Lil' Kim
After strolling down the cracked boulevards of
Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn - looking ghetto-queen lean and chocolate-wine
fine - the mack momma who answers to the name Lil' Kim is rocking
rugged on her Undeas/Big Beat/Atlantic debut disc, "HARD
CORE." The lieutenant for Junior M.A.F.I.A., Kim has already
been heard on the group's gold-selling album,
"CONSPIRACY," and completed cool cameos on singles by
Skin Deep, the Isley Brothers, Mona Lisa, and Total, in addition
to dropping a cut on the hot, gold-certified motion-picture
soundtrack to High School High.
"The solo project was a lot harder to do because I wrote it
all," says Kim. "Plus I was going through a lot of
drama... business and personal. I'm real pleased with how
everything turned out though. What made it all possible is my
faith in God."
With a voice as sweet as syrup and lyrics that are as wild as a
Vanessa Del Rio flick, the diminutive diva backs the tracks
layered by producers Sean "Puffy" Combs, Jermaine
Dupri, Stevie J., Nashiem, Prestige, High Class, and Cornbread.
"I like ghetto-melodic beats with lots of bass, guitars, and
piano," states Kim.
Unlike other female MCs who drop PC verses, Kim crashes through
the rap-scapes with a rawness that is rare. She's honest in her
explorations of sexual freedom, and - although she's been
attacked by hip-hop conservatives for being too nasty - she
flexes the female liberation that a generation of women fought
for not so long ago. "I'm a very sexual person,"
insists Kim, "and what I'm revealing on my album is my
personality and experiences."
"Big Momma Thang," which features that black
Roc-A-Fella, Ja˙-Z, bites back at some of the pesky insects
annoying Kim. The song "M.A.F.I.A. Land," meanwhile,
shines a light on how Kim rolls and who she hangs with. "I
used to associate a lot with girls," she says. "But
they were always talkin' a whole lotta he-say-she-say, getting
into trouble and taking me along. Now I hang with my niggas,
especially Biggie Smalls, who I owe 85% of my career to; he's the
one that gave me and the rest of Junior M.A.F.I.A. our shot at
stardom."
Another cut, "Spend A Little Doe," details a past
relationship with an ungrateful hustler who gave Kim up to the
cops when a street situation got hot. Then there's "No
Time," which opens with the Moet-cool of Puffy's smoky
voice. The song is the latest player's anthem in the lexicon of
GQ. With a beat that bounces like a pimp with a bullet in his
leg, "No Time" is the perfect soundtrack for ghetto
femme fatales, Rolex-staring like black cats in the darkness.
* * *
Born in Brooklyn, Kim lived
ghetto-comfortable with her mom and dad until she was 9. At that
age her parents split up and she moved in with her father. But,
she recalls, "things started getting bad and he kicked me
out." She lived with friends and turned to the streets for
sustenance. "I always loved music, though, and when Biggie
found out I could rhyme he helped put me on," she says.
Kim introduced herself to the world on the Junior M.A.F.I.A.
single "Player's Anthem" and was also featured on the
group's follow-up "Get Money." With pinches of
inner-city street ego slipping from her crimson-hued lips and
lots of sexually-spiced subject matter (hot as a gushing
volcano), Kim refuses to be restricted by the repressed minds who
judge her style. Much like a black female haunted by the ghost of
Henry Miller, Kim has fashioned "HARD CORE" as an
exotic black-light soundtrack that busts through the barriers of
uncut funk and censored language.
Whether hanging with her homies or dropping phat lines, Lil' Kim
is ushering in a new style for female wild childs to follow.
"I'm gonna keep doin' what I'm doin' cuz it's workin',"
she says.
11/96
Taken From Atlantic Records Webpage