DMX It's Dark And Hell Is Hot 20th Anniversary Thread

mobbinfms

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Now who gon' tell your mother, her baby's under a cover
In the morgue, stiff as a log, sniffed out by the dogs
Son of a hardheaded nikka that wouldn't listen
So you got what you came for
(What's that?) Surgery wit the chainsaw
I hit the fukking streets
Cause, like I said before, ain't nothing going down until I eat
Mu'fukkers think it's all about impressing bytches and stressing bytches
Well, I'm testing bytches game, undressing bytches, and caressing bytches
And dealing wit mu'fukkers on all level, what I'm dealing with is all devils
fukking with snakes running with nikkas you call rebels
I got an army of 730 nikkas, dirty nikkas
That come through and worry nikkas
30 nikkas that like to bury nikkas and scary nikkas get it all the time
Cause what they got is all of mine, your man was talking shyt until I pulled the nine
And if I don't know you, I don't fukk witchu
And if you wit my man, then he getting stuck witchu
And gave it the money, cause I just lost my mind when he crossed the line
Sent his back through his chest then I tossed the nine
Boss of crime, black Gotti, I stack bodies wit the black shotty
bytch-ass nikkas who act snotty
Get it

:wow:
Arguably best verse of 98.
 

spliz

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In retrospect there really hasn't been an album quite like this. It had the production values of the jiggy era, but never managed to lose it's dark and gritty tone, I mean even the 'love' songs were almost like a reprieve from the darkness more than anything else. This album and Capital Punishment ran the summer of 98 for me.
It was this. Capital Punishment. And NORE.
 

spliz

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17 hours ago
It's Dark and Hell Is Hot: DMX's haunting magnum opus turns 20
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WILL LAVIN

The year was 1998
Bad Boy Records ran everything: the airwaves, the charts and any award show willing to recognise Hip Hop music as a credible art form.

If it wasn’t Ma$e’s Harlem World album banging out of speakers in cars passing by then it was Puff Daddy’s No Way Out or The Lox’s Money, Power & Respect.

Following the deaths of 2Pac and Biggie hardcore Hip Hop had taken a backseat to what later became known as the 'shiny suit' era. And it wasn’t just New York that was shining. In the south Master P’s No Limit Records and Baby and Slim’s Cash Money Records were cleaning up with their brand of diamond-encrusted rap.

But this was all about to change.

Blowing the doors off of Hip Hop, It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot blindsided the industry. Sneaking up on it like DMX did his prey during his days as a stick up kid doing everything he could to survive in the streets, it’s Hip Hop’s greatest debut album of all-time.

“What about Illmatic?” I hear you say. “What about Snoop’s Doggystyle?” Yes, I know these are both superior albums, as is Wu-Tang Clan’s Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)and Biggie’s Ready To Die, but for me DMX takes first place.


I can remember the day I first got It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot because it was the same time I first got a Sony Discman. I was 15-years-old and I had to order it into my local record store because DMX hadn't yet blown up so was considered a niche artist. The reason I even ordered it was because I saw it advertised in the magazine The Source, it was the first time I had seen his name since hearing him on LL Cool J’s “4,3,2,1” alongside Method Man, Redman and Canibus (and Master P if you picked up the video version) and Ma$e’s “24 Hours To Live”.



I distinctly remember it was a Saturday and after purchasing it I walked home unaware of what was about to happen. Casually strolling up the stairs to my bedroom, I slipped the disc into my boombox and I was instantly transported to a dark place, somewhere my country bumpkin ass had never been before.

Listening to it that first time left me speechless. I was in awe of what was coming out of the speakers. It was raw, unfiltered, and the storytelling scared the shyt out of me. The lyrics on “X-Is Coming” in particular had me shook because I felt like I was listening to a Hip Hop horror movie, which was done on purpose of course, hence lifting its hook from Nightmare on Elm Street.

“And if you got a daughter older than 15 I’ma rape her/ Take her on the living room floor right there in front of you/ Then ask you seriously: ‘What you wanna do?’”

