Like, he wouldn't even have to say it."ĭuring a 2020 chat with E-40 for All Urban Central, Fat Joe mentioned encountering Hammer one time in the Las Vegas airport. "I know who Hammer was affiliated with and he wouldn't have to pay to tell somebody to fuck somebody up. "Without spending any money, he coulda told people to fuck the fuck up," Too Short said. Him and his brother Louis and the crew."Īsked about the alleged hit Hammer put out on MC Serch, Too Short said the only part he didn't believe was the $50,000-because Hammer would never have to pay for such services. In a 2018 interview, Too Short expressed respect for MC Hammer, having come up around the same time. When anybody that talked shit came to the Bay Area, they was in for it. Y'all motherfuckers laugh and y'all joke about Hammer? No, no, no, no. "That goddamn MC Hammer? Very serious about beef. Because I've gotta come to the west coast and get money. Redman later admitted that his response to Hammer was, "Yes, sir!" He elaborated: "I got the message. But I don't allow nobody to talk about my mama. We was almost boxed in," he told Vlad TV in 2016.) And in 1995, when both MCs were on set for the final episode of Yo! MTV Raps, Hammer approached Redman and reportedly said, "Red? I'm gonna tell you something. Redman says he was subsequently chased out of Oakland by Hammer affiliates. "He ain't shit, mama ain't shit, daddy ain't shit, ain't nobody shit." Redman also made the mistake of dissing Hammer during an interlude on 1992's Whut? Thee Album titled "Funky Uncles." "Everybody yelling 'Hammertime! Hammertime!'" the track went. Understand what it feels like to not know that you can turn a corner without someone trying to kill you for $50,000." Redman But when somebody tries to kill you over a rap lyric?. "I've been through 25 years of therapy three days a week. In a later interview, Serch said fear and anger over the incident has never left him. Serch claims the $50,000 hit was confirmed by fellow Def Jam artist Eric B., and was supposed to be carried out by the Los Angeles crips. "We're in the air," Serch says, "and Carmen Ashhurst-Watson, who was the president of Def Jam at the time, picks up the phone and hears someone say 'Is 3rd Bass on their way to L.A.?' And she goes 'Yeah.' And the voice says 'Good. In 2015, Serch told the Ed Lover Show about receiving death threats from Hammer's brother, Louis Burrell, in the middle of a flight to Los Angeles. MC Serch of New York's 3rd Bass has claimed repeatedly that MC Hammer put out a hit on the group over a lyric in their song, " The Cactus." The line in question-"The cactus turned Hammer's mother out"-was purportedly a play on the title of 3rd Bass' 1989 The Cactus Album and Hammer's record from the same year, " Turn This Mutha Out." But stories of Hammer's more streetwise traits have been rife in both the East Bay and the wider hip-hop community for years.įor those not in the know, here are interviews with five MCs that will put Hammer in a whole new light. Because the Oakland rapper spent the early '90s shuffling from side-to-side at the top of the charts, and filling commercial breaks with entreaties to buy sneakers and Taco Bell, Hammer is too often treated like the Carlton Banks of hip-hop. The Twitter explosion reflected the vast gulf between what hip-hop knows about MC Hammer and what mainstream pop culture thinks it knows about MC Hammer.
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