Why did two of Atlanta's most exciting rappers name their tape after one of… Read Full Bio ↴Why did two of Atlanta's most exciting rappers name their tape after one of America's whitest cities?
Last Tuesday, Young Thug and Bloody Jay released an 11-track collaborative tape, combining new songs with previously released singles βDanny Gloverβ and βLetβs Go Play.β Itβs a thrilling ride, both rappers whipped into an ecstatic frenzy with a hummable undercurrentβbut I was sold before I heard the first track, because the tape is called Black Portland. I moved to Portland when I was 18. At the time, I was mortified to be living outside of the South, where I'd grown up, and in a city so overwhelmingly not-diverse that one woman has since dedicated herself to documenting its black residents, each like a rare pearl. Like lots of locals and transplants, I adjusted to Portland by learning to ride a bike, buying rain shoes and getting into the city's basketball team, the Trail Blazers, who are reliably good if not recent league champions. Their arena was small and homey; keeping up with the season was a nice way to make friends that werenβt in school. When I graduated college, I wore a Blazers hat instead of a mortarboard.
So why, a half-decade later, would two rappers from my home state call their tape Black Portland, and plaster the Blazers logo on its cover? Last week, Pitchfork called this βtruly the most important question in America right now,β while Stereogum preemptively concluded that the tape had been βinexplicablyβ titled.
Reached by phone, Bloody Jay offered an explanation. He and Young Thug, he said, consider themselves innovators, and wanted to give that purpose a name. βWeβre on fire right now in the streets of Atlanta, and weβre stoners, so you know, weβre the Blazers and Atlanta is Black Portland,β said Jay. Propane, a manager who has worked with both Jay and Thug, said, βTheyβre the ones that are making the sound thatβs going on right now. Theyβre the trailblazers of the culture. Everything falls in line behind them.β
More directly, Bloody Jay is also a fan of Portlandβs team, and identifies his determination in its roster. β[The Blazers are] young and ambitious. Thereβs a lot of players on their team that you might have never heard of, but theyβre all coming in and playing as a real team. They stick together. You know that if you play them, youβre gonna have a hard night.β (Jayβs favorite Blazer is point guard Damian Lillard, an Oakland, CA native.) A friend in New York told me this week that Trail Blazers jerseys are currently en vogue, but I think it'd be fair to call Jay's Blazers fandom a niche pursuit in AtlantaβI called three stores at the city's beloved Lenox Square mall, and none stocked Portland gear.
"All of us have some Black Portland in us." βBloody Jay
But the Black Portland idea expands beyond weed and teamwork metaphors. Portland is one of America's whitest major cities; in Jayβs words, βmore of a caucasian city.β In turn, Black Portland is both a nickname for contemporary Atlanta and an imaginary place, like the Atlantis to OutKastβs Atlanta, where young creative thinkers live. βBlack Portland is our own world,β Jay explains, "and all of us have some Black Portland in us. Itβs where ambition, freedom and being young all roll into one. A never-ending party, just changing the color on your mood ring. Thatβs the kid in you, that wants to get outside when youβve been in the house too much, thatβs Black Portland. That Saturday when the sun is beaming through your window, thatβs Black Portland.β
Defined this way, Black Portland is a concept that can thrive not only in Atlanta, where Jay and Thug have promoted a culture of weird clothes and wacky voices, but in any rap market where kids are looking for something that feels new. βJay and Thug are real street guys," Propane says, "but if you look at how they dress and how they act, theyβre real eccentric, worldly-type dudes. They can get along with anybody! I can take these dudes anywhere and theyβll fit in place." For Thug and Jay to brand their scene Black Portland, instead of, say, the tired and limiting "new Atlanta," they're saying they're not beholden to a regional contextβit's more an ethical framework, suggesting that rap should be a freewheeling, collaborative sport; that guys from shitty neighborhoods can refresh the habits and dress codes they grew up with; that they can get along with anybody, and anybody can get along with them.
These ideas are already popular outside of Atlanta. Take the Bay Area's HBK Gang, for example, the independent squad who strive to make motivational national hits by tweaking a palette of regionally rooted sounds. (HBK's Iamsu! recently released a remix of Young Thug's "Stoner.") Or consider the outer orbits of today's Odd Future crew, forming jam bands and designing a sort-of rap college at Mac Miller's house. As for me, I'll probably never live in Portland again, but I'm sure there are Young Thug fans out there these days. And I'm happy that when they look at the Blazers logo, already a mark of diversity, collaboration and pride in a city that could use more of all those things, they'll now be able to recognize themselves in it even more.
