Rakim Allah
Superstar
Casual, Saafir, and Sway and Tech breakdown what happened behind the scenes. A long but rewarding read.
http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/edito...ory-of-saafir-vs-casual-s-wake-up-show-battle
Battle Drill: The Oral History Of Saafir vs. Casual's "Wake Up Show" Battle
by DANA SCOTT
posted June 18, 2014
Twenty years after its origins, Saafir, Casual, Sway and Tech look back on the historic "Wake Up Show" battle that shaped how we view both beef and Battle Rap.
In 1994, Sway and King Tech were in the midst of their success with the Wake Up Show, airing on both KKBT 92.3 FM The Beat in Los Angeles and KMEL 106.1 FM in San Francisco. The Wake Up Show was an anchor for hardcore and underground Hip Hop diehards on the West Coast and beyond. That year, Sway and Tech broadcasted a lyrical brawl with the caliber of a highly anticipated heavyweight boxing title in both of their syndicated markets for Northern and Southern Californians to listen and call into the radio show to decide the victor.
The battle was between two of the Oakland’s most popular underground Rap crews, Hieroglyphics and the Hobo Junction. In February and May of 1994, respectively, both Casual (a founding member of the Hieroglyphics crew) and his associate from across town Saafir (the de facto leader of the Hobo Junction) released their debut albums Fear Itself and Boxcar Sessions. After a misunderstanding over a featured guest appearance on Boxcar Sessions, the two former comrades expressed their pride and aggression via battle raps and squared off with their crews against each other live on the Wake Up Show. This main event helped catapult the momentum of the Wake Up Show to become one of the highest-rated Rap radio programs in the country. The high ratings would also later serve as a barometer for major record labels to scout and sign new underground Rap talent that had performed on their show for the rest of the ‘90s and early 2000s.
This is the second installment of HipHopDX’s coverage of the Sway, Tech, Hieroglyphics and Hobo Junction’s involvement in one of Hip Hop’s epic battles . After 20 years of minimal documentation on this urban legend, the air is finally cleared straight from the mouths of the sources involved in this story. Casual is currently on tour celebrating his debut album’s anniversary. Having completed a new project, the independently released Mystery School , he looks back on how his childhood friends formed the Hieroglyphics, and how this historic Rap battle began. Saafir details his story of how he became an associate to seminal Oakland Rap group Digital Underground, how he befriended Tupac Shakur and landed his acting role in the street classic Menace II Society. Saafir also gave his perspective of how the battle between he and Casual began as well. Sway and King Tech chime in on how this event happened on their show, and each of them reflect on the codification on the art of freestyling in Hip Hop, and how the “Casual versus Saafir” battle reverberates in comparison to the Battle Rap scene as we know it today.
We Dem: How The Hieroglyphics & Hobo Junction Crews Formed
Casual: Honestly, I was looking toward the East Coast to get a lot my influences. These are people I was intrigued with—EPMD, Big Daddy Kane, LL Cool J. But obviously you also have your regional champions like Too Short. That was because I was young and that’s what people were into, but his lyrics didn’t have me going. I was intrigued by the music and playing with words like the Juice Crew, Kool G Rap and all the OGs. So that’s what made to blend what I listened to regionally and accepted it to get the party going with music like Too Short. But I was really intrigued my East Coast influences to blend those styles to become Casual.
Saafir: With LL Cool J’s “I Need A Beat,” I really knew I wanted to rap after I heard that. I really wasn’t a rapper. Me and my brother would beat on like the washing machine, making beats and rhymes, but that was just bullshytting. While Casual and the Hieroglyphics, and other crews where were going to school, I was in the streets. At a young age, I was in group homes and foster homes. I’m one of those stories that went from real rags and nothing to the stadium. I knew I had to metamorphisize myself to a certain degree in order to get within the speed of what was happening in that genre and that era. It was to accomplish what I always wanted and dreamed about. And I dreamed about putting a record out and being in movies. I was really into the music, man. Like I really wanted to be a superstar. Then I got connected to Digital Underground through a cousin of mine. I saw my cousin in the “Doowutchyalike” video once I had just gotten out of jail. That made me want to get to know them. So I hung with them for a minute. My Digital Underground years were the most fun that I ever had. Shock G, that man knew how throw a party, boy! I’ll tell you that .
