Black 44 Year Old Bitch Can Take the Dick
"Bitches Ain't Shit" | |
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Song by Dr. Dre featuring Snoop Doggy Dogg, Dat Nigga Daz, Kurupt, and Jewell | |
from the album The Chronic | |
Released | December 15, 1992 |
Genre |
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Length | 4:48 |
Label |
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Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | Dr. Dre |
"Bitches Ain't Shit" is an American rap song by record producer and rapper Dr. Dre for his debut solo album, The Chronic.[1] It was released in December 1992 as Death Row Records' first album.[2] The song was never issued as a single, but was a huge underground hit.[3] In late 1993, discussing a set of public protests over this song, rap journalist Dream Hampton incidentally called it, artistically, the best song on the year's best rap album.[4] Billboard notes, however, "the misogyny is ugly and thick, even for a rap record."[1] It evokes a set of four male running mates who rap sagas and lessons altogether teaching that "bitches," being women,[5] are ripe for sexual indulgence, and sometimes offer easy money, but, being traitorous, are just "hos and tricks."[6] [7] Simultaneously notorious and a rap favorite, this song, employing pimp values and language,[8] helped establish the early persona[9] of its guest rapper Snoop Dogg.[10] [11] [12]
Largely debuting via this album,[2] Snoop also raps this song's hook, which reduces "bitches" to performing fellatio,[13] and which fellow guest rapper Daz's verse heralds as "the anthem."[14] Dre's verse, the song's first, overlooks literal women to disparage his former N.W.A bandmate Eazy-E as a "bitch,"[15] who allegedly cheated Dre of money, and to incidentally call N.W.A's manager Jerry Heller, allegedly complicit, "a white bitch."[1] [16] Snoop's own verse portrays a former girlfriend, unfaithful but perhaps fictitious,[17] "a bitch named Mandy May."[7] Between those verses, guest rapper Kurupt's verse, alike Daz's, demotes women to mere indulgences.[18] With the closing verse, R&B singer Jewell, the only female,[19] boasts indifference as "a bitch that's real." Until the album's 2001 reissue,[20] this song was a hidden track—unforeseen by the album's first buyers[21]—but, hitting especially hard, it helped drive album sales.[22]
In an era when popular songs still idealized women,[23] this song appalled many.[4] [24] [25] But even women often liked or loved the song,[a] compelling in "the beat" and lyrical "flow."[25] [27] [30] Meanwhile, Dre's musical sound, borrowing from funk and soul music, shaped a new rap subgenre, gangsta funk, G-funk.[31] Its smooth musicality impelled gangsta rap—as The Chronic singles, lyrically milder—onto popular radio and music television.[12] [32] [33] But in 1993, leading a national battle against gangsta rap,[34] activist C. Delores Tucker largely targeted this song, album, and record label.[35] [36] In 1994, at the ensuing Congressional hearings,[37] Tucker called gangsta rap, especially Snoop's, "pornographic smut."[38] [39] Yet its foothold proved secure.[40] [41] Dre and Snoop thus refashioned the rap gangsta from an angry menace to society, Ã la N.W.A, into an urban socialite, threatening violence only to guard his own lifestyle of leisure and indulgence.[11] [33] [42] [43] Becoming iconic, "Bitches Ain't Shit" reshaped both rap and R&B,[44] [45] [46] which, merging, became popular music, reshaping America's popular culture,[40] [23] [47] [48] if largely by spurring women to criticize men, assert themselves, and often proclaim the title bitch.[5] [45] [49] [50]
Social critics alleging adverse cultural effects by gangsta rap have recurrently indicted this song.[b] Reportedly, in 1995, it motivated Sarah Jones's performance poem "Your Revolution,"[58] a feminist rebuke of salacious rap lyrics about women.[59] [60] Still, when listening, a woman may instead identify even with the male vocalists and, singing along, feel herself aggrieved by "bitches."[61] And amid numerous, borrowing artists, including the "Queen Bitch" Lil' Kim, some interpolate the hook to start, "Niggas ain't shit," disparaging men generically.[5] [62] [63] Further, in early 2005, rock artist Ben Folds released an abbreviated cover version[64]—only Dre's and Snoop's lyrics, including the vulgar hook—a "hipster rendition,"[65] ironically sentimental,[66] later called "a gorgeous piano ballad."[67] In April 2005, it placed #71 on the main popular songs chart, the Billboard Hot 100.[68] Surviving his 2008 attempt to retire it,[69] [70] it was a humorous fixture of his live sets into at least 2017.[21] [71] But in 2019, to stem conflation of its slang term niggas for racial slurring, Folds had stopped performing it.[72] [73] And in June 2020, amid America's escalating racial tensions, he sought the cover's removal from music streaming.[74]
Record production [edit]
In 1986, Ice-T's song "6 in the Mornin'," diverting from electro rap and "funk hop" some fanfare in the Los Angeles area's rap scene, was gangsta rap's inaugural anthem, reaching gold sales.[75] Forming in early 1987, the group N.W.A recast gangsta rap into a grim, menacing presentation.[75] Despite scarce radio play outside the County of Los Angeles, and despite two, early departures over money—secondary record producer Arabian Prince in 1988, then primary rapper and ghostwriter Ice Cube in late 1989[76]—N.W.A took gangsta rap to platinum sales, but disbanded in 1991 once primary record producer Dr. Dre left.[75] Freed from N.W.A's brash personae, Dre held creative control and preeminent industry cachet.[19] [77]
Dre wanted to only produce, but his ghostwriter the D.O.C. convinced him to still rap, too.[78] Starting Death Row Records with their manager Suge Knight,[79] they drew Dick Griffey, whose SOLAR Records had the office space, recording studio, and major distributor Sony Music.[19] [80] [81] In April 1992, SOLAR issued their first rap song, "Deep Cover," whose success drew Sony's interest in Death Row.[82] But soon, outrage at "Cop Killer," heavy metal, by Ice-T's band Body Count, repelled Sony, as "Deep Cover" had similar theme.[82] [83] Death Row gained Interscope Records distribution by Warner Music,[10] Knight excluded Griffey, and reportedly "Deep Cover" as album track was replaced by a newer song, "Bitches Ain't Shit."[82]
The Chronic [edit]
Assisted by Daz and by Warren G on drum programming and sampling classics,[84] Dre culled from funk and soul music, especially funk's subgenre P-funk, to shape a new sound,[85] casting a new aura: gangsta funk, G-funk.[33] [42] In late 1993, Death Row Records' second album—Snoop Doggy Dogg's debut solo album Doggystyle[86] —secured gangsta rap as mainstream, popular music.[2] [40] Yet first, in late 1992, there was Dr. Dre's debut solo album The Chronic.[2] Set to the Los Angeles area's scenery and scenarios in Dre's directed music videos,[1] [33] its aural motifs impelled gangsta rap's breakthrough by grooving bass lines and bassy thumps under catchy, melodic hooks and Snoop's relaxed, melodic raps.[11] [31] Its lead single, "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang," pervading popular radio,[12] [43] was nominated for a 1994 Grammy, which The Chronic single "Let Me Ride" won.[87] [88] "Bitches Ain't Shit," though "equally well built with G-funk musicality and danceability," was of the more "gruff" and "sinister"[33] Chronic tracks.[89]
Album recording, across nine months in 1992,[90] began in Calabasas, California, in Dre's house[91]—which, midway, or in late June, sustained severe fire damage[92]—but mainly occurred in the City of Los Angeles section Hollywood at the studio Galaxy Sound,[77] owned by SOLAR Records' owner Dick Griffey.[93] Its audio console was advanced,[77] yet its neighborhood had "lapsed into pure Babylonian decay"—a journalist's opinion 25 years later[94]—and from late April to early May was beset by the L.A. riots.[95] Guest rapper Kurupt, a studio fixture, remarks, "I don't know what kind of album The Chronic would have been without the riots."[95] Recording, he says, "was coming from the middle of it all."[95] But "Bitches Ain't Shit" became, Kurupt prides, "one of the most hard-hitting songs on The Chronic."[96] In the album's 2001 reissue, this song joined the track list, after all.[97] But in 1992, although present, playable as track #16,[1] the song doubly surprised the album's first buyers, discovering it, by chance, as a hidden track.[21]
Instrumentals [edit]
Synthesis [edit]
In the album's 1992 issue, its final listed track is "The Roach," subtitled "The Chronic Outro,"[1] plus a long silence.[98] Abruptly breaking the silence to open the truly final but unlisted track, Snoop intones, a capella, "Bitches ain't shit but hos and tricks"[7]—the hook's first line, spanning the four beats that occur during one bar[99]—trailed by a breakbeat, spanning the second bar, from the band Trouble Funk's 1982 hit "Let's Get Small."[100] Then opening, to loop once per bar, is a synthesized rhythm section—kick drums' bassy thumps, aflutter, syncopating offbeat, and snare drums' lively taps,[101] steady, syncopating backbeat,[102] atop a bass guitar's grooving bass line, a riff that is the replayed start of Funkadelic's 1976 song "Adolescent Funk"[103] [104]—with a cymbal strike on the one count, and both snare drum attacks per bar, on the two count and the four count, meeting a chord on synthesized keys.[105] Simultaneously, an eerie, highpitched whine or ring, a type of motif called "the funky worm" and created on a Moog synthesizer—a keyboard that can synthesize bass, too[77]—manifests while Snoop, restarting from its first line, raps the full hook.[7] It has four lines,[14] each occupying one bar.[99] Immediately, then, as Snoop restarts the full hook, a sample emerges—to recur often in the song—from New York City rapper MC Shan's 1986 hit "The Bridge."[25] [106] After those ten bars—starting the 11th—Dre's verse starts.
Backstory [edit]
A rock musician, Colin Wolfe had worked long hours for Dre at Ruthless Records, which had first hired the bass guitarist for its R&B singer Michel'le.[107] [108] Wolfe played the bassline also on Dre's debut solo single, "Deep Cover," featuring Snoop, which reportedly was slated to be a Chronic track, too, until it was removed to include a newer song, "Bitches Ain't Shit."[109] In 2014, Wolfe recalled, "One day, I was alone in the control room and Dre and Daz were up in the back room, trying to mess around on the keyboard for the 'Bitches Ain't Shit' bass line. So I stepped in the doorway and I could hear what they were trying to do. I said, 'Man, look out, y'all trying to do this.' I straight did it, recorded it, and then I was like, 'Yo, I got another part,' and did the high Moog part right after that."[107] [108]
Via the funk group Ohio Players' 1972 single "Funky Worm," such "high Moog part" is nicknamed "the funky worm," made on a Moog synthesizer, which Dre, coveting Bernie Worrell's otherworldly Parliament–Funkadelic or P-Funk sounds, had tasked Wolfe to buy.[77] With N.W.A, Dre released two songs deploying it—Ice Cube, in 1987, rapping "Dope Man," and Dre with MC Ren, in 1991, rapping "Alwayz into Somethin' "—a signature sound, rather, of The Chronic.[77] Also engineered masterfully, by Dre himself, the album's audio, during its era, was exceptionally robust yet clear.[110] A leading record producer of 1980s pop rock,[111] Jimmy Iovine—the record executive who secured the album major distribution[112]—recalls, "Dre's sonics just sounded better than anything else on my speakers."[110]
Vocals [edit]
Backstory [edit]
Dre's verse was written by the D.O.C.,[113] his usual ghostwriter,[1] [107] a Dallas rapper discovered by Dre,[114] who helped Dre leave Ruthless Records and form Death Row Records.[79] [115] Helping shape its first album, the four "Bitches Ain't Shit" guest vocalists, still unsigned and poor, frequented the studio like a social club.[19] Snoop's circle brought his younger cousin Daz and also Kurupt—soon a rap duo, Tha Dogg Pound—while R&B singer Jewell, already present, hereby pioneered women's singing on gangsta rap.[19] Yet most prominent is Snoop.[19] Midway through 1992,[10] Dre plucked Snoop, who turned 20 in October, from Long Beach, California, trio 213: Snoop, Nate Dogg, singer, and Warren G, producer and rapper,[19] [116] stepbrother of Dre.[117]
In April 1992, unheard since N.W.A's May 1991 album and breakup, Dr. Dre reemerged by a debut solo single—title track to actor Laurence Fishburn's film Deep Cover—while debuting a guest but in essence lead rapper, an instant rap sensation, Snoop Doggy Dogg.[10] [19] Despite intense buzz about Snoop,[94] then, his album recorded only after release of Dre's,[86] so heavily featuring Snoop as nearly his album, too.[40] Early on, working with Snoop to write the "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang" lyrics, The D.O.C. focused, beyond Dre's verses, on imparting to Snoop, already gifted, an extra lyricism, "the formula."[113] Snoop brought from Long Beach an intoxicated, lighthearted gangsterism,[94] and the elders coached him,[118] sealing the aura that this team would mint.[1] [42]
Arrangement [edit]
Producer Dre links the vocals of the four "Bitches Ain't Shit" male rappers closely, never skipping a beat—effecting teamwork, like a tag team[119]—Snoop's hook twice, Dre's verse, Daz's verse, Snoop's hook once, Kurupt's verse, Snoop's verse, and Snoop's hook twice. During the second and third of the three hook sections, a nondescript but male voice, whispering below Snoop's vocals, incessantly chimes, "Bitches ain't shit"—at least twice per bar—each time repositioned in the stereo field, voicing on the left, then on the right, and fleeting in the center, back and forth. After the song's very final hook recital, rapper Dre, silent since the first verse, reenters on the very next beat, starting the next bar, to starkly deadpan, "Bitches ain't shit." Reverb effect echoes Dre's declaration across the full bar till the following bar's first beat. On this beat, Jewell's vocals enter, effecting an R&B outro—initially wordless Wooo'ing for two bars—and then her first clear word, if mere ad lib, enters on her own third bar's first beat as she sings, "Yeah."[120]
In vocal metre, or timing of stresses, which often rhyme, all of the raps prioritize the bar's last beat, the four count, whereas Jewell's singing focuses on the first beat, the one count, the strongest bass strike.[120] By this common metric choice, Jewell's very first line, I don't give a fuck about a bitch, gathers from her third bar's last beat to peak on her fourth bar's first beat as she sings "fuck" while Dre abruptly states "bitches."[120] First heard four bars earlier, Dre's deadpanned Bitches ain't shit—now echoing across Jewell's first full bar of lyrics—proves to be a refrain, issued across every fourth bar. Singing unperturbed, Jewell declares her own outlook and lifestyle, then distills one tenet. For four times in a row, she stresses on the one count the line's final word when belting, "And I don't give a fuck!"—the first of the four times as Dre's refrain states "bitches"—and then, switching to sexual theme, she raps, switching stress to the four count. Her final few words abruptly go a cappella and, echoing, fade out to Dre's refrain, still on time, returning once more, which, fading out, spans two bars echoing
Lyrical content [edit]
First verse (Dre): Promptly after Snoop opens with the hook,[14] Dre narrates a personal tale of a specific "bitch"—a man who allegedly shorted Dre's money—until, closing the "real conversation," Dre calls a "pass to Daz."
Second verse (Daz):[121] Off and rapping before Dre silences, Daz exploits "hos" and grows camaraderie, "chilling with your homies and shit, and have my niggas kick the anthem like this," Snoop's immediate hook recital.[122]
Third verse (Kurupt): A beat later, Kurupt tersely adds to the hook and then, like Daz, refers generically—"bitches" or "hos" or "tricks"—ultimately closing with a brag, "turning them trick-ass hos the fuck out, now."
Fourth verse (Snoop): Seizing the next beat, Snoop narrates just the second tale of a specific "bitch"—this one a woman, unfaithful—and caps it with his third and final round of trumpeting the anthemic hook.
Fifth verse (Jewell): Dre returns to intermittently deadpan, "Bitches ain't shit," while Jewell—a woman, singing soulfully, then rapping vociferously—stamps her endorsement, if mostly I don't give a fuck!.
