The
Game is from the birthplace of Gangsta Rap,
Compton, California. But this is a new, different
Westside story, one that joins with the Eastside
while paying respects to rap's hardcore pioneers
of the '80s, NWA. The Game, a former
gangbanger who turned to rap after being shot
five times and left for dead, is about peace
not war. Working closely with Dr. Dre on his
debut album; This Game is for real.
 "The
Game Vol. 1," (Aftermath/G Unit/Interscope),
the debut album from The Game (a/k/a
Jayceon Taylor), announced the arrival of the
most significant West Coast gangsta rapper since
Snoop
Dogg more than a decade earlier. With
guest spots from 50
Cent, Nate Dogg and several others,
as well as producers from Dr. Dre to Kanye
West to Just Blaze and tracks such as
"Like Father Like Son," "Church For Thugs,"
"Dreams," "Where I'm From" and "Westside Story,"
"The Game Vol. 1" resurrected the truth, spirit
and hope of hardcore rap.
"A lot of rap today is bubblegum bullshit that
says nothing and means nothing to anybody living
in the 'hood," says the rapper with a tattoo
of NWA's Eazy-E on his right forearm. "I'm not
knocking anybody's hustle but I can't feel what's
in hip-hop today. Everybody's rapping but they're
not saying anything. NWA, Biggie, 2Pac,
Snoop and Jay-Z
all had something to say then Biggie, Pac and
Eazy died and it was devastating. We almost
let rap die until the Great White Hype (Eminem)
saved hip-hop and 50
dropped the gangsta wake-up call. I feel like
it's my turn now and I can fill the shoes."
What all three have in common is the guiding
hand of Dr. Dre, Compton's own and one of the
founding members of NWA. "The best moment I've
had in rap was walking into his studio in 2002
and Dre saying he heard a mix tape of my freestyles
and wanted to sign me," says Game. "Trying
to act cool? I was frozen. I'm still starstruck
with Dre. He's been almost 20 years at the top.
That I get to soak up the game from a musical
genius like him gives me a 20-year head start
on everybody else. He's like the father I never
had. Everything about a father throwing a baseball
to his son in the suburbs, that's what NWA was
to me. They were the only role models I had
besides Michael Jordan. Eazy was the father
of hardcore and I don't understand why he only
gets honorable mention when people talk about
rap."
Game's beloved grandmother nicknamed
him Game because he was always game for
anything – basketball, running track,
riding bikes, playing in the streets. Family
problems related to his father caused him to
be placed in a foster home from the third grade
to the ninth grade. "My childhood was f----d
up but it wasn't really that different from
anyone else who lived in the 'hood," he says.
Soon after he was returned to his mother, one
of his older brothers, Jevon, was shot and killed.
The Game then started running behind
another older brother, Big Fase 100, who had
been taken in by the Cedar Block Piru Bloods,
even though they grew up in a Crip neighborhood
called Santana Block on Compton's East Side.
Fase tried to keep him away from thuggin', but
once it became clear that Game was going
to be there, his brother was determined to teach
him how to survive on the streets. Then, after
graduating high school in 1999, an older adopted
brother, Charles, was shot and killed. "People
don't know what type of toll that takes on your
life," he says. "Especially being young and
just fresh out in the world." A one-time star
shooting guard for Compton High School who was
offered scholarships to various colleges, the
6-foot-4 Game now started gangbangin'
hard – car thefts, drug dealing and shootings.
Finding him too much to handle, his mother kicked
him out of her house.
In 2000, The Game and his brother moved
into the projects in a nearby city and took
over its drug trade. Their success attracted
rivals. Late on the night of October 1, 2001,
Game was alone in their apartment when
there was a knock on the door. Game became
victim to a home invasion. "That was the biggest
learning experience ever in my life. This sounds
crazy but I appreciate that happening to me,
because I'd probably be dead if it didn't. Anybody
who gets shot and survives feels lucky. On the
other hand I went through so much already that
I felt somebody owed me. Now I could live out
my dreams."
He sent his brother to buy new copies of all
the classic rap albums, East Coast and West
Coast – Dre's "The Chronic," Big's "Ready
To Die," Jay-Z's
"Reasonable Doubt," Ice Cube's "Death Certificate,"
Snoop's
"Doggystyle," 2Pac's "All Eyez On Me," every
Kool G Rap record, and anything from NWA. He
studied them carefully over the next five months.
In December 2001, he rapped for the first time.
"I mixed everybody's style into one. That's
why some people feel that I sound like I'm from
the East Coast even though I rap about the West
Coast."
"I'm telling my story. I'm out to please no
one but myself. I'm not telling anybody to sell
drugs or pick up guns. When I sold drugs it
was because it was my last resort, because I
had four sisters and an older brother and we
were eating Cheerios on Thanksgiving. When I
picked up a gun it was because my life was threatened.
If you don't want to hear that; then don't listen.
I'm not glorifying the life I lived because
I wouldn't wish that on anybody. I'm just one
human being raised in the 'hood who wanted nothing
more than to get out."
His sole regret is that his grandmother –
the only person who ever believed he could make
it out – passed away before she could
see his success, not just in rap but in life:
In summer 2003, Game became a father
for the first time with son Harlem Caron Taylor.
He says the best moment he's ever experienced
was watching his son's mother give birth: "That
was some next level s--t. I've never been so
happy. I wanted to bring him into the world
so much that I was going, 'Come on!'"
There's pride and even optimism for the future.
"As humans we grow and the next album will be
about how I'm living now - and I'm loving life."
The Game has only just
begun.
Notable songs include --
- Higher
- Runnin'
- Like Father, Like Son
- The Documentary
- Don't Worry
- Compton 2 Fillmoe
- Don't Cry
- Drama Is Real
- Where I'm From
- How We Do
- G.A.M.E
- Exclusively
Genre: Rap
Styles:
..Gangsta Rap
..Hardcore Rap
..West Coast Rap
Years
active:
..00s
Born:
Nov 27, 1979
..in California
..in Compton
|