Nipsey Hussle wants to give the '90s West Coast hip-hop sound a facelift | Music | Denver | Denver Westword | The Leading Independent News Source in Denver, Colorado
Navigation

Nipsey Hussle wants to give the '90s West Coast hip-hop sound a facelift

Not since the emergence of the Game on the national hip-hop scene has Los Angeles had such a promising new rapper as Nipsey Hussle. The onetime member of the notorious Rolling Sixty Crips from the Crenshaw and Slauson neighborhood of L.A. has steadily gained attention over the past couple of...
Share this:

Not since the emergence of the Game on the national hip-hop scene has Los Angeles had such a promising new rapper as Nipsey Hussle. The onetime member of the notorious Rolling Sixty Crips from the Crenshaw and Slauson neighborhood of L.A. has steadily gained attention over the past couple of years. He first garnered attention on the strength of his Bullets Ain't Got No Name mixtape series, narrated in a sing-songy flow that recalls an edgier Snoop Dogg. While a debut album is still forthcoming, his street releases scored him a slot in last year's edition of XXL magazine's career-making "Annual Freshman Ten." We spoke with Nipsey about his youth, his music and growing up in L.A.

Westword: Tell us a little about growing up in L.A.

Nipsey Hussle: I grew up on the west side of L.A., Crenshaw district. That area was controlled by gangs, and in my teenage years, I got involved with that lifestyle. I like to say I grew up better than some and worse than others. I don't like to tell no sad story about how it was so rough coming up. I had the same drama a lot of young black kids had: drugs, gangbanging, violence. But I also had a love for music, and when I saw a lot of my friends, a lot of the people around me going off to jail, music is what sent me in a different direction.

Were you more a child of N.W.A, or was it more Death Row?

Definitely Death Row. Born in '85, grew up in the '90s, so definitely Snoop, Dre, a little bit of Ice Cube — but mostly Snoop and Dre. Me and my friend would rap the whole Chronic album. I'd be Dre, and the li'l homie would be Snoop, and then we'd switch off, just rapping along with the words. Half the stuff, we didn't know what it meant; we'd just be saying it. We were just fascinated with the sound.

That album and the Death Row stuff that came after it — how much did it affect people's lifestyles out there? Did the lifestyle make the music, or did the music make the lifestyle?

Yeah, chicken or the egg. One thing I can say is that The Chronic really impacted the suburbs. I think that certain areas, like where I grew up — obviously that had an impact on the music, but the music transported that lifestyle all over the map. The kids were a little more impressionable, and I think some of those records took ideas about gangbanging and spread 'em around. For us in South Central, that was like, "Finally, someone is talking about us." But we weren't infatuated with khakis and Chucks or anything. That was already the style, you know?

The Bullets mixtapes have a lot of variety on them — some traditional L.A. gangster tracks, some R&B stuff, some club stuff.

My whole intention is to take West Coast music and culture and adapt it and update it to today. The melodies and concepts are all products of me paying attention to the game. And one thing I've learned, just checking out what records pop these days, is that it's not what you're saying as much as how you're saying it.

BEFORE YOU GO...
Can you help us continue to share our stories? Since the beginning, Westword has been defined as the free, independent voice of Denver — and we'd like to keep it that way. Our members allow us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls.