I cheer pretty hard for Big K.R.I.T.. Sincere, creative, hard working and really thoughtful about making rap music. Not a bad video either.
Tag Archives: Big K.R.I.T.
hip hop 2011: Building vs. Beef
I cheer for a couple of rappers who have successfully avoided beef. I know that a lot of people still make money through simple controversy, but I wanted to acknowledge a couple of rappers who took the classy road.
I’ve been listening to Big K.R.I.T.’s Return to 4eva all day long. Check out “Sookie Now,” the spicy track that K.R.I.T. rocks with fellow Mississippian David Banner.
You might remember David Banner back when he was rapping and scaring folks as a Southern political rapper. Or perhaps you are one of those liberals who remembers him as the rapper who drove a tractor trailer of water and supplies to New Orleans in the aftermath of Katrina. Either way, he is an absolute boss, and for a rapper coming up in Mississippi he had to be the paragon.
K.R.I.T. invites him on the track, gives him props in interviews — does what a gracious up-and-comer should do with an elder. Pay his damn respect. The result on “Sookie Now” is just awesome. Banner’s verse is blood-chilling.
Today, the big hip hop news is that Curren$y and Lil Wayne have a collaboration — “Smoke sum’n” — a track released on the 110% badass DJ Drama mixtape Verde Terrace. (Actually Curren$y’s verse is on Verde Terrace, Lil’ Wayne sent in his verse a week later, whoops!).
(Thanks and props to The Smoking Section one of the best hip hop blogs running.)
Curren$y spent time on a couple of labels before meeting up with an appreciative audience. His time with Lil’ Wayne and Young Money resulted in some great tracks. “Poppin’ bottles” and “Where the cash at?” on Dedication 2 are standouts. Despite leaving the label and setting up his own projects, Curren$y passed on every opportunity to attack Lil Wayne and his folks.
I hear some bitterness on the tracks of “Independence day,” but they aren’t explicit Lil’ Wayne slams — they are complaints about the industry.
I guess I’ll add Gucci and Waka to this conversation and note that despite various potential provocation they have never turned on each other that I know about it. Ferarri Boyz get’s a solid 3.5 from this fan — it’s a solid undertaking. But kudos to continuing to build with each other.
Respect to the emcees who take the high road. Those emcees who simply step past the petty bullshit and make good music.
videos that kick ass
Here is batgirl arguing for equal pay. Thanks to feministing for the cool link.
And Big K.R.I.T. with the remix of Country shit featuring Ludachris and Bun B. Yowza.
Absolute victory: Big K.R.I.T

thanks to the apollokidz.com for the photo
Big K.R.I.T. is an astounding musician. His mixtape Return of 4-eva is emblematic of new melodic southern hip hop and the political economy of a rapper on the come up. Return of 4-eva is an album, with musical cohesion, quick skits, and a distinct tape-long flow. It is also given away free.
K.R.I.T. is one of several artists who develop fans by giving away exceptional musical product. It seems like he just wants to make fans. Well in my case it worked. Whatever you put out, I’m buying.
Return of 4-eva is an engaging listen all the way through. The intro track hints at the Charlie Daniels Band as the fantasy of an emcee taking the stage to a roaring crowd is positively cathartic; engineered through clever audio layering into a horn-heavy crescendo. Fade into an alarm clock to the track “Rise and Shine,” boom-bap and an invitation into the worldview of a sincere young emcee hustling to make something happen.
Big K.R.I.T. can make a name for himself with his poetic articulation of consciousness and struggle. “The vent” and in particular “Free my soul” offer a lens on ethics of consumerism.
“I think it was the shine that got us blinded not sure of what we reading when we signing our life away/they say ignorance is bliss well I’d like to stay in the game and test out records and real shit they don’t like to play/you ghetto famous to us, you just Bojangles to them/ tap your feet, tip your brim and sell it back to your kin/ I don’t rap I spit hymns my god’s bigger than them trying to blacken your heart and say we’re children of men/ I sin ‘cuz I’m ain’t perfect but I’d rather save your life than hurt it.”
And of course, the tune “Dreamin'” for which there is a fairly earnest K.R.I.T. narrating while engaging in some custodial work.
Better than the heart-felt K.R.I.T. is the wood-wheel steering old school driving emcee out for a ride in “Rotation,” “Highs and Lows,” and “My sub.” “My sub” in particular is a thumping tune about the value of bass and it might be the best track on the album. It is a good point to note that most of these beats were made by K.R.I.T. himself. The sound is mature hip hop with Southern flavor and a refreshing absence of the pop loops that saturate most hip hop projects. Each track was obviously lovingly crafted to articulate the distinct sound of the emcees or the tune itself.
“Sookie now” positions the Mississippi up-and-comer with the Mississippi veteran David Banner. I guess sookie now is parlance for ‘we don’t believe you.’ Big K.R.I.T. enjoys the chance to drawl out while Banner gets righteously political. “From the land of the Ku Klux/with no masks/and my folks they ain’t never had/ the rebel flag still flying/ bitch you lying if you say we ain’t hanging/from a tree Fredrick Carter Greenwood Mississipi.”
His flow is nice over slow thumping beats. “American Rap Star” and “King’s Blues” are good examples where he can get expressive about his struggles in smooth cadence. There is some casual sexism in K.R.I.T.’s lyrics especially associated with sexual behavior and pimping. Fortunately his rhymes portray diverse perspectives of women and he isn’t a one-note misogynist. There was more of this pimping paradigm represented in his previous mixtape Big K.R.I.T. wuz here.
The “Country Shit (remix)” offers a latent pack of trouble. The beat is rugged (and a holdover from Big K.R.I.T. wuz here) sharp snaps and a bumping bass hit that moves the listeners through verses by Ludacris, K.R.I.T. and Bun B.
Return of 4-eva is an awesome undertaking, a true creation of great musician. Thank you Big K.R.I.T.
Now make a video for “My sub!”
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