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View Full Version : Legendary Hiphop Crew @ Magnet


Sketchy Bwoy
19-10-2006, 11:36 AM
This Sunday (October 22nd) is going to be the last ever Sunday Service. We’re going out in style, on our 5th birthday @ Magnet, with the renowned bay area rap collective SOULS OF MISCHIEF.
Those who are fans of groups from ‘the golden era’ of rhyming ie. the early nineties, will surely remember this crew and their classic album ’93 til infinity. Often compared to A Tribe Called Quest, they’re only playing a few UK dates and are well worth catching… theres a biog below.

The event will also feature local artists and up and coming rhymers (in true Sunday Service style) as well as those who’ve been involved in SS over the years. First up is MAK OF ALL TRADES and DJ RASP (both Shakti crew members) followed by THE PUNNING CLAN (Feat. MCs Benny Diction, Ro Jista, 2 Tone, Tony Skank and Louis Cypher). Then Sunday Service veteran JOHNNY 1 MOVE gets busy on the ones and twos alongside DJ RASP. The SOULS are sure to smack it (as they did at No Fakin four years ago) and to round off the mayhem is the customery OPEN MIC JAM for budding MCs/Beatboxers to flex some lyrical muscle. Battles, freestyles and pre-written, all welcome. Also featuring DJs Sketchy Bwoy, Average Joe and Germ.

SUNDAY SERVICE 5TH BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 22ND @ MAGNET
9 til 1am. £5/6 in.


Heres a biog…

The East Oakland crew SOULS OF MISCHIEF are members of the loose underground hip-hop consortium known as Hieroglyphics. The group consists of four erudite but hardcore MCs: A-Plus, Phesto, Opio and Tajai. Their debut album in 1993, '93 Til Infinity, produced an early-'90s anthem of the same name and spawned a movement towards bohemian yet rugged hip-hop.

One of hip-hop's great lost masterpieces, 93 'Til Infinity ranks as a seminal early classic of the West Coast underground. The Souls of Mischief weren't even out of their teens when they completely redefined the art of lyrical technique for the West Coast, along with fellow standard-bearers Freestyle Fellowship, The Pharcyde, and Hiero founder Del tha Funkee Homosapien. The Souls come off as four brash young MCs who are too smart for their own good, yet they're so full of youthful exuberance that it's impossible to dislike them for it. They're also excellent storytellers, punctuating their tales with a wry wit and clever asides; still, they're able to take on the grittier subjects of violence and death with a worldliness beyond their years. The production on 93 til infinity— all by various core Hieroglyphics members — is just as good as the raps, driven by complex beats, unpredictable basslines, and samples drawn from spacy fusion records and East Coast jazz-rap crews. Main Source and Gang Starr both provide track foundations, and it's possible to hear the intricately constructed loops of the former and the lean attack of the latter (circa Step in the Arena) in the record's overall style. A better comparison, though, would be to the effortless flow and telepathic trade-offs of A Tribe Called Quest. In fact, 93 'Til Infinity seems to actively aspire to the fluidity of the best Tribe albums; tracks often segue directly into one another without pause — and the transitions are seamless. Although the title cut is an underappreciated classic, 93 'Til Infinity makes its greatest impression through its stunning consistency, not individual highlights. Put it all together, and you've got one of the most slept-on records of the '90s.

Two years later, SOM shucked off their reputation for their sophomore release, No Man's Land, a derisive and brash departure from '93 Til. While the crew lost some fans who were looking for a '95 Til, they managed to cultivate a loyal fan base who respected their out on a limb artistic development. Rather than sticking to the formula that made them popular with the college hip-hop set, they chose to shatter their image similar to De La Soul's second album De La Soul Is Dead. Their Northern California mindset combines chaos, danger, and the avant-garde, all from a very intellectual B-Boy perspective. The crew dropped the virtually invisible Focus strictly for web heads in 1999, then returned with Trilogy: Conflict, Climax, Resolution in 2000.