
Several years ago, the backpacker/ underground hip-hop crowd and the hardcore/ thugged-out street crowd occupied entirely different spaces on the hip-hop landscape. Time passed. Most folks got over silly allegiances, and now these same folksall grown up now and more threatened by the approach of adulthood than musical strataabandoned the abstractions of backpacker rap and the sensationalism of the goon life to begin raising families, paying mortgages and hating George W. Bush. Today, if youโre between the ages of 25 and 40 and still doing stick-ups and drive-bys or walking around all night screaming โreal hip hopโ while donning a Jansport, youโre probably a sociopath. You need help.
Fortunately, Chapel Hill rapper KAZE has long dodged these sorts of categorizations. Unfortunately, his tight rope has never translated into anything marketable. For the past decade, KAZE has headlined local shows, hit the chittlinโ circuit several times, opened for major artists, and hosted weekly music showcases and beat battles. Hell, the guy even had a TV show. Itโs hard to imagine an emcee carrying NCโs hip-hop flag for as long as KAZE has and never getting the proper recognition as this stateโs flagship artist.
Itโs even harder to imagine KAZE complaining about it. Thatโs never been his gimmick. Actually, heโs never even had a gimmick (remember the whole non-marketable thing?). On Block 2The BasementKAZEโs latest and part of Rawkus Recordsโ plan to release 50 albums by 50 relative unknownstracks like โReal Life,โ โSo Farโ and a reggae-stamped โBlack Man Worldwideโ perpetuate the image of KAZE as hip hopโs selfless lensman, directing the attention away from any personal woes by focusing on the broader malaises of this hip-hop generation. B2Bโs tone never strays too far from KAZEโs scathing didacticism, save for moments like โYou Call That Gangsta?โ when his longtime associate, Young Fluwho dates back to KAZEโs โSOUL DOJOโ outfitlends a jovial verse. But even at his loosest, KAZE sounds only minimally amiable. By spouting out a series of taunting grunt-raps, he often turns whole verses into disciplinary hearings. But this brash attitudean a priori reaction to being underappreciated as one of North Cackโs premier emceessaves Block 2The Basement from becoming a 20-part series of spoken-word idylls. That is, KAZE preaches it so hard and passionately, heโs hard to ignore.
While trying to bludgeon enlightenment and the spirit of proactivity into folksโ psyche may not be the most effective way to sell a million records these days, itโs a perfect reason why all community activists could benefit from a lesson or two in rap rhetoric. KAZE could certainly teach this course in agitprop. Having mastered the ability to blur the distinctions between the backpacker and the block-hugger, the academic and the hooligan, KAZE is hip hopโs bilateral spokesman.
As an aside, his material speaks to the black experience. As the title infers, the poles between the proverbial โblockโ and the basement are merely the length of a staircase and a front lawn, the basement often functioning as a musical hideaway from the trouble that the โblockโ endows.


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