Casual: We were rapping before we formed the crew. We all were rappers when we were younger, but we were colleagues. I knew Del, Opio, Tajai, and A-Plus since kindergarten. We were already homies, but we formed the impromptu battle on Aster Avenue back in the ‘80s. We were just getting together to battle each other. And right after we finished, Del said “Hey, let’s just form a crew. Just all of us.” And we went up to A-Plus’ grandma’s house and thought of a crew name. The first name we thought of was The Mad Circle. But then Del had the deal with Da Lench Mob, so he went to L.A., and WC and then had the name. By the time Del came back, we weren’t The Mad Circle anymore. So we were thinking of a new name. I think a lot of the logos developed possibly before we had a crew name. Del came with the name “Hieroglyphics.” He also drew the logo. I guess we were freshman in high school. Del was a junior. And we started blowing that name up. Every little show, we’d show up, we started banging that name, and it became what it became.
Saafir: I knew that I didn’t want to come out sounding like Too Short. You can’t do Too Short. If you come out sounding like him, you’re gonna get dissed or put under his umbrella. I didn’t want that because I really wanted to be original. I came in a fortunate time when Rap was at a transitional stage. I had lived the street life, but I was actually trying to get in the tail end of what they call “The Golden Era” of Rap now. I grew up on East Coast. I grew up on West Coast shyt too. Just like nikkas in L.A., we grew up on East Coast shyt too. I used to listen to everything. Like BDP, that was some street shyt back in the day! I was on the block selling weed, and we were bumping that. Like Run-DMC saying, “It’s like that! And that’s the way it is!” It wasn’t, “This is Hip Hop and this is hood.” No, Hip Hop was hood. And then there came a time where it was like, “Okay, you’re gonna be a rapper, an entertainer, or you’re gonna be in the street.” I used to boogaloo, break and all that shyt. And I did this other type of dance called “struttin’.” I was cold, man!
King Tech: We thought we had the Bay Area on lock as far as knowing everybody. Then I heard Saafir’s “Battle Drill,” which to this day is one of my top 10 favorite records of all time. I had never heard nobody with that freaky flow before. One of the groups played on the show was Hieroglyphics with the guys being from Oakland with that twisted way. And they were bringing the art of freestyling back, plus they had their own look. They had their own sound. But then you had Freestyle Fellowship in L.A., so the West Coast really started to push their own movement for the first time. Saafir’s flow to this day is one of the most unique flows I’ve ever heard. When we met him, we were trippin’ out like, “Yo, that’s that dude!” That was the era of whoever was weirder and had a dope twist to their flow was getting shine.
Saafir: Money B of Digital Underground introduced me to Tupac. Me and Tupac started hanging, and we clicked real deep. At this time, I was staying between five places. I didn’t have my own spot. Tupac had just gotten his spot as he started getting paid for the D.U. shyt he did. One day he asked me, “Where do you stay?” I said, “I got a few places I stay.” He then said, “Nah, where you live? You don’t got your own spot?” When I said no, he told me I could stay with him, and I moved in. He was cool, really on some heavy brotherhood shyt. I could see that because everyone that was around him was really down for him. He showed you real love in the beginning. He opened his arms and embraced me at that time, and I learned a lot being around him…positive and negative shyt. He opened my eyes to what was real about the record industry.
From there with Tupac, I met the Hughes Brothers after they shot his video for “Brenda’s Got A Baby.” Then shytted on them, they got into it, and they were real upset because they were really trying to connect with him about what had happened between them. I hung out with the Hughes Brothers, trying to get their mind off of what he had just did. And I hooked them up with some females and shared some drinks. Then the next day they asked me, “Yo, can you act?” I said, “Yeah I act everyday with the police.” So they gave me a script and told me to study the shyt. A few weeks later, they flew me out to L.A. to audition for the part, and I got to be Cousin Harold in Menace II Society. Shout out to the Hughes Brothers because they gave me my first shot. They saw something in me that I really didn’t see in myself at the time. It’s unfortunate that me and the Hughes Brothers fell out because of some other shyt that I was wrongly accused of, and to this day I admit that I did not do. I won’t speak deep on it, but I just want to clear the air about that if they read this. I reached out a couple times to them, but they never responded. I still got love for them for giving me my 15 minutes of fame. So shout out to the Hughes Brothers.
