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Treach: The Forgotten MC

treach(undated-headshot-med)

By Odeisel

Once upon a time, in the house that Run built, there was an MC whose skill among his contemporaries was fairly superior.  Treach possessed every single tool you needed as an emcee.  Street cred?  Check. Voice?.   Treach had that hood voice.  Not up stairs looking out the window at the hood, hood. On the corner doing chin-ups on the traffic light hood. He had the look. The muscles. The tattoos back when having tattoos was a big deal. The menacing glare that made soft cats tuck those chains.  Treach had his own style of fashion and for Christ’s sake, a chain around his neck for the homies on lockdown and a machete. In an era when everyone was wearing army fatigues, this guy really looked like he was ready for war.

Then there was the industry cosign.  Redman, lyrical god? Check. Tupac, rebel without a cause? Double Check. Her royal highness, the Queen L-A-T-I-F-A-H in command? Riding and dying with him. This is all in place before we even examine his skill.

There is a ton of one trick pony emcees. Club banger emcees. Anthem making emcees. Punchline emcees. Underground Emcees, etc. Treach was efficient at many of those avenues, both lyrically and technically. Normally, when you heard a rapid-fire emcee in the 90’s it was generally innocuous.

You didn’t take the Fu-Schnickens seriously.  You took Das seriously for those first two until they got bitten so much they were caricature. You didn’t take Twizta seriously while he was Tongue Twista. Kane, Ra, and G.Rap were on the decline by then but they have a lifetime trinity exemption. KRS was on his own planet.  When you heard this emcee go hard, your ears were either glued to the speakers or you were forced off your seat and waving your hands.

That's a machete
That’s a machete

His style was copied, both with and without his consent, and while his group created hits and sold millions of records , Treach stood at the center, famous as hell but a phantom menace on the mic.

Count the hits that he’s had.” Hip-Hop Hooray.” “OPP”.  “Uptown Anthem.” “The Craziest.” “Feel Me Flow.  Treach could go rough and rugged or melodic and sing-songy, yet lyrical far before Ja Rule and 50 ran that into the ground. If you can’t hear him in Latifah’s flow in “Latifah’s Had It Up To Here” then your ears are numb to the drum.

Aside from the anthems, Treach  painted a picture of urban blithe without making it into a horror film. “Ghetto Bastard” didn’t make you want to come see Trenton and East Orange out of curiosity. It made you take his word for it. Don’t ever come to the ghetto?  You got it Treach.

Need some raw lyricism?  “Check Hot Potato”, the duet with Bumpy Kuckles. Check “Yoke The Joker.” Check “Guard Your Grill.” Peep “Hood Comes First.” Aside from his own work, he hopped on D-Nice’s solo joint for the remix of the single “Time To Flow” and flat out demolished it.

Treach was in many videos back then, but was so fearsome on the mic that he rarely did collaborations outside of family because not many rappers wanted that problem. On a side note, his shout to Grand Puba at the end of “Guard Your Grill” was both a nod to Hip-Hop history, a big up to a fellow rapper and just flat out class. You didn’t see a rapper extend that kind of courtesy to a rapper not in the same crew.

On stage, Treach was a superior Hip-Hop performer. Hhe had tremendous stage generalship, great energy, and the breath control to go with  the fast flow. He was the total package as a rapper.

If Treach had a flaw, it was that he never updated his style. When the bleak, post-Illmatic world arrived, and the gritty rhymes took precedence, no one wanted anthems anymore, they wanted war stories. It wasn’t enough to actually be hood.  You had to project the Apocalypse and as most real tough guys, Treach wanted no part of the fake gangsterism. While not quite a dinosaur, Treach and Naughty, with a little help from Kaygee’s departure, lost their career momentum and took hiatus.

So next time someone asks you about who’s the best emcee, just don’t default to Biggie, Jay-Z, and Tupac. There are some really great emcees in the history of Hip-Hop.  And when you stop to think about them, remember the forgotten emcee. One with the skill, the swagger, the track record and the music to back it up.  Remember the Treacherous MC. Hip-Hop hurray!

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3 thoughts on “Treach: The Forgotten MC

  1. I had a chance to see Naughty in Dec 1991 or 92 can’t remember. It was the typical tour of the time, PE Headline with about 7 other groups, but I remember Naughty By Nature’s set because most people knew them as strictly the “O.P.P. guys” but the real heads in the arena (Bayfront Theater in St. Pete Florida) knew they had some serious “Yoke the Joker” kind of shit. People in the arena were absolutely blown! They had Apache with them and when they performed 1-2-3 the place went Bananas!

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