Dr. Dre's verse [edit]
Based on an early rap feud, Dre's verse never directly comments on women. Rather, complementing brief skits and the single "Fuck wit Dre Day," it is the album's final smear of Eazy-E.[1] Dre's former N.W.A groupmate, Eazy had founded the group and owned its label, Ruthless Records.[123] Never identifying Eazy by his stage name, Dre's lyrics identify him first by his legal name, Eric Wright, but otherwise call him "bitch" and "she."[15] [124] These jabs are occasioned by Dre's glossing their friendship, rap partnership, fallout over money, and then Wright's lawsuit against him,[124] allegedly resulting since, Dre raps, "bitch can't hang with the street." Tracing the turning point to Wright, more specifically, "hanging with a white bitch"—unnamed in the song's lyrics—Dre thus alludes to veteran music manager Jerry Heller,[1] [16] counting N.W.A among his clients.[123] [125] Wright and Heller—manager of Dre's first group, too, the World Class Wreckin' Cru—had cofounded Ruthless.[123] [125]
(In real life, feeling underpaid as an N.W.A rapper and Ruthless Records' prime record producer, Dre, although signed as exclusive to the label,[126] left it.[127] [128] Dre teamed with the D.O.C. and their manager Suge Knight to form Death Row Records.[128] [129] But Eazy sued, alleging that Suge had coerced the April 1991 release of three artists[128]—Dre with girlfriend Michel'le and the D.O.C.[130]—Death Row's legal jeopardy whereby the label lost Epic Records distribution under Sony Music.[19] [131] Then at Dre's offer of The Chronic with artwork and video concepts nearly complete, other labels stonewalled him, until Jimmy Iovine, excited by its sound, took on the legal imbroglio and took Death Row into Interscope Records distribution by Warner Music.[132] [94] By a legal settlement,[133] Interscope owed Ruthless part of Dre's earnings for six years,[134] and the independent giant Priority Records, an early distributor for Ruthless,[128] became The Chronic's official seller.[112] Eazy's musical retort[135]—"Real Muthaphuckkin G's"—became his biggest solo hit.[136])
Guest verses [edit]
Daz & Kurupt [edit]
Although both touting hedonism,[137] Daz, operating systematically, like a gigolo, stalks profit and eyes leisure, whereas Kurupt, derisively mistrustful, chases sheer thrills. Here, women resemble a faceless breed of indulgent but disloyal nymphomaniacs, who if shown men's affection would repay it by becoming the men's adversities as traitors and perhaps parasites.[7] [18]
Daz, before heralding Snoop's hook recital as "the anthem," advises best practices to grow relaxation time with "your homies." In Daz's protocol, "you pick a ho who got the cash flow," and "run up in them hos and grab the cash and get your dash on." Once the hook soon closes, "Then I hops in my coupé to make a quick run," Kurupt adds, "To the sto'—to get me a 4-O."
Kurupt, out to buy a 40 oz. bottle of malt liquor, gets paged by Snoop. "That must mean," Kurupt knows, "more hos." His outing to Snoop's hometown Long Beach—"just so I can meet a freak to lick me from my head to my feet," Kurupt beams—swiftly attracts, he prides, "bitches on my nuts like clothes." But, in his circle, "we don't love them hos": "a ho's a trick"; "a trick's a bitch."[138]
Snoop Dogg [edit]
Snoop skims a saga of finding himself as "a nigga on sprung," "up in them guts like every single day," and "in love like a motherfucker," walking into his debacle with her, "a bitch named Mandy May."[7] Early on, despite "the homies" advising him that she was "no good," he had "figured that niggas wouldn't trip with mine," his being, after all, "the maniac in black, Mr. Snoop Eastwood."[139] But, "on a hot, sunny day," his "nigga D.O.C." and "homie Dr. Dre," retrieving him from a jail stint, pose, "Snoop, we got news."[7]
Now wise to her "tricking" during his "county blues," Snoop, who "ain't been out a second," already must inflict some "chin checkin.' " So he pulls up to "my girl's house," he says, and will "kick in the door," but first goes, "Dre, pass the Glock."[7] At the doorstep, drawn to "look on the floor," Snoop finds, "It's my little cousin Daz, and he's fucking my ho"—a discovery that prompts Snoop to "uncock" the pistol.[7] Snoop admits, but affirms, "I'm heartbroke, but I'm still loc,"[140] and, at long last, swears Mandy May off: "Man, fuck a bitch."[7]
Jewell [edit]
Whereas "you can't deal," Jewell, "a bitch that's real," belts, "I don't give a fuck—about a bitch," and will "let her know that she can't fade this." Headily, Jewell boasts selfdetermination, "hanging with Death Row like it ain't no thang," the chime And I don't fuck a fuck!, a carnal skill "like a washing machine," and an oral appetite, if for "just the juicy ones," whereby she closes in some explicit detail.
Public reception [edit]
[edit]
"Bitches Ain't Shit," in predating the popular cultural effects of Snoop's debut solo album Doggystyle,[40] met a society that, despite misogynistic rap lyrics by Too Short and by 2 Live Crew since the 1980s,[141] still expected popular songs, rather, to romanticize women.[23] [52] Although too hardcore to be a single from The Chronic, this song was among its "unheralded favorites,"[142] sparking talk of "the beat"—that is, the entire instrumention—and of the lyrical "flow," especially Snoop's,[25] which, during the era, was very relaxed,[11] sometimes reminiscent of singing.[19] Interviewed, asked her sentiments on "Bitches Ain't Shit," one young black woman, echoing many women, commented, "I shouldn't like it, but I love the song 'cause it's the jam."[28] In October 1993, rap journalist Dream Hampton, remarking aside the controversy over it, called it, in the rap genre, "the best song on the best album of a pretty slow year."[4] And closing the year, rock critic Alan Light called the album a "sonic masterpiece."[11]
Since the November 1992 release of "Nuthin' But a 'G' Thang," the album's singles, lyrically milder, pervading popular radio, shifted the rap genre's spotlight, for the first time, from the East Coast to the West Coast.[2] [12] The Chronic, suddenly, "recast hip hop in the mold of L.A. rap."[95] Although in August 1993, months before Doggystyle's November release, Snoop was charged with involvement in a homicide,[11] Death Row Records' CEO Suge Knight bailed him out. [86] Snoop kept amassing popular appeal and emerged as one of America's biggest superstars.[11] [12] [86] Meanwhile, presaging Snoop's injection of misogyny into pop music's culture,[23] "Bitches Ain't Shit" became "notorious."[12] Altogether, this hidden track, a huge underground hit,[3] as explains its guest rapper Kurupt, "was one of the things that helped sell The Chronic the most."[96] And yet in 1993, it remained debated whether—while even some rap fans disputed that—rap songs, being strongly rhythmic but allegedly primitive and spoken, are actually music.[27]
In 1995, ethnomusicologist Kyra Gaunt observed, "The overwhelming perception of beats, rhythm, and the controversial use of sampling has led many to believe that rap is not music."[27] Meanwhile, many assessed rap lyrics in prose format.[27] A landmark in this dichotomous reaction was "Bitches Ain't Shit," whereby acclaim about "the beat" and "the flow"—melodic, too—met anxiety and criticism about its lyrical content.[25] [27] [30] "Most people are not conversant with even one way of talking about the formal and aesthetic aspects of music," Gaunt explained, "ultimately why articles on rap in major newspapers only focus on the lyrics of Snoop Doggy Dogg."[27] "What else can they communicate to a poorly conversant music public? How do you describe for a newspaper deadline the interaction of meter and rhythmic units of time and a particular flow of those rhythms that defines Snoop's style? How"—Gaunt posed—"do you describe the way rap music is constructed, when the general public does not accept, nor can they verify to themselves or others, whether it is music or not?"[27]
Public opposition [edit]
The runup [edit]
All in 1990, many rap records gained the Parental Advisory label,[143] Newsweek smeared rappers as, in one reading, "ignorant black men who scream obscene threats,"[144] and in Florida a federal judge, triggering ban laws, ruled a rap album, As Nasty as They Wanna Be, obscene, US history's first in music.[145] But, hearing the lewd party music in court, jurors laughed, and acquitted the group, 2 Live Crew.[145] By contrast, recorded amid the 1992 Los Angeles riots, The Chronic reflects this climate[95] [107]—anger, angst, and mayhem,[89] present in Dre's life, too[90] [146]—interspersed by visions of leisurely life for a West Coast rap "G."[33] [42] For the December 1992 album release by Death Row Records, its intermediary label, Interscope Records—cued by its own parent, Time Warner's major label, Warner Music[147] [148]—had Dre remove the track "Mr. Officer,"[107] [117] whose hook wishes a policeman's death.[117] [149] In October 1992, rapper Tupac Shakur, Interscope Records, and Time Warner had been sued for the April 11 fatal shooting of a Texas Highway Patrol officer.[150]
In June 1992, homicide on an undercover, corrupt detective already themed Dre's debut solo single "Deep Cover,"[151] a hit issued in April—from Dick Griffey's SOLAR Records, a soul label in Los Angeles, via Epic Records under major label Sony Music[152]—but national outrage arose, instead, about a March release by a side project of L.A.'s original gangsta rapper, Ice-T.[123] "Cop Killer," on his band Body Count's eponymous album of heavy metal music, was condemned by US Vice President Dan Quayle, US President George H. W. Bush, and the NRA.[153] Time Warner, also owning the Six Flags amusement parks, faced boycott threats.[154] By August, about 1 000 stores withdrew the album.[153] Sire Records, whose roster included Madonna as well as Ice-T since his 1987 debut in major distribution, cancelled his new rap album.[155] In January 1993, Sire's owner, Warner Brothers Records[156]—itself owned by Warner Music—freed all Body Count artists from contract.[153] Yet after The Chronic, despite a related, civilian homicide in June 1993,[157] opposition regrouped about misogyny.[158]
Harlem rallies [edit]
On Sunday, May 9, 1993, in his Mother's Day sermon, senior pastor Calvin Butts—leading the Abyssinian Baptist Church, in New York City's Harlem section—vowing a symbolic act, solicited offending music samples.[159] Butts thus became the first black public figure to decry gangsta rap.[38] On Saturday, June 5, amid a few hundred supporters outside of Abyssinian—historically the city's largest and preeminent black church[160]—Reverend Butts, as vowed, mounted a steamroller.[161] But dozens of counterprotesters, decrying censorship, blocked its path.[161] One shouted, "You're steamrolling our dreams," and "who we are."[162] Another alleged, "He's attacking us black rappers," not "the white power structure."[162] Skipping ahead to the preplanned finale, then, Butts and followers, taking the boxes of CDs and tapes unexpectedly unscathed, boarded a bus to Midtown Manhattan.[161]
On the sidewalk at 550 Madison Avenue, they laid, and some trampled, the boxes of gangsta rap.[161] There, at Sony Music headquarters,[163] "representative of an industry which," Butts felt, "laughs at black people all the way to the bank," he blared, over megaphone, "Recognize that this poison kills!"[164] But that summer, amid Harlem's wide tolerance, young males would casually wear T-shirts emblazoned with the hook Bitches ain't shit but hos and tricks.[4] Eventually, some two dozen women organized and protested.[4] On three days, aided by megaphone, they demanded that street vendors on Harlem's main thoroughfare, 125th Street, stop selling the shirts.[4] Such apparently sold on streets of the Los Angeles area, too, into at least 1995.[165] By then, Reverend Butts—who, romanticizing "the black community," had called gangsta rap "antithetical to what our culture represents"[38]—had faded from the battle. But in 1994, US Congress had invited Butts to speak about gangsta rap.[166]
National battle [edit]
In September 1993, C. Delores Tucker, chair and 1984 founder of the National Political Congress of Black Women, a lobbying group in Washington DC, reentered the public eye to take up the battle against gangsta rap.[38] [34] Swiftly becoming the battle's national leader, she expanded it against offensive rock lyrics, too, but especially targeted "Bitches Ain't Shit," The Chronic, and Death Row Records.[35] [36] Of a background in civil rights activism and state political office, Tucker demanded congressional hearings.[35] [41] Illinois representative Cardiss Collins, already chair of Congress' standing committee on commerce and consumer protection, convened them in 1994 on February 11.[35] [39] There, Tucker called gangsta rap, especially Snoop's, "pornographic smut."[38] [39] Congress convened again for the inquiry on May 5.[39] No government action ensued.[41] Tucker, a Democrat, soon teamed, however, with Republican conservative, onetime US education secretary, William Bennett.[36] [167]
In May 1995, Tucker and Bennett aired a TV commercial, in four major cities, attacking Time Warner,[168] and gained Senate majority leader Bob Dole, Republican presidential candidate, as ally.[169] Time Warner, though calling them political opportunists, divested from Death Row's intermediary, Interscope Records.[169] Interscope's 1991 cofounder Jimmy Iovine[170] was promptly dined, then, by four of the other five major labels,[171] the then Big Six's rivals to Warner Music.[156] At Interscope's options, Iovine reacted, "I'm just happy we got our company back."[147] Interscope chose MCA,[148] soon renamed Universal.[172] Suge Knight, too, expressed relief,[147] and his Death Row label, unfazed, steamrolled onward.[41] [173] In the late 1990s, as G-funk's era closed,[174] The Chronic grew into a popular classic.[48] [86] [175] And yet "Bitches Ain't Shit" would refuel recurring rebuke and debate about this slang term for women,[5] [49] such depictions of them, and, more broadly, its album's pivotal role in popularizing the values of idealized street gangsters.[c]
Female listeners [edit]
Too Short's lyrics, smearing types of women since 1985,[141] or even 1983,[178] were comparatively vague.[7] In 1993, "Bitches Ain't Shit" was arresting since it apparently "scorned all women,"[7] and "presented misogyny with an explanation."[142] Meanings of bitch and ho reflect the rappers' and listeners' specific context, maybe playful or even loving,[179] but, explicitly defining terms, this song scorns any trust or love for them.[7] [18] [138] A contemporary listener fond but at times uneasy, artist Saul Williams recalls, "Some people, women in particular, would be instantly offended, while others excused the lyrics because of Snoop's intoxicating flow. It became common to hear people say, almost apologetically, 'Oh, I just like the beat.' "[25]
Per ethnomusicologist Kyra Gaunt, "examples of women defending their love of the beats, but not the rhymes," "leaves them looking like their participation is all about the body, not the lyrics."[28] A woman, Gaunt estimates, "For females, the appeal of being able to move to the latest jam, and falling in love with the beats that drive one's body, is a learned desire," a descent to a sexist stereotype: "men work the intellect, and women work the body."[28] By contrast, rapper Jadakiss, a man, called women "the main ones" who "want to hear" this "entertainment" of Snoop rapping "that 'Bitches Ain't Shit' shit."[29] But at least some girls who ignored accosts by unknown, passerby boys were harassed, then, by chants from the hook.[177]
Dream Hampton, profiling Snoop in the September 1993 issue of rap's leading magazine, The Source, noted, "Women like him because of, not in spite of, his verse on 'Bitches Ain't Shit'."[10] Hampton, elsewhere, named it one of her own "two favorite songs this summer."[4] Still, in 1995, recalling her first writing assignment, to review the debut or 1990 album of H.W.A., or Hoes Wit Attitude,[180] Hampton recalled, "I was offended that they'd confirmed boys' most twisted notions of womanhood—that 'bitches ain't shit but hoes and tricks'."[181] In fact, during 2008, in Hampton's hometown, Detroit, one Piper Carter, launching an open mic for women to rap, held a female focus group, which scorned her proposed name, the Foundation, and advised the name Bitches Ain't Shit.[182]
In 1995, a New York City rap mogul promoted a party at Tavern on the Green.[58] "I was standing there," recalls Sarah Jones, a Brooklyn resident, "like some video ho, singing along to 'bitches ain't shit but hoes and tricks.' And I thought, 'Something has gone awry. This is not me. You know, I disagree!' "[58] On this epiphany, Jones, wistful for classic hip hop, wrote "Your Revolution"—partly, Your revolution will not happen between these thighs—which, as a performance poem, drew Off-Broadway invitation to The American Place Theater.[58] In 2000, she performed it on TV—HBO's Def Poetry Jam—prompting a version set to music. [60] Fining a radio station for playing it, the FCC deemed it indecent, but reversed once Jones became the first artist ever to sue the FCC.[60]
On the other hand, perhaps in the late 2010s, Amy Cook, a researcher of theatre arts,[183] in analyzing dynamics of role casting, listens repeatedly, appraises her own cognition, and—despite others' likelihood to cast her as "one of the various 'bitches' " in the song—soon finds, "Even I, a white female, feel impelled to join him, to sing along about how 'bitches ain't shit.' "[61] Nor is this mindless. Instead, "singing along, I take on the position of the powerful, the angry, the sad, the person aggrieved by 'bitches.' "[184] Further, amid the female/male distinction's social primacy, when facing such a "miscasting, or counter casting," Cook explains, "the spectators must consider the nature of their expectations."[61] And so Cook finds, in sum, "a cultural power in the counter casting."[61]
