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"I'm wilin' out, the security/ I ain't got patience!" Moose pulls the lyrics straight from the bottom of his stomach, every line hits like Tyson in '89: "I hear his voice saying daddy I'm still with you/ I'm breaking down junior every time I see your picture." The mistreatment of Nicole caused him to flip out on security guards. Moose raps about how the doctors ignored her pain and kept her waiting for a prolonged period of time. On his heartfelt track 'Breathe (RIP)' we learn that his girlfriend birthed a stillborn baby. 'My Bitch Geeking' deals with insecurities in intimate relationships. And though the tales of drug-dealing such as 'Posted' are powerful, it's the songs that take us on a personal journey that give Moose his range and impact. Moose says again that, like me, he used to deal, but doesn't anymore.
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I asked Moose to tell me about his experience with Detective Hersl.ĭetective Hersl has cost the city hundreds of thousands of dollars in police brutality suits, as shown by a series of Baltimore Sun Investigates articles on dirty cops. I was fucked up because how they going to go let them take my shine like that. "I look up to Boosie as a rapper and that was a big night for me," he says of the timing of the raid. There aren't many writers coming from DDH and that's evident when seeing the clueless response to his music.Īlmost two months after the Lil Boosie show, which he was unable to play because of his arrest, Moose is still locked up. Moose comes with a fresh perspective from a completely different reality however, he is equally brilliant and can capture the same world through a lens that has never been seen before. "The Wire" brilliantly displayed the balance between police, dealers, politicians, reporters, and junkies and how their worlds collide through the eyes of David Simon and Ed Burns. It's the stories in these songs that represent the people where he came from that gives Moose a much greater range than an ordinary street rapper. Moose doesn't act like he's from any other place in the world but East Baltimore and it bleeds through in every song. He's in Tru's and New Balance with designer belts posted on vacants and in between alleys spitting real raps while big-ass rats leap over his feet. He rocks Prada shoes and films on Monument Street. Moose is heavily inspired by Lil Boosie, The Hot Boyz, and some other out-of-town acts, but he still maintains his 410 swag. Neighborhoods that I've been through, telling raw stories that are both native to Baltimoreans and universal. He was making references to neighborhoods that I know. I downloaded the tape at school and bumped it on my way home from work and was hooked.
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2!" I had to check Young Moose's mixtape, "Out the Mud 2," released for free download in June.
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"Who ya'll listening to? Music wise?" I asked a class full of middle schoolers. "I'm telling you Watkins," he said, "ask anybody from anywhere DDH, projects, new homes, Westside or wadevea! Moose! Moose is that! He better than Boosie, Jeezy, everybody! Moose dummy!" Young Moose was brought to me by a seventh grader named Nick I met while working at Friendship Academy, a charter school in the Canton area. Those in power are most comfortable when attacking the poor and underrepresented, and they don't want impoverished black kids to flourish in anything, especially the arts. It does not mean that it is a documentary or should be used as evidence. I wasn't saying that his video should count as probable cause, but was making the same point that Moose made: His music, in representing the people where he comes from, is authentic. My words, about the authenticity of Baltimore music, didn't come across the way I intended them. When The Sun wrote a piece about Moose, Justin Fenton, one of the story's writers, asked me to comment. Moose and I are both storytellers who are lucky enough to deliver the human side of our Baltimore to the world. Cops never fucked with David Simon while he was filming "the Wire" and dudes who rock out at The Crown perform heroin ballets weekly, but Moose can't do the same? Martin Scorsese can but Moose can't? Can you not be an artist if you've dealt heroin? If you're a felon? If you've owned guns? So now being black and from the ghetto exempts you from artistic expression? To many people, what Moose does isn't art at all, though it's just evidence. The video for 'Posted' depicts what goes on in any impoverished Baltimore neighborhood with the cinematic flair of hood flicks like "Paid In Full." It's thoughtfully shot and executed and feels more like a short film than just another rap video. A YouTube description for 'Posted' notes that the video was uploaded on Dec. After posting bail the day of the show, he was immediately brought in on a probation charge again, stemming partly from music videos, which Moose's lawyer Richard Woods says were recorded long before Moose was on probation.