research (and creativity) from students in MUSC-4454-01
 
Geto Boys

Geto Boys

The Geto Boys in the Fifth Ward: Raheem (Oscar Ceres, age 14), Sire Juke Box (Keith Rogers, age 15), and Sir Rap-A-Lot/K-9 (Thelton Polk, age 19)

Geto Boys was a Houston based rap group that formed in 1986 and were the first to put Houston on the hip-hop map. Not only did they formulate a spotlight on hip-hop in the south, but they also introduced a new style of music, the genre of “gangsta rap”.  The rappers grew up in Houston’s fifth ward, a musically rich neighborhood in east downtown Houston. The fifth ward is also the home of musicians Arnett Cobb, Milton Larkin, and Illinois Jacquet. The neighborhood became predominantly black in the early 1900’s. Geto Boys, originally “Ghetto Boys” was first made up by “Lil’ J” Smith, owner of Rap-A-Lot Records, which consisted of members Keith Rogers (Sire Juke Box), Thelton Polk (K-9/Sir Rap-A-Lot), and Oscar Ceres (Raheem). They released their first single “Car Freak” which didn’t reach a wide audience. The group then added Bushwick Bill (Richard Shaw) and released the album “Making Trouble” in 1988. Due to creative differences, the band members split and formed the New Geto boys that consisted of Bushwick Bill, Willie D (Willie Dennis), and Scarface (Brad Jordan). This remodel of the group led to the making of “Grip It! On That Other Level”, which received much more success than the previous album. This led to fame and fortune, and in return, controversy.  

Scarface, Bushwick Bill, and Willie D performing

People don’t want to hear that shit. People want to hear what’s going on around them in everyday life—war, blood, violence. It’s okay for the President to start a war in Iraq, but it’s not okay for me to talk about what I see around me in the ghetto.

Bushwick Bill
“We Can’t Be Stopped” album cover

This was one of the most popular album covers of their time. Pictured in the wheelchair is Bellwick Bill, who got into an altercation with his girlfriend and got shot in the eye, leading to the removal of his right eyeball. This portrays their violent and sexually explicit music in the most realistic way possible, right in the hospital. “We Can’t Be Stopped” was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. This album features their hit song “Mind Playing Tricks on Me”, which became a huge hit in Texas, NYC and LA, even though they did not receive much radio play time. These southern rappers even got their song on the Billboard pop charts. This legendary picture was attached to a legendary record.

Review of “Till Death Do Us Part” by Da Hip Hop Vandal in 1993 for The Rice Thresher (Houston, Texas) Vol. 80 No.25 Ed.1

*TW// talks slightly about suicide

A multi-instrumentalist from a long line of musical talent, Scarface had been a fan of metal as a kid. But growing up in Houston’s Southside introduced him to a different kind of hard rock: He went from dropout to local drug dealer coming up. He also spent some time in a hospital psych ward, after trying to kill himself once as a teenager. 

Learning to articulate his feelings must have contributed to making him the coldest songwriter in rap, more Southern Gothic than Edgar Allan Poe. Just listen to him in the song’s third verse: One moment he’s in church praying for an exit out the drug game; the next, he’s contemplating suicide. 

Rodney Carmichael, NPR

An excerpt from NPR describes the influential musical taste of Scarface, and how that changed the formation and stylistic aspects of this new form of rap. The experiences each member had growing up in the Fifth Ward, and how that was incorporated into the music.   

This hip-hop group made music that, in lack of better reference, needed a parental advisory stamp on each song. They rapped about sex, drugs, money, violence, and even police brutality. They made music about the ugly parts of the world that they experience. In an interview, Bushwick Bill describes their take on making music, and he states “I wanna make the world see how ugly it fuckin’ self is” (5:36). Not everyone enjoyed their raw, vulgar truth, but listening to these “gangsta” tunes opened a new audience, who absolutely loved them.   