Cultural integration [edit]
Snoop effect [edit]
Dre's carefully crafted "G"—the sociable street gangsta ever at leisure, doing violence only on threats to his comforts and privileges[42]—spawned untold copycatting.[16] [86] And the "Bitches Ain't Shit" track, "the final wisdom Dr. Dre left us on The Chronic,"[176] lays bare the basic values of the aura,[185] refined in Snoop's breakthrough, early rap brand, intoxicated on alcohol and marijuana, mellow and debonair, but, while loyal to the homies, gunhappy and misogynistic.[11] [40] Amid the rap genre's snowballing corporate consolidation underway,[186] Snoop's persona spawned rap's massive commercialization, like his endorsements of St. Ides malt liquor and Tanqueray gin, in the 1990s.[40] Traditional R&B rapidly receded.[45] [46]
In 1999, rap magazine Ego Trip identified "16 Memorable Misogynist Rap Music Moments."[141] They date back to 1985: the pioneer, Too Short, still at #3, "The Bitch Sucks Dick."[141] Topping that, the #2 moment, is "Bitches Ain't Shit."[141] This trails only Snoop with, the next year, more male camaraderie and teamwork, [86] [142] now featuring Warren G, Nate Dogg, and, again, Kurupt: the Doggystyle track "Ain't No Fun (If the Homies Can't Have None)."[141] [187] Also never a single, yet another huge underground hit,[3] "Ain't No Fun" is often recalled with "Bitches Ain't Shit."[23] [30] [142] [188] The second seemingly fulfilled overnight what Snoop's first underground hit presaged: the end of popular music's insistence on idealizing women.[23] [52]
Female reply [edit]
Ahead of Beyoncé's iconic status solo, Vibe magazine profiled the lead singer's R&B group, Destiny's Child.[45] "Chockful of sophisticated, ball-busting, and often comical hits that berated brothers," the group's June 1999 or second album, The Writing's on the Wall, "earned the group reputations for being everything from gold-digging male bashers—a charge the girls heatedly deny—to new-millennium feminists out to challenge the bitches-ain't-shit posturing that plagued much of late-'90s R&B and hip hop," explains the February 2001 issue.[45] By contrast, in March 2000, rapper Trina's debut album Da Baddest Bitch delivered "sexually explicit tales riddled with braggadocio and vulgarity." [189] Late to retort The Chronic's hidden track, Trina rehashes the 1992 hook—rewording its fellatio directive into her cunnilingus directive—for her "Niggas Ain't Shit" song's hook.[190] But in 1996, rapper Lil' Kim, on her debut solo album, Hard Core, proclaimed herself, by a track name, the "Queen Bitch." [191] A July 2000 release, Lil' Kim's second album offers an intricate answer to "Bitches Ain't Shit."[5] [62]
Lil' Kim's 2000 song "Suck My Dick" is, in English professor Greg Thomas's view, an "anti-sexist faceoff" where Lil' Kim "talks back," delivering "a royal reply," to the 1992 "classic" and "flips its sexual script," such that ultimately, "Snoop and Dre get tricked themselves, lyrically."[62] Lil' Kim interpolates their 1992 hook's four bars only to finish her final verse and segue to her own hook, original.[62] Her hook, a duo with a man—his only vocals—is after each of her three verses.[192] In verse one, Lil' Kim identifies with enterprising, ghetto, intoxicated women, boasts of combat prowess and sexual power, but poses, "Imagine if I was dude, and hitting cats from the back." Soon aping a man, she is still rapping, " 'Ey, yo, yo, come here so I can bust in your mouth"—how she closes verse one—when a man, starting the hook over her vocals, yells, " 'Ey, yo, come here, bitch."[192] Thus dragged into the hook, she snaps, "Nigga, fuck you," is asked, "Why you acting like a bitch?"—her reply, 'Cause y'all niggas ain't shit—and her hook's own fellatio directive, hypothetical, is what, "if I was a dude, I'd tell y'all."[192]
In verse two, Lil' Kim, supplier of many intoxicants, wants only money and cunnilingus, but "got this nigga now" who, tipsy, "asked me did I love him." Aping a demeaning vocal sample in 2 Live Crew's hook of "Me So Horny"—on 1989 album As Nasty as They Wanna Be—Lil' Kim replied, "I love you long time," got "some head" and "the piss sucked out" without requiting, and secretly recorded it to show her "girls."[62] Ending verse two, she brags, "Niggas know he gave me all his cake"—a double entendre for money—"I peeled the Benji's off and threw the singles back in his face."[62] Thomas reads, "The male 'nigga' is now"—derided by the stripper—"the 'trick' who gets done."[62] In verse three, a "dude named Jaleel," seeming a rich socialite, offered Lil' Kim "10 grand just to belly dance" and "come all over his pants," but "showed up with his homeboy named Julio," and "was a phony." Recalling her gun in his mouth—Fool, give me my money!—she relabels him "just a nigga frontin'." She chimes, "Niggas ain't shit, but they can still trick," and limits them to sucking till she climaxes and jumps up.[192]
Pop revised [edit]
In 2003, Lil' Kim reemerged with her third album and her "Queen B" persona, leading American women's latest effort—perhaps first attempted around 1970—to reappropriate the word bitch,[193] this time amid a lingering "Bitches Ain't Shit" ethos.[5] Absorbing the label bitch preempted its use against women, who reframed it to buoy their own ambitions.[5] But since their 1996 debut albums, both Lil' Kim and, slightly newer, her popular rap contemporary female, Foxy Brown—two rappers who would slur each other as various types of "bitch"[5]—had relied on profane boasts of vanity and lewdness, avarice and violence, more gangsta rap.[35] [49] Allegedly, as models of womanhood, both rappers were "resurrecting Jezebel"—pernicious stereotypes of women, especially of black women—and so, in a roundabout,[193] were supplementing "Bitches Ain't Shit."[35] (In 1995, the beautiful, indomitable protagonist of the 1974 blaxploitation film Foxy Brown regained currency,[194] after a cameo in a Snoop music video of 1994.[195])[196] Lil' Kim's persona, however, has stressed loyalty—especially to her one "nigga"—and in some ways has expanded women's sense of liberties.[49] [50] Per a 2009 analysis, her 2000 song "Sucky My Dick"[192]—retorting "Bitches Ain't Shit"—lyrically "moves beyond any rigid gender or sexual identity."[62]
Meanwhile, during 2002, certain singers, rather, including Usher and Alicia Keyes, were leading a revitalization of R&B's soul tradition, after a decade of the rap genre, with its "Bitches Ain't Shit" model, invading the R&B genre.[46] But by 2005, in the rap genre itself, "Bitches Ain't Shit" had seemingly stood, as New York rapper Jadakiss would hyperbolize, "since the beginning of time."[29] And yet, in 2012, at The Chronic's 20th anniversary, Billboard magazine still found, at this track, "an elephant in the room here: the misogyny is ugly and thick, even for a rap record," as "women are treated like disposable sperm receptacles."[1] The album was, by then, both a rap classic and a pop classic, anyway,[175] roundly celebrated at its 25th anniversary.[197] "A misogynistic hip-hop masterpiece and relic of the past," wrote one music journalist during the commemoration.[12] Another journalist, meanwhile, called it "rap's world-building masterpiece."[94] In 2020, the Library of Congress enshrined it in the National Recording Registry.[48] By then, music artists of over 40 songs had borrowed from "Bitches Ain't Shit."[63] In the process, it had become, additionally, "a gorgeous piano ballad"[67]—a 2008 description of the 2005 cover version by rock artist Ben Folds[66]—which entered the main popular songs chart, the Billboard Hot 100.[68]
Ben Folds cover [edit]
"Bitches Ain't Shit" | ||||
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Single by Ben Folds | ||||
from the album Supersunnyspeedgraphic, the LP | ||||
A-side | "Landed" | |||
Released | March 8, 2005 | |||
Genre |
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Length |
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Label | Epic | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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Ben Folds singles chronology | ||||
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Development [edit]
In 2005, American singer, songwriter, and pianist Ben Folds, an alternative rock artist, who formerly led the band Ben Folds Five, had a new solo album, Songs for Silverman, scheuled for April 26 release by Epic Records.[64] For the album's track "Landed"—the lead single, released on February 1[64]—Folds sought a B side.[66] Having wanted since college to put a melody to rap group Public Enemy's 1990 song "Can't Do Nuttin' for Ya, Man," Folds at last began work on it.[66] But soon, he "found it too symmetrical for a good melody," effecting "too much of a Cat in the Hat vibe to sound serious with sad chords."[66] [198]
Folds sought in his rap collection, then, a classic more divergent from English poetry's classic metre, iambic pentameter.[66] Folds found "Bitches Ain't Shit," chose only Dr. Dre's and Snoop Dogg's lyrics"[14]—thus omitting the boasting and gloating in Daz's, Kurupt's or Jewell's verses—and, Folds says, "just added pretty chords and one of my best melodies."[66] In the result, Snoop's infamous hook, Bitches ain't shit but hos and tricks, and so on,[14] mates with only Dre's and Snoop's verses—two sagas of endured betrayal—letting the rendition sound, in Folds's estimation, "like a sad Johnny Cash song with a lot more vulgarity."[66]
Composition [edit]
The cover version, beyond lacking heavy bass riff and thumps as well as the instrumental sample from the 1986 rap hit "The Bridge,"[106] is a new composition.[199] With piano, drum set, and bass guitar,[200] it fits the Ben Folds repertoire familiar to fans, except by eventually summoning a synthesizer at high pitch,[201] evoking the original's eerie ring nearly ubiquitous, "the funky worm."[77] When the Snoop verse recalls abrupt separation from his girlfriend by jail time, the original—simply retaining the funky worm—reintroduces "The Bridge" sample, whereas the cover inserts a bridge, eight bars, the sole section of the funky worm's mimic. Later in the Snoop verse, freed on bail, nearing her house, he foresees catching her "tricking." In that span during the original, instrumental phrases alter the bass riff, first silenced a few bars, then restored but truncated each bar, then back to normal with Snoop's pistol uncocking at the shock of her sex partner's identity. The cover, instead, first truncates the riff, then injects instrumental silences into the shocking discovery, which prompts complete silence.
The cover also effects two hooks, copying the infamous Snoop hook and creating a Dre hook. More specifically, the Dre verse, the first verse in both versions, loses its closing line—So recognize, and pass to Daz—while instrumentalizing the resulting last four lines as a second hook.[202] Altogether, Folds, playing the keys, sings the original hook solo, then sings Dre's verse solo, which closes as a second hook joined in vocals by drummer Lindsay Jamieson and bass guitarist Jared Reynolds.[200] Jamieson then sings Snoop's verse solo, followed by a silence, whereupon the trio repeats Snoop's hook. Thereupon, Folds again sings Dre's verse—this time atop brighter keys and livelier drums—while Jamieson and Reynolds add backing, accenting vocals throughout. Again, the Dre verse closes like a hook of four lines, across four bars, sung by the trio.[202] Then the Dre hook's first line, one bar, becomes a refrain, Bitches can't hang with the street, sung every other bar till song end. (In the original, after Snoop's final hook recital, a differing Dre refrain, Bitches ain't shit, echoes across every fourth bar till song end.)
Reception [edit]
Between the February 1 "Landed" release and the April 26 album release, Folds directly released[203] "Bitches Ain't Shit," on March 8, through only Apple's iTunes.[64] [204] Soon, his own website presold it on a forthcoming, expanded album version issued on vinyl, the LP format.[64] When performing the cover live, rather, "Ben Folds sitting at a piano," says an observer, "evokes an old-fashioned crooner or lounge act."[71] [205]
When opening for pop rock artist John Mayer's nationwide tour atop the pop charts, though, "I was definitely causing problems," Folds admits.[66] "But the biggest problem," he adds, "was one particular song, which was becoming a very successful single for me."[66] The audiences' booing at his "Bitches Ain't Shit" rendition—whose own genre, rock, renders even the word niggas ostentatious[206]—was spurring Folds to replay it once or twice more, until the crowd quieted or, as he demanded, sang along with it.[66]
Whereas many cover versions stand unto themselves, the irony of this cover—swapping genres, subcultures, and largely races[206] [199]—hinges on recognition of the original version, gangsta rap, a stark contrast.[70] [71] Thereby, the cover also parodies the singer's "whiteness,"[65] and may highlight the listener's.[71] At shows of Ben Folds headlining, "The cackles and singing from the audiences," writes an appraising researcher,[183] "suggest that they are hailed by the song, welcomed in, and engaged to be a part of it. And they like it."[71] A rock critic calls the original version, which originally was a hidden track closing Dr. Dre's 1992 rap album, "a sumptuous slice of Olympic-level sexism that's almost as memorable as Ben Folds' emotional, piano-ballad version."[21]
As of 2020, Folds has had five songs appear on the popular Billboard charts, starting with the single "Brick," by his earlier band, and altogether spanning 1998 to 2015.[68] Both in 2005, two of the five have charted on the main popular songs chart, the Billboard Hot 100.[68] "Landed," an A side highly promoted by Epic Records' major label Sony Music,[66] spending two weeks on the Hot 100, peaked at #77 on February 26.[68] The B side, which "features" his then usually collaborating bass guitarist Jared Reynolds and drummer Lindsay Jamieson as "Mr. Reynolds" and "Lin-Z,"[200] a rendition ironically sentimental,[70] "had spread by word of mouth and was now doubling my audiences," Folds explains, although it raised the proportion of "drunken college boys," Folds noticed.[72] On the Hot 100 for one week, the cover held #71 on April 2.[68] In October 2006, it was reissued on a Ben Folds compilation album of covers, Supersunnyspeedgraphic, the LP.[207] And in 2008, the book publisher Rough Guides anthologized it among "the best music you've never heard."[67]
Retirement [edit]
During 2008's first half, feeling that the "Bitches Ain't Shit" cover had made enough rounds, Folds, retiring it, "was choked up," he later said.[69] But, lest the next audience feel let down, he played it—planning to honor its retirement afterward—once more, "somehow even more moving for me," he would recall.[69] Yet at the next show, abroad in Germany, lest this crowd feel cheated, then, he played the retired song again.[69] Folds thus accepted its unretirement.[69] "So it's been an emotional roller coaster," he remarked to a confused interviewer in July 2008.[69] About 10 years onward, the singer's live sets still retained this cover.[21] [70] Around the 2017 homages to the Dr. Dre album's 25th anniversary,[94] the Folds audiences received anecdotes instead about the celebrated cover version.[71] "I've almost been beaten up a couple of times over this," Folds prefaced, "once by a kind of uptight hippie woman who said it was demeaning to women."[71] He referred her to Dr. Dre, "the lyrics department," Folds recalled.[71]
In the ensuing live performance, emergence of the original's hook, a hook notorious in 1993,[4] could still move the crowd to shout, "So true!"[71] But soon, ceasing to perform it—which had "never got easier for me to sing," and "always felt so very wrong", although "that was also part of what made it interesting"—he began ignoring requests to play it.[72] "Music should work to ease social tensions, not throw gasoline on the fire, even inadvertently," Folds explained in 2019.[72] Folds speculated about "someone that wasn't white, in my audience, hearing a bunch of white people singing the N word—and in this climate?"[73] In Folds's estimation, "they might feel like they need to run for the exit."[73] Then in June 2020, amid America's sociopolitical upheaval via the George Floyd protests and the Black Lives Matter movement's nationally pressing allegations of ubiquitous racism violating blacks, Ben Folds announced that he would ask the record label "to take the next step and remove the recording from any streaming platforms where it has been placed."[74]
References [edit]
Notes [edit]
- ^ [10] [26] [27] [28] [29] [30]
- ^ [7] [18] [23] [30] [35] [40] [51] [52] [53] [54] [55] [56] [57]
- ^ [7] [8] [13] [16] [18] [23] [28] [35] [40] [43] [52] [53] [54] [57] [176] [177]
Citations [edit]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Thomas Golianopoulous, "Dr. Dre, 'The Chronic' at 20: Classic track-by-track review", Billboard.com, Prometheus Global Media, LLC, 15 Dec 2012.
- ^ a b c d e Wayne Marshall, "Hip-hop's irrepressible refashionability: Phases in the cultural production of black youth", in Orlando Patterson with Ethan Fosse, eds., The Cultural Matrix: Understanding Black Youth (Cambridge, MA & London, UK: Harvard University Press, 2015), p 184.
- ^ a b c Soren Baker, The History of Gangster Rap (New York: Abrams Image, 2018), indexing "Bitches Ain't Shit".
- ^ a b c d e f g h Dream Hampton, "Dreaming America—hip hop culture", Spin, 1993 Oct;9(7):111.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Aine McGlynn, "Lil' Kim", in Mickey Hess, ed., Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture, Volume 2 (Westport, CT & London: Greenwood Press, 2007), pp 454–455 on women reappropriating the word bitch, which in "Bitches Ain't Shit" is synonymous with the word woman, and on Lil' Kim touting herself "Queen Bitch". Yet pp 453–454 skim feud between Lil' Kim and Foxy Brown while slurring each other as sorts of "bitch".