Last Tuesday, Young Thug and Bloody Jay released an 11-track collaborative tape, combining new songs with previously released singles βDanny Gloverβ and βLetβs Go Play.β Itβs a thrilling ride, both rappers whipped into an ecstatic frenzy with a hummable undercurrentβbut I was sold before I heard the first track, because the tape is called Black Portland. I moved to Portland when I was 18. At the time, I was mortified to be living outside of the South, where I'd grown up, and in a city so overwhelmingly not-diverse that one woman has since dedicated herself to documenting its black residents, each like a rare pearl. Like lots of locals and transplants, I adjusted to Portland by learning to ride a bike, buying rain shoes and getting into the city's basketball team, the Trail Blazers, who are reliably good if not recent league champions. Their arena was small and homey; keeping up with the season was a nice way to make friends that werenβt in school. When I graduated college, I wore a Blazers hat instead of a mortarboard.
So why, a half-decade later, would two rappers from my home state call their tape Black Portland, and plaster the Blazers logo on its cover? Last week, Pitchfork called this βtruly the most important question in America right now,β while Stereogum preemptively concluded that the tape had been βinexplicablyβ titled.
Reached by phone, Bloody Jay offered an explanation. He and Young Thug, he said, consider themselves innovators, and wanted to give that purpose a name. βWeβre on fire right now in the streets of Atlanta, and weβre stoners, so you know, weβre the Blazers and Atlanta is Black Portland,β said Jay. Propane, a manager who has worked with both Jay and Thug, said, βTheyβre the ones that are making the sound thatβs going on right now. Theyβre the trailblazers of the culture. Everything falls in line behind them.β
More directly, Bloody Jay is also a fan of Portlandβs team, and identifies his determination in its roster. β[The Blazers are] young and ambitious. Thereβs a lot of players on their team that you might have never heard of, but theyβre all coming in and playing as a real team. They stick together. You know that if you play them, youβre gonna have a hard night.β (Jayβs favorite Blazer is point guard Damian Lillard, an Oakland, CA native.) A friend in New York told me this week that Trail Blazers jerseys are currently en vogue, but I think it'd be fair to call Jay's Blazers fandom a niche pursuit in AtlantaβI called three stores at the city's beloved Lenox Square mall, and none stocked Portland gear.
"All of us have some Black Portland in us." βBloody Jay
But the Black Portland idea expands beyond weed and teamwork metaphors. Portland is one of America's whitest major cities; in Jayβs words, βmore of a caucasian city.β In turn, Black Portland is both a nickname for contemporary Atlanta and an imaginary place, like the Atlantis to OutKastβs Atlanta, where young creative thinkers live. βBlack Portland is our own world,β Jay explains, "and all of us have some Black Portland in us. Itβs where ambition, freedom and being young all roll into one. A never-ending party, just changing the color on your mood ring. Thatβs the kid in you, that wants to get outside when youβve been in the house too much, thatβs Black Portland. That Saturday when the sun is beaming through your window, thatβs Black Portland.β
Defined this way, Black Portland is a concept that can thrive not only in Atlanta, where Jay and Thug have promoted a culture of weird clothes and wacky voices, but in any rap market where kids are looking for something that feels new. βJay and Thug are real street guys," Propane says, "but if you look at how they dress and how they act, theyβre real eccentric, worldly-type dudes. They can get along with anybody! I can take these dudes anywhere and theyβll fit in place." For Thug and Jay to brand their scene Black Portland, instead of, say, the tired and limiting "new Atlanta," they're saying they're not beholden to a regional contextβit's more an ethical framework, suggesting that rap should be a freewheeling, collaborative sport; that guys from shitty neighborhoods can refresh the habits and dress codes they grew up with; that they can get along with anybody, and anybody can get along with them.
These ideas are already popular outside of Atlanta. Take the Bay Area's HBK Gang, for example, the independent squad who strive to make motivational national hits by tweaking a palette of regionally rooted sounds. (HBK's Iamsu! recently released a remix of Young Thug's "Stoner.") Or consider the outer orbits of today's Odd Future crew, forming jam bands and designing a sort-of rap college at Mac Miller's house. As for me, I'll probably never live in Portland again, but I'm sure there are Young Thug fans out there these days. And I'm happy that when they look at the Blazers logo, already a mark of diversity, collaboration and pride in a city that could use more of all those things, they'll now be able to recognize themselves in it even more.
Parade
Young Thug & Bloody Jay Lyrics
Whoa
How the fuck you out here goin' tit for tat? (Tit for tat)
I should've saw the signs, how could I miss that? (How could I miss that?)
