Over the past weekend as I listened to the Beastie Boys in homage to Adam Yauch, I reflected on the impact he had on me as a young white kid from the suburbs. In 1987, License to Ill blasted until the cassette tape wore out on my crappy GE one speaker boombox as I played countless hours of basketball in my driveway. I became enthralled with that hip-hop/punk hybrid and the wanton attitudes of Adrock, MCA, and Mike D. But it was MCA with his could give a fuck demeanor, 5 o’clock shadow, disheveled hair, and gravel road voice that was especially appealing. He rapped about “stealing your honey like he stole your bike”. The perfect juxtaposition to my sanitized life as an eighth grader. He held the swagger that spoke to any shred of rebellion that existed in my 13 year-old self. And despite the Fight for Your Right to Party anthem that played over and over, it was several other tracks from the album that peaked my curiosity and led me to listen to more hip-hop. MCA and his crew opened the door to a world of hip-hop and music that was not on the radio. So much so that by 2004, I went more to see A Tribe Called Quest who opened for the Beasties, than to see the Boys themselves. But the Beastie Boys put on an amazing show demonstrating their ability to capture an audience.
Over a 25 year period the Beastie Boys have been a steady part of the soundtrack of my life. By the time I was in high school, Paul’s Boutique released a cacophony of samples that were mind numbing with lyrical cleverness to boot.
To me, MCA
was always "cooler than a cucumber in a bowl of hot sauce”. While
Adrock clowned and Mike D acted as sidekick, it was MCA, lurking in the
background, who would deliver the well-timed line and banter in seamless wordplay
with his counterparts. He didn’t rap as
much as Adrock, but when he did, he commanded your attention. He was the guy you wanted to hang out with
because he was in the know. Adrock might
have acted like the life of the party but it was MCA who brought you there.
I
celebrate the life of MCA, an artist who brought me joy through his music from grade school through grad school. An artist who infected my musical consciousness
through my headphones and rocked many a party through tower speakers for the whole
block to hear. And so, "Give it up, the maestro. All three cheers for the maestro".
To me, the best part about the Beastie Boys is the way their music evolved. Yauch made a comment once about how he realized, after License to Ill, what an effect his music had on young people, and the sense of responsibility that came with it.
ReplyDeleteTheir music ebbed and flowed with the times, much like you mention about the correspondence with the changes in your own life.
Great stuff, Doc.