The Goats

Location:
PENNSYLVANIA, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Hip Hop / Alternative / Rap
Site(s):
**Update** Madd (Maxx) and Incognegro of the Goats are now among us!! Check out the top 8 and feel free to message them here or on their personal myspace accounts



I am but merely a fan of the Goats that created this profile for them so that maybe one day one of them will find it and see how much people enjoyed their music and perhaps even take over this profile as well.

So anyways



No Goats, No Glory



Considering the ultra-patriotic times we live in, a look back at this album is

key. first off, its initial release was during George Bush, Sr.'s presidency.

also, its multicultural, sociopolitical perspective of America is certainly one

that most stateside residents wouldn't take kindly to in a post-9/11 U.S.A. you will NEVER see a re-release of this album



the Philly collective known as The Goats



back then, it whipped my ass with a vengeance.

The A-side was one of the most powerful and angry rap tracks I'd ever heard

with the three rappers dropping lines like "the hell with Stormin' Norman, I

write rhymes Black, they be political and plus they be all of that," ".now

you're pounding sand for another man's sins.but when you come home in a box, green drawers, green pants, green socks." The B-side took it over the line, with a hardcore anthem to flag-burning - "so he can exercise his right to ignite the flag."



For real, some of these lines hit me upside the head, and there's no explaining what these guys were saying: "we don't hate the people, but the government's a drag," "the Goats are staging this political protest, to make you aware of the economical unrest,"******* and of course, "Columbus killed more Indians than Hitler killed Jews, but yet on his birthday we get sales on shoes."



That's right, it was 1992, George Bush was in office and shit was wound up like Morton Downey, Jr. By the time I got to the Radio Edit of "Burn The Flag" - over three minutes of nothing but beep - I was down with these guys.



Don't get the wrong idea - this stuff was slamming hardcore hip-hop. It proved that you didn't need to tax George Clinton's drawers to make a great head-nodder in '92. It had so much of an "edge" it was virtually an subgenre in itself, but it was a total rap album. As the story goes, Oatie Kato, Madd and Swayzack met while all pushing pushcarts in Philly and got together. They hooked up with the famed Joe "The Butcher" Nicolo (in Philly, who else?) and he put them together on his Ruffhouse label.



The messed-up part was until you read the liner notes (ALL the lyrics), you didn't realize that most of these grooves were made live with live instruments and turntables. The album simply didn't sound like a bunch of musicians - more like the Bomb Squad smoking weed.



"Tricks Of The Shade" just might be the opera of the early '90s. It's a theme

record, of two characters (Chicken Little and Hangerhead) making their way

through Uncle Scam's Federally Funded Welfare & Freakshow to find their mother who was jailed for attempting an illegal abortion.



They meet Manny Noriega selling drugs, Leonard Peltier locked down as the last Native American, Officers Daryl Gates and Stacey Koons who 'tattoo' their heads, Rovie Wade The Sword Swallower who has no control over her own body, and multi-ethnic shooting galleries where whoever doesn't look like you is the target.

It's a journey and each song breaks the flow of the story by taking it down another road to tell another story.



The beats are lush and funky, but dark and full of minor keys.

There are eerie resonating beats, samples that just stick out in their pure

oddity and repetition, and an overall air of frustration in these songs between

the headlines and rolling paper. Like I said, it's got more edge than most

records, but it slams more often than not, between hard, fast lyrics and harder production.



Of course, this record after-burned over most everyone's head and then buzzed the budget racks on its way to the cutout bin.



When I tried to see them on my birthday at Wetlands, Madd and I discussed the situation on press outside the club. Basically, one of Playboy's rock critics flat out loved it, and that was all. Wetlands dissed my underage ass and I missed their set with Chuck Treece, but got Maad's phone number after a great talk. I didn't actually see the Goats until the second record dropped and Oatie had already left the fold.



Oatie, the Italian kid in the group, was nice lyrically (check out "NotNotBad"

for a nice assessment of Italians and Blacks), but according to Madd he flipped before the act was supposed to tour Europe with Fishbone and The Bad Brains.



Q-Tip, Special Ed, Swayzack, Oatie, & Madd

Before their set at Maxwell's in Hoboken a few years later,



Madd told me that

Oatie basically jetted because the rest of the act was too involved in smoking

dope. This might seem dumb now, but sadly Oatie was on the right track. At the end of their mind-blowing set that night, after watching them throw down all the killers from Tricks and their ill live drummer freestyling while laying down a mean 4/4 at the same time, Madd and Swayzack literally went to sleep on the stage after all the weed they puffed. It was only a few months later that they broke up and Columbia ended a last ditch promo effort on the weaker album



No Goats, No Glory.



And now, what's left? The members have all gone different ways, and the closes thing to new material is Incognegro. But once in a while, you'll find someone who knows about how dope the Goats were. Don't believe me? Vernon Reid, someone who KNOWS about misunderstood music, drops the Goats in his piece

"Hard Left:

Hip Hop's Forgotten Visionaries" in The Vibe History of Hip Hop. Need more?



Check the dollar bin.



Madd is now living in France. Oatie is teaching Biology and Physics in Manhattan. Swayzack is MIA, who knows where.

Schmoove just got married December 27th 2003. Pierce and EJ play in a folk band that just completed their fifth album.
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