John Austin IV, (born September 25, 1973) better known by his stage
name Ras Kass, is an American rapper. He is also a part of hip hop
supergroup The HRSMN along with Canibus, Killah Priest, and Kurupt.
Austin was born in Watts, California on September 26, 1973.[1]
[edit] Early career
Ras Kass sent waves through the hip-hop world with his debut independent
single release "Remain Anonymous," earning him a Hip-Hop
Quotable in The Source Magazine. Before his signing with Priority/EMI
Records, Ras Kass began making guest appearances on several records
and freestyles on numerous radio shows, further solidified the emerging
lyricist's notoriety. Recorded guest appearances include Sway & King
Tech's "Come Widdit" (feat. Ras Kass, Ahamad & Saafir)
(Priority Records) and their "Wake Up Show Anthem ’94" (feat.
Ras Kass, Nas, Lauryn Hill, Chino XL, Organized Konfusion & Saafir),
as well as Chino XL's "Riiot" American Records, and KeyKool & Rhettmatic's "E=MC5" (feat.
Ras Kass, LMNO, Meen Green & !) Up Above Records.
[edit] Soul on Ice & Rasassination
From a young age, Austin was influenced by hip hop music, inspired
by a variety of emcees including Ice Cube, Rakim, Scarface, and KRS-One.
His first album, Soul on Ice, was released in 1996. Taking its name
from a book by Eldridge Cleaver, Ras addressed racial relations in
the same manner, most notably with "Ordo Abchao" and "Nature
of the Threat." The album was released on Priority Records, as
was the follow-up, Rasassination, which featured beats from Easy Mo
Bee and guest appearances by RZA, Twista, Xzibit, Mack 10 and Dr. Dre.
Lead single "Ghetto Fabulous" featured Dre and Mack 10 and
was pushed by a lavish video shoot. The album received generally positive
reviews,[2] and shortly afterward the MC announced his third album,
Van Gogh.
[edit] Priority Issues, Van Gogh & Goldyn Child
During the recording of Ras's intended third album, Van Gogh, Priority
Records merged with Capitol Records, which acquired the emcee’s
contract and his material.[3] Initially near completion, the album
was heavily bootlegged before any single or promotion could be prepared.
Ras went back to work overhauling the project, procuring tracks from
DJ Premier, Hi-Tek, and Dr. Dre and retaining songs from Rockwilder
and Battlecat. Tensions arose during the re-recording, from budget
restrictions to lack of promotion:
“
I would always tell Priority executives, "You give me a road kill
cow and pair of scissors but you expect a pair of Air Jordans. It's
not fair." Ironically, I would still somehow manage to make a
couple pairs. ”
—Ras Kass
Ras Kass was also involved in The HRSMN, sometimes called the 4 Hrsmn,
consisting of himself, Kurupt, Killah Priest, and Canibus. The Horsemen
Project, a white-label of rough tracks by the four, was released in
2003, but no other releases have been subsequently forthcoming. Finally,
nearing the completion of his album, the MC and Priority disagreed
over the lead single. Originally pushing "Goldyn Child," produced
by DJ Premier, Priority executives decided to try to release the Dr.
Dre-produced "The Whoop" instead, against the wishes of both
Ras Kass and Dr. Dre. As he was finishing up Goldyn Child, Kass was
pulled over in California and arrested for a D.U.I., marking his third;
though sentenced to jail time, he was given an extension. Two weeks
before the start of his sentence, Priority informed him of their decision
not to put out Goldyn Child after all. Becoming a fugitive, Ras attained
the masters to his project, recorded some music, and finally turned
himself in to police.[4] During this time, he also had minor problems
with producer the Alchemist, who sold Ras a beat that he later re-sold
to rapper Jadakiss, which ultimately formed the basis for the track "We
Gon' Make It."[5]
[edit] Incarceration, Institutionalized, Priority Release
After serving only 19 months for his D.U.I. charge, Ras Kass recorded
the album Institutionalized and began seeking release from his contract
with Priority/Capitol Records. Though intended to be an album, it was
released as a mixtape,[6] generating a moderate buzz[7][8] despite
Capitol's alleged reluctance.[8] He would go on to release two more
mixtapes in 2006, Revenge of the Spit and Eat or Die, and got into
a fight with former G-Unit rapper The Game over an alleged reference
to the rapper's son in a freestyle .[9] In October 2007, Kass finally
succeeded in being released from his record contract.[3] However, after
rumors of a deal with Def Jam or G-Unit Records,[10] he was again incarcerated,
this time for violating his parole by flying to the 2007 BET Awards.
During this time, he put out the album Institutionalized Vol. 2 on
Babygrande Records. After nearly two years of incarceration, Ras Kass
was released from jail at the end of May 2009.[11]
[edit] The Quarterly
Featured in HipHopDX's Underground Report, Ras Kass revealed that
his next release would be a project called The Quarterly. Originally
intended to be completed within the fourth quarter of 2009, it comprises
a song a week released in the fashion of fellow west coast emcee Crooked
I's Hip-Hop Weekly and Freeway's Month of Madness. Though released
in this format, the collected songs was released as an album.[12] "The
Quarterly" was released on November 23, 2009 via www.raskass-central.com
and includes nineteen tracks featuring collaborations by Killah Priest,
Mistah F.A.B. and Krondon of Strong Arm Steady, with production from
Pete Rock, Veterano, and others.[13]
[edit] A.D.I.D.A.S. Kickstarter Project & Save The Ras Kass
In 2010 Ras Kass launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund the manufacture
of 1000 CDs and 500 vinyls for his A.D.I.D.A.S. project and a viral
marketing campaign called Save The Ras Kass, which included a series
of satirical webisodes about the plight of the endangered emcee. In
an interview with MTV UK writer Han O'Connor he explained his decision
to use Kickstarter, stating "we started trying different angles
at solving old problems. Kickstarter was the natural evolution of trying
creative new business models. When we put out The Quarterly there were
people that said, ‘well how come you didn’t create a CD
for this?’ and I’m like ‘well if I have to spend
that $5000 and you want one, I appreciate it but there’s the
small problem that I spent $5000.’"[14] His webisodes document
the downfall of an emcee, as he explained, "You just see this
downward spiral; it’s just that fall from grace and I’m
kind of making fun of that and using me as the vehicle for it."[14]
[edit] Discography
[edit] Studio albums
Year Title Chart positions
U.S. Billboard 200 U.S. R&B
1996 Soul on Ice
* Released: October 1, 1996
* Label: Priority
169 35
1998 Rasassination
* Released: September 22, 1998
* Label: Priority
63 11
[edit] Singles
Year Single Chart positions Album
U.S. R&B U.S. Rap
1996 "Anything Goes" 85 20 Soul on Ice
"
Soul on Ice" 82 22
1998 "Ghetto Fabulous" (featuring Dr. Dre and Mack 10) 56 – Rasassination
[edit] Filmography
* 1997 Rhyme & Reason
* 1998 I Got the Hook Up
* 2000 Brothahood