- ^ Eithne Quinn, Nuthin' But a "G" Thang: The Culture and Commerce of Gangsta Rap (New York: Columbia University Press, 2005), p 117.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mitchell S. Jackson, Survival Math: Notes on an All-American Family (New York: Scribner, 2019), p 125.
- ^ a b Eithne Quinn, " 'Who's the mack?': The performativity and politics of the pimp figure in gangsta rap", Journal of American Studies, 2000 Apr 1;34(1):115–136, p 116.
- ^ Snoop's persona would evolve such that in 2007, he appeared in his own reality TV show, Snoop Dogg's Father Hood, as a family man with his wife and daughter [Joseph A. Kotarba, Bryce Merrill, J. Patrick Williams & Phillip Vannini, Understanding Society through Popular Music, 2nd edn. (New York & London: Routledge, 2013), p 96].
- ^ a b c d e f Dream Hampton, "G Down", The Source, 1993 Sep;(48):64–70, archived at dreamhampton.com.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Alan Light, "The year in hip hop: Hard reign", Vibe, 1993 Dec & 1994 Jan;1(4):74–75, p 75.
- ^ a b c d e f g Stereo Williams, "When Snoop Dogg became the most wanted man in America", TheDailyBeast.com, The Daily Beast Company LLC, 18 Nov 2018.
- ^ a b David Farber, Crack: Rock Cocaine, Street Capitalism, and the Decade of Greed (Cambridge, UK: University of Cambridge Press, 2019), p 107.
- ^ a b c d e In the hook's four lines, Snoop apparently raps, "Bitches ain't shit but hos and tricks / Lick on these nuts and suck the dick / Gets the fuck out after you're done / Then I hops in my coupé to make a quick run" [Sound recording, "Bitches Ain't Shit", Dr. Dre @ YouTube "Official Artist Channel", 19 Apr 2020]. Yet written sources may slightly depart, for example, Mitchell Jackson, Survival Math (New York: Scribner, 2019), p 125, in the final line: " — / — / — / And I hops in my ride to make a quick run". MetroLyrics, licensed to share lyrics online, matches Jackson ["Dr. Dre—'Bitches Ain't Shit' lyrics", MetroLyrics.com, CBS Interactive Inc., 2020]. The parlance generally reads a quick run to mean a "quick trip" for more intoxicant, as in Kurupt's verse, picking up from the hook by indicating a trip to the store for a 40 oz. bottle of malt liquor.
- ^ a b "In fact, the first 'bitch' referred to in the song is Eazy-E. This does not decrease the misogyny so much as increase the 'heat' thrown at Eazy-E, who is cast as nothing but a ho and a trick" [Amy Cook, Building Character: The Art and Science of Casting (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2018), p 166].
- ^ a b c d Jim Irvin & Colin McLear, eds., The Mojo Collection: The Ultimate Music Companion, 4th edn. (Edinburgh: Canongate Books, 2007), p 587.
- ^ The tale of betrayal in Snoop's 1992 verse overlaps, however, with his cousin Nate Dogg's own 1991 tale of having, in real life, caught his own girlfriend having sex with his own cousin. Lola Ogunnaike, "Dogg day afternoon", Vibe, 2001 Dec;9(12):156–160, profiles the singer, himself iconic in the rap genre, a member of Snoop's original music trio, named 213. Soon before returning to Long Beach, California, and reuniting 213, Nate's career in the Marines was terminated over a singular incident. Ogunnaike explains, "For all his macho posturing, bitches-ain't-shit-bravado, and pity-the-fool-who-falls-in-love-with-a-trick propaganda, at his core, Nathaniel Hale is a sensitive guy, perhaps even emotional." "Nate Dogg, the character, was born out of pain a decade ago, in the wee hours of the morning when he caught his then-girlfriend in a compromising position with his cousin. 'I opened the door and saw two bodies clapping together.' The clapping was silenced when Nate cocked his pistol. 'I pulled my weapon out and had a talk with them for two days. We cried together for two days, and then I let them go,' he says. His voice in a whisper now, 'Nate wanted to kill everybody. Nathaniel let them go.' " [p 160]
- ^ a b c d e While citing "Bitches Ain't Shit" to discuss gangsta rap's view of women, Davarian Baldwin, a cultural analyst concentrating on urban black Americans, interprets, "The degree of anxiety expressed in these heavy-handed fantasies explains both an intense desire and distrust of women and the way in which their (in)subordination disrupts racial authenticity" [D. L. Baldwin, "Black empires, white desires: The spatial politics of identity in the age of hip-hop", in Murry Forman & Mark Anthony Neal, eds., That's the Joint!: The Hip-hop Studies Reader (New York: Routledge, 2004), p 167]. Whatever that interpretation's merits, Baldwin, mistaking the hook's first line for the song's very title, and citing no other lyrics, asserts, "African-American women are often portrayed as welfare queens making babies merely to stay on public assistance or 'gold-diggers' who use their sexuality to take black men's meager earnings' (Kelly, 1994, 217). This narrative can be found in Dr. Dre's song 'Bitches Ain't Shit But Hoes and Tricks,' or E-40's 'Captain Save a Hoe,' in which men are chastised for taking care of a woman and her children, especially if they aren't his own" [p 167]. With a similar claim is Donnetrice C. Allison, a communications professor and an Africana professor, also chair of the "Africana Studies Program" at Stockton University, in New Jersey, who specializes in "Media Images of African Americans, Hip Hop Culture and Identity" [School of Arts & Humanities, "Program chairs", Stockton.edu, visited 24 Aug 2021]. As editor of an essay collection, Allison wrote, "Dr. Dre released a song that would become an ongoing characterization of black women. The song was called 'Bitches Ain't Shit', and it implied that all women—particularly women of color, given that they were his primary reference group growing up in the predominanty black and Latino Compton, California—were only good for sex, and only out for money" [D. C. Allison, "Introduction", Black Women's Portrayals on Reality Television: The New Sapphire (Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2016), p xviii]. More accurately, however, the "Bitches Ain't Shit" lyrics are as follow: Dre overlooks women; Daz exploits women to obtain both sex and money from women; Kurupt pursues sexual thrills and social esteem from women while disparaging women; Snoop, in love with a woman, his girlfriend, planned to assault the man she was cheating with, and is heartbroken; Jewell, a woman, deflecting critics or rivals, boasts of autonomy, indifference, willful affiliation with the record label, and fulfilling her own appetites. Film and music critic Nathan Rabin instead names the two, different Snoop songs that both Baldwin and Allison perhaps conflate, Dre's The Chronic track "Bitches Ain't Shit" and Snoop's Doggystyle track "Ain't No Fun", two massively influential, underground hits and misogynistic anthems that feature Kurupt [N. Rabin, The Big Rewind: A Memoir Brought to You by Pop Culture (New York: Scribner, 2009), p 91]. Rabin explains, "Gangsta rap taught us that the worst thing any man could do was to fall in love with a woman", who then "can break your heart", and "can turn your world upside down. But if gangsta rap teaches anything, it's that a bitch ain't nothing but a bitch and a ho ain't nothing but a ho. The Chronic preaches that bitches ain't shit but hos and tricks. Kurupt extrapolated on this point when"—in "Ain't No Fun", a year later—"he legendarily reasoned, 'If Kurupt gave a fuck about a bitch, I'd always be broke / I'd never have no motherfucking endo to smoke' " [p 91].
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ben Westhoff, "The making of The Chronic", LA Weekly, 19 Nov 2012.
- ^ EAM, "Dr. Dre: 'Bitches Ain't Shit' from The Chronic", HiddenSongs.com, visited 16 Jan 2020.
- ^ a b c d e Mark Beaumont, "Remember the '90s fad for 'hidden tracks' on CDs? Here are 10 of the best from Nirvana, Blur, Dre and more (and where to find them)", § "6: Dr Dre—'Bitches Ain't Shit' ", NME.com, BandLab Technologies, 5 Apr 2019.
- ^ James G. Spady, Charles G. Lee & H. Samy Alim, Street Conscious Rap (Philadelphia: Black History Museum, UMUM/LOH Pub., 1999), p 538.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Nathan Rabin, The Big Rewind: A Memoir Brought to You by Pop Culture (New York: Scribner, 2009), p 91.
- ^ Gwendolyn D. Pough, "What it do, Shorty? Women, hip hop, and a feminist agenda", Black Women, Gender + Families, 2007 Fall;1(2):78–99, quoting Karen R. Good, "Tricked out", Vibe Vixen, 2005 Spring;1(1):29–30, p 30.
- ^ a b c d e f Saul Williams, The Dead Emcee Scrolls: The Lost Teachings of Hip-Hop (New York: Pocket Books, 2006), pp xv–xvi.
- ^ Genell Goodson, "Mail", Vibe, 1993 Nov;1(3):17.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Kyra D. Gaunt, "African American women between hopscotch & hip hop: 'Must be the music (that's turnin' me on)' ", in Angharad N. Valdivia, ed., Feminism, Multiculturalism, and the Media: Global Diversities (Thousand Oaks, CA, London & New Delhi: Sage Publications, 1995), pp 285–287, esp. p 286.
- ^ a b c d e Kyra D. Gaunt, The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-Dutch to Hip-Hop (New York & London: New York University Press, 2006), pp 120–121.
- ^ a b c Byron Hurt, director, Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes (USA: Media Education Foundation, 2006), a "documentary that tackles issues of masculinity, sexism, violence and homophobia in today's hip-hop culture" ["Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats & Rhymes: The film about hip-hop, the issues", PBS.org, ITVS, visited 21 Jun 2020]. A 2006 transcript by Media Education Foundation, and archived by University of North Texas, University Libraries, at Library.UNT.edu, quotes rapper Jadakiss: "This shit is entertainment. If it was so bad like that, Snoop wouldn't have no fans or nothing like that. Snoop has been talking that 'Bitches Ain't Shit' shit since the beginning of time. They want to hear that. They the main ones out there" [p 14].
- ^ a b c d e Amanda Seales, Small Doses: Potent Truths for Everyday Use (New York: Abrams Image, 2019), "Bitches+Ain't+Shit" p 20.
- ^ a b Kevin L. Ferguson, Pop Goes the Decade: The Nineties (Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2019), p 130.
- ^ Murray Forman, The 'Hood Comes First: Race, Space, and Place in Rap and Hip-Hop (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2002), pp 182 & 279.
- ^ a b c d e f Marcus Reeves, Somebody Scream!: Rap Music's Rise to Prominence in the Aftershock of Black Power (New York: Faber and Faber, Inc., 2008), p 142. In part, Reeves explains, "Laced with memorable hooks and beats grooving on cruise control, these songs sold gangsta life not as a violent reaction to a cruel world but as a state of mind, a posture, an attitude". More specifically, "the true force behind The Chronic phenomenon was the pop-crafted ingenuity of its singles", mainly "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang" and "Let Me Ride". Not fleeing the police on grim streets, Dre's gangstas were cruising sunny boulevards in modified 1964 Chevy Impalas, showcasing them at street rallies, mingling at barbecues, and, after nightfall, drinking malt liquor at parties, at any moment puffing weed, altogether, at that time, "a glamorous brand of gangsta rap". Reeves adds, "Whereas the threatening sounds Dre created for N.W.A were shunned by radio and television, the smoothed-out production on The Chronic, sounding more like R&B than hip hop, made hardcore attractive to these outlets. As videos from Dre began to win regular play outside of Yo! MTV Raps, The Chronic solidified the new crossover, especially among hip hop's growing pop audience—white youngsters whose silent majority, since the rise of P.E. and N.W.A, indirectly shaped and affirmed this direction with its monetary support" [p 143].
- ^ a b Richard S. Dunham & Michael Oneal, "Gunning for the gangstas", Business Week, 1995 Jun 18;3249:41.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Lori A. Tribbet-Williams, "Saying nothing, talking loud: Lil' Kim and Foxy Brown, caricatures of African-American womanhood", Southern California Review of Law and Women's Studies, 2000 Fall;10(1):167–207, part III: "Jezebel of contemporary times", § A: "Rap music: Resurrecting Jezebel", pp 186–187.
- ^ a b c Carlos D. Morrison & Celnisha L. Dangerfield, "Tupac Shakur", in Mickey Hess, ed., Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture, Volume 2 (Westport, CT & London: Greenwood Press, 2007), p 398.
- ^ United States House of Representatives, Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Commerce, Consumer Protection and Competitiveness, Music Lyrics and Interstate Commerce, 11 Feb 1994.
- ^ a b c d e Bryan J. McCann, The Mark of Criminality: Rhetoric, Race, and Gangsta Rap in the War-on-Crime Era (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2017), pp 80–81: Butts quote p 80, Tucker quote p 81, author elaborating on following pages.
- ^ a b c d Serial No. 103–112, Music Lyrics and Commerce: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Commerce, Consumer Protection, and Competitiveness of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives,103rd Congress, Second Session, February 11 and May 5, 1994 (Washington DC: Government Printing Office, 1994), pp 4–7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Travis L. Gosa, "The fifth element: Knowledge", in Justin A. Williams, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Hip-Hop (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015), p 56.
- ^ a b c d Kyra D. Gaunt, The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-Dutch to Hip-Hop (New York & London: New York University Press, 2006), p 119, although Gaunt misidentifies Tucker as a "Congresswoman".
- ^ a b c d e Bryan J. McCann, The Mark of Criminality: Rhetoric, Race, and Gangsta Rap in the War-on-Crime Era (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2017), p 70–, for several pages, McCann swiftly unveils and deciphers the cultural subtexts of the G-funk aesthetic.
- ^ a b c James C. Howell, The History of Street Gangs in the United States: Their Origins and Transformations (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2015), pp 83–85, which find the G-funk innovation, superseding N.W.A, employing videos depicting "acclaimed and imagined places" showcasing street gangs' hubs in South Central Los Angeles, Compton, and Long Beach. But unlike warring Crips and Bloods sets, "G-funk artists remained united in messaging and representing, creating a profound cultural force (with the benefit of broadcast media)", blending "two overarching behavioral types, the nihilist gangbanger and the enterprising hustler", "stressing 'gratuitous, individualist pleasures of the moment' (Quinn, 2005, p 145). What is most remarkable is that G-funk music became mainstream. Dr. Dre's 'Nuthin' but a G thang' was arguably the 'hardest rap' to ever rank high (#2) on the Billboard Hot 100 chart". But gangsta rap's breakout period, 1989 to 1993, saw massive growth in black incarceration, mainly via illicit drug sales, and gangsta rap's popularization spurred unprecedented growth of black street gangs.
- ^ Kim Osorio, Straight from The Source: An Expose from the Former Editor-in-Chief of the Hip-Hop Bible (New York: Pocket Books, 2008), p 15.
- ^ a b c d e Lola Ogunnaike, "Divas live", Vibe, 2001 Feb;9(2):74–81, p 76.
- ^ a b c Craig Seymour, "The re-energizers", Vibe, 2002 Feb;10(2):68–73, specifically p 69 on traditional R&B's struggle amid rap's influence on R&B in the prior decade, p 70 on Alicia Keys, more in line with traditional R&B, "upping the ante with her breakout debut", and p 73 citing "Bitches Ain't Shit" as the ethos that these R&B artists countervail.
- ^ Richard Pfefferman, Strategic Reinvention in Popular Culture: The Encore Impulse (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), p 53.
- ^ a b c Sophie Smith, "Dr Dre's 'The Chronic' added to National Recording Registry", uDiscoverMusic.com, Universal Music Group, 25 Mar 2020.
- ^ a b c d Stephane Dunn, "Baad Bitches" and Sassy Supermamas: Black Power Action Films (Urbana & Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2008), pp 26–34.
- ^ a b Clover Hope, "The meaning of Lil' Kim", PitchFork.com, Condé Nast, 26 Jan 2021.
- ^ Michelle Inderbitzin, Kristin A. Bates & Randy R. Gainey, Deviance and Social Control: A Sociological Perspective (Thousand Oaks, CA & London: Sage Publications, 2021), pp 124–125.
- ^ a b c d William L. Van Deburg, Hoodlums: Black Villains and Social Bandits in American Life (Chicago & London: University of Chicago Press, 2004), pp 209 & 269.
- ^ a b Tricia Rose, "There are bitches and hoes", The Hip-Hop Wars (New York: Perseus, 2008), collected in Gail Dines & Jean M. Humez, eds., Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Critical Reader, 3rd edn. (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc., 2011), p 321.
- ^ a b Editorial, "Women and 'gangsta' rap", Glamour, 1994 Jun;92(6):93, republished as "Gangsta rap promotes violence against women", in Carol Wekesser, ed., Violence in the Media (San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press, 1995), p 163.
- ^ Mahaliah Ayana Little, "Why don't we love these hoes? Black women, popular culture, and the contemporary hoe archetype", in Trimiko Melancon & Joanne M. Braxton, eds., Black Female Sexualities (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 2015), indexing "Bitches+Ain't+Shit" "Bitches Ain't Shit".
