Regaining consciousness
East Oakland rapper Ise Lyfe spreads the word, makes his mark

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"I want to be a mainstream artist," says East Oakland rapper and spoken word poet Ise Lyfe, discussing his rejection of the label "conscious rap." "I'm not trying to be some backpack cat performing in Davis. I want to be ..."

The 23-year-old trails off thoughtfully. "I think the only way to do it harder than Jay-Z is to have a real movement, something tangible that will effect change in the world through music. I'd like to be that big but at the same time put a dent in the Earth."

At first glance, it's hard to imagine a rapper less like Jay-Z than Ise Lyfe, whose 2004 self-released debut, SpreadtheWord, is devoid of the big pimpin', cheese-spending exploits that have endeared Jiggaman to millions. But like James Baldwin — who once said he didn't want to be the best black novelist in America, he wanted to be Henry James — Ise isn't talking about betraying his identity for success. He's simply saying he wants to be the best, period. If there's anything common to all four of these artists, it's the awareness that in order to be the best you must change the game. With the rerelease of SpreadtheWord, complete with new artwork, a bonus DVD, and a mildly retooled track list, on fledgling independent Hard Knock Records, in addition to his recently concluded nationwide tour with the Coup, Ise Lyfe is hoping to do just that.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


Born in 1982, Ise was raised in Brookfield, deep in East Oakland next to the notorious Sobrante Park. "I grew up as a young kid right when the crack epidemic was flourishing and having a real effect on our families," he says. "My father had been affected by drugs. For me, growing up in a single-parent home was the manifestation of that existing in our community. But I also came up amongst a large level of social justice activity and youth organizing. That influences my music. I think Oakland has a history that unconsciously bleeds into everyone from here."

The legacy of this history — which includes a spoken word scene at least as old as Gil Scott Heron's mid-’70s albums for underground label Strata East — endures in Oakland, where Ise first made a name for himself as a teen slam poet. "I would be three years deep into performing spoken word before there was any place I could go and perform hip-hop," he says. "Hip-hop was all 21-and-up venues, where I was the number one slam poet in the country when I was 19." Repping the Bay in 2001 at the Youth Speaks National Poetry Slam, Ise would achieve a modicum of fame through appearances on HBO's Def Poetry Jam.

"When I started recording," he confesses, "folks didn't even know I was making a hip-hop record. They thought it was a spoken word record, but I fused both in there." The success of this fusion of art forms is all the more apparent on the rereleased SpreadtheWord, the continuity of which has been improved by a few judicious edits. Ise's flow is so dexterous that the moments of purely a cappella poetry enhance rather than disrupt the musical experience. In fact, musicality underscores an important difference between SpreadtheWord and most conscious hip-hop recordings, for most of the beats on even otherwise impressive efforts sound like they were made sometime in 1993. The lack of curiosity about the sound of contemporary hip-hop gives such music a perfunctory air, while the tracks on SpreadtheWord are infinitely fresher even after two years. While it's not exactly hyphy, a tune like "Reasons" ...

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( 1 comment | Comment on this article )
charstar on Friday, August 25, 2006 at 01:29 PM
I know Ise Lyfe personally and although this is a very well written article, I don't think it truly conveys the extent to which Ise Lyfe really inspireshis fans. I am a spoken word artist as well as a dancer/choreographer and Ise Lyfe has influenced me in both diisions. I took a writers' workshop he instructed for 6 weeks and saw my writing skills durastically improve. I found that I cared about the world on a politically conscious level and discovered that there was more to me than I thought. As a dancer, his music inspires me to want to alter the way people think though my interpretations of his lyrics. He has come to my shows in spite of his hectic schedules and makes appearances at high schools as well. His shows aren't just parties- it's like entering a classroom. If I were to pick a new leader of the revolution, I would have to say Ise is definitely at the helm. I am blessed to have been existing in an era where someone said more than just "females are rippers." Ise says that women are beautiful. I think this is important to the community of women of color because we don't hear it enough in this day and age. It kind of restores our lost sense of cnfidence and self-respect as well as our faith in men in general. And finally, what makes Ise Lyfe a star is his authenticity. What you see is almost all of what you get, but as with all first impressions, there is always more depth. Ise is a sompassionate individual, which makes his music more worth listening to and connecting with. He's not coming from Hollywood telling us to stop killing one another. Ise comes from the same ghetto streets we live in and with his podium, he is trying to be the catalyst for a positive change in the world. Still, he is not without flaw. No human is. But his genuine heart and willingness to accept the challenge others have backed away from makes him almost heroic in a sense. Enough said. Ise is just brilliant.

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