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MUSIC The first thing Wiz Khalifa wants to say is that he loves to smoke marijuana. “Usually I just wake up and get high to start my day,” he says. Comparing his love of green to Bob Marley’s, he adds, “For some people, weed is just made for them. I’m one of those people.”
The rapper from Pittsburgh is a veritable weed glutton. (In a recent viral video, he bragged that he “might spend up to $10,000 on weed.”) It brightens the title of his recent mixtape, Kush & Orange Juice. (When asked if he actually has “kush” and orange juice for breakfast, he answers “I don’t always wake up and drink orange juice, but I always wake up and smoke weed.”) Even the music, an aromatic blend of cool vibes assembled by a close-knit team called ID Labs Productions, is conducive to semiautobiographical musings about girls, street fashion, cars, money, and smoke. Wiz has decent rhyme skills and a flair for themes. But he excels at creating electric relaxation, a mood perfect for … well, you know.
“I listen to certain artists for certain things. I listen to Three 6 Mafia when I’m in a rowdy mood; I listen to Snoop Dogg or Devin the Dude when I want to smoke weed; and I listen to Biggie when I want to listen to some lyricism,” Wiz says.
“It’s a mind state,” he adds. “It’s a lifestyle.”
Wiz Khalifa’s “Waken Baken” tour, which lands Oct. 19 at the Fillmore, may be yet another marker in hip-hop lore — a period when the much-hyped, blog-groomed generation of MCs evolved from fresh-faced optimists unburdened by stupid intramural beefs and heinous recording contracts into nouveau riche hustlers buoyed by cultish mixtape fame and major label development deals. Wiz’s popularity is real, though — his superior 2009 album Deal or No Deal (Ihiphop Distribution) breached the top 25 of the R&B album charts, and Kush & Orange Juice was reportedly a top 10 Twitter hash topic when it hit the Internet last spring.
Thankfully, “Waken Baken” won’t only be a smoker’s delight. The undercard features Yelawolf, a young gunner from Alabama. Earlier this year, he issued Trunk Muzik, an assembly of down South evocations, or “country shit” (as Mississippi rapper Big K.R.I.T. once put it). Trunk Muzik’s crown jewel is “Pop the Trunk,” where Yelawolf swerves in double-time rapping from an image of his father shooting a vagrant on his property to one of his homies capping a rival in a parking lot “with his biscuit.” Over producer Will Power’s ominous interplay of keyboards and bass, Yelawolf delivers the moral, “Think he’s playing? You better listen to what he’s saying, punk! Don’t make me pop the trunk on you!”
The remarkable thing about “Pop the Trunk” is that Yelawolf is able to lyrically distinguish himself as an impartial observer while still conjuring the trauma of a violent encounter. “This is the life I live,” he says. “If I was on some gangsta shit, I would be talking about gangsta shit. But I’m just not. And I don’t sell dope so I can’t talk about that. I can talk about doing dope, and my folks growing weed. I can talk about partying, fashion, and all that punk rock shit.”
Yelawolf’s “Pop the Trunk” is more pointed and focused than anything Wiz Khalifa has recorded. Concurrently, Wiz’s Deal or No Deal and, to a lesser extent, Kush & Orange Juice float effortlessly, while Yelawolf’s Trunk Muzik sounds workmanlike, a series of brilliant pieces speckled amid the chaff. (Yelawolf has assembled a retail version, Trunk Muzik 0-60, that combines seven of the mixtape’s best cuts with new tracks. It’s tentatively scheduled for a November release on Interscope.) The two rappers offer a nice study in perspectives.
Yelawolf, who is much better at explaining himself than the amiable yet ambient Wiz, says, “I’m really hardcore and have rock energy on stage. I don’t smoke weed, I drink beer. But I’m all about putting on a good show and having a good time. Wiz steps on stage chillin’, smoking weed and real mellow. It’s a yin and yang thing.”
One thing Wiz Khalifa and Yelawolf have in common, though: both have a lot of tattoos. *
WAKEN BAKEN TOUR: WIZ KHALIFA WITH SPECIAL GUEST YELAWOLF
Tues/19, 8 p.m.; $32.75
The Fillmore
1805 Geary, SF
(415) 346-6000