- ^ Donnetrice C. Allison, ed., "Introduction", Black Women's Portrayals on Reality Television: The New Sapphire (Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2016), p xviii.
- ^ a b Ajay Kumar Ojha, "Does 'gangsta rap' music cross good judgment lines and decency values?", Masters Theses (Eastern Illinois University), 2000:1466, offers a relevant sketch, perhaps useful, particularly on its pp 8–9 & 15, as well as a bibliography revealing contemporary journalism. But this paper states that Tucker, before being sued by Death Row in August 1995, had sued Death Row—a claim seemingly absent from sources. In 1997, though, Tucker did sue rapper Tupac Shakur's personal estate for defamation on his 1996 Death Row album All Eyez on Me [Chuck Philips, "Rap critic sues Shakur's estate for defamation", Los Angeles Times, 1 Aug 1997], and soon sued both Newsweek and Time magazines for their reporting that her lawsuit blamed Shakur for ruining her sex life [Anick Jesdanun, " 'Gansta' rap critic sues magazines", AP News, 1 Oct 1997]. Tucker's lawsuit was later dismissed [Elaine Woo, "C. DeLores Tucker, 78; civil rights pioneer led a spirited campaign against gangsta rap", Los Angeles Times, 14 Oct 2005].
- ^ a b c d Chris Nutter, "I'm every woman", Vibe, 2000 Aug;8(6):90.
- ^ Athena Elafros, "Feminism in rap music", in Mickey Hess, ed., Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture, Volume 1 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2007), pp 200–201.
- ^ a b c Alix Olson, ed., Word Warriors: 35 Women Leaders in the Spoken Word Revolution (Emeryville, CA: Seal Press, 2007), pp 4–5 discuss Sarah Jones's success litigating the FCC, whereas pp 8–10 republish her poem "Your Revolution", which invokes Gil Scott Heron's 1971 performance poem "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised". Jones's poem rejects, one after another, a rapper's sexually motivated lyric. Once she performed the poem on HBO's Def Poetry Jam, it drew wider acclaim, and, with DJ Vadim, she made a 2000 version more musical. In May 2001, Portland, Oregon, radio station KBOO played it, whereupon a listener reported it to the Federal Communications Commission, which then fined the station $7 000, prompting other stations to cease playing it [Dustin Kidd, Pop Culture Freaks: Identity, Mass Media, and Society (New York: Westview Press, 2014), indexing "Your Revolution"]. For more details, see Brenda Cossman, Sexual Citizens: The Legal and Cultural Regulation of Sex and Belonging (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007), pp 48–55, or pp 49–50 skimming the FCC action and Jones's legal counteraction.
- ^ a b c d Amy Cook, Building Character: The Art and Science of Casting (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2018), pp 94–95.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Greg Thomas, Hip-Hop Revolution in the Flesh: Power, Knowledge, and Pleasure in Lil' Kim's Lyricism (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), pp 52–53. ("A much shorter version of chapter 4"—pages 85 to 110—was published previously, Greg Thomas, "Queens of consciousness & sex-radicalism in hip hop: Erykah Badu & the Notorious K.I.M.", Africology: The Journal of Pan-African Studies, 2007 Mar;1(7):23–37.)
- ^ a b In 2000, there was Trina's debut album and its "Niggas Ain't Shit". In 2001, Dipset's mixtape Diplomats Volume 1 offered a synthesis, "Bitches Ain't Shit (Remix)". In 2010, Boosie's mixtape Gone Til' December offered a "Niggas Ain't Shit". In 2011, YG's mixtape Just Re Up'd offered a "Bitches Ain't Shit", featuring Tyga and Nipsey Hussle, that samples the original and reached #90 on the main popular songs chart, the Billboard Hot 100. By 2020, over 40 songs had sampled the original, as listed at "Samples of Bitches Ain't Shit by Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg feat. Daz Dillinger, Kurupt and Jewell", WhoSampled.com, originally visited 16 Jan 2020, revisited 25 May 2020 [sampling count at 45 songs].
- ^ a b c d e Jill Kipnis, "Folds open to unusual marketing ideas", Billboard, 2005 Apr 30;(18):42.
- ^ a b Michael Z. Newman, "Movies for hipsters", in Geoff King, Claire Molloy & Yannis Tzioumakis, eds., American Independent Cinema: Indie, Indiewood and Beyond (London & New York: Routledge, 2013), pp 75–76.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Bend Folds, A Dream About Lightning Bugs: A Life of Music and Cheap Lessons (New York: Ballantine Books, 2019), pp 272–274. Google Books tends to conceal p 273, which explains, "the part that I chose to excerpt skewed sad", "like a sad Johnny Cash song with a lot more vulgarity. Slowing these words down from their gangsta-rap presentation and adding a melody creates an absurd effect, both sad and funny. Sung this way, the misogyny in the original lyrics, no matter how wrong, COULD be explained by how badly the narrator was hurt". "It was a joke only to the extent that the comedy I loved from the seventies was a joke: It was based on something real".
- ^ a b c Nigel Williamson, The Rough Guide to the Best Music You've Never Heard (New York & London: Rough Guides Ltd., 2008), p 43.
- ^ a b c d e f "Chart history: Ben Folds—Hot 100", Billboard.com, Prometheus Global Media, LLC, visited 20 Jun 2020. "Bitches Ain't Shit" spent one week on the Hot 100, where it held #71 for the week ending on April 2, 2005. The single's A side, "Landed", in two weeks on it, peaked at #77 on February 26, 2005. Although defaulting to the Hot 100, this webpage has a drop menu that, categorizing the Hot 100 as a "popular" songs chart, can switch to a "pop" songs chart, rather, the Adult Top 40, where "Landed" peaked at #40 on August 13, 2005, and where "Brick", a single by his earlier band, Ben Folds Five, peaked at #11 on March 21, 1998 ["—Adult Top 40"]. Meanwhile, on another "pop" songs chart, the Mainstream Top 40, "Brick" reached #17 on March 28, 1998 ["—Mainstream Top 40"]. Yet on Billboard's other "popular" songs chart, Triple A Songs, where "Brick" had placed #9 on February 14, 1998, the Ben Folds song "You Don't Know Me", featuring Regina Spektor, peaked at #28 on November 15, 2008, and "Phone in a Pool" peaked, also at #28, on September 9, 2015 ["—Triple A Songs"]. Outside of "popular" and "pop" but under a "rock" is Alternative Airplay, where Folds has five songs charted, the first four as Ben Folds Five and the fifth as Ben Folds: "Battle of Who Could Care Less" for 12 weeks at #22 peak on April 26, 1997; "Brick" for 26 weeks at #6 peak on February 7, 1998; "Song for the Dumped" for 9 weeks at #23 peak on June 13, 1998; "Army" for 11 weeks at #17 peak on May 29, 1999; "Rockin' the Suburbs" for 11 weeks at #28 peak on September 22, 2001 ["Chart History: Ben Folds—Alternative Airplay", Billboard.com, Billboard Media, LLC, visited 14 Aug 2021]. Note that the Billboard 200, rather, is a "popular" albums chart.
- ^ a b c d e f Jason Killingsworth, interviewer, "Catching up with... Ben Folds", PasteMagazine.com, Paste Media Group, 7 Jul 2008, partially quoted by, as a backup source here, Brandon Stosuy, "Ben Folds reveals album details, unretires 'Bitches Ain't Shit' ", Stereogum.com, Stereogum Media, LLC, 8 Jul 2008.
- ^ a b c d Maddie Crum, "How NOT to perform a cover song", Huff Post, 18 Nov 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Amy Cook, Building Character: The Art and Science of Casting (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2018), pp 93–94.
- ^ a b c d Bend Folds, A Dream About Lightning Bugs: A Life of Music and Cheap Lessons (New York: Ballantine Books, 2019), mentions "Bitches Ain't Shit" on pp 272–274 & 276, but Google Books conceals pp 273 & 276. Viewable on Amazon's Look inside feature, they say, in part, that the song "was expanding my audiences much like 'Brick' had done for Ben Folds Five in the decade before. I can't say I was completely thrilled with this new demographic", "more drunken college boys", and "YouTube was full of CHILDREN lip-syncing along with the vulgar song—something I wasn't expecting"—which "never got easier for me to sing. It always felt so very wrong, but, then, that was also part of what made it interesting", while "this crude and melancholy tune was undoubtedly my hit" [p 273]. "These days, I've stopped playing 'Bitches Ain't Shit' and I ignore requests for it. Music should work to ease social tensions, not throw gasoline on the fire, even inadvertently. I don't want non-white people in my audience subjected to large numbers of white people gleefully singing a racial slur that had never been the point. We had our Dre moment. Moving on" [p 276]. (On the effect whereby music streaming, especially YouTube, extends the reach of songs to broader and younger audiences, see David Arditi, Itake-Over: The Recording Industry in the Streaming Era, London: Lexington Books, 2020, p xix.)
- ^ a b c Kylie Northover, "Every generation has something more enlightened to add: Ben Folds", SMH.com.au, Sydney Morning Herald, 15 Nov 2019, updated 18 Nov 2019.
- ^ a b Ben Folds, "Those who have read my memoir. . .", @BenFolds with "verified badge", Facebook.com, 24 Jun 2020, 5:26 PM EST.
- ^ a b c David Diallo, ch 10 "From electro-rap to G-funk: A social history of rap music in Los Angeles and Compton, California", in Mickey Hess, ed., Hip Hop in America: A Regional Guide, Volume 1: East Coast and West Coast (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press, 2010), pp 228–231 on Ice-T, particularly p 231, and pp 234–238 on N.W.A, amid backstory on their precursor, contemporary, and evolving rap scene in the Los Angeles area. In more focus on the scene's transition from electro rap to gangsta rap, whereby N.W.A's landmark album, Straight Outta Compton, in 1988, granted West Coast rap its first unique identity, see Loren Kajikawa, "Compton via New York", Sounding Race in Rap Songs, (Oakland: University of California Press, 2015), pp 91–93. For more on the album, see Steve Huey, "N.W.A: Straight Outta Compton", AllMusic.com, Netaktion LLC, visited 14 Jun 2020.
- ^ Todd Boyd, Am I Black Enough for You?: Popular Culture from the 'Hood and Beyond (Bloomington & Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1997), p 75.
- ^ a b c d e f g Ben Westhoff, "Backstabbing, Moogs and the funky worm: How gangsta rap was born", TheGuardian.com, Guardian News & Media Limited, 13 Sep 2016.
- ^ Will Lavin, "Dr. Dre says he didn't want to appear on his classic '2001' album at all", NME.com, BandLab Technologies, 17 Nov 2019.
- ^ a b Vlad Lyubovny, interviewer, "The D.O.C.: I put Suge and Dre together so we could build Death Row Records", VladTV–DJVlad @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 22 Dec 2015. Interview clip opens on money gripes sending Dr. Dre from Ruthless Records. Death Row Records' formation enters near 2:33 mark. Snoop Dogg's development enters near 12:36 mark.
- ^ Chuck Philips, "The big mack", Spin, 1994 Aug;10(5):48–53,96, p 53.
- ^ Sheldon Pearce, Changes: An Oral History of Tupac Shakur (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2021), pp 173–177.
- ^ a b c Ronin Ro, Have Gun will Travel: The Spectacular Rise and Violent Fall of Death Row Records (New York: Main Street Books/Doubleday, 1999), esp. p 83.
- ^ Sheldon Pearce, Changes: An Oral History of Tupac Shakur (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2021), p 182.
- ^ For Daz's recollection, see Vlad Lyubovny, interviewer, "Daz Dillinger details working on 'The Chronic' w/ Dr. Dre at 15", VladTV–DJVlad @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 20 Aug 2015. For more on that, see Trent Clark, interviewer, "Daz Dillinger says Dr. Dre took his ideas to create 'The Chronic' ", HipHopDX @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 23 Apr 2018. On Warren's contribution, see Ebro Darden & Laura Stylez, interviewers, "Warren G talks growing up as Dr. Dre's brother, Snoop's early rap battles and his new album", Hot 97 @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 10 Aug 2015, 22:30 mark. Jeff Weiss adds, "As much as 'The Chronic' is a psychedelic and sinister warp of the Parliament and Funkadelic records that constantly rotated on Dre's childhood turntable, it is the sound of Long Beach, too: the ecumenical hymns of the Baptist church turned into filthy harmonic gospel by Snoop, Nate Dogg, Warren G and Daz" [J Weiss, "25 years later, Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic' remains rap's world-building masterpiece", Chicago Tribune & The Washington Post, 15 Dec 2017]. Snoop said that Daz and Warren made some beats on Doggystyle, but that production, truly Dre's, was a far greater task [Rob Markman, "Did Dr. Dre produce Snoop's Doggystyle?", MTV News, 26 Nov 2013]. For fuller discussion, mainly defenses of Dre, while Dre seemingly concedes some crediting neglect at Death Row Records, but asserts diligently avoiding such at his subsequent label, Aftermath Entertainment, see Jake Brown, Dr. Dre in the Studio (Phoenix, AZ: Colossus Books, 2006), pp 54–57.
- ^ Apparently, Dr. Drew drew the foundation of the G-funk sound from Cold 187um, who, as record producer of rap group Above the Law, worked near Dre at Ruthtless Records on the group's second album, Black Mafia Life, while Dre was working on N.W.A's final album, Efil4zaggin [Ben Westhoff, "Backstabbing, Moogs and the funky worm: How gangsta rap was born", sec "Who invented G-funk?", TheGuardian.com, 13 Sep 2016]. Yet it was Dre's guidance whereby it became, rather, "a fully formed universe" [Jeff Weiss, "25 years later, Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic' remains rap's world-building masterpiece", Chicago Tribune & The Washington Post, 15 Dec 2017].
- ^ a b c d e f g Gerrick D. Kennedy, Parental Discretion Is Advised: The Rise of N.W.A and the Dawn of Gangsta Rap (New York: Atria Books, 2017): pp 204 & 211 on Death Row's atmosphere; p 201 on The D.O.C.'s view of it; p 206 on Chronic promotion, music videos on MTV, Dre–Snoop superstardom/trendsetting; pp 211–213 on Doggystyle's recording/content and on Snoop's murder case.
- ^ Kevin L. Ferguson, Pop Goes the Decade: The Nineties (Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2019), p 130.
- ^ Recording Academy, "Artist: Dr. Dre", Grammy.com, 13 Apr 2020.
- ^ a b Havelock Nelson, "Album reviews: The Chronic", Rolling Stone, 18 Mar 1993.
- ^ a b "Dr. Dre speaks at Snoop Dogg's Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony 11.19.18", The Hollywood Fix @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 19 Nov 2018.
- ^ In Calabasas, on the hills west of the San Fernando Valley, Dre had bought, in perhaps 1989, "a lavish troubadour-style home", and put a recording studio in an upstairs bedroom [Gerrick D. Kennedy, Parental Discretion Is Advised: The Rise of N.W.A and the Dawn of Gangsta Rap (New York: Atria Books, 2017), pp 123 & 132].
- ^ "The house was described by fire officials and neighbors as heavily damaged, particularly its shingled roof and the attic, which was completely destroyed. Fire officials estimated damage at $125,000. 'It looks like a dinosaur ate a huge chunk out of it,' said neighbor Amanda —, 16" [Henry Chu & Aaron Curtiss, "Fire damages rap singer's house, injures 2 firefighters", Los Angeles Times, 29 Jun 1992].
- ^ Nelson George, "Rhythm & blues", Billboard, 1986 Mar 29;98(13):27, identifies Galaxy Sound's owner as Dick Griffey. Viewable in 2021, a tribute website places the SOLAR building at 1635 North Cahuenga Boulevard, Hollywood, CA, 90028, "right between Hollywood Blvd and West Sunset Blvd, and just a few blocks from the legendary Capitol Records Tower. The building included office space and his Galaxy Sound Studio where most of his acts had recorded their hits" ["This is a Tribute to.... SOLAR (Sound Of Los Angeles Records)", Disco-Disco.com, visited 21 Aug 2021].
- ^ a b c d e f Jeff Weiss, "25 years later, Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic' remains rap's world-building masterpiece", Chicago Tribune & The Washington Post, 15 Dec 2017.
- ^ a b c d e Felicia Angeja Viator, To Live and Defy in LA: How Gangsta Rap Changed America (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2020), p 234 skims the March 3, 1991, beating of Los Angeles resident Rodey King by city police officers; pp 242–242 skim the nation's reaction to the April 29–May 4, 1992, rioting that was triggered by the police officers' acquittal at criminal trial; pp 252–254 skim the riots influence on The Chronic and the album's setting for the rap genre a new national standard; Kurupt is quoted, about the riots' influence upon the album, on p 253.
