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_files/BLDJgraffitti.jpg) Here's one educated
spinner.
DJ
Graffiti
Mix-tape maestro blasts the bling-bling.
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by
Hobey
Echlin 3/5/2003 8:00:00 AM
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It’s hip hop that isn’t just about sippin’ bub in
the club.
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Hip hop today is all about scads of cash, gleaming cars and
glittery jewelry — you know, the “bling-bling” of shiny
diamond necklaces rappers like Fat Joe wears that are worth
more than most people’s houses. Even a street-bred New Jack
like 50 Cent calls his record Get Rich or Die Trying.
Clearly, for rappers, success has never been so important — or
so one-dimensional. Which is why Ann Arbor’s DJ Graffiti (aka Martin Smith) has set about the
ambitious task of playing, producing and recording hip hop
that isn’t just about sippin’ bub in the club. His own label
is called Bling Free, he says, “because we shine on our
own.”
The U-M business school grad and law student stresses that
bling-free doesn’t mean vowing a life of poverty, only one of
responsibility. “It means we take care of our priorities —
that we shine as people before and after we have money.”
Through Bling Free, Graffiti releases mix tapes of
underground hip hop from Detroit and around the country — the
same kind of street-savvy tapes that launched the career of 50
Cent and are such an essential part of the hip-hop tradition.
His latest, Bling Free, Volume 2, features tracks by
such underground luminaries as Jurassic 5, J Live, Athletic
Mic League, People Under the Stairs and Mr. Lif bumping beats
with a range of Detroit artists, including Slum Village, Dabrye, One Man Army, S.U.N. and Royce da 5’ 9”. Amid the disc’s solidly mixed
and scratched-together songs are four Graffiti originals,
including “Underground Raw,” featuring Eminem protégé Obie Trice.
Graffiti admits Detroit’s mix-tape scene still lags behind
more established hip-hop cities like New York. “But Detroit
does have a mix-tape scene,” he insists, citing DJ Butter, King Dave, Drunken Master, DJ
Physics and other longtime champions of new artists and
underground tracks. “It’s just not as developed as other
places. It’s like if you don’t know a DJ or see one at a show
with a backpack full of his CDs, or selling them out of the
back of his car, you may not know they’re out there.”
To that end, Graffiti brings his business and legal
shrewdness to the game. “Mix tapes aren’t like bootlegs where
you’re including the whole song; it’s just like a 2-minute
snippet of a track,” he explains. “But unless you have the
right legal background, it’s hard to put one out legally. And
where some DJs are really good at putting out an image, they
don’t have a marketing force behind them.”
To this latter end, Graffiti founded his own company,
Rapture Enterprises, LLC. He won’t give specifics on what his
plans after graduation are, but he will say he has struck a
deal with a major music marketing company to work with him,
one that has the promotional and financial muscle to put
Detroit mix tapes on the map. In the meantime, Graffiti’s
intelligent-but-not-too-smart-for-his-own-good take on hip hop
and the music biz has been making waves beyond Detroit. Los
Angeles’ Urb magazine, the musical bible of all things young
and baggy, gives props to Graf and his bling-free credo in its
March issue.
But beyond his business savvy, Graffiti has the musical
chops to strike a balance between the DJ as educator and
jukebox. A jazz percussionist in high school, Graffiti
performed at the Montreux-Detroit Jazz Festival. But growing
up in Oakland County, Graffiti was drawn toward being an
underground “backpacker” hip-hop fan for his more indie-minded
spirit. When Graffiti started to DJ in Ann Arbor as an
undergrad, he learned how to rock a party as much as teach
about lesser-known artists. But as Bling Free, Volume 2
shows, Graf can move between a bulbous DJ Jazzy Jeff track
extolling the love of rap, right into an MC Lyte a cappella
over a Truth Hurts heat to show just how fun the game can be.
And in a city as ripe for its own mix tape heroes as Detroit,
Graffiti is showing he’s got skills on all fronts — legal,
business and musical.
DJ Graffiti spins at Lush (10241 Joseph Campau, Hamtramck) on
Friday, March 7. Also on the bill are Paradime, Sindy Syringe and Trip. Call 313-872-6220 for
information.
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Hobey Echlin scratches and mixes words for Metro
Times. E-mail letters@metrotimes.com. |