The
Week of March 5th, 2006: IN BLACK
HISTORY
THE
NOTORIOUS B.I.G.
CELEBRATE
BLACK HISTORY
EVERYDAY
In
just a few short years, the Notorious B.I.G.
went from a Brooklyn street hustler to the savior of East Coast
hip-hop to a tragic victim of the culture of violence he depicted
so realistically on his records. His all-too-brief odyssey
almost immediately took on mythic proportions, especially since
his murder followed the shooting of rival Tupac Shakur by only
six months. In death, the man also known as Biggie Smalls became
a symbol of the senseless violence that plagued inner-city America
in the waning years of the 20th century. Whether or not his death
was really the result of a much-publicized feud between the East
and West Coast hip-hop scenes, it did mark the point where both
sides stepped back from a rivalry that had gone too far. Hip-hop's
self-image would never be quite the same, and neither would public
perception. The aura of martyrdom that surrounds the Notorious
B.I.G. sometimes threatens to overshadow his musical legacy, which
was actually quite significant. Helped by Sean "Puffy"
Combs' radio-friendly sensibility, Biggie re-established East
Coast rap's viability by leading it into the post-Dr. Dre gangsta
age. Where fellow East Coasters the Wu-Tang Clan slowly built
an underground following, Biggie crashed onto the charts and became
a star right out of the box. In the process, he helped Combs'
Bad Boy label supplant Death Row as the biggest hip-hop imprint
in America, and also paved the way to popular success for other
East Coast talents like Jay-Z and Nas. Biggie was a gifted storyteller
with a sense of humor and an eye for detail, and his narratives
about the often violent life of the streets were rarely romanticized;
instead, they were told with a gritty, objective realism that
won him enormous respect and credibility. The general consensus
in the rap community was that when his life was cut short, sadly,
Biggie was just getting started.......read
more from VH1.com.
Andrea
Lee Oliver Woodson aka "Andy" aka "Mother"
Lucy Curry , Dot
Talley, Bertrand "Goocher" Frye, Irma Woodson,
Russell Woodson,
Nora Moorehead-Dixon, James Dixon, Anthony
"Torry" Dorsey,
Ross "Booper"
Thomas, Termain "Butter" Woodson, Dorothy Jean Lee
Ransom,
John Martin Moorehead,
Jr., Donna Ann Davis, Patrice "Trice Ball" Howze
Copyright
2005 Brotha Ash Productions. All Rights Reserved
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