The
son of a touring barbershop quartet member,
Charles Jones III was born in Natchez, Mississippi,
where he would eventually join the Navy and
serve in Africa. Upon his return to America,
a newly-discharged and saxaphone-equipped Jones
decided to perform at Club 521 in Brooklyn where
he would meet Fannie Ann Little of Mount Gilliard,
NC, and subsequently marry her in 1960. As Jones
took on the new name of Olu Dara, he took Fannie
to Queensbridge and began a professional jazz
career, which would strongly influence his future
firstborn child.
Born
on September 14, 1973, Nasir Bin Olu Dara Jones
(given by Dara's best friend Rasheed, it is
Arabic for "Helper and Protector") was followed
by Jabari Jones then finally young Kiane Jones.
Nasir spent the next 18
years of his life on the eight city blocks that
spanned from Queensboro Bridge to 41st Side.
Watching Godzilla movies and reading Iron Man
comic books did nothing but spur his imagination,
as his father often brought him to the studio
or on tour. During this time, Nasir was listening
to his father's Curtis Mayfield records and
being introduced to hip-hop by the Allie brothers
in his project building.
Nasir had plans of becoming a
producer/DJ as he hung pin-ups of the Juice
Crew, Slick Rick, Rakim, LL Cool J,
Salt & Pepa, and Sweet Tee on his wall.
Unfortunately (or fortunately for the fans he
would inspire), he was too poor to afford turntables
and a beat machine, so Nas did the next
best thing: pick up a pencil and a napkin to
write his first rap ("My name is Nasir, the
rhyme engineer / and if you want to battle,
I will end your career / people perpetrate,
I process much power / it's too late to debate,
it's MC hour").
Things
were not looking good in the Jones' household,
however, as Olu Dara's groupie-f**king, powder-snorting
lifestyle caused Fannie to divorce him in 1985.
The 12-year old Nasir started to fall
into the traps of the street as he (renaming
himself "Nasty Nas"), Jabari (who became
"Jungle"), and the rest of the crew began to
hang out in front of bodega named Sandino's.
By the time he was 14, Nasty
Nas dropped out of grade 10 and smoked his
first spliff. As he recalls, "the first time
I ever smoked was with this thugged-out white-boy
who wore a big rope chain ...I thought weed
was the worst thing in the world, I even hated
the smell. But after I smoked that first time,
I felt like I couldn't live without it." In
the next few years, Nas would be forever
haunted by a dramatic event. One day, while
chilling in his boy's room, he heard shots fire
and ran downstairs and saw his best friend Ill
Will dead on the pavement and Jungle bleeding.
Through a chance encounter, Nas hooked
up with and rapped for an impressed Large Professor
(despite popular belief that MC Serch was the
first one to meet Nas). His advanced
flow and unheard-of-rhyme-schemes compelled
LP to give this young QB native a chance. Nas
did not disappoint, as he exploded onto the
rap scene in 1991 on Main Source's "Live At
The BBQ" posse cut.
Threatening to "kidnap the President's
wife without a plan," Nas let the hip-hop
world know that he "went to hell for snuffing
Jesus." Afterwards, after blessing the Zebrahead
soundtrack with "Halftime," Nas met MC
Serch through Large Professor and was given
the opportunity to work on a "Live At The BBQ"
sequel, "Back To The Grill Again." Although
his verse was short, Nas shined the most
brightly, alongside veterans such as Chubb Rock
and managed to keep his name alive in the industry.
Finally, MC Serch brought Nas to Faith
Newman, Director of A&R at Columbia Records,
and broke a deal for Nasty Nas.
April 19, 1994, was a landmark in hip-hop history
as Nas' debut album was released. It
was the magical combination of producers like
DJ Premier, Large Professor, Pete Rock, L.E.S,
and Q-Tip, combined with the effortless heartfelt
poetics of Nasty Nas that created "Illmatic,"
which received an unexpected, yet well-deserved
5 mics from the then-credible rap Bible,
"The Source."
In addition, Nas
was hailed as the second coming to Rakim (the
trendsetter and god MC of the golden '80s age
of hip-hop), someone who would bring back lyricism
in a g-funkdafied era of booty bitches. Although
it succeeded in bringing back focus to the East,
"Illmatic" did not fare well financially. Even
the four videos (Halftime, It Ain't Hard To
Tell, The World Is Yours, One Love) could not
garnish Nas with a gold plaque.