Ayy, soon as I'm fresh out the box like a Tic-Tac
We havin' sex soon as I get my bitch back
It ain't gon' be sexy when I get my lick back
I'm about to mop up some boys, it's custodian time
Me and my thoughts, it's the loneliest time
Don't tell me 'bout loyalty, show me this time
Don't tell me 'bout loyalty, show me this time
Business is business, you owe me this time
Slime on your head, Nickelodeon time
Oh, whoa
Parade on Bleveland soon as I get home
I'm comin' home
I'm comin' home
All the lows, all the lifers
All the bright burns, all the lifers
Ayy, Parade on Bleveland soon as I get home
You already know, you already know
Hello, this is a prepaid call from Jeffery
An inmate at the Cobb County Adult Detention facility
To accept this call, press zero
To refuse this call, hang up or press one
Yo, wassup, my brother
Wassup, my brother
Talk to me, what's the word?
Uh, I ain't doin' shit, man
Just pushin' more Peter, more sweeter, more completer
Than any Peter pusher around
See what I'm sayin', twin? Ha (ha-ha-ha)
Spider back, I'm a big dawg, you a cat
How is that you was ever in the format?
Honey bun, on the bed, yeah, hunnid racks, sun's up
I ain't 'sleep, I been countin' stacks
Hands down, yeah, the big dawg comin' back
Think you good? Nigga, pants down, you smokin' crack
Michael Kors robe, mm-mm, nah, Michael Jackson
Back in like forty days, forty seconds
Backend after backend like I'm trappin'
Actually I been trapped in
But I took a black bitch to Beverly Hills
Now she white, Michael Jackson
After we fuck, she told her friends, "Bitch, it's crackin'"
Made a jail call to your bitch, she say you down
You a bug in the grass, finna get ate by my cow
I'm just livin' my life on the jet, ridin' 'round
Two hoes with me, one white, the other one Bobby Brown
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business, yeah
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business, yeah
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business, yeah
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business
(Metro)
How the fuck you out here goin' tit for tat? (Tit for tat)
I should've saw the signs, how could I miss that? (How could I miss that?)
Ayy, soon as I'm fresh out the box like a Tic-Tac
We havin' sex soon as I get my bitch back
It ain't gon' be sexy when I get my lick back
I'm about to mop up some boys, it's custodian time
Me and my thoughts, it's the loneliest time
Don't tell me 'bout loyalty, show me this time
Business is business, you owe me this time
Slime on your head, Nickelodeon time
Oh, whoa
Parade on Bleveland soon as I get home
I'm comin' home
I'm comin' home
All the lows, all the lifers
All the bright burns, all the lifers
Ayy, Parade on Bleveland soon as I get home
You already know, you already know
Hello, this is a prepaid call from Jeffery
An inmate at the Cobb County Adult Detention facility
To accept this call, press zero
To refuse this call, hang up or press one
Yo, wassup, my brother
Wassup, my brother
Talk to me, what's the word?
Uh, I ain't doin' shit, man
Just pushin' more Peter, more sweeter, more completer
Than any Peter pusher around
See what I'm sayin', twin? Ha (ha-ha-ha)
Spider back, I'm a big dawg, you a cat
How is that you was ever in the format?
Honey bun, on the bed, yeah, hunnid racks, sun's up
I ain't 'sleep, I been countin' stacks
Hands down, yeah, the big dawg comin' back
Think you good? Nigga, pants down, you smokin' crack
Michael Kors robe, mm-mm, nah, Michael Jackson
Back in like forty days, forty seconds
Backend after backend like I'm trappin'
Actually I been trapped in
But I took a black bitch to Beverly Hills
Now she white, Michael Jackson
After we fuck, she told her friends, "Bitch, it's crackin'"
Made a jail call to your bitch, she say you down
You a bug in the grass, finna get ate by my cow
I'm just livin' my life on the jet, ridin' 'round
Two hoes with me, one white, the other one Bobby Brown
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business, yeah
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business, yeah
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business, yeah
Business is business, business is business, business is business
Business is business, business is business
(Metro)
Lyrics Β© Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: Aubrey Drake Graham, David Ruoff, Elias Klughammer, Jeffery Lamar Williams, Kaushik Barua
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Jeff Jean
YOUNG THUG IS THE BEST RAPPER EVER DOPE SONG EVER 2017
lebrons doe
love this song turn up!
lebrons doe
koo
Khalid Shihab
Shit go in!!
One ManMan
very good song goin thug
thugger
Lil Fireworkz
forgot about this! banger
Nwb Twinn
Dey always go hrd tagetha
Garry Syiem
Best rapper
Carson Palmer
bloody jay doesn't do this song any favors, kinda ruined it a lil, still like the song but he made my rating go from a solid 7/10 to a 6/10
Joel Lawrence
You a dub