- ^ a b James G. Spady, Charles G. Lee & H. Samy Alim, Street Conscious Rap (Philadelphia: Black History Museum, UMUM/LOH Pub., 1999), p 538.
- ^ EAM, "Dr. Dre: 'Bitches Ain't Shit' from The Chronic", HiddenSongs.com, ERRRRK! Media, visited 25 Aug 2021. Meanwhile, the song is listed #16 and the album is copyrighted 2001 at "The Chronic: Dr. Dre", Music.Apple.com, Apple Inc., visited 25 Aug 2021.
- ^ The Chronic tends to omit silence between tracks.
- ^ a b As the sound recording opens, Snoop's first word, bitches, starts on the #1 beat, shit lands on the #2 beat, hos on the #3 beat, and tricks finishes on the #4 beat. Completing the first bar, then, is silence till the next beat—the second bar's #1 beat. Snoop's hook recital will always neatly align this way in sync with the bar. Among the instruments, rather, the #1 count is distinct throughout most of the song by a cymbal strike, exclusively on the #1 beat.
- ^ "Direct sample of multiple elements": Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg feat. Daz Dillinger, Kurupt & Jewell, "Bitches Ain't Shit", The Chronic (Death Row, 1992) / Trouble Funk, "Let's Get Small" (D.E.T.T., 1982), WhoSampled.com, visited 11 Mar 2020. "Let's Get Small", itself, is discussed by John Leland, "Singles", Spin, 1985 Sep;1(5):33, and by Kip Lornell & Charles C. Stephenson, Jr., The Beat!: Go-Go Music from Washington, D.C., revised edn. (Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 2009).
- ^ In a conventional drum kit, the kick drums, also called bass drums, are each struck by a "beater"—propelled by a lever attached to a pedal pressed by the player's foot—producing bassy thumps, while snare drums, each tapped by a handheld drumstick, participate at higher pitch.
- ^ The "backbeats" are on beat, yet were traditionally—if several decades ago by now—expecteded to be unstressed beats. Traditionally, the 4/4 time signature, standard in popular music, primarily stresses beat #1 and secondarily stresses beat #3 while #2 and #4 are unstressed beats. Yet decades ago, rock music popularized accent sounds on #2 and #4, and so such backbeat strikes now sound familiar, not eccentric.
- ^ George Clinton & Ben Greenman, Brothas Be, Yo Like George, Ain't That Funkin' Kinda Hard On You?: A Memoir (New York: Atria Books, 2014), p 375.
- ^ "Interpolation (replayed sample) of bass": Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg feat. Daz Dillinger, Kurupt & Jewell, "Bitches Ain't Shit", The Chronic (Death Row, 1992) / Funkadelic, "Adolescent Funk", Hardcore Jollies (Warner Bros., 1976), WhoSampled.com, visited 11 Mar 2020.
- ^ A chord is multiple notes played at once, such as three piano keys pressed at once. Even if consciously noticing the chord, a casual listener might call it simply "a note" or "a key press". But if literally a single note, it could sound unnaturally empty. The "Bitches Ain't Shit" chords, if synthesized, mimic piano chords. But their origin and nature, perhaps two chords, each struck twice per bar, then alternating, remain unclear as to this Wikipedia article [this footnote last revised 24 Mar 2020].
- ^ a b "Direct sample": Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg feat. Daz Dillinger, Kurupt & Jewell, "Bitches Ain't Shit", The Chronic (Death Row, 1992) / MC Shan, "The Bridge", Down by Law (Cold Chillin', 1986), WhoSampled.com, visited 11 Mar 2020. "The Bridge", itself, is contextualized by John Leland, "Singles", Spin, 1988 Dec;4(9):112.
- ^ a b c d e Tony Best, interviewer, "Musician Colin Wolfe built beats with Dr. Dre for The Chronic, NWA's Niggaz4Life, and Jimmy Z's Muzical Madness", WaxPoetics.com, Wax Poetics, 3 Jun 2014.
- ^ a b "Colin Wolfe & The Chronic", live demonstration and Q&A at University of North Carolina School of the Arts, UNC-TV, 1 May 2017, streamed live, now archived, on Moogfest @ YouTube. Wolfe demonstrates and discusses his use of Moog keyboard and bass guitar to help write The Chronic instrumentals. Comments on meeting and working with Dr. Dre start near 33:10 mark.
- ^ Ronin Ro, Have Gun will Travel: The Spectacular Rise and Violent Fall of Death Row Records (New York: Main Street Books/Doubleday, 1999), pp 59 & 83.
- ^ a b Allen Hughes, director, The Defiant Ones, Part 3 (New York: HBO, 2017).
- ^ Jason Ankeny, "Jimmy Iovine", AllMusic.com, Netaktion LLC, 2021.
- ^ a b Geoff Mayfield, "Is you or is you ain't an indie? The charts explained", Billboard, 1994 Mar 26;106(13):86–100, p 86.
- ^ a b Vlad Lyubovny, interviewer, "The D.O.C. on co-writing Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic' & paperwork not being right", VladTV–DJVlad @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 10 Jan 2016. Near 02:33 mark, D.O.C. affirms he wrote Dre's sole "Bitches Ain't Shit" verse. Near 00:24 mark, he comments, rather, on imparting to Snoop "the formula". Groping a moment for an apt word, he apparently invokes the theme of his own single "The Formula", released in 1989 by Ruthless Records before a car accident, injuring his vocal cords, ended his own rap career. On some principles he imparted, see Soren Baker, "Doing numbers with the D.O.C.", History of Gangster Rap (Abrams Image, 2018), p 119.
- ^ Roni Sarig, Third Coast: Outkast, Timbaland, and How Hip Hop Became a Southern Thing (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Da Capo Press, 2007), pp 38–40.
- ^ Whatever the legal terms, Dre left Ruthless while finishing N.W.A's final album in 1991, already forming Death Row through assistance now often overlooked—creative partner the D.O.C., industry insider Dick Griffey, and incarcerated financier, onetime cocaine kingpin, Michael 'Harry O' Harris—but with mainly Suge Knight leading its business operations. For major story versions, see Ben Westhoff, "We know where your mother lives", Original Gangstas: The Untold Story (New York & London: Hachette, 2017). On Harris, see Nate Gartrell, "Death Row Records co-founder 'Harry-O' denied early release from prison, feds say", Mercury News (San Jose, CA), 28–29 Feb 2020.
- ^ The music trio 213 originally formed in Long Beach, California, in 1985, and reunited a few months after Nate Dogg, after three years in the Marines, returned in 1991 [Lola Ogunnaike, "Dogg day afternoon", Vibe, 2001 Dec;9(12):156–160]. In the studio at the back of the V.I.P. record store in Long Beach, the trio made a demo tape. Rebuffing Warren G's requests, Dr. Dre refused to listen. But at a bachelor party for Dre's buddy, another producer, LA Dre, Warren gave the tape to LA Dre, who forwarded it to Dr. Dre, whose own listen had him summoning 213 to his home studio, where he immediately recorded Snoop. On that and more on Warren, see P.R., "Warren G", in Nathan Brackett with Christian Hoard, eds., The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004), p 859. For Warren's own telling, see Ebro Darden & Laura Stylez, interviewers, "Warren G talks growing up as Dr. Dre's brother, Snoop's early rap battles and his new album", Hot 97 @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 10 Aug 2015. On the V.I.P. record store, see Andrea Domanick, "World famous V.I.P. Records to close", LA Weekly, 5 Jan 2012.
- ^ a b c Al Shipley, "Dr. Dre's The Chronic: 10 things you didn't know", Rolling Stone, 15 Dec 2017.
- ^ Interviewed in 1998, Snoop explained his January departure from the label. "When I first got with Death Row, it was for Dre", says Snoop. "I wanted to be down with him, help him, and that's why I wrote so many tight records with him. That's why I was there. His departure took away my heart and soul. But I stayed down, did what I had to do. And then Tupac got killed, and it was like, Damn, and then Suge went to jail, and it was like, I can't handle this by myself, 'cause I don't have control. When the company's structure broke up, I was just an artist, a player with no coach. So I had to find a team that knew how to coach me" [Cheo Hodari Coker, "The treacherous two", Vibe, 1998 Sep;6(7):151,159].
- ^ William L. Van Deburg, American historian, likens the song to "a testosterone-fueled gang bang" [Hoodlums: Black Villains and Social Bandits in American Life, University of Chicago Press, 2004, pp 209 & 269].
- ^ a b c In the following adaptation of vocal rhythm to typing, the slashes indicate true barlines, which separate the musical bars, also termed measures. Jewell's first lyrical line, I don't give a fuck about a bitch, spans roughly six beats or roughly 1 & 1/2 bars arranged within three consecutive bars. First, in this abstraction of these, the syllable immediately after a beat #, here the word and, strikes a 1/2 beat, which, midway between beats, may be called an "upbeat" between two "downbeats": and Four (#4) and / ONE (#1) and Two (#2) and Three (#3) and Four (#4) and / ONE (#1). Improvised here, the symbol ^ will denote silence at the 1/2 beat, so instead of counting, "One and two and three", we count, "One. Two. Three". A long dash, —, symbolizes silence for a full beat, so instead of counting, "One and two and three", we count, "One. —and three". Inward arrows, > <, are only where Jewell rapidly vocalizes "give a" as two 1/4 beats in a 1/2 beat's span. Boldface denotes any stressed beat, some of which a performer freely chooses, personalizing the rhythm. BOLD UPPERCASE denotes a stressed beat given primary stress, generally dictated by the metre, whereby a performer's dramatic or unceasing departure may derange the performance. Stress variation concerns metre and rhythm, whereas pitch variation, atop these, helps create melody, but pitch, not covered here, differs from stress, which is depicted here for Jewell's first two lyrical lines, prefaced by her ad lib's closure: ". . . -oh- (#4) -hh / YEAH (#1) — (#2) — (#3) I don't (#4) >give a< / FUCK (#1) — (#2) a-bout (#3) ^ a (#4) bi- / -ITCH (#1) — (#2) but I'll (#3) let her (#4) kno- / -OW (#1) ^ that (#2) she can't (#3) ^ fade (#4) ^ / THIS (#1) . . ." [Sound recording, "Bitches Ain't Shit", 03:26, Dr. Dre @ YouTube "Official Artist Channel", 19 Apr 2020]. Jewell's first three actual words on her #1 counts—the beats that receive primary stress both vocal and instrumental—as thus seen seen to be yeah, then fuck, then bitch.
- ^ Sound recording, "Bitches Ain't Shit", 01:06, Dr. Dre @ YouTube "Official Artist Channel", 19 Apr 2020.
- ^ In Daz's song section, Daz closes his verse actually one beat short of a full bar, as he raps "—and kick the anthem like this" while ending on the three count, not the four count. Meanwhile, the hook always starts—the very beat after the four count—on the next bar's one count. Strictly, then, a beat is skipped between Daz's verse and the hook. And yet Snoop effectively jumps into Daz's verse and, on the four count, in Snoop's signature drawl of blaxpoitation pimp caricature, blares, "Beeo—tch!" As a tag team, then, Daz and Snoop close the verse by rapping, in effect, "—and kick the anthem like this, bitch!", whereupon Snoop then starts the hook on the very next beat, effected by producer Dre's vocal arrangement of separate audio tracks .
- ^ a b c d David Diallo, ch 10 "From electro-rap to G-funk: A social history of rap music in Los Angeles and Compton, California", in Mickey Hess, ed., Hip Hop in America: A Regional Guide, Volume 1: East Coast and West Coast (Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press, 2010), pp 228–231 on Ice-T, particularly p 231, and pp 234–238 on N.W.A, amid backstory on their precursor, contemporary, and evolving rap scene in the Los Angeles area. In more focus on the scene's transition from electro rap to gangsta rap, whereby N.W.A's landmark album, Straight Outta Compton, in 1988, granted West Coast rap its first unique identity, see Loren Kajikawa, "Compton via New York", Sounding Race in Rap Songs, (Oakland: University of California Press, 2015), pp 91–93. For more on the album, see Steve Huey, "N.W.A: Straight Outta Compton", AllMusic.com, Netaktion LLC, visited 14 Jun 2020.
- ^ a b Gerrick D. Kennedy, Parental Discretion Is Advised: The Rise of N.W.A and the Dawn of Gangsta Rap (New York: Atria Books, 2017), p 204.
- ^ a b Daniel Kreps, "Jerry Heller, former N.W.A manager, dead at 75", Rolling Stone, online, 3 Sep 2016.
- ^ Arsenio Hall, interviewer, with Eazy-E, guest, and live stage performance of "Real Compton City G's", featuring Gangsta Dresta and BG Knocc Out, The Arsenio Hall Show, season 6, episode 64, 10 Dec 1993.
- ^ Whatever the legal terms, Dre left Ruthless while finishing N.W.A's final album in 1991, already forming Death Row through assistance now often overlooked—creative partner the D.O.C., industry insider Dick Griffey, and incarcerated financier, onetime cocaine kingpin, Michael 'Harry O' Harris—but with mainly Suge Knight leading its business operations. For major story versions, see Ben Westhoff, "We know where your mother lives", Original Gangstas: The Untold Story (New York & London: Hachette, 2017). On Harris, see Nate Gartrell, "Death Row Records co-founder 'Harry-O' denied early release from prison, feds say", Mercury News (San Jose, CA), 28–29 Feb 2020.
- ^ a b c d Chuck Philips, "The big mack", Spin, 1994 Aug;10(5):48–53,96, p 53.
- ^ Vlad Lyubovny, interviewer, "The D.O.C.: I put Suge and Dre together so we could build Death Row Records", VladTV–DJVlad @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 22 Dec 2015. Interview clip opens on money gripes sending Dr. Dre from Ruthless Records. Death Row Records' formation enters near 2:33 mark. Snoop Dogg's development enters near 12:36 mark.
- ^ Elka Worner, "Rapper sues Sony Music", UPI, 15 Oct 1992. Reputedly among Suge's bodyguards at the time, James McDonald, the former Mob Piru Bloods gang member known as "Mob James", describes the storied meeting, but states that it occurred with Jerry Heller, not with Eric Wright [Vlad Lyubovny, interviewer, "Mob James details Suge Knight forcing Jerry Heller to sign over Dr. Dre & Michel'le", VladTV–DJVlad @ YouTube "Verified" channel, 13 Jul 2019].
- ^ Soren Baker, The History of Gangster Rap (New York: Abams Image, 2018), indexing "October 1992".
- ^ Allen Hughes, director, The Defiant Ones, Part 3 (New York: HBO, 2017).
- ^ Interscope agreed to pay Ruthless a "huge" cash payout and publishing royalties on Dre's Death Row earnings: 10% on production and 15% on solo performance [Gerrick Kennedy, Parental Discretion Is Advised (Atria, 2017), p 156]. By some estimates, Eazy's royalty payments were up to some $1.5 million before his 1995 death: 25 to 50 cents per copy on some three million sold [Al Shipley, "Dr. Dre's The Chronic: 10 things you didn't know", Rolling Stone, online, 15 Dec 2017].
- ^ Soren Baker, The History of Gangster Rap (New York: Abams Image, 2018).
- ^ Sacha Jenkins, Elliott Wilson, Gabe Alvarez, Jeff Mao & Brent Rollins, eds., Ego Trip's Book of Rap Lists (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2014), p 237.
- ^ Joel Whitburn, Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955–2002, 10th edn. (Menomonee Falls, WI: Record Research Inc., 2003), p 217.
- ^ Hedonism means "devotion to pleasure as a way of life" [Dictionary.com, visited 26 Mar 2020].
- ^ a b Near closing his own verse, Kurupt asks rhetorically and answers circularly (while Snoop queries—and echoes), "How could you trust a ho? (Why—) / 'Cause a ho's a trick (—?) / I don't love them tricks (Why—) / 'Cause a trick's a bitch (—?)".
- ^ Charles Aaron, "Sir real", Spin, 1993 Oct;9(7):50–56, p 51.
- ^ In California gang culture, the term loc, meaning "insane, irrational, or mentally unbalanced", particularly as to violent tendencies, is short for the Spanish term loco, meaning "crazy" [Maciej Widawski, African American Slang (Cambridge U P, 2015), p 218; S. Ivan Riley Jr & Jayne Batts, "Youth and gang violence", in Ralph Riviello, ed., Manual of Forensic Emergency Medicine (Jones and Bartlett, 2010), p 197].