Sway: Opio was just getting out of high school, and his stepfather named Michael Ashburne was our first attorney. He became the attorney for Del and all the Hieroglyphics. He was a great guy, very reputable, very well respected. Tech and I used to go to him, and we didn’t have any money. I told him I wanted to learn about contract law, and he would teach me about publishing, mechanical royalties, whatever this or that meant in a clause. One day he said, “My son is in a Rap crew called the Hieroglyphics. His group in the crew is called the Souls of Mischief. I have their tape. Can I play it for you?” I said, “Where are they from?” Then he said they’re from Oakland, and I thought, “These dudes are from Oakland? They don’t sound like they’re from Oakland. Yo these dudes are dope!” I took a liking to them and started playing them on the 10 O’Clock Bomb, and had them come onto the 10 O’Clock Bomb. We started playing them on the Wake Up Show too. They had Domino, one of their producers, who was dope. Their energy was the same as the A$AP Mob today coming out of Harlem. It was like, “Who is this new fresh thing coming out of Oakland?” And then you started hearing about other people that came from that world that clicked—Hobo Junction being one of them.
Saafir: Our crew came together nonchalantly. I met a production team called The Seven. From that meeting, the Hobo Junction was born through that camaraderie. At first, our name was called “C.O.D.” Children Of Destiny. I was chillin’ with Plan B, Poke Martian, and we were playing around with names because we knew we needed something new. So we were looking through records. I found this Charles Mingus record called “Hobo Ho.” I was like, “‘Hobos is clean.” I think Poke said, “Hobo Junction,” and everybody liked it. It kind of fit us because we were made up of people who either left home early, were young and went through the system, in and out of jail, or fellas that were lightweight crazy. It was different people from all walks of life. Like Big Nose was from Mount Vernon, New York. IQ was from Los Angeles. Me and some of the other members were from the Bay, in Oakland. And we just made it a movement. We were just rapping because we loved it, just to be raw. People starting liking our shyt, so we just kept pushing. I knew the demographics of Hip Hop and how far it could go. At the time that street shyt was limited as far as getting out to the mass majority and out to the world. I tried to keep my brothers from going back to jail, and Rap was really used as an alternative based on the love of music.
http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/edito...ory-of-saafir-vs-casual-s-wake-up-show-battle
Battle Drill: The Oral History Of Saafir vs. Casual's "Wake Up Show" Battle
by DANA SCOTT
posted June 18, 2014
Twenty years after its origins, Saafir, Casual, Sway and Tech look back on the historic "Wake Up Show" battle that shaped how we view both beef and Battle Rap.
In 1994, Sway and King Tech were in the midst of their success with the Wake Up Show, airing on both KKBT 92.3 FM The Beat in Los Angeles and KMEL 106.1 FM in San Francisco. The Wake Up Show was an anchor for hardcore and underground Hip Hop diehards on the West Coast and beyond. That year, Sway and Tech broadcasted a lyrical brawl with the caliber of a highly anticipated heavyweight boxing title in both of their syndicated markets for Northern and Southern Californians to listen and call into the radio show to decide the victor.
The battle was between two of the Oakland’s most popular underground Rap crews, Hieroglyphics and the Hobo Junction. In February and May of 1994, respectively, both Casual (a founding member of the Hieroglyphics crew) and his associate from across town Saafir (the de facto leader of the Hobo Junction) released their debut albums Fear Itself and Boxcar Sessions. After a misunderstanding over a featured guest appearance on Boxcar Sessions, the two former comrades expressed their pride and aggression via battle raps and squared off with their crews against each other live on the Wake Up Show. This main event helped catapult the momentum of the Wake Up Show to become one of the highest-rated Rap radio programs in the country. The high ratings would also later serve as a barometer for major record labels to scout and sign new underground Rap talent that had performed on their show for the rest of the ‘90s and early 2000s.
