Every year, it seems, another Southern city makes it onto the mainstream rap radar. Is Birmingham ready to pull a Memphis? Lil Haze's first single is certainly a dignified effort, built on familiar skittish beats and slurry rhymes but lined with uncommonly spacey synths.
Lil Haze is a man on a mission; determined to discover new
lands and new civilizations in the vast world of hip-hop. Lyrically, conceptually
and musically, he?s in another orbit hovering over earth waiting for his
opportunity to make a dynamic landing that will forever change the landscape
of hip-hop as we know it.
With the release of his debut CD, Doin da Most
(Birmingham Records), the 22-year-old Birmingham native is
determined to put the ?Magic City? on hip-hop?s map and he?s vowed to do it
without verbal misogyny or profanity. ?I don?t really use profanity in my lyrics,?
says Haze. ?I?m trying to bring a whole new flavor.? The father of a young
daughter, Haze stresses that his commitment to making vulgarity-free music
has nothing to do with recent movements to clean up hip-hop. ?Now that it?s
all coming to the light I?m comfortable with it but it?s always been in me to be
that way,? he says.
And so far it looks like earthlings are getting his message loud and clear.
His lead single, ?Whut It Iz,? featuring Ying Yang Twins, has been a favorite
among local fans and has begun to spread quickly across the southeast. And
there?s more where that came from.
Doin da Most is a musical constellation of non-threatening, feel-
good beats and rhymes that hearken back to the early days of hip-hop when
having fun was the primary focus of music.
One of Haze?s favorites, ?Git to da Flo,? rekindles that old party spirit and
is the song that Haze says best describes who he is and what he?s about. ??Git
to da Flo? sends a positive messages to the kids,? he explains. ?If you go out
and listen to some of these rappers ? I?m not knocking everybody but there?s a
few ? they?re disrespecting women, but this song says you don?t have to
disrespect women to have a good time, so let?s have fun cause that?s what I?m
all about ? having a good time.?
Rounding out Doin da Most is ?Dubs,? a riding song spiked by a
naughty, slithering track, ?Bounce,? notable for its dramatic bass line and
Haze?s brash vocal delivery and ?What I?m About,? which boasts the rapper?s
non-stop flow sweetened by the crooning of a female vocalist in the
background.
Lil Haze says he is ready to show the world that hip-hop life
does indeed exist in Birmingham, Alabama. ?We doin? big things down here in
the ham? says Lil Haze and he?s set to show the world just how he?s
livin? the good life; having a good time doing it the only way he knows how, by
Doin? da Most.