How N.W.A 's Powerful Hip Hop Changed The Genre Forever - Features - Mixmag
Features

How N.W.A 's Powerful Hip Hop Changed The Genre Forever

We talked to Ice Cube of N.W.A about the real story of "the world's most dangerous group"

  • Words: Mark Lindores / Images: Ray Barmiston, Getty
  • 25 September 2015
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With N.W.A effectively over, Eazy moved into launching the careers of new acts on the Ruthless Records roster such as Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, while Dr Dre would re-define hip hop with his debut album 'The Chronic'. After everything that N.W.A had had thrown at them, the biggest bombshell of all came at the end of 1994 when a seriously ill Eazy was rushed to hospital and diagnosed with AIDS. He released a statement on March 16 1995 disclosing his condition, urging fans to learn from his diagnosis, practise safe sex and get tested. He died 10 days later on March 26 1995, aged just 31 years old.

"I couldn't believe it when he got sick," Ice Cube recalls. "We had made our peace a few months earlier at the Tunnel nightclub in New York. We hadn't seen each other and didn't know if there was gonna be beef, but as soon as we sat down and talked we were family again and all hatchets were buried. We didn't talk about contracts or anything like that, it was just two friends catching up who had missed each other."

Following the death of Eazy-E, the other former members of N.W.A pursued their own career paths. In 1996, Dre abruptly left Death Row Records after learning (somewhat belatedly) that Knight was corrupt, financially dishonest and out of control. In Straight Outta Compton, Dre finds Knight intimidating a semi-naked executive with a pitbull. "It happened," Dr Dre told The Hollywood Reporter recently. "I was like, 'What the fuck is going on?' I was ready to leave anyways. This was the extra push. All this shit actually happened."

The bad blood with Suge Knight continues, as does Knight's alleged 25-year reign of terror using heavy-handed tactics and intimidation methods to further his business affairs. He is currently awaiting sentencing in on charges of murder and attempted murder after ploughing his car into two advisers working on a trailer for the Straight Outta Compton film, one of whom, Terry Carter, co-founder of Heavyweight Records, died.

The film has come along at a time when the black experience in the US is once again under the spotlight. "It's always been the way with poor people, with black people", says Cube of the death of Sandra Bland, a black woman found dead in a Texas police cell earlier this year, shortly after her arrest for a traffic violation. "It hasn't changed. We're talking about something that has been constant – we're just catching more and more stuff on video nowadays. 'Fuck Tha Police' was relevant then, and it's relevant now. We were tired of what was going on and we wanted to do something about it. We changed pop culture in a lot of ways. It allowed artists to be themselves. If you wanted to be raw, a little risqué, you could be. We proved that you don't have to pretend to be squeaky-clean to get on TV."

Straight Outta Compton is out now

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