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Bigmouth strikes again

Immortal Technique goes on the offensive
By CHRIS FARAONE  |  June 24, 2008

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If you don't have anything nice to say . . . Five outrageous Immortal Technique moments. By Chris Faraone.
The few college students who don’t watch The Daily Show get their news from Immortal Technique. An unfounded assertion, sure, but for budding activists from campuses to ghettos worldwide, the Harlem revolutionary hip-hop Goliath is the proven militant alternative to pacifist patchouli rap and lightweight political satire. Technique is more Stewie Griffin than Jon Stewart, a vehement opponent of hypocrisy who’s content with deploying shock-and-awe attacks, shoulder-loaded rockets, or whatever else it takes to mangle adversaries. He doesn’t joke about world hunger, irresponsible globalization, or Christian conservatives — and as it turns out, his approach is precisely what discouraged hip-hop fans and disenchanted liberals were waiting for.

“Hip-hop doesn’t have to be one extreme or another,” says Technique, who comes to the UnderGroundHipHop.com store on Friday for a free performance. “It doesn’t have to be socially conscious, non-threatening, crying on records, smelling like incense, and wearing African clothing that you don’t even understand the significance of. That’s just as fake to me as people who rap about being gangsters and who aren’t really gangsters. On the other extreme, it doesn’t have to be hardcore and ignorant to the point that we water down the lyrics like idiots and animals for the amusement of the public on some minstrel-show shit. That’s what hip-hop is suffering from.”

Technique owns his masters — and his publishing rights. He has for years been hip-hop’s most vocal and loco opponent of major record labels, at least four of which he’s told to go screw. With his own imprint, Viper Records, and through distribution deals with other labels including Babygrande, he’s sold hundreds of thousands of copies of his 2001 Revolutionary Vol. 1 debut and his 2003 Revolutionary Vol. 2 follow-up. Since he’s slung more than a few units out of his trunk and doesn’t trust Nielsen SoundScan for shit, he has no definitive sales numbers, but his resonance with everyone from pimps and players to professors and professionals attests to his widespread notoriety.

“I’ve always had respect in my own community, and I’ve always had a very large Latino fan base, but now I have the most diverse fan base in all of the underground,” Technique declares. “I have a large Middle Eastern fan base thanks to all of the support that I’ve given over there, and now I have a lot more Asians, too. I welcome all of that, and I think that it’s a positive thing to stretch out to so many demographics. Unlike some other people, I’ve never resented the fact that I have a gang of white fans.”

Technique’s staying power has been as impressive as his rise through the underground in the politically rattled climate following 9/11. Especially when you consider that it’s been five years since he’s dropped a full album — other than sporadic guest appearances on some affiliates’ projects, he’s surfaced only for the 2004 single “Bin Laden.” This EP, which featured versions with hooks from both Chuck D and Mos Def, charges that America “is run by fake Christians, and fake politicians,” and it tells us: “Look at their mansions, then look at the conditions you live in.” Trite stuff, maybe, but when Technique exhales over morbid piano loops and atomic bass lines, his radical banter eclipses generic rhetorical anti-establishmentarianism.

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Related: Backed the f*** up, If you don’t have anything nice to say . . ., Legends of Bucktown, More more >
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