From appearing on the "Street Fighter" soundtrack
to rapping with Kool G Rap, Nas spent
the remainder of 1994 and all of 1995 confirming
the high expectations that had been thrust upon
him with the release of "Illmatic." One notable
achievement was his prolific verse on "Verbal
Intercourse" on Raekwon's "Only Built 4 Cuban
Linx" album.
Apparently possessed, Nas
received a Source Quotable as he had the distinction
of being the only non-Wu-member to be allowed
on a Wu-Tang album (until Ras Kass appeared
on "Bobby Digital") when the Clan was undeniably
the greatest group at the time and were strictly
keeping guest appearances inside the fam. Listed
as Nas Escobar, he attacked the prison system
("It's like a cycle: niggaz come home, some'll
go in") and dropped urban philosophy ("From
the womb to the tomb, presume the unpredictable").
Regardless, his biggest and proudest
accomplishment in life came after in the birth
of his only daughter Destiny Jones (remember
The World Is Yours? "think of a word best describing
my life to name my daughter") with his girlfriend
Carmen. Perhaps these two extra mouths to feed
initiated his decision to approach the next
album with a more accessible direction.
With anticipation building and patience wearing
thin, the release of "It Was Written" on July
2, 1996, was heavily scrutinized by the discerning
public. Under new management, Nas fell
victim to the sophomore jinx, not because the
quality of the tracks were less than his debut,
but because of various circumstances. Instead
of the angst-filled Nasty Nas, the soft-spoken,
obviously blunted, nonchalant Nas Escobar
followed trends instead of setting them with
his mafioso bravado. In addition, gone were
the project funk-induced beats of the "Illmatic"
producers, replaced with the glossy soundscapes
of The Trackmasters; only DJ Premier remained
(L.E.S joined The Trackmasters), but for one
song. What was also surprising was that Dr.
Dre produced and appeared on one track; it was
unheard of for a high profile Cali artist to
work with a New York artist of Nas' caliber
during the turbulent time of a media-fabricated
East/West beef. These aforementioned factors
caused Nas to be unfairly criticized
by reviewers who would not recognize the album's
brilliance until years later.
Regardless of public opinion, "It Was Written"
was a milestone in Nas' career. His life
was turned upside-down as hatred came from all
directions. One blazing gun was Tupac Shakur,
who felt that Nas was biting his thug
style and indirectly dissing him on "The Message."
With rumors abound that 2pac had retaliated
on his upcoming Makaveli album, Nas and
his crew bumped heads with 2pac and his boys
at the MTV Awards. After Suge Knight calmed
everyone down, he allowed Nas and 2pac
to discuss the removal of the "Against All Odds"
diss. As Nas recalls, "So we talked and
it was a beautiful thing. He said, 'If me and
you are on cool terms, I won't have to come
at you on Makaveli. I'll take the dis off my
record and we need to build. We can set up a
meeting where we sit down and make this shit
real.'" Two days later, 2pac was brutally gunned-down
in Las Vegas and the Nas dis remained
intact.
Another beef that stemmed from "It Was Written"
was between Nas and his boy Cormega (he
had even shouted him out on Illmatic's "One
Love"). Nas' plan was to create a supergroup
called The Firm, which consisted of himself,
Foxy Brown, Cormega, and AZ with Dr. Dre &
The Trackmasters on production. They had made
their official debut on "Affirmative Action,"
dropped a few mixtape freestyles, shout each
other out on their respective albums, and collaborated
for the occasional b-sides. Yet, when they appeared
in The Source and RapCity, gone was Cormega,
replaced by unknown newcomer Nature. There are
many sides to the story, but this is the most
popular one: apparently, Nas' manager
wanted Cormega to sign an exclusive deal with
Trackmasters, but when Cormega refused, he was
out and Nature was in. Cormega was also vexed
that Nas didn't stand up for him and
thus, the fiery white label "F**k Nas
& Nature" emerged on the underground scene.
The show must go on, however, and on October
21, 1997, The Firm's "The Album" was released.
Mixed feelings arrived as the Dr. Dre banger
"Phone Tap" appeared with the shiny "Firm Biz"
and it seemed that Nas was definitely
not the second coming of Rakim. The album suffered
from inconsistency, too many guest appearances,
etc... it basically was a flop while Nas
became less focused on the music and decided
to expand his entertainment career. From appearing
in "In Too Deep" to endorsing Esco clothing,
Nas also got his own label imprint and
co-write/starred in "Belly" with
DMX. One riveting scene was near the end
when Nas reenacted the infamous "One
Love" park bench convo with a little foul-mouthed
shorty.
