
Sir Mix-a-Lot
Opening: C & C Music Factory @ Sir Mix-A-Lot might be best known for Baby Got Back but, what most saw as a pop inspiredtrack aimed at the mainstream was actually a song written about his distain for how Hollywoodviewed & casted women of color in the 80s and early 90s. “Although there were exceptions(Phylicia Rashad, Diane Carrol, etc.) many women of color were cast as struggling prostituteswho doubled as police informants or streetwise single mothers struggling to make it in theghetto and of course….maids.” -Sir Mix-A-Lot BGB was written in a way to poke at what werethen the beauty police (Cosmo, Hollywood, TV, etc.) in way that would go almost unnoticed bythose not hearing lines outside of “I like big butts”. By the time the powers that be figured itout, it was already #1 on the charts. But even before he struck crossover gold, Sir Mix-A-Lotwas one of rap’s great D.I.Y. success stories. Coming from a city — Seattle — which at thattime had a strictly local Hip Hop scene, Mix-A-Lot co-founded his own record label, promotedhis music himself, produced and mixed all his own tracks, built his own studio by himself andessentially pulled himself up by the proverbial American bootstraps. Even before Baby GotBack, Mix-A-Lot was a platinum-selling album artist with a strong following in the hip-hopcommunity, known for bouncy, danceable, bass-heavy tracks indebted to old-school electro.Even though Mix had sold over 2million units on an independent label, it took signing withRick Rubin’s Def American label — to carry him into the mainstream. With three straight platinum albums and a multi-platinum single, some still think he is a one hitwonder. Lyrically, his best material came after Baby Got Back. Songs like Poppi Grande,Daddy’s Home, Mob Style and the Nas West Coast remix of Where Are They Now to name afew. Posse on Broadway,” which referred to a street in Seattle pushed the album SWASS toplatinum with minimal video or radio play. Contrary to popular belief, most of Mix’s…
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