- ^ a b c d e f Sacha Jenkins, Elliott Wilson, Jeff "Chairman" Mao, Gabriel Alvarez & Brent Rollins, "16 memorable misogynist rap music moments", Ego Trip's Book of Rap Lists (New York: St. Martin's Griffin Press, 1999), p 40. Ten of them postdate the #2, Dr. Dre et al., "Bitches Ain't Shit" (Death Row, 1992). Of the five that instead predate it, two are by, alike Dre, a recent N.W.A member, #15, Ice Cube, "Can't Fade Me" (Priority, 1990), or by the group itself, with Dre in it, #8, N.W.A, "One Less Bitch" (Ruthless, 1991). The remaining three, predating "Bitches Ain't Shit" but not connected to N.W.A, are #3, Too Short, "The Bitch Sucks Dick" (75 Girls, 1985), #12, 2 Live Crew, "We Want Some Pussy!!" (Luke Skywalker, 1986), and #11, Kool G Rap & DJ Polo, "Talk Like Sex" (Cold Chillin', 1990).
- ^ a b c d Marcus Reeves, Somebody Scream!: Rap Music's Rise to Prominence in the Aftershock of Black Power (New York: Faber and Faber, Inc., 2008), p 148.
- ^ In 1985, Tipper Gore, wife of Democratic senator and later US Vice President Al Gore, bought Prince's album Purple Rain, which spurred her to cofound the Parents Music Resource Center, or the PMRC, which instigated laws requiring some albums to bear parental advisories. In 1990, the Recording Industry Association of America, the RIAA, standardized the Parental Advisory sticker, soon most common on rap albums, sometimes for reasons unclear. For discussion, see Jessica Elliott, "Hip hop and censorship", in Mickey Hess, ed., Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture, Volume 2 (Westport, CT & London: Greenwood Press, 2007), pp 398–399.
- ^ Richard Harrington, "Critics hit Newsweek's bum 'rap' ", The Washington Post, 28 Mar 1990. Harrington explains that the Newsweek article, more like a mere opinion piece, so broadly stereotyped rap that it triggered a unified rebuttal by some three dozen music critics, including Harrington. (For a short take, see Times Wire Services, "Critics rap Newsweek on rap", Los Angeles Times, 29 Mar 1990.)
- ^ a b Jessica Elliott, "Hip hop and censorship", in Mickey Hess, ed., Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture, Volume 2 (Westport, CT & London: Greenwood Press, 2007), pp 398–399.
- ^ Jeff Weiss, journalist, writes that Dre, then age 27, "was nearly destitute". Besides his Calabasas house, bought with money from N.W.A's 1988 or debut album, the "former N.W.A. sound architect was flat broke and fighting legal turmoil on multiple fronts. In the year leading up to The Chronic, disturbing headlines overshadowed his music: a punch by Dre shattered another producer's jaw; MTV News reported on a shooting that left four bullets in his leg; he totaled his car; and his house burned down. In May 1992, Dre left a music industry convention in New Orleans in handcuffs after allegedly participating in a brawl that left a 15-year-old stabbed and four police officers wounded. None of this even accounts for his attack on rapper and Pump it Up! host Dee Barnes—a brutal assault that indelibly stains his legacy" [J Weiss, "25 years later, Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic' remains rap's world-building masterpiece", Chicago Tribune & The Washington Post, 15 Dec 2017]. The July 1992 shooting was in South Central at a party, where, Dre claimed, he was among a group calling someone's girlfriend ugly, whereas the assaulted producer was Damon Thomas, soon prompting Eazy-E to comment, "He had the Dee Barnes thing, breaking that kid's jaw, driving his car off the cliff, getting shot, New Orleans. None of that ever happened when he was down with us" [Gerrick Kennedy, Parental Discretion Is Advised (Atria, 2017), p 201].
- ^ a b c Julia Chapman, "The race card", Spin, 1996 Jan;11(10):65.
- ^ a b Nelson George, Hip Hop America (New York: Penguin Books, 1999), p 140.
- ^ Gerrick D. Kennedy, Parental Discretion Is Advised: The Rise of N.W.A and the Dawn of Gangsta Rap (New York: Atria Books, 2017), p 204, quotes a line from the song's hook as going, "Mister Officer, Mister Officer, I wanna see you lying in a coffin, sir".
- ^ During a routine traffic stop on April 11, 1992, the trooper was shot by Ronald Ray Howard, age 19, reportedly listening to "Soulja's Story", a track on 2Pac's November 1991 album 2Pacalyse Now. With Howard's attorneys expected to claim this as an influence and mitigating factor at his sentencing, the widow, Linda Sue Davidson, filed in October 1992 a product-liability lawsuit alleging gross negligence via music that incites "imminent lawless action". Interviewed, she said, "Ron Howard may have pulled the trigger, but I think Tupac, Interscope, and Time Warner share in the guilt for Bill's death and they ought to take responsibility for their actions" [Chuck Philips, "Testing the Limits", L.A. Times, 13 Oct 1992].
- ^ In this duet, whereas Snoop raps the role of an undercover detective's killer, Dre actually raps the role of that undercover detective, in line with the theme of the 1991 film Deep Cover, whose director wanted such for the soundtrack [Soren Baker, The History of Gangster Rap, NY: Abams Image, 2018, "Deep Cover" indexing].
- ^ Soren Baker, The History of Gangster Rap (New York: Abrams Image, 2018).
- ^ a b c In June 1992, a presidential election year, US vice president Dan Quayle called the song "obscene", whereupon US president George H. W. Bush, the elder President Bush, characterized such lyrics as "sick", and then the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas, or CLEAT, called for a boycott of all Time Warner products. Time Warner's CEO, Gerald M. Levin, publicly defended the song's release. But in July, at a shareholders meeting, eminent Hollywood actor Charlton Heston read "Cop Killer" lyrics and condemned company officials. By August, the Body Count album went gold—over 500 000 copies sold—but over 1 000 stores pulled it from their shelves. For the timeline and context, see Soren Baker, The History of Gangster Rap (New York: Abams Image, 2018). For more specifics on the "Cop Killer" song and more appraisal of the public opposition to it, see Barry Shank, "From Rice to ice: The face of race in rock and pop", in Simon Frith, Will Straw & John Street, eds., The Cambridge Companion to Pop and Rock (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001), pp 268–269.
- ^ Dallas Morning Sentinel staff, "Ice-T, police clash over 'Cop Killer' song", Orlando Sentinel (Florida), 19 Jun 1992.
- ^ In 1987, Ice-T had become the first rapper signed to Sire [B. Westhoff, Original Gangstas, New York & London: Hachette, 2017]. Following the "Cop Killer" controversy, indie giant Priority Records, issuing much of gangsta rap, released the new Ice-T rap album, Home Invasion, later in 1993 [M. Forman, The 'Hood Comes First, Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2002, p 296, archived elsewhere].
- ^ a b Not to be conflated, Warner Brothers Records, an intermediary record company, was distinct from Warner Music Group, also called simply Warner Music, a major record company. An intermediary label may accept into its own catalog a small label's releases, thereby distributed with the intermediary's catalog. Yet the major label—Warner Music, a Time Warner company in 1993—controls this distribution. (For general discussion, see Christoper Knab & Bart Day, "How and why major labels and independent labels work together", MusicBizAcademy.com, Midnight Rain Productions, Mar 2004.)
- ^ On Saturday, June 12, 1993, in Port St. Lucie, Florida, the brutalized and mutilated body of Mollie Mae Frazier, age 81, was found in a field near her home. Victor Brancaccio, 16, once an altar boy, but otherwise troubled, would recall listening on his walkman to The Chronic track "Stranded on Death Row" when the elderly woman, a passerby, unwittingly provoking his attack on her, had criticized him for rapping the coarse lyrics aloud. For details, see Karen Testa, Associated Press, "Man convicted of widow's slaying gets new trial, fashionable defense", Los Angeles Times, 11 Oct 1998, and Erin MacPherson, "Family members plea to judge for grandmother's killer to stay behind bars", CBS 12 News website, 17 Jan 2018. On the American climate of controversies over song lyrics in the early 1990s, see Murray Forman, The 'Hood Comes First (Wesleyan U P, 2002), p 295.
- ^ Earlier, in 1990, the 2 Live Crew controversy was mainly over lyrical obscenity. And although other rap acts with lyrical misogyny predating 1993, like N.W.A and the Geto Boys, became targets for it in 1993—year of The Chronic and Snoop Dogg—it was here that misogynous lyrics overtook murderous lyrics in the cries against gangsta rap. For a broad view, see Carlos D. Morrison & Celnisha L. Dangerfield, "Tupac Shakur", p 398, and Jessica Elliott, "Hip hop and censorship", p 399, in Mickey Hess, ed., Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture, Volume 2 (Westport, CT & London: Greenwood Press, 2007).
- ^ Michel Marriott, "Harlem pastor to campaign against rap lyrics", The New York Times, 8 May 1993, § 1, p 24.
- ^ Clarence Taylor, Fight the Power: African Americans and the Long History of Police Brutality in New York City (New York: New York University Press, 2019), p 11.
- ^ a b c d Clifford J. Levy, "Harlem protest of rap lyrics draws debate and steamroller", The New York Times, 6 Jun 1993, § 1, p 39.
- ^ a b A counterprotester, Gary Jenkins, 31, a lawyer, shouted, "You're steamrolling our dreams, you're steamrolling our aspirations, you're steamrolling who we are. But we're here to say that we will not stand for it. We know what is right. We know what is wrong. Music is not the killer, it is not the ill. The ill is the streets". Willie Stiggers, 15, an aspiring rapper, before climbing onto the steamroller, shouted, "No justice! No peace!" Noel Rosa, also 15, of the rap nickname Kiddynamite, verbally squared off with Janice Robinson, 38, a Butts supporter then working for a record company. Janice told him, "You did not listen, my brother! The Reverend said he was not attacking rap or rappers. He was attacking negative rap!" Noel persisted, "I understand that! But he should be attacking the white power structure, who own the record companies, who own the cable stations." Janice affirmed, "He did. He said it was mainly their fault because they were the ones with the money." Noel retorted, "But what is he doing now? Actions speak louder than words! He's attacking us black rappers now!" Janice posed, "Do you consider yourself a negative rapper?" Noel demanded, "What is negative? You tell me what negative is!" According to Janice, "Negative is when my 14-year-old daughter comes home with a tape that says, 'Gangster bitch!' That's negative!" [CL Levy, "Harlem protest", NYT, 6 Jun 1993, § 1, p 39].
- ^ Press release, "Sony Corporation of America announces sale of 550 Madison Avenue building", Sony Corporation of America, 18 Jan 2013.
- ^ Joel Anderson, "The reverend vs. rap", Slate.com, The Slate Group, 20 Nov 2019.
- ^ Carter Harris, "Eazy living", Vibe, 1995 Jun–Jul;3(5):59–62, collected in Raquel Cepeda, ed., And It Don't Stop: The Best American Hip-Hop Journalism of the Last 25 Years (New York: Faber and Faber, Inc., 2004).
- ^ Bill Holland w/ J R Reynolds, "House panel to examine rap", Billboard, 1994 Feb 19;106(8):1&103.
- ^ Elaine Woo, "C. DeLores Tucker, 78; civil rights pioneer led a spirited campaign against gangsta rap", Los Angeles Times, 14 Oct 2005.
- ^ The commercials against Time Warner—aired on the West Coast in Los Angeles and San Francisco, and on the East Coast in New York City and Washington DC—urged parents to "make them feel the heat".
- ^ a b During 1995, Tucker and Bennett, codirector of conservative advocacy group Empower America, recently director of US antidrug policy, and once the US secretary of education, appeared in a television commercial against music that allegedly "celebrates the rape, torture, and murder of women". In May, Dole joined the battle against "violent and sexually degrading music". They all targeted Time Warner apparently since its major music company Warner Music Group, as the only publicly traded American music company, was singularly vulnerable to public pressure. But, as foreign companies, like Germany's Bertelsmann Music Group, or BMG—the major label parenting, for instance, Arista Records, offering distribution to Bad Boy Entertainment—were delivering even more gangsta rap, Time Warner alleged itself targeted by political opportunists. Still, while gaining only some 2.5% of its own income from Interscope, Time Warner was in some 40% of households via cable television, and needed congressional approvals to expand in cable. [On the Tucker and Bennett teamwork against Time Warner, see Ken Auletta, "Fighting words", The New Yorker, 12 Jun 1995, p 35. On that and Time Warner's counteraccusation, see Richard S. Dunham & Michael Oneal, "Gunning for the gangstas", Business Week, 1995 Jun 19;3249:41. Toward the BMG tangent, see Christina Saraceno, "Bad Boy and Arista part ways", Rolling Stone, 21 Jun 2002. On Dole joining, and the pressure on Time Warner amid an important congressional bill on cable reform, see Julia Chaplin,"Dogg Fight", Spin, 1995 Oct;11(7):46. On Time Warner's profits and ownerships, which, besides the major label Warner Music Group, included some intermediary labels, too—Atlantic, Elektra, Reprise, and Warner Brothers—and on Warner Music Group dropping Interscope to likely nil consequence for either Time Warner, Interscope, Death Row, or music lyrics, see Julia Chapman, "The race card", Spin, 1996 Jan;11(10):65.]
- ^ Robert Hilburn & Chuck Philips, "They sure figured something out", Los Angeles Times, 24 Oct 1993.
- ^ Warner already out, and Sony abstaining, BMG, EMI, MCA, and PolyGram vied for Interscope [Chuck Philips, "Company town: 4 music companies wooing Interscope", Los Angeles Times, 1 Dec 1995].
- ^ James Bates & Claudia Eller, "Seagram signs deal to buy 80% of MCA", Los Angeles Times, 10 Apr 1995.
- ^ Death Row actually counterattacked, in August 1995 suing Tucker [Cynthia Littleton, "Time Warner, rap foe sued by Death Row", UPI, 18 Aug 1995], and in March 1996 publicizing alleged dirt that its hired private investigators, Palladino & Sutherland, found on her [Chuck Philips, "Anti-rap crusader under fire", Los Angeles Times, 20 Mar 1996]. The lawsuit was later withdrawn [Elaine Woo, "C. DeLores Tucker, 78; civil rights pioneer led a spirited campaign against gangsta rap", Los Angeles Times, 14 Oct 2005]. But soon, Death Row imploded, by troubles in house, signaled and spurred by Dre's departure to form Aftermath Entertainment in March 1996, by Tupac Shakur's shooting death amid Death Row posturing in September 1996, by CEO Suge Knight's imprisonment for parole violation in March 1997, and basically completed by Snoop's departure, going to Master P's No Limit Records, in January 1998 [Neil Strauss, "Rap empire unraveling as stars flee", The New York Times, 1998 Jan 26, § D, p 1]. Cf., Thomas Harrison, Music of the 1990s (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2011), p 51. Harris notes that Tha Dogg Pound saw its October 1995 or debut album, Dogg Food, "delayed, as sharesholders of their parent record company, Interscope/Time Warner, had decided that they would protest the lyrical content of the album". Harris claims that, "coupled with the shareholder's protest, Suge Knight's incarceration, Snoop Dogg's exit, and Tupac Shakur's death ended the label's hold on the hip-hop scene". As Harris concedes, "the album did enjoy high sales". But in Harris's estimation, "this was the last high-selling album released on Death Row in the 1990s". On the contrary, released months later, in February 1996, 2Pac's All Eyez on Me was a juggernaut. Merely, by February 1998, Tha Dogg Pound's Daz was the last high-selling artist still with Death Row [Strauss, NYT, 1998]. And in 1995, Interscope, not having shareholders, had sided against Warner, a quagmire resolved by their splitting, as Warner was the only major label with American shareholding [J Chapman, "The race card", Spin, 1996 Jan;11(10):65]. And even without Interscope and its next major label, MCA/Universal, there was the giant independent label Priority Records, unfettered in distributing gangsta rap, like N.W.A and the Geto Boys, ready to pick up Death Row's distribution [Strauss, NYT, 1998 & Randall Sullivan, Labyrinth: The True Story (Grove Press, 2007)]. In fact, it was Priority that had distributed Tha Dogg Pound's album Dogg Food [Chapman, Spin, 1996].
- ^ By the July 1998 release of Nate Dogg's repeatedly delayed solo album, the curtain was already closing on the G-funk era [Thomas Erlewine, "Nate Dogg: G Funk Classics, Vols. 1 & 2", AllMusic.com, Netaktion LLC, visited 24 Apr 2020]. Even longer overdue, the eventual studio album from the Long Beach trio 213—formed of Warren G, Snoop Dogg, and Nate Dogg in 1990—was a 2004 release, The Hard Way, competent G-funk for the nostalgic. "Time waits for no man", an album review closes [Rondell Conway, "213: The Hard Way", Vibe, 2004 Sep;12(9):236].
- ^ a b S. Craig Watkins, Hip Hop Matters: Politics, Pop Culture, and the Struggle for the Soul of a Movement (Boston: Beacon Press, 2005), p 48, or elsewhere.
