![]() |
GRITS have been hip-hop's best-kept secret long enough. Rolling into 2004, this Tennessee rap combo tackles a primetime platform with the one-two punch of back-to-back albums, DICHOTOMY A (June 29) and DICHOTOMY
B (November 2). GRITS, who sold a career-best 125,000 copies of 2002's
ART OF TRANSLATION, further elevate their rap game as DICHOTOMY A and
B slam out their most assertive, club-banging tracks yet. Though setting
out to make just one album, the duo's creative spree produced so many
innovative new songs that the label insisted they press on, even if the
final output required two full-length releases. In the end, the DICHOTOMY
albums retained GRITS' radio-ready touches, but the energy level got
cranked up to turn clubs upside down. Says Bonafide of the new discs, "Past albums had a good
balance of urban with a mass appeal, but this time we did songs that
are predominately more aggressive. We just went for it with the beats,
rhythms, and feel. We did a record that gave our music a fresh breath
of life." "People
slave at their jobs all week long. When they get out to kick it, they
want to kick it hard, and they need the music to match how they're feeling." Though highlighted by such anthems as "I Be" and "Bobbin Bouncing," DICHOTOMY
A and B ultimately cover the whole spectrum of urban music, from the
soulful vibe of "Pardon Me Yo" to the dancehall flavor of "Gutter Boy." The
albums, produced by GRITS and Otto Price, also feature thematic diversity
such as "Hittin' Curves" to celebrating life with the '70s soul-flavored "Get
Down." Overall, the foundation clearly reflects their southern roots,
though lyrically the group's east coast influences come through in the
intensity of the rhymes themselves. Rolling back the calendars, Coffee originally made his mark coming up in the local Atlanta scene, while Bonafide cut his emcee teeth with a group down in Jacksonville, Florida. As fate found both rappers relocating to Nashville, Bonafide and Coffee (their parking tickets read Teron Carter and Stacy Jones, respectively) came together to form GRITS in 1993. Eventually signing with Gotee Records, the duo dropped their rookie bow MENTAL RELEASES in 1995 and followed with FACTORS OF SEVEN two years later. GRITS scored a major national breakthrough with the remarkable 1999 disc GRAMMATICAL REVOLUTION. Among other accolades, the album earned the group a Billboard Video Award and an appearance on the nationally syndicated radio show Sway & Tech.
|
| ![]() |