This is the second installment of HipHopDX’s coverage of the Sway, Tech, Hieroglyphics and Hobo Junction’s involvement in one of Hip Hop’s epic battles . After 20 years of minimal documentation on this urban legend, the air is finally cleared straight from the mouths of the sources involved in this story. Casual is currently on tour celebrating his debut album’s anniversary. Having completed a new project, the independently released Mystery School , he looks back on how his childhood friends formed the Hieroglyphics, and how this historic Rap battle began. Saafir details his story of how he became an associate to seminal Oakland Rap group Digital Underground, how he befriended Tupac Shakur and landed his acting role in the street classic Menace II Society. Saafir also gave his perspective of how the battle between he and Casual began as well. Sway and King Tech chime in on how this event happened on their show, and each of them reflect on the codification on the art of freestyling in Hip Hop, and how the “Casual versus Saafir” battle reverberates in comparison to the Battle Rap scene as we know it today.
We Dem: How The Hieroglyphics & Hobo Junction Crews Formed
Casual: Honestly, I was looking toward the East Coast to get a lot my influences. These are people I was intrigued with—EPMD, Big Daddy Kane, LL Cool J. But obviously you also have your regional champions like Too Short. That was because I was young and that’s what people were into, but his lyrics didn’t have me going. I was intrigued by the music and playing with words like the Juice Crew, Kool G Rap and all the OGs. So that’s what made to blend what I listened to regionally and accepted it to get the party going with music like Too Short. But I was really intrigued my East Coast influences to blend those styles to become Casual.
Saafir: With LL Cool J’s “I Need A Beat,” I really knew I wanted to rap after I heard that. I really wasn’t a rapper. Me and my brother would beat on like the washing machine, making beats and rhymes, but that was just bullshytting. While Casual and the Hieroglyphics, and other crews where were going to school, I was in the streets. At a young age, I was in group homes and foster homes. I’m one of those stories that went from real rags and nothing to the stadium. I knew I had to metamorphisize myself to a certain degree in order to get within the speed of what was happening in that genre and that era. It was to accomplish what I always wanted and dreamed about. And I dreamed about putting a record out and being in movies. I was really into the music, man. Like I really wanted to be a superstar. Then I got connected to Digital Underground through a cousin of mine. I saw my cousin in the “Doowutchyalike” video once I had just gotten out of jail. That made me want to get to know them. So I hung with them for a minute. My Digital Underground years were the most fun that I ever had. Shock G, that man knew how throw a party, boy! I’ll tell you that .
Casual: We were rapping before we formed the crew. We all were rappers when we were younger, but we were colleagues. I knew Del, Opio, Tajai, and A-Plus since kindergarten. We were already homies, but we formed the impromptu battle on Aster Avenue back in the ‘80s. We were just getting together to battle each other. And right after we finished, Del said “Hey, let’s just form a crew. Just all of us.” And we went up to A-Plus’ grandma’s house and thought of a crew name. The first name we thought of was The Mad Circle. But then Del had the deal with Da Lench Mob, so he went to L.A., and WC and then had the name. By the time Del came back, we weren’t The Mad Circle anymore. So we were thinking of a new name. I think a lot of the logos developed possibly before we had a crew name. Del came with the name “Hieroglyphics.” He also drew the logo. I guess we were freshman in high school. Del was a junior. And we started blowing that name up. Every little show, we’d show up, we started banging that name, and it became what it became.
Saafir: I knew that I didn’t want to come out sounding like Too Short. You can’t do Too Short. If you come out sounding like him, you’re gonna get dissed or put under his umbrella. I didn’t want that because I really wanted to be original. I came in a fortunate time when Rap was at a transitional stage. I had lived the street life, but I was actually trying to get in the tail end of what they call “The Golden Era” of Rap now. I grew up on East Coast. I grew up on West Coast shyt too. Just like nikkas in L.A., we grew up on East Coast shyt too. I used to listen to everything. Like BDP, that was some street shyt back in the day! I was on the block selling weed, and we were bumping that. Like Run-DMC saying, “It’s like that! And that’s the way it is!” It wasn’t, “This is Hip Hop and this is hood.” No, Hip Hop was hood. And then there came a time where it was like, “Okay, you’re gonna be a rapper, an entertainer, or you’re gonna be in the street.” I used to boogaloo, break and all that shyt. And I did this other type of dance called “struttin’.” I was cold, man!
