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À la Chart

Use both hands and both ears to sample 2005's auditory offerings

By Sam Chennault

Published on December 29, 2005

Hip-Hop Hors D'oeuvres

There were at least a couple of classic albums (Beanie Sigel's The B. Coming and Kanye West's Late Registration) and a slew of great ones (Madlib's The Further Adventures of Lord Quas, Young Jeezy's Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101, and The Game's The Documentary) in 2005. Balance these albums with a steady procession of club-banging singles (Trina's "Don't Trip" and Ying Yang Twins' "Wait [The Whisper Song]"), as well as weepy ghetto ballads (G-Unit's "Hate It or Love It" and Damian Marley and Nas's "Road to Zion"), and you have a solid, if not spectacular, year for hip-hop.

But beneath the surface lurked a restlessness — a cultural and an aesthetic agitation that was both hidden and violent. The nation's roiling political climate added a certain postmillennium tension, but there was also a collective desire for the genre to move beyond 2004's crunk and pop-hop template. Some artists looked to hip-hop stepchildren such as grime, one-drop reggae revivalism, and reggaeton, while others banked on the emergence of the new and exciting scene in Houston to liven things up. In this vein, we examine three major trends that shaped this year in hip-hop.

Still Tippin': The Emergence of H-Town Rap: Yeah, "Still Tippin'" is two years old and at this point more played out than Stan Van Gundy. But when hip-hop historians look back at 2005, chances are it will be remembered as the year H-Town rap broke. The city's hip-hop scene had been poppin' since long before The Geto Boys put the South on the map with 1991's "My Mind's Playin' Tricks on Me," but though great and innovative music had been coming out of the region from artists such as DJ Screw and UGK, Houston rap was viewed as too insular, too esoteric, and just too Southern.

All of that changed with "Still Tippin'." The song introduced Houston's new rap vanguard — Paul Wall, Slim Thug, and Mike Jones — and though it wasn't technically screw music, it's austere synth swells and simple yet menacing beat did seem to announce the arrival of a new hip-hop aesthetic. The corresponding video was the icing on the cake. The video's grainy, low-budget look and communal focus seethed an unearthed underground vitality that was reminiscent of Dr. Dre's 1992 classic "Nuthin' but a öG' Thang."

The promise of "Still Tippin'" went largely unfulfilled. Unlike Dre's early Cali revolution, Houston would neither largely reconfigure how hip-hop sounds nor produce any genuine superstars. Sure, Bun B's Trill was great, but it paled in comparison to his earlier UGK material. And Mike Jones's Who Is Mike Jones? was little more than a series of marketing gimmicks disguised as an album. Though Slim Thug's Already Platinum was decent enough, with most of the production duties handled by the Neptunes, it wasn't exactly an H-Town album. And after all the excitement and hype that followed Paul Wall, it was disappointing to discover on The People's Champ that he was merely a mediocre rapper with a shiny grill. In the end, Houston felt like more of a pleasant diversion than a genuine transformation.

Stop Snitching! Hip-Hop Goes to Jail: In 2005 it seemed as though every week another hip-hop figure was getting arrested, going to jail, or whining to the press about the bias of judges or the unfairness of his parole hearing. Philly MC Cassidy celebrated his first Top 10 hit — the infectious early-summer jam "I'm a Hustla" — by allegedly going on a killing spree in his old neighborhood. After foisting the noisome "So Icy" on an ice-saturated public, Atlanta MC Gucci Mane was arrested not once but twice — first for murder and later, in Miami, for aggravated assault. And while Beanie Sigel's The B. Coming may have been criminally overlooked by fans, he certainly wasn't ignored by the law. By the time his album dropped in March, he was in jail for a litany of charges too extensive to list in just one edition of this paper.

Whew. And the beat goes on. Meanwhile the angels at Murder Inc. (home to Ja Rule and Ashanti) were indicted (and amazingly acquitted) on money-laundering charges involving Eighties drug lord Supreme McGriff. Over in Texas, UGK's Pimp C remained behind bars for brandishing a firearm. And up-and-coming Miami rapper Dirtbag returned to jail for violating his probation.

Lil' Kim's perjury case took the cake, though. During her trial, she denied being at the scene of the crime despite numerous eyewitnesses and a surveillance tape that clearly showed otherwise. It was a tragically logical conclusion to the "Stop Snitching" campaign that has become hip-hop's unofficial motto.

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