It was 1998 and Nas had been limiting
himself to guest-appearances when the public
caught wind of the news: after a three-year
hiatus, the gold child would release "I Am .
. . The Autobiography," a double-disc LP for
1999. The timing was wrong, however, as bootlegging
had began to get rampant on the Internet and
the streets; to Nas' dismay, a handful of tracks
for "I Am..." were leaked months before the
album was intended to be released. Thus, Nas
was forced to return to the studio and record
new tracks.
The world thereafter became hungry
when "Nas Is Like" was released on vinyl –
DJ Premier and Nas together again. Heads
expected much more than Nas would be
capable of providing. April 6, 1999, came and
the public was disappointed by an above-average
(but not on Nas' standards) release that was
full of potential, but failed. Soon, after filming
the video for "Hate Me Now," Steve Stoute would
catch a beatdown by Puff Daddy and his henchmen,
who were not exactly happy about Puffy being
depicted in a Christ-like manner. All of this
publicity further fueled "I Am..." financially,
but where was the prophet we used to believe
in?
News immediately followed that Nas would
return to the studio and release another album
in the same year. "Nastradamus," his fourth
studio album, was released on November 23, 1999
and proved to be his worst album ever. Even
The Source, the publication that never gave
Nas anything less than a 4, brandished
him with a 3.5 mic rating and buried the review
in the back pages of Record Report. His street
credentials were finally taken away after two
singles, "You Owe Me" and "Nastradamus," received
heavy rotation on the airwaves.
Just when hope had faltered and the once messiah-regarded
lyricist was cast aside as just another MC,
Nas appeared on CNN's "B EZ" with the
same hunger he had on "Live At The BBQ." What
followed was outstanding guest-appearance after
guest-appearance for the next few months and
the "QB Finest" project, which reunited Cormega
and Nas on Da Bridge 2001. The streets were
starving and some wondered if Nas was
truly back. In addition, unreleased songs from
a b-sides/remixes/unreleased filled album called
"D.O.E." would appear on mixtapes as DJs screamed
out "DEATH OF ESCOBAR! COMING SOON" and the
people were reminded once again of what Nas
was capable of, although it never came out.
It was now the middle of 2001 and the stakes
were raised at the Hot 97 Summerjam when Brooklyn
MC Jay-Z called out Nas onstage with
the line, "Ask Nas, he don't want it
with Hov!" For years, competition had been brewing
between the two since B.I.G. was fatally shot
and the throne for king of New York had been
up for grabs. Nas quickly retaliated
on "Stillmatic" (aka H-to-the-Izzo, M-to-the-Izzo)
and called out the whole Roc-A-Fella camp.
Jay-Z proceeded to release his album "The
Blueprint," which received 5 mics in The Source
and contained a long-ass verse directed at Nas
on the track "The Takeover."
The pressure was on for Nas
to deliver, as he had been working on his fifth
studio album, "Stillmatic," for the past year.
The first single, "Got Yourself a…", finally
premiered and featured Nas reenacting
the murders of 2pac and The Notorious B.I.G.
December 18, 2001 finally arrived
and "Stillmatic" at the least returned Nas
to his exalted position. Receiving 5 mics in
The Source, "Stillmatic "showcased a focused,
mature artist, who many will agree with this,
destroyed Jay-Z on "Ether." The confused Nasty
Nas Escobar was apparently destroyed
and what remained was Nas.
Jay-Z wasn't having it,
however, as he released two direct retaliations
to "Ether" in the same week that revealed Nas'
ex-girl and Destiny's mother Carmen had been
unfaithful. At the time of this writing, the
issue has not been resolved yet and Nas
has only had this to say of his future: three
more albums are left then he is going to focus
on writing screenplays.
Notable songs include --
- It Ain't Hard to Tell
- Halftime
- Made You Look
- If I Ruled the World (Imagine That)
- N.Y. State of Mind
- Nas Is Like
- Got Ur Self A...
- You Won't See Me Tonight
- Thugz Mansion (N.Y.)
- Nastradamus
Genre: Rap
Styles:
..East Coast Rap
..Gangsta Rap
Years
active:
..90s, ..00s
Born:
Sep 14, 1973
..in New York
..in New York City
..in Queens
..in Queensbridge
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