I mean, who says that!? While of course it’s fictional, and a part of the song’s frightening narrative, that doesn’t make it any less horrifying. There’s a thin line between art and real life and I don’t think any other artist would have dared attempt what X did back then, and they for damn sure wouldn’t do it now in the age of social media.

It was animalistic in ways I had never experienced before, not only because of X’s constant dog barking - a trademark of his which stemmed from his time as a homeless youth befriending stray dogs on the cold hard streets - but because it didn’t feel human. Here was a man who grew up in the gutter moving from detention centre to foster home and back again, he was a castaway and treated as such and it had a profound effect on the way in which he created his music.

It was physical. The production on tracks like “fukkin’ wit’ D” punched you in face, it was something you could actually feel. And that was all down to the genius of Dame Grease’s dirty beats that could have never worked for anyone else. The violence, the wrath, the greed, the religious polarity contained within the lyrics were complimented with the perfect backdrops. He and DMX formed a brotherhood of beats, rhymes and life.


The album was led by the trunk-rattling “Ruff Ryders’ Anthem”, a track that introduced the world to the production talents of Swizz Beatz. What started off as a battle cry for the thugs, street dudes, and anyone wanting to flex their muscles for the right situation, went on to become one of Hip Hop’s most treasured anthems and genre-defining moments that crossed over commercially to the point that it’s probably being played at a bar mitzvah right now. Hell, when I was a kid I even named one of our five-a-side football teams after it, we were: 'The Ruff Ryders'.



Some have described It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot as the Dante’s Inferno of Hip Hop, and while I agree I also think it’s more than just a journey through hell and its different pockets. At the core of it - to me at least - it’s about the human experience, just maybe not the human experience you’ve come across.

Listen to what X is saying on “Look Thru My Eyes”:

“Look through my eyes, see what I see/ Do as I do, be what I be/ Walk in my shoes, hurt your feet/ Then know why I do dirt in the street.”

Those outside of Hip Hop culture used to bash and berate the music by making the sweeping claim that it was all about promoting violence and criminal activity. The thing is, in actual fact the music was a news source, an education if you will, it was a way to report on what was going on in the ghettos of America and shine a light on what CNN didn’t want you to see.

While criminal activity of any kind is not acceptable there is a reason why the disenfranchised often fall victim to it, because of their living conditions, because of the lack of jobs, because of the vicious cycle that lands a high percentage of repeat offenders, especially in the black community, back in prison. DMX, with a Stephen King-type penmanship, was explaining this back in 1998 when the rest of the world wasn’t as openly ‘woke’ as they are now because of the awareness channeled through artists like Kendrick Lamar, Childish Gambino and Chance The Rapper.

Like someone stuck in the middle of the Bermuda Triangle, X’s moral compass might have been on constant rotation throughout It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot but his heart was in the right place. His spirit was in constant fight or flight mode. While the battle between good and evil couldn’t have been easy for him it damn sure resulted in some incredible music, painful music, transcendent music.


On “Let Me Fly” X raps, “I sold my soul to the devil, and the price was cheap,” but it isn’t until two tracks later where the consequences of such an act are realised where on “Damien” a conflicted X succumbs to the temptation of the devil on his shoulder and soon realises it’s not all it’s cracked up to be.



A likely correlation to his own life and personal struggles, the deal with the devil is balanced out by X’s constant praising of the Lord. It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot plays host to the first of many “Prayer” skits that went on to feature heavily in DMX’s musical catalogue.

If I’m being honest, if it wasn’t for It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot I might not have known about Phil Collins until much later in life - remember, I was 15 at the time this album was released.

“In the Air Tonight” is sampled on the song “I Can Feel It”, and boy did it do something to me. Hearing DMX speak his truth over the crying strings of the then not-so-familiar Phil Collins song, he broke down his torment, his struggle and ultimately his routine to keep the devil at bay and it really spoke to me. It made me realise that you can’t stand still when you’re going through it, you’ve got to keep on moving.

“How’s It Going Down” is like one of those slight of hand magic tricks. One minute it's one thing and the next it's something else, it’s all about the dressing of it.

