Crunchy Black

Location:
Memphis Tn, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Rap
Label:
Da Real Hard Hitters
Type:
Indie
!! Its ((Crunch Time)) And For DEM HATERS LOST IN DA SOS KiLL YALL SELF !! Whatz Good Myspace . ALbum Coming Sooner Than Ya Can Imagine And Be Looking Out For My New Group (( THE HARD HIITERS )) We Coming To Take Control And Take Ova DA GAme .



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Crunchy Black: Climbing back up a steep rap ladder

By Andria Lisle

Friday, December 26, 2008



Crunchy Black's appearance at the Hi-Tone Café tonight has been a long time coming.



It's been nearly three years since his highly publicized split from Three 6 Mafia, and were it not for a new song, "R U Ready," getting spins on K97, fickle fans would've deemed the rapper ancient history.



Local industry insider Hosea "M-town" Mayes, co-founder of MemphisRap.com, says that Black has the potential for a comeback.



In March 2006, rapper Crunchy Black shared an Oscar with his fellow Three 6 Mafia members for the song "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp." He left the group soon after and has been working to establish a successful solo career.Brandon DillSpecial to The Commercial Appeal



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"He brings higher expectations than most," says Mayes, adding, "If he doesn't come out with something good, they'll come down harder on him.



That said, we've got tons of Three 6 fans coming to MemphisRap.com."



Rattling off a list of former Three 6 affiliates, Mayes says, "Lord Infamous, Koopsta Knicca, Crunchy Black -- they don't forget about those guys too quickly. (Black) just needs to focus on who his audience is and build his own fan base."



"It's an uphill battle," says another observer, local promoter Freddy Hydro, who worked with Memphis rapper La Chat shortly after she left the Three 6 fold.



Even Black says he's faced with a Sisyphean-sized task.



"It's harder doing Crunchy Black than if I was somebody brand new," the rapper (real name: Darnell Carlton) says.



Personally and professionally, Black's life is defined by tough breaks.



His mother was incarcerated in a women's prison in Indiana when she gave birth to him in August 1974.



Nine years later, Black watched helplessly as his grandmother died of an asthma attack. By then, Black was already flirting with trouble -- so he ran away from home and began accruing gangsta merit badges for petty, and then serious crimes. Soon, he was bouncing in and out of jail.



Then Black joined forces with childhood friend Paul Beauregard in the burgeoning rap group Prophet Posse, which, by the mid-1990s, morphed into Three 6 Mafia. Success, via platinum-selling songs like "2-Way Freak," "Ridin' Spinners" and "Stay Fly," came quickly.



On March 5, 2006, Black's career reached its apex when he joined Beauregard and Three 6 co-founder Jordan "Juicy J" Houston onstage at the 78th Academy Awards ceremony, accepting an Oscar for "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp."



A few months later, Black left the group, just as Three 6 was riding a pop culture wave that included their own MTV reality show, "Adventures in Hollyhood," and appearances on "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" and "Beauty and the Geek."



Black says, "It wasn't the big stuff that mattered -- it's the little stuff that hurts. I was already planning on leaving before the Oscars, but I thought if I stayed a little bit longer, more folks would know me."



Leaving the group wasn't easy. When he walked out on Jordan and Beauregard, Black lost his best friends. And, when Three 6's Hypnotize Minds imprint released two substandard Crunchy Black solo CDs, On My Own and From Me To You, which were culled from sessions for their 2005 album Most Known Unknown, his reputation plummeted.



Undaunted, Black rented a house in East Memphis and filled a spare room with recording equipment from the Guitar Center.



"All my friends were gone," Black says. He laughs ruefully, then corrects himself. "I had people who were hanging on, who weren't my friends in the first place."



On his own for the first time, Black strove to create new songs the only way he knew how "riding the beat and painting pictures in my head."



"I was talking to God about the work I was doing on my own, and I was spending all my time in the studio, because God said I needed to give it 100 percent," he says.



"I could make 'hood money, but I wanted to make real money, so God told me I didn't need a real producer -- I needed someone who could talk money."



At that moment, Glen Booth knocked on the door to get the rent.



The 43-year old property manager became Black's manager -- and now, under the aegis of "Da Real Hardhitters, Inc.," the two are hustling new tracks produced by Atlanta beatmakers Gahsh and Big Reef to major labels.



"Crunchy is a very intelligent person. He just doesn't have the music business experience. Hopefully [success] will come with time, but if he was gonna jump out, he should've done it immediately after Three 6 Mafia," Hydro says.



Yet there's no going back for Black.



"Being on my own, I've tried to focus on giving the people a change," he says. "I'm trying to bring gangsta music back the right way, with a crunk-wise vibe and a better message."



"At the concert, I'll be doing songs from old to new -- Three 6 songs, and new stuff that's getting ready to drop," he says.



In the studio, it's another matter entirely.



"I'm not against how [other rappers] are living, but their lyrics limit them," Black says.



"No more 'funky bitches,' no more weed songs, no get high songs, no powder songs. I've got other things I can talk about -- the good part of life."



Crunchy Black is most known as an one of the original members of Three 6 Mafia along side with Lord Infamous, DJ Paul, and Juicy J Crunchy Black contributed and played a significant role in the group's albums as a rapper and shared success for their 2006 Oscar for Best Song. In May, Crunchy and Three 6 Mafia parted ways due to what Crunchy Black describes as unfair treatment. With all the buzz around his departure it has increased interest in Crunchy Black's first solo album, which features Frayser Boy, Juicy J, & Boogie Mane.



1. Ain't Nothin Goin On

2. Get Off My Dick

3. Rob The Dopeman

4. Lock And Load

5. Your Hood Ft Juicy J

6. Let Another Nigga

7. Stick And Move

8. We Gutta

9. World Goes Around

10. If She's A Hoe Ft Frayser Boy

11. Ooh Wee

12. Punkin' Me Ft Boogie Mane



01. Crunchy Black - Do Da Crunchy Black 04:15

02. Crunchy Black - Catch Up With Your Kind 03:12

03. Crunchy Black - 3 Different Kinds Of Weed 03:36

04. Crunchy Black - Black On Black 03:03

05. Crunchy Black - Snitchin' Azz Bitches 02:47

06. Crunchy Black - Twin 45's 03:51

07. Crunchy Black - Catch That Cut 03:23

08. Crunchy Black - I Play Bitches 03:35

09. Crunchy Black - Let's Plan A Robbery (Remix) 03:48

10. Crunchy Black - Let It Be Known 03:49

11. Crunchy Black - Suck On The Straw 03:21

12. Crunchy Black - Let It Be Known (Bonus Screwed Track) 03:14

13. Crunchy Black - Catch That Cut (Bonus Screwed Track) 03:15

14. Crunchy Black - I Play Bitches (Bonus Screwed Track) 02:58

15. Crunchy Black - Let's Plan A Robbery (Remix) 02:13

(Bonus Screwed Track)

16. Crunchy Black - Black On Black (Bonus Screwed Track) 04:34



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