Description
he 1990s was a rich vein of classic hip-hop, especially on the East Coast, which rendered some of the greatest works from the likes of Wu-Tang Clan, Nas, Mobb Deep, and many others. Frequently lost in the genre’s New York-centric history was Boston’s burgeoning hip-hop scene during the 1990s, spearheaded by working class Roxbury native Edward Anderson, best known by his stage name Ed O.G.
Over the course of his career, which has spanned nearly 30 years, Ed O.G. has maintained an admirably strong cult following, and has gone on to work with contemporaries like RZA, KRS-One, Masta Ace, Pete Rock, and Common, while touring the world over, and producing numerous solo and collaborative albums. Ed O.G.’s illustrious career debuted in 1991, with the release of what is arguably his best known album, Life Of A Kid In The Ghetto, a collaboration with his crew, billed as Da Bulldogs (which was actually an acronym for “Black United Leaders Living Directly on Grooving Sounds”), though Ed O.G was clearly the main event. An underrated classic in its own right, Life Of A Kid In The Ghetto runs a gamut of sounds ranging from the introspective conscious hip-hop of “Be A Father To Your Child”, to the whimsical boasts of “I’m Different”, to deeply political fare like the Ace & Quan and Def Jef-featuring “Speak Upon It”, plastered across a backdrop of Joe Mansfield-produced sample-heavy soundscapes, which snatched clips from deep cuts of James Brown, Roy Ayers, and The Delfonics, to name just a few. It also managed to generate Billboardcharting singles out of tracks like “Bug-A-Boo”, “Be A Father To Your Child”, and “I Got To Have It”, which would become Ed O.G’s signature track, and sample fodder for 2Pac, De La Soul, and DJ Premier. Get On Down now presents Life Of A Kid In The Ghetto, an unheralded rarity of renaissance hip-hop, reissued on vinyl for the first time since 1991. The audio has been remastered from its original tapes, so every bit and piece of Ed O.G’s masterpiece is crisp and clear on wax. An uncovered gem of 90s rap well worth a re-listen or first-time discovery, and a sterling representation of Boston hip-hop.
Tracklist:
A1. I’m Different
A2. Speak Upon It (feat. Ace & Quan, & Def Jef)
A3. Feel Like A Nut
A4. I Got To Have It
A5. She Said It Was Great
A6. Dedicated To The Right Wingers
B1. Gotta Have Money (If You Ain’t Got Money, You Ain’t Got Jack)
B2. Let Me Tickle Your Fancy
B3. Be A Father To Your Child
B4. Stop (Think For A Moment)
B5. Bug-A-Boo
B6. Life Of A Kid In The Ghetto