Musically it’s the perfect mood setter and wouldn’t sound out of place on any slow jams playlist, but as with much of the album's content there's always a dark side to it. Once you analyse the lyrical content you soon realise it’s a tale of infidelity and giving into your sexual desires, but truth be told you gloss over that fact because it's such a good song, it's so good in fact that Drake even used the same lyrics on his "U With Me?" track taken from his album Views.


Then there's “Stop Being Greedy”.

Those fukking organs are insane! The way in which PK and Dame Grease laid the record out for DMX to get his lyrical guns off was like something I’d never heard before, it was neck snapping. In fact I can feel myself getting hyped right now.

Ultimately It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot set the stage for Hip Hop's hardcore resurgence that was on the verge of exploding in New York at the time. If this album hadn’t been a success (it had sold 4 million copies by 2000) there might never have been a Dipset movement led by Cam’ron, or better yet, no 50 Cent and G-Unit. It also acted as a springboard for the Ruff Ryders - think Eve, Jin, Cassidy, Swizz Beatz - to make their mark on popular culture.

It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot was DMX’s coming out party. It's confrontational, unapologetic, complex, twisted, animated, and most of all, as the title suggests, it's dark, so dark in fact that you can’t even make out the colour black.

DMX might have gone on to have more than his fair share of personal problems but in my eyes he'll always be remembered for this incredible body of work.

Thank you X.
It's Dark and Hell Is Hot: DMX's haunting magnum opus turns 20 | JOE.co.uk
Bro. X was literally everywhere before IDAHIH dropped. Where the hell is the author from? Lol
 

Dirty D

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Bought this the first day, even had to borrow change off a friend cuz I was short. Anticipated since I heard Money Power Respect. Loved it immediately. The Intro & F*ckin Wit D were the early faves.

X is top 10 all-time. This album is better than either of Biggie's.
 

TheDarceKnight

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In retrospect there really hasn't been an album quite like this. It had the production values of the jiggy era, but never managed to lose it's dark and gritty tone, I mean even the 'love' songs were almost like a reprieve from the darkness more than anything else. This album and Capital Punishment ran the summer of 98 for me.
Exactly.

A lot of comparisons were made to 50 Cent and DMX during the rollout to GRODT and people have tried to compare the albums but I don't think they're that similar. 50's grittiness wasn't the same as X's and was more polished. And IDAHIH didn't have a "rollout" or hype train behind it. I mean people thought X was a beast and were hyped by his guest verses but if I remember right, the album just sort of dropped and was fire, right? I don't remember there being a massive campaign leading up to it. Get At Me Dog is the only song I remember hearing from the album before it dropped, and then I remember the rest of the singles coming later, right?
 

TheDarceKnight

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Now who gon' tell your mother, her baby's under a cover
In the morgue, stiff as a log, sniffed out by the dogs
Son of a hardheaded nikka that wouldn't listen
So you got what you came for
(What's that?) Surgery wit the chainsaw
I hit the fukking streets
Cause, like I said before, ain't nothing going down until I eat
Mu'fukkers think it's all about impressing bytches and stressing bytches
Well, I'm testing bytches game, undressing bytches, and caressing bytches
And dealing wit mu'fukkers on all level, what I'm dealing with is all devils
fukking with snakes running with nikkas you call rebels
I got an army of 730 nikkas, dirty nikkas
That come through and worry nikkas
30 nikkas that like to bury nikkas and scary nikkas get it all the time
Cause what they got is all of mine, your man was talking shyt until I pulled the nine
And if I don't know you, I don't fukk witchu
And if you wit my man, then he getting stuck witchu
And gave it the money, cause I just lost my mind when he crossed the line
Sent his back through his chest then I tossed the nine
Boss of crime, black Gotti, I stack bodies wit the black shotty
bytch-ass nikkas who act snotty
Get it

:wow:

Arguably best verse of 98.
Top 10 album closing verse of all time as well
 

mobbinfms

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Top 10 album closing verse of all time as well
Here's number 1 right here :Pshades:

