Microsoft Store
 

KRS One


 

Lawrence Krisna Parker (born August 20, 1965) is an emcee born in Park Slope, Brooklyn, USA. Over his career he has been known by several psuedonyms, including Kris Parker, KRS One, The Blastmaster and The Teacha. KRS One is a highly respected figure in the hip hop community and is often referenced in works by other hip hop artists.

Youth and early career

Born Lawrence Parker in 1965, the future KRS-One (an acronym for Knowledge Reigns Supreme Over Nearly Everyone) grew up with his brother Kenny with their single mother in assorted inner-city neighborhoods of Brooklyn and the Bronx. According to interviews he's done in The Source Magazine, one fateful day when he was 12, he and Kenny prepared a pan of flavored rice, which was to be the family?s dinner for the evening. But the hungry pair ate the whole thing, and when their mother came home from work, she kicked them out of the apartment in a fit of anger. On a whim, they stayed gone for two whole days before the younger Kenny decided to go back home, while Larry decided to stay gone. He spent the better part of the next seven years homeless, spending much of his time in local libraries.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

By the time he was around 17, he fell in with some marijuana dealers and became a courier. Using a bread delivery truck as a cover (!), Parker and his partner had garbage bags full of the product that they would drive around town to make drops. One day, a police car pulled up behind them and started flashing their lights. Parker?s partner?who was driving?panicked, and decided to lead the cops on a several-miles-long chase, after which the truck was finally crashed, and the duo were apprehended. At the trial, the judge made the ironic commentary that the only reason the cops initially tried to pull them over was because they had private plates on a commercial vehicle?they initially had no intention of searching for drugs.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Parker, still a minor, claimed he was a ward of the state, and got sent to a juvenile home for his sentencing, after which he was moved to a Covenant House youth homeless shelter. It was there that he met Scott Sterling, a recent college graduate who just started working at the shelter as a social worker. Soon, Parker found that Sterling moonlighted as a hip-hop DJ under the name Scott LaRock. By this time, Parker had earned the nickname ?Kris? from the relationship he had developed with local Hare Krishnas that evangelized near the shelter. Heavily influenced by Eastern philosophies, he was also an aspiring rapper, and practiced routines in verbal spars with the other shelter residents.

Related Topics:
Covenant House - Scott Sterling - Scott LaRock

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

The pair, along with two other fellows, decided to form a rap group together, initially calling themselves Scott La Rock and the Celebrity Three. That was short-lived, however, as the two peripheral members quit, leaving Parker (now calling himself KRS-One) and Sterling. They then decided to call themselves Boogie Down Productions. ?Success is the Word?, a 12? single release on indie Fresh/Sleeping Bag Records (under the puzzling group name ) didn?t go anywhere; soon after, the pair approached another NY indie, Rock Candy Productions, for a deal. As it turns out, the ?entertainment? company was allegedly a front for a pornography operation?but Sterling and Parker convinced the boss to front them the money to record an album, under the newly created ?subsidiary?, B-Boy Records. After a few 12? single releases, the Criminal Minded album finally surfaced.

Related Topics:
Scott La Rock and the Celebrity Three - Fresh/Sleeping Bag Records - B-Boy Records - Criminal Minded

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

He embarked on a career in music when he formed Boogie Down Productions together with DJ Scott La Rock. Their debut album Criminal Minded was released in 1987. Criminal Minded featured many tracks that attacked other hip hop emcees and tracks about street crime ("wa da da deng wa da da da deng, listen to my nine millimeter go bang"). KRS One and La Rock appeared on the cover of the album holding firearms, a controversial precendent that would be followed by many rap artists in the years to follow. Musically, the album was based around James Brown samples and reggae influences. They also sampled hard-rock band AC/DC on "Dope Beat". During these years, KRS-One was also famously involved in a a hip hop battle with MC Shan, of Queensbridge. KRS objected to MC Shan calling Queensbridge the home of hip hop, and attacked him viciously on a seminal battle rap, The Bridge Is Over.

Related Topics:
Boogie Down Productions - DJ - Scott La Rock - Criminal Minded - 1987 - Firearm - James Brown - Reggae - AC/DC - A hip hop battle - MC Shan - Queensbridge - Battle rap

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~