BIO
Born
out of Montgomery, Alabama, a city best known as the cradle of the
Civil Rights Movement, Big Pimp and Mr. G Stacka The Gangsta,
collectively known as Dirty , speak the universal language of
hip hop with a down-home, southern accent.
First
cousins Daniel Big Pimp Thomas, 25, and Tavares Mr. G The
Gangsta Webster, 20 started rapping on a whim when they were grade
schoolers. We been rappin since the third grade, says The Pimp.
We got footage of us doing a show for [local radio personality] Roscoe
Killer Diller Miller years ago. We rapped for him at a store called
Big B Drugstore. We went over there to get some candy and he was doing
a live remote. And he said, Rap something. Miller was so impressed
with their performance, he invited them to make an appearance on his
weekly television show footage that he would proudly air again 12
years later, after the duo released their first album for Universal
Records, The Pimp and Da Gangsta.
Big
Pimp and Mr.
G were already local celebrities before the Universal release of The
Pimp and Da Gangsta. Dirty had previously released an
independent album on Nfinity music in the summer of 1999 entitled CountryVersatile.
They set it off with their hit local single Rollin Vogues and
sold nearly 3000 albums independently in less than a month. If their
national debut, which featured Rollin Vogues and Hit
Da Floe, introduced the world to the real flavor of Dirty
south music, its follow-up Keep It Pimp & Gangtsa,
will have the world talking country in no time. Says The Pimp;
It's letting you know who we is and where we come from. It's like
people from New York, the north or the west, they gon represent how
they was raised til they die. We want everybody to know that if you
sayin we country, we gon give you country and we gon make you talk
country cause it's gon sound so gooood to you. We got people in New
York sayin here we is boy. They thought they would never say that so
we bringing it like that. We know who we is, we know where we come
from, we know what we about.
Keep It
Pimp & Gangsta
displays the Dirty boys at their Dirty best telling
stories, painting
pictures and spitting truths so real, so riveting
they'll make listeners want to hop the next Greyhound headed south,
just to get a whiff of what life is like below the Mason Dixon line.
We really took our time with this album, says Big Pimp. We
didn't have the pressure about being on somebody else's time or dime
and going over any studio budgets cause we were at home in our studio.
Says Da Gangsta, This album will pretty much tell you how we
live on a everyday basis. What I mean by that is most of the stuff
that we talk about in our songs we've seen or been through. What you
hear Pimp saying is pretty much what he do or how he lives;
what you hear me say is pretty much what I do and how I live and we
just collab together like that.
The
album's first single, My Cadillac re-introduces The
Pimp and Da Gangsta cruising once again in their famous Lac
. The funk driven, southern slang twang track follows the duo cruising
through the streets of their beloved Montgomery; Big Pimp
Pimping the ladies and Mr. G earning and stacking G's as usual.
For that song, we took a sample from an old song called Beep Beep and
flipped it. We telling a story about what happened while we was in our
Cadillac.
And the
ride continues with Ghetto Ride, the most
autobiographical song on the album. It's basically talking about why
we living like this, says The Pimp. Why my mama had to get
evicted from her apartment, why we had to struggle coming up.
We not
really questioning God but we trying to tell him, Do you really see
the hood? If you don't see it come with me and let me ride you through
it. And I'm asking the Lord to Let me take you on a ghetto ride and
maybe you'll see how we came up, you'll feel the hood and do more for
the hood .
Lose
Control (Candy Man Pt. 2), pairs
the duo with Atlanta R&B group Silk. The song matches the
singers sexy, soulful vocals with Dirty's nasty boy rhymes.
Label-mate
and fellow Dirty South rapper Pastor Troy joins the
group on C mon , a confrontational,
knock-the-chip-off-my-shoulder battle cry. Explains, Da Gangsta,
C mon is pretty much about all the people who had any
negative thing to say about Dirty or anybody who's trying to do
their thing. Why don't you come to my face? Come on, bring the noise
if you ready for war.
Ackamonkey
(read act a
monkey ) is a get-crunk club joint that pays homage to southern towns
like Montgomery, aka Monkey Town. Ackamonkey is on the level of
how we act down here. Monkey is a word for act a fool, or crazy. Once
they hear it, they gon act a monkey on it. We callin out a lotta
places that's from the country, like we callin Georgia, Florida all
the places that's real south.
Keep It
Pimp & Gangsta
features appearances by several members of Montgomery's thriving music
scene and, with the exception of Silk and Pastor Troy,
there are no other big name cameos. We worked with Silk and Pastor
Troy because of the vibe that we got from their music, says Da
Gangsta. And then Silk we been listening to them when we was
coming up. They had a couple of songs that we liked. Lose
Control was a song we wanted to re-do so we pretty much felt
them on their music. There's a lotta other artists out there we
wouldn't mind working with but right now we trying to do this thing Dirty
way. Dirty album so we try to put ourselves out there first and maybe
later on they'll call us to do cameos.
While
many rap acts have come from the south, Dirty is the first to
come from Alabama and they take their place in history quite
seriously. Dirty south, says Da Pimp.
One
listen to Keep It Pimp & Gangsta and listeners will
know that the south is definitely on the rise again but they'll also
realize that in the real world the world that rappers rap about what
you say is more important than how you say it and who you are is far
more significant than where you re from.
They'll
realize that, when you really think about it, there s not that much
difference in the ghettos of the north, south, east and west. And
they'll learn that even though there are lots of stories and lots of
rappers born each day in the Montgomery, Alabamas of the world, there
is only one Dirty.
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