[Verse 2: Prodigy]
Yo, my empire strikes with the strength of poisonous snakes
My entire unit loaded up with snake ns that hire stakes
We pull off a high stakes, great escapes, expand, shift team downstate
Dreams of growing old with my son to live great
Little man I'm plannin' to enhance your mindstate
The rebirth, a na who lived an ill life
The one before me was of an even more trife
My understandin', I'll raise you with precise plannin'
And put you on to the whole game of this planet
But I gotta survive in order to follow through
Plans to live lotto, me and my little kicko
Any man tryin' to stop us, he get wet tho
He couldn't withstand the snake bite, there is no antidote
Don't you put your hands too close and try to approach
I won't snap at you I'm goin' for throats
And when you feel my bite, ya sing high notes
I peeped you from deep and then you got cut close
My formulae: I live life do or die
Stare into the eyes of a deep wiseguy
Prodigy, turnin' ns to protegés
My protegé, I advise ya ass to make way

Make way...for fully-auto gun spray
You're small prey, I'll easily bait and trap game
This man is half mad scientist-half sane
Create a rhyme labyrinth like poisonous cannabis
Here, take a toke of this deadly rare vocalist
Overpower y'all, tiny noise like locusts
Like sunlight thru a magnifying glass I'll focus and burn
A hole straight thru ya brain and leave ya open (Oh shyt!)
And let the venom soak in
You start sweatin' and goin' thru convulsions from dope shyt I writ
Leavin' ns stuck, I let stick
Trapped up in a web of a na that's sick
I'll wrap you up in coc00n, get caught up in the midst
A dangerous, it's risky business fukkin' with this
Contender number one I put you on top of the list
You're the best challenger so far, I'll give you this
But peep this (What?) fatal shots that solar plex
Man Down...now who dares to go next?
Like General Monk Monk orders to chop necks

I send a message to my whole clique to bomb shyt
Atomic, no time for calm shyt
We hyperactive when it’s time to Vietnam it
Ya whole alliance gets singlehandedly bombed-ed
Take heed to the Apostle's Warning
Word up!
 

TheDarceKnight

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Here's number 1 right here :Pshades:

[Verse 2: Prodigy]
Yo, my empire strikes with the strength of poisonous snakes
My entire unit loaded up with snake ns that hire stakes
We pull off a high stakes, great escapes, expand, shift team downstate
Dreams of growing old with my son to live great
Little man I'm plannin' to enhance your mindstate
The rebirth, a na who lived an ill life
The one before me was of an even more trife
My understandin', I'll raise you with precise plannin'
And put you on to the whole game of this planet
But I gotta survive in order to follow through
Plans to live lotto, me and my little kicko
Any man tryin' to stop us, he get wet tho
He couldn't withstand the snake bite, there is no antidote
Don't you put your hands too close and try to approach
I won't snap at you I'm goin' for throats
And when you feel my bite, ya sing high notes
I peeped you from deep and then you got cut close
My formulae: I live life do or die
Stare into the eyes of a deep wiseguy
Prodigy, turnin' ns to protegés
My protegé, I advise ya ass to make way

Make way...for fully-auto gun spray
You're small prey, I'll easily bait and trap game
This man is half mad scientist-half sane
Create a rhyme labyrinth like poisonous cannabis
Here, take a toke of this deadly rare vocalist
Overpower y'all, tiny noise like locusts
Like sunlight thru a magnifying glass I'll focus and burn
A hole straight thru ya brain and leave ya open (Oh shyt!)
And let the venom soak in
You start sweatin' and goin' thru convulsions from dope shyt I writ
Leavin' ns stuck, I let stick
Trapped up in a web of a na that's sick
I'll wrap you up in coc00n, get caught up in the midst
A dangerous, it's risky business fukkin' with this
Contender number one I put you on top of the list
You're the best challenger so far, I'll give you this
But peep this (What?) fatal shots that solar plex
Man Down...now who dares to go next?
Like General Monk Monk orders to chop necks

I send a message to my whole clique to bomb shyt
Atomic, no time for calm shyt
We hyperactive when it’s time to Vietnam it
Ya whole alliance gets singlehandedly bombed-ed
Take heed to the Apostle's Warning
Word up!
:jbhmm:Good thread idea. I'm making it now and about to tag you
 
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