Ice Cube
b. Oshea Jackson, June 1969, Crenshaw, South Central Los
Angeles, California, USA. Controversial hardcore rapper who
formerly worked with the equally inflammatory N.W.A.. Following a
relatively stable background, both his mother and father working
at UCLA, Cube entered the homeboy lifestyle. One day I was
sitting in class with a friend called Kiddo and we had some time
on our hands, so he said let's write a rap. At the age of
16 he penned his first important rap; Boyz N The Hood,
which was later recorded by Eazy-E. He subsequently spent time
with CIA, an embryonic rap outfit produced by Dr. Dre. As guest
lyricist, he brought NWA 8 Ball and Dopeman, which would comprise
the opening salvo from the band. After studying architectural
draughtsmanship in Phoenix, Arizona, he returned to the NWA fold
in time for the ground-breaking STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON. He would
leave the group at the tail-end of 1989, amid thinly veiled
attacks on NWA's Jewish manager Jerry Heller. His debut album,
recorded with Public Enemy producers the Bomb Squad, drew
immediate mainstream attention with its controversial lyrical
platform. As well as homophobia and the glamorisation of violence,
his work was attacked primarily for its overt sexism; raps about
kicking a pregnant girlfriend (You Can't Fade Me) notwithstanding.
Conversely, Ice Cube overlooks a production empire (Street
Knowledge) run for him by a woman, and he also fostered the
career of female rapper Yo Yo (who appears alongside him
defending her gender on AMERIKKKA'S MOST WANTED'S It's A Man's
World). The politicisation of his solo work should also be noted;
in his NWA days he had once written Life ain't nothing but
bitches and money, but his words since then have
incorporated numerous references to black ideology which add up
to something approaching a manifesto. His defence against
critical discomfort with his rhymes, I put a mirror to
black America, has been hijacked by many other, less worthy
cases. To Ice Cube's credit, he went on to produce two excellent
sets, THE PREDATOR and LETHAL INJECTION. The former in particular
boasted a much more discursive approach to the problems of the
ghetto, including reflections on the Los Angeles riots and the
Rodney King beating. Perhaps it was marred by the blunt sexism of
tracks like Cave Bitch, but it was certainly an advance.
Musically it was typified by a stirring One Nation Under A Groove,
with a lead vocal by the song's writer, George Clinton. In 1993
he also teamed up with fellow rapper Ice-T, with whom he shares
more than a similarity in name, to launch a fashion range
incorporating a gun logo. No stranger to controversy, Ice Cube
looks like becoming better acquainted with commerce too. His 1992
film TRESPASS, re-titled after the LA Riots deemed original
moniker LOOTERS unsavoury, saw him team up with Ice-T once more.
He had already starred in John Singleton's 1991 hit film, titled
after his first rap, BOYZ N THE HOOD, and later appeared in
the same director's HIGHER LEARNING. Having completed four
million-selling albums, Ice Cube's career has attracted the
attention of those outside the hip hop fraternity. It Was A Good
Day gave him a massive profile via MTV. Like Ice-T, Cube was
targeted on right wing assassination lists discovered by the
police in 1993. However, his career has continued unabated.
Street Knowledge has provided Da Lench Mob and Kam with
successful albums on which Cube has acted as executive producer,
and he has set up a second subsidiary, titled after his posse,
Lench Mob, and written several screenplays.
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