King Tech: We thought we had the Bay Area on lock as far as knowing everybody. Then I heard Saafir’s “Battle Drill,” which to this day is one of my top 10 favorite records of all time. I had never heard nobody with that freaky flow before. One of the groups played on the show was Hieroglyphics with the guys being from Oakland with that twisted way. And they were bringing the art of freestyling back, plus they had their own look. They had their own sound. But then you had Freestyle Fellowship in L.A., so the West Coast really started to push their own movement for the first time. Saafir’s flow to this day is one of the most unique flows I’ve ever heard. When we met him, we were trippin’ out like, “Yo, that’s that dude!” That was the era of whoever was weirder and had a dope twist to their flow was getting shine.
Saafir: Money B of Digital Underground introduced me to Tupac. Me and Tupac started hanging, and we clicked real deep. At this time, I was staying between five places. I didn’t have my own spot. Tupac had just gotten his spot as he started getting paid for the D.U. shyt he did. One day he asked me, “Where do you stay?” I said, “I got a few places I stay.” He then said, “Nah, where you live? You don’t got your own spot?” When I said no, he told me I could stay with him, and I moved in. He was cool, really on some heavy brotherhood shyt. I could see that because everyone that was around him was really down for him. He showed you real love in the beginning. He opened his arms and embraced me at that time, and I learned a lot being around him…positive and negative shyt. He opened my eyes to what was real about the record industry.
From there with Tupac, I met the Hughes Brothers after they shot his video for “Brenda’s Got A Baby.” Then shytted on them, they got into it, and they were real upset because they were really trying to connect with him about what had happened between them. I hung out with the Hughes Brothers, trying to get their mind off of what he had just did. And I hooked them up with some females and shared some drinks. Then the next day they asked me, “Yo, can you act?” I said, “Yeah I act everyday with the police.” So they gave me a script and told me to study the shyt. A few weeks later, they flew me out to L.A. to audition for the part, and I got to be Cousin Harold in Menace II Society. Shout out to the Hughes Brothers because they gave me my first shot. They saw something in me that I really didn’t see in myself at the time. It’s unfortunate that me and the Hughes Brothers fell out because of some other shyt that I was wrongly accused of, and to this day I admit that I did not do. I won’t speak deep on it, but I just want to clear the air about that if they read this. I reached out a couple times to them, but they never responded. I still got love for them for giving me my 15 minutes of fame. So shout out to the Hughes Brothers.
Sway: Opio was just getting out of high school, and his stepfather named Michael Ashburne was our first attorney. He became the attorney for Del and all the Hieroglyphics. He was a great guy, very reputable, very well respected. Tech and I used to go to him, and we didn’t have any money. I told him I wanted to learn about contract law, and he would teach me about publishing, mechanical royalties, whatever this or that meant in a clause. One day he said, “My son is in a Rap crew called the Hieroglyphics. His group in the crew is called the Souls of Mischief. I have their tape. Can I play it for you?” I said, “Where are they from?” Then he said they’re from Oakland, and I thought, “These dudes are from Oakland? They don’t sound like they’re from Oakland. Yo these dudes are dope!” I took a liking to them and started playing them on the 10 O’Clock Bomb, and had them come onto the 10 O’Clock Bomb. We started playing them on the Wake Up Show too. They had Domino, one of their producers, who was dope. Their energy was the same as the A$AP Mob today coming out of Harlem. It was like, “Who is this new fresh thing coming out of Oakland?” And then you started hearing about other people that came from that world that clicked—Hobo Junction being one of them.
Saafir: Our crew came together nonchalantly. I met a production team called The Seven. From that meeting, the Hobo Junction was born through that camaraderie. At first, our name was called “C.O.D.” Children Of Destiny. I was chillin’ with Plan B, Poke Martian, and we were playing around with names because we knew we needed something new. So we were looking through records. I found this Charles Mingus record called “Hobo Ho.” I was like, “‘Hobos is clean.” I think Poke said, “Hobo Junction,” and everybody liked it. It kind of fit us because we were made up of people who either left home early, were young and went through the system, in and out of jail, or fellas that were lightweight crazy. It was different people from all walks of life. Like Big Nose was from Mount Vernon, New York. IQ was from Los Angeles. Me and some of the other members were from the Bay, in Oakland. And we just made it a movement. We were just rapping because we loved it, just to be raw. People starting liking our shyt, so we just kept pushing. I knew the demographics of Hip Hop and how far it could go. At the time that street shyt was limited as far as getting out to the mass majority and out to the world. I tried to keep my brothers from going back to jail, and Rap was really used as an alternative based on the love of music.