Mind Playing Tricks On Me

Lyrics: *warning* explicit lyrics

I sit alone in my four-cornered room 
Staring at candles 
Oh that shit is on? heh 
Let me drop some shit like this here 
Real smooth 

At night I can’t sleep, I toss and turn 
Candle sticks in the dark, visions of bodies being burned 
Four walls just staring at a n**** 
I’m paranoid, sleeping with my finger on the trigger 
My mother’s always stressing I ain’t living right 
But I ain’t going out without a fight 
See, everytime my eyes close 
I start sweatin, and blood starts comin out my nose 

It’s somebody watchin’ the ak’ 
But I don’t know who it is, so I’m watchin my back 
I can see him when I’m deep in the covers 
When I awake I don’t see the motherfucker 
He owns a black hat like I own 
A black suit and a cane like my own 
Some might say “take a chill, b” 
But fuck that shit, there’s a n**** trying to kill me 

I’m pumping in the clip when the wind blows 
Every twenty seconds got me peeping out my window 
Investigating the joint for traps 
Checking my telephone for taps 
I’m staring at the woman on the corner 
It’s fucked up when your mind is playing tricks on you 

I make big money, I drive big cars 
Everybody know me, it’s like I’m a movie star 
But late at night, somethin ain’t right 
I feel I’m being tailed by the same sucker’s head lights 
Is it that fool that I ran off the block 
Or is it that n**** last week that I shot 
Or is it the one I beat for five thousand dollars 
Thought he had ‘caine but it was gold medal flour 
Reach under my seat, grabbed my popper for the suckers 
Ain’t no use to be lying, I was scareder than a motherfucker 
But they’re laughing at pow pies and buried that quick 
If it’s going down let’s get this shit over with 
Here they come, just like I figured 
I got my hand on the motherfucking trigger 
What I saw’ll make your ass start giggling 
Three black, crippled and crazy senior citizens 

I live by the sword 
I take my boys everywhere I go 
Because I’m paranoid 
I keep looking over my shoulder and peeping around corners 
My mind is playing tricks on me 

Day by day it’s more impossible to cope 
I feel like I’m the one that’s doing dope 
Can’t keep a steady hand because I’m nervous 
Every sunday morning I’m in service 
Playing for forgiveness 
And trying to find an exit out of the business 
I know the lord is looking at me 

But yet and still it’s hard for me to feel happy 
I often drift while I drive 
Havin fatal thoughts of suicide 
Bang and get it over with 
And then I’m worry-free, but that’s bullshit 
I got a little boy to look after 
And if I died then my child would be a bastard 

I had a woman down with me 
But to me it seemed like she was down to get me 
She helped me out in this shit 
But to me she was just another bitch 
Now she’s back with her mother 
Now I’m realizing that I love her 
Now I’m feeling lonely 
My mind is playing tricks on me 

This year halloween fell on a weekend 
Me and geto boyz are trick-or-treating 
Robbing little kids for bags 
Till an old man got behind our ass 
So we speeded up the pace 
Took a look back and he was right before our face 
He’d be in for a squab’ no doubt 
So I swung and hit the n**** in his mouth 

He was going down, we figured 
But this was no ordinary n**** 
He stood about six or seven feet 
Now, that’s the n**** I’d been seeing in my sleep 
So we triple-teamed on him 
Dropping them motherfuckin b’s on him 
The more I swung the more blood flew 
Then he disappeared and my boys disappeared, too 
Then I felt just like a fiend 
It wasn’t even close to halloween 

It was dark as fuck on the streets 
My hands were all bloody from punching on the concrete 
God damn, homie 
My mind is playing tricks on me 

Works Cited

Kim, Leezie & Carson, Chad. The Rice Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 1993, newspaper, April 2, 1993; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth245839/m1/9/?q=geto+boys: accessed November 3, 2021), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rice University Woodson Research Center. 

Kleiner, Diana. “Fifth Ward, Houston.” TSHA, 1 Jan. 1995, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/fifth-ward-houston.  

Lopez, Raymond. “Geto Boys.” TSHA, 29 May 2013, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/geto-boys

Carmichael, Rodney. “Stressed out: How ‘Mind Playing Tricks on Me’ Gave Anxiety a Home in Hip-Hop.” NPR, NPR, 29 May 2019, https://www.npr.org/2019/05/29/726615663/geto-boys-mind-playing-tricks-on-me-anxiety-american-anthem