Geto Boys Declare “War”
Bushwick Bill returned to notorious hardcore rap crew the Geto Boys
after seven years for one reason: timing. “Everything that’s out
there now is not dealing with social issues,” he says. “Party
anthems and party things aren’t what people need when they’re the
most oppressed.”
Due out November 9th, War and Peace furthers the Geto
Boys’ legacy of telling uncomfortable truths in the starkest of
terms. “We’re still dealing with social issues, tough social
circumstances and how it affects us as individuals. We still want
you to have a good time listening to our music, but we still
believe putting the message in the music.”
That message has been reaching ears and turning heads since the
Boys’ 1990 self-titled debut. In particular, the track “Mind of a
Lunatic” became the focus of controversy when the Parents Music
Resource Center protested the song’s graphically violent content
and leaned on Time Warner not to distribute the album.
Though War and Peace often tackles tough big-picture
issues, “I Tried” keeps a tight focus on the day-to-day
difficulties of living. “The hook goes, ‘I tried, I tried to do the
best I could/Sometimes I guess my best ain’t good,'” says Bushwick.
“The song is dealing with your kids, your parents and the people
who ever believed in you, and explaining to them you’re trying to
do the best you could.”
As for his group mates, Bushwick says that there are no tensions
between him and Scarface and Willie D. “My discrepancy was strictly
with the structure of the paperwork of the Geto Boys,” he says. “It
had nothing to do with individuals. We gelled pretty fully together
— it didn’t seem like we’d been away from each other for seven
years.”