- ^ a b John McWhorter, All about the Beat: Why Hip-Hop Can't Save Black America (New York: Gotham Books, 2008).
- ^ a b Jody Miller, Getting Played: African American Girls, Urban Inequality, and Gendered Violence (New York: New York University Press, 2008), pp 94–95, or elsewhere.
- ^ Cheryl L. Keyes, Rap Music and Street Consciousness (Urbana & Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2002), p 96.
- ^ Ellen G. Friedman & Jennifer D. Marshall, eds. Issues of Gender (New York: Pearson Longman, 2004), p 95.
- ^ Hello Beautiful staff, "25 Women to Know: Dream Hampton", HelloBeautiful.com, Interactive One, LLC, 30 Mar 2011.
- ^ Dream Hampton, "Confessions of a hip-hop critic", in Evelyn McDonnell & Ann Powers, eds., Rock She Wrote: Women Write About Rock, Pop, and Rap (New York: Delta, 1995), pp 456–457. Hampton recalls, "As a nineteen-year-old intern from NYU's film school hired to organize The Source's photo collection, I was always offering unsolicited opinions. . . ."
- ^ Kellie D. Hay & Rebekah Farrugia, Women Rapping Revolution: Hip Hop and Community Building in Detroit (Oakland: University of California Press, 2020), pp ix–xi & pp 25–27. Hay & Farrugia, both professors in the communications department at Oakland University, located in Michigan, discuss at length Piper Carter, author of a foreword in the book. Carter had grown up living in Detroit and New York, and attended college both at Howard University, located in Washington DC, and at the State University of New York's Fashion Institute of Technology, located in New York City. After several years as a fashion photographer in New York, Carter returned to Detroit, but found Detroit's rap scene stultifying, especially for women, and sought to form a rap club for women. Carter's effort led to a "no-misogyny open mic" named the Foundation for Women in Hip Hop, active from 2009 to 2015, which drew local, national, and international media coverage. In 2012, after several weeks of attending the open mic, held each Tuesday night, Hay & Farrugia began interviewing and shadowing Carter. Carter recalls initially having gone throughout the community while expressing her wish to "build a hip-hop community where women can get on", but Carter then "started to really realize" that "no one cared" and that "they thought it was a dumb and horrible idea". Still, two local rappers already established—Invincible as well as Miz Korona—lent support, stimulating more support. Thereafter, Hay & Farrugia explain, "Piper anticipated enthusiastic support and so was shocked when a group of women she had reached out to for feedback suggested ideas and practices steeped in traditional misogynist stereotypes". More specifically, Carter herself recalls, "So I went back to the collective body with the idea of calling the women and hip-hop group the Foundation and the first thing—and I thought everyone would think it's genius—and the first thing I heard was, 'That's the dumbest name. Why don't you call it Bitches Ain't Shit?' It was this thing that stunned me. They were like, 'You should have girls in bikinis with Jello shots.' I was like blown back. These were coming from women! At first, I was so hurt I went home and cried. It doesn't sound like something to cry over, but . . . I cried more because I thought, here we are so far and I remember all the strides of women and it's like these younger women were upset because I wanted to do something that would empower them. They actually wanted to do the misogyny and they preferred that. Not ony did they suggest it, they were actually fighting me and pissed off because I didn't want to do that stuff. Now this proves the need; I'm definitely calling it this. If it's upsetting them that much, it's going to be called that." [pp 26–27]
- ^ a b A professor of English and of theatre arts, this Amy Cook, now at Stony Brook University, in New York, is not the American musician Amy Cook. Professor Cook has webpages among English faculty and College of Arts & Sciences administration [both webpages visited 15 Mar 2020 & 11 Aug 2021]. The latter, identifying Cook as its "Associate Dean for Research and Innovation", notes, "Cook specializes in the intersection of cognitive science and theatre with particular attention to Shakespeare and contemporary performance". According to the English webpage, supplemented by Cook's CV linked to there, Cook is 25% professor in the English department, and 75% professor in as well as chair of the Department of Theatre Arts [11 Aug 2021].
- ^ Amy Cook, Building Character: The Art and Science of Casting (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2018), p 94.
- ^ Ira A. Robbins, The Trouser Press Guide to '90s Rock, 5th edn. (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1997), p 217.
- ^ For a discussion of consolidation in the music industry, see Tom Hutchison, Amy Macy & Paul Allen, Record Label Marketing (Burlington, MA: Focal Press, 2006), pp 280–281.
- ^ Note that on "Bitches Ain't Shit" and, the following year, also on "Ain't No Fun"—Snoop's other reputedly misogynist anthem [Jenkins et al., Ego Trip's Book of Rap Lists, New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1999, p 40]—whereas Kurupt scorns any love ever for a "bitch", and so does Nate Dogg on the latter song, Snoop uniquely concedes having loved a "bitch", if both times incurring his present regret. In "Ain't No Fun", Snoop raps, "Hoes recognize; niggas do, too / 'Cause when bitches get scandalous and pull a voodoo / What you gon' do? You really don't know / So I'd advise you not to trust that ho / Silly of me to fall in love with a bitch / Knowing damn well I'm too caught up with my grip" ["Snoop Dogg—'Ain't No Fun' lyrics", MetroLyrics.com, CBS Interactive Inc., 2020].
- ^ Charlamagne tha God, Black Privilege: Opportunity Comes to Those Who Create It (New York: Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, 2017), p 246.
- ^ Abigail Addis, "Trina 'Da Baddest Bitch' ", Vibe, 2000 May;8(4):173.
- ^ Peter Shapiro, The Rough Guide to Hip-Hop, 2nd edn. (London: Rough Guides, 2005). Trina's song opens, "Niggas ain't shit but hoes and tricks / Lick the pearl tongue; nigga, keep your dick / Get the fuck out after I cum / So I can hop in my coupe and make a quick run" ["Trina—'Niggas Ain't Shit' lyrics", MetroLyrics, CBS Interactive Inc., 2020].
- ^ Frank Hoffmann, Rhythm and Blues, Rap, and Hip-hop (New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2006), p 166, remarks that Lil' Kim's debut or 1996 album, Hard Core, "which entered the pop charts at number 11 due in large part to its effervescent dance arrangements, represented something of a challenge to the misogynistic posturing of male gangsta rappers".
- ^ a b c d e In the Lil' Kim song "Suck My Dick", the hook is performed with a man barking at her (in parentheses): "('Ey, yo, come here, bitch) Nigga, fuck you / (No, fuck you, bitch) Who you talking to? / (Why you acting like a bitch?) 'Cause y'all niggas ain't shit / And—if I was dude, I'd tell y'all to suck my dick". By contrast, the third and final verse's last four bars musically interpolate but lyrically rehash: "Niggas ain't shit, but they still can trick / All they can do for me is suck my clit / I'm jumping the fuck up after I cum / Thinking they gon' get some pussy, but they gets none". (Compare with the original "Bitches Ain't Shit" hook: "Bitches ain't shit but hos and tricks / Lick on these nuts and suck the dick / Gets the fuck gone after you're done / Then I hops in my coupe to make a quick run".) According to Greg Thomas [Hip-Hop Revolution in the Flesh, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, pp 52–53], despite written lyrics saying "clit", Lil' Kim vocalizes "click" [Lil' Kim, sound recording, "Suck My Dick", Lil Kim @ YouTube "Official Artist Channel", 8 Nov 2014]. In Thomas's reading of this song, whereby Lil' Kim has already posed, "Imagine if I was a dude, hitting niggas from the back", her saying "click" not only rhymes with the prior line's word trick, but also joins the word dick, which the elder hook employs, with the word clit, which one expects Lil' Kim to employ, and invokes the click or C-L-I-C-K homophone clique or C-L-I-Q-U-E, indicating an exclusive group of associating persons.
- ^ a b Stephane Dunn, "Baad Bitches" and Sassy Supermamas: Black Power Action Films (Urbana & Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2008), p 27, partly explains, "Women's confiscation or revision of the 'Bad Bitch' label to signify female empowerment has a long history. During the second-wave of feminist fervor of the early '70s, Jo Freeman's 'The Bitch Manifest' (1971) critically configured 'Bitch' as a call to sisterhood and liberation struggle, declaring that the 'true bitch' was self-determined, militant, and beautiful. Today, the 'Bad Bitch' label and persona now function as a mode of expression; it is a way of participating in the braggadocio that remains such an important aesthetic element of rap music lyrical play and representation. Nevertheless, this is a risky proposition. It offers the allure of transgression, a seductive construction for women and especially for historically devalued women in the U.S. celebrity culture. The 'Bad Bitch' suggests a black woman from working-class roots who goes beyond the boundaries of gender in a patriarchal domain and plays the game as successfully as the boys by being in charge of her own sexual representation and manipulating it for celebrity and material gain. Yet, like the screen icons of 'baad bitches' Cleopatra and Foxy Brown, the careers of some key contemporary rap female stars suggest that they have not necessarily transgressed or radically upset established conceptualizations of black femaleness as much as they are perhaps immersed in the jezebel or bad girl codes long associated with it."
- ^ "Exploitation films are films that exaggerate sex, violence, drug use, and other perceived social evils. . . . One of the sociological effects of exploitation films is their ability to create and then naturalize certain stereotypes, particularly for those marginalized groups. . . . Most exploitation films are set in areas, such as the deep South or the inner city, that are as exaggerated as the characters. . . . Foxy Brown was the basis for Quentin Tarantino's 1997 Jackie Brown, a modern tribute to the blaxploitation films. . . . . The production of blaxploitation films only lasted roughly five years, but the genre helped establish stereotypes of black prostitutes and pimps that are still prevalent in popular media" [Debbie Clare Olson, "Films, exploitation", in Melissa Hope Ditmore, ed., Encyclopedia of Prostitution and Sex Work, Volume 1 (Greenwood Press, 2006), pp 165–166]. A common view, more specifically feminist, alleges about blaxploitation films "gratuitous violence and nudity" as "ever-lingering misogynistic barriers", but credits "that 'Foxy Brown' introduced blaxploitation film audiences to strong, sexy, and outspoken women for the first time" [Sari Rosenberg, "April 5, 1974: 'Foxy Brown' starring Pam Grier was released", MyLifetime.com, A&E Television Networks, 5 Apr 2018]. In 1994, cultural critic Nelson George maintained about the leader actor, "Pam Grier was a cult figure who was embraced even by many feminists for her ball-breaking action films. She remains one of the few women of any color in American film history who had vehicles developed for her that not only emphasized her physical beauty but also her ability to take retribution on men who challenged her" [Greg Braxton, "She's back and badder than ever: Pam Grier's '70s blaxploitation films are a big kick again, making the star a hot retro hero", Los Angeles Times, 27 Aug 1995]. And by August 1995, or 20 years after her film career's pinnacle, Grier was in high demand by young fans [Ibid.].
- ^ In the 1974 film Foxy Brown, heavy in sexuality and violence, its protagonist, played by Pam Grier, is a supersexy vigilante who hunts down a murderous drug ring by posing as a prostitute. Grier cameos in the 1994 music video for Snoop's Doggystyle album's song "Doggy Dogg World", as does Rudy Ray Moore, who played the 1975 film Dolemite's protagonist, a pimp and nightclub owner [Cheryl L. Keyes, Rap Music and Street Consciousness (Urbana & Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2002), p 217]. (In the biggest Chronic single, "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang", Snoop raps, "Showing much flex when it's time to wreck a mic / Pimping hos and clocking a grip like my name was Dolemite".) For more on the music video, see Eithne Quinn, Nuthin' But a "G" Thang: The Culture and Commerce of Gangsta Rap (New York: Columbia University Press, 2005), p 146. In gist, the video is mainly Snoop, then Kurupt, then Daz, accompanied by classic R&B group The Dramatics, on a nightclub stage for an audience featuring vintage celebrities, Grier playing the date of Dr. Dre, who with Ricky Harris directed the music video [Preezy Brown, "9 music videos that bridged the gap between blaxploitation and hip-hop", Revolt.tv, 15 Jun 2018].
- ^ Yvonne D. Sims, Women of Blaxploitation: How the Black Action Film Heroine Changed American Popular Culture (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2006), p 6.
- ^ "T.I., Juicy J & Outkast's Big Boi share their fondest memory of Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic' for 25th anniversary", Billboard.com, Prometheus Global Media, LLC, 14 Dec 2017.
- ^ "Music based on minor scales tends to sound serious or melancholy; also, the tonic triad built from a minor scale is a minor chord, which sounds darker than a major chord" [Roger Kamien, Music: An Appreciation (Boston: McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2008), p 46].
- ^ a b Victoria Malawey, "An analytic model for examining cover songs and their sources", in Nicole Biamonte, ed., Pop-Culture Pedagogy in the Music Classroom: Teaching Tools from American Idol to YouTube (Plymouth, UK: Scarecrow Press, 2011), pp 28–29, indicates, "Cover versions are a great resource for opening students' minds to analysis, because many such songs transform the meanings of the originals and present striking music differences that students can easily perceive and discuss. At more advanced levels, through transcription and close listening, students can compare pitch and rhythmic information"—as well as scrutinize "extramusical meanings" while "articulating specific qualitative differences in genre analysis". Exemplified in this passage are, among other songs, the present cover [Ben Folds, sound recording, "Bitches Ain't Shit—single", 8 Mar 2005, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Music.Apple.com, Apple Music, 2021], versus the original [Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg et al., sound recording, "Bitches Ain't Shit", Dr. Dre @ YouTube "Official Artist Channel", 19 Apr 2020].
- ^ a b c Betty Clarke, "Ben Folds—Hammersmith Apollo, London", TheGuardian.com, Guardian News & Media Limited, 2 Jun 2005. Photos are viewable elsewhere: Hayley Madden, contributor, Getty Images editorial #85019781, Ben Folds w/ Lindsay Jamieson & Jared Reynolds, and #85019918, Folds w/ Jamieson, live performance, Hammersmith Apollo, UK, 13 Dec 2005.
- ^ Justin A. Williams, " 'Cars with the boom': Music, automobility, and hip-hop 'sub' cultures", in Sumanth Gopinath & Jason Stanyek, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Mobile Music Studies, Volume 2 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), p 139.
- ^ a b In the cover version's second hook, vocalist Folds is accompanied by other vocalists (in parentheses): "(Bitches can't hang with the street) / She found herself short / (Now she's taking me to court) / That's real conversation for your ass".
- ^ Folds's first bypass of record labels was an EP that includes a cover version which debuted atop Billboard's Hot Digital Tracks in August 2003. But, its success being very relative, a music journalist, in January 2004, reacted, "Ben Folds has a new CD. What? You didn't know? That's because there is little, if any, publicity regarding this new five-song EP, available online only from a website— www.attackedbyplastic.com —created for the purpose of marketing it, Apple's iTunes, and Sony Music Digital Download. In a recording coup, Folds has recorded and released this album on his own, to avoid the publicity circus" [Jonathan Nelson, "Ben Folds: Speed Graphic EP", Treblezine.com, Treble Media, 9 Jan 2004]. The EP, his first, titled Speed Graphic, had a track—a cover of The Cure's 1985 single "In Between Days"—debut on Billboard's Hot Digital Tracks chart the week of August 9 at #1, selling 1 300 units, ahead of Avril Levigne's live EP [Silvio Pietroluongo, Minal Patel, Wade Jessen & Keith Caulfield, "SinglesMinded: It's 'Five O'Clock' at No. 1 on Country Singles & Tracks", Billboard, 2003 Aug 9;115(32):82]. Levigne's live EP, Try to Shut Me Up, released through only Apple's iTunes, had debuted the prior week, August 2, at #1 [Silvio Pietroluongo, Minal Patel & Wade Jessen, "SinglesMinded: RCA label group repeats its chart-topping trifecta", Billboard, 2003 Aug 2;115(31):64].
- ^ Alyssa Fried, "Ben Folds covers Dre on iTunes", MXDWN.com, 6 Mar 2005.
- ^ And in 2006, an obscure group, the Leisure Kings, itself turned the Ben Folds cover—that is, the Dre and Snoop vocals alone—into musical parody of, indeed, a lounge act ["Cover version: The Leisure Kings, 'Bitches Ain't Shit', Total Loungification (Retropolis, 2006) / Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg et al., 'Bitches Ain't Shit', The Chronic (Death Row, 1992), WhoSampled.com Limited, visited 25 May 2020].
- ^ a b Adam Bradley, The Poetry of Pop (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 2017), p 268.
- ^ Nielsen Soundscan, "The Billboard 200: Nov 11 2006", Billboard, 2006 Nov 11;118(45):85.
Black 44 Year Old Bitch Can Take the Dick
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitches_Ain%27t_Shit
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