One team up to lay it down
By CHRIS FARAONE | February 16, 2010
WORLDS COLLIDE: When you cross a BET icon like Freeway (above) with a genuine track star of Jake One's caliber, "best of both worlds" accolades are hardly hyperbolic. |
One can only wonder what the door policy will be at Freeway & Jake One shows (including the one that comes to the Middle East on Friday). Although he's done tracks for G-Unit, Jake One is a white Seattle underground stalwart who's best known for producing gems with the Midwest indie powerhouse Rhymesayers. In other words, he's the type of artist whose fans rarely get harassed and frisked. Freeway, however, is a coke-talking, scary-bearded black Roc-A-Fella ex-pat from Philly's toughest blocks. His legionnaires are accustomed to lifting their shirts, hats, and nut sacks for bouncers.Racial profiling and double standards aside, the intersection of these two hip-hop hemispheres on the new The Stimulus Package (Rhymesayers) is a positive development. Subterranean snobs might not realize this, but not all commercially successful rappers are complete hacks. (It's just hard to tell, since clowns like Cam'ron are assigned sonically retarded beats fit for grade-school mixers.) Likewise, not all fringe producers spin tracks that sound like alien farts. So when you cross a BET icon like Freeway — who's blessed with a special kind of vocal prowess — and a genuine track star of Jake One's caliber, "best of both worlds" accolades are hardly hyperbolic.
"Nowadays there are so many hot up-and-coming producers that I try and stay open-minded," says Freeway, whose major-label output has featured such marquee beatmakers as Dame Grease, Kanye West, and Cool & Dre. "For me, this wasn't about anything more than really liking what Jake was sending me. He did something for my Free at Last album, then I did two for his [White Van Music], then he just kept sending over beats and I just kept cutting joints until we had the whole thing done."
Of course, even before leaving Roc-A-Fella for the independent Rhymesayers, Freeway was never quite the average MTV spectacle (aside from his massive dangling medallion). As one of the Roc family's dedicated hood cats — along with fellow Philly native Beanie Siegel — he enjoyed the freedom to spit nails in the shadow of Jay-Z's materialistic superficiality. Indeed, Freeway's breakout 2003 hit, "What We Do," is a downtrodden tale of urban woe on which he declares, "Fuck a Bentley or a Lexus." Hova hopped on for endorsement purposes, but otherwise the single was the hardest thing to rock Billboard since DMX.
"Some things with Rhymesayers are more real than anything I've ever done," Freeway acknowledges. "But even at Roc-A-Fella, some of my biggest songs were never aimed at the radio. We just did what we did, and things worked out. When I said that I wanted to use 'What We Do' as a single, people said it couldn't happen because it didn't have a hook. You know how the rest of that one goes."
Related:
Julianna Barwick | Florine, Rihanna | Rated R, Elvis Presley | Elvis 75: Good Rockin' Tonight, More
- Julianna Barwick | Florine
When someone describes an album as “hmmm, I dunno, sort of like Enya if she were from Brooklyn” — that person is not setting you up for success with said album.
- Rihanna | Rated R
Look, it’s not as if there were a song where she says, “Chris Brown, you chicken-shit motherfucker, your ass is gonna pay.”
- Elvis Presley | Elvis 75: Good Rockin' Tonight
There's a plethora of Elvis Presley albums on the market, most of them compilations and box sets, each focusing on certain hits, eras, and/or styles.
- Wanting more
After its triumphant traversal of the complete Béla Bartók string quartets at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, the Borromeo Quartet was back for a free 20th- and 21st-century program at Jordan Hall, leading off with an accomplished recent piece by the 24-year-old Egyptian composer Mohammed Fairuz, Lamentation and Satire.
- Group hug
Things aren’t always what they’re called — we know that flying fish don’t fly and starfish aren’t even fish.
- Beyond Dilla and Dipset
With a semi-sober face I'll claim that hip-hop in 2010 might deliver more than just posthumous Dilla discs, Dipset mixtapes, and a new ignoramus coke rapper whom critics pretend rhymes in triple-entendres.
- Local flavor
Local journalist and acclaimed hip-hop scribe Andrew Martin has corralled a flavorful roster of Rhody-based rap talent on the Ocean State Sampler , 10 exclusive tracks available for free download.
- John Harbison plus 10
Classical music in Boston is so rich, having to pick 10 special events for this winter preview is more like one-tenth of the performances I'm actually looking forward to.
- Bleep the faith
If you were young and had brain space to spare in 1985, those vacant folds were likely soon flooded with the vast audial ephemera of the Nintendo era.
- Photos: Passion Pit at House of Blues
Photos: Passion Pit live at House of Blues Boston, January 6, 2010.
- The Big Hurt: Billboard Top Hip-Hop and R and B songs
This week, a jolly traipse through one of Billboard 's most artistically fecund charts: "Top Hip-Hop and R&B Songs." What wonders await?
- Less
Topics:
Music Features
, Celebrity News, Entertainment, G-Unit, More
, Celebrity News, Entertainment, G-Unit, Dr. Dre, Cam'ron, hip-hop, economic stimulus, Bun B, FREEWAY, FREEWAY, Less