Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz

In EveryGhetto, USA, hip-hop is the soundtrack
of young Black America. However, hip-hop's true birthplace,
"Da Boogie Down Bronx," has been shortchanged for too
long on the rap anthem tip. Getting ready to set the record
right, enter hard-edged Codeine/Columbia Records rap duo Lord
Tariq & Peter Gunz. Their certified smash hit single,
"deja Vu (Uptown Baby)" -- from Make It Reign, the
pair's debut album -- has become a Bronx battle cry heard around
the world and played around the clock. Indeed, on the landscape
of famous urban turf defining phrases like "Brooklyn's in da
house" and "Money-earnin' Mount Vernon," "
deja Vu (Uptown Baby)" is now the official Bronx
street-speak contribution to urban America's large-and-in-charge
lexicon.
It's also a springboard that has catapulted Lord Tariq and Peter
Gunz to rap's forefront, while refocusing mass attention on the
historic Uptown stomping grounds where hip-hop took its first
steps. "We put out 'deja Vu' because the Bronx and MCs from
there, particularly KRS-One, deserve mad props and attention from
the new hip-hop generation," says Lord Tariq, the first MC
to rhyme on the lucrative mix-tape underground, where he's still
considered a living legend.
Lord Tariq's mighty mix-tape adventures are just part of his and
Peter Gunz's impressive hip-hop credentials. Tariq has appeared
on records with the Notorious B.I.G., Jay Z, Nas, (Wu-Tang's)
Ghostface Killah and Mobb Deep. Peter has lent solid rhyme
support to Bobby Brown, KRS-One, B-Real, Ice Cube, DJ Quik, and
Shaquille O'Neal, on whose label his solo CD (Othello Chapter 1),
is coming, and with whom he and Tariq toured Europe and Japan
last summer.
This year, of course, they're in the spotlight boasting a
mega-hit single and an album they're proud of. In addition to the
hit single, other prime cuts on Make It Reign include: "We
Will Ball," a hard-hitting, head bangin' jam, wherein Tariq
and Gunz rap raw to the core; "Make It Reign," another
fearless, funky verbal onslaught, produced by Bad Boy Hitman Ron
Lawrence; "Don't Blame Me," a volatile sample free ride
to hip-hop's real side, produced by Dave Atkinson; and
"Cross Bronx Expressway," named after the long winding
road that takes Peter and Tariq to the gritty Uptown hood they
pride. The CD's guest artist roster features DJ Quik, Busta
Rhymes, Wyclef Jean and more. "When they buy our album, we
want people to listen from the first cut to last, and back
again," says Tariq. "That's why there's so many
different moods, flavors, and shades to our joint. Boredom is not
an option," says Peter, who plays drums, guitar and piano.
Despite their impressive debut, Tariq and Peter reveal their
so-called "overnight success" was actually 10 years in
the making. "We've been in the game a long time, so it kills
me when people ask stuff like, 'Damn man, how did y'all blow up
so fast?," explains Peter Gunz, whose last name now reflects
his rapid fire rhyming ability, but years ago stood for his
illegal selling of fire-arms. He spent eight months behind bars
for it. "Although I only sold guns to people who needed
protection," he confesses, "I'd never do again."
His gun-running past behind him, handsome Peter, an avowed ladies
man (once known as "Pete Lover"), was, like Tariq,
born, raised and still based in the Bronx, where, he advises,
"deja Vu' was written three years ago. But nobody wanted to
release it, so in '97 we put it out on our own label, Codeine
records." "We pressed up about 1,000 copies and gave
them away," Tariq picks up the story. "After deejays
started playing it a lot and (New York's) HOT '97 radio put it in
heavy rotation, it kept getting bigger. Soon labels were coming
at us with mad deals. And yo, it felt real good turning down some
of the same record people who just ignored us before. Now they
were throwing big money and bigger promises at us, and we were
calling the shots." "We went with Columbia," Gunz
interjects, "because they understood what we wanted to do,
and let us do it."
Signing on the dotted line with Columbia proved a brilliant move.
The deal included the major label distribution of Codeine
records, and worldwide release of "deja Vu (Uptown
Baby)." There's more. In addition to Peter's before
mentioned debut solo album, scheduled for mid-'98 release,
Tariq's still-to-be-titled solo CD is another priority
Codeine/Columbia project.
Professionally teamed since 1993, when they were in an East Coast
N.W.A. type gangsta crew called the Gunrunners, Tariq's and
Peter's styles totally compliment each other. The edgy, intense
hard-core MC flavor Tariq brings to the Lord Tariq & Peter
Gunz table is the stuff true hip-hop heads respond to. In
complete sync with his partner-in-rhyme, Peter's colorful,
distinctive rap style and hype skills approach is more
commercial, he concedes, but genuinely as hard and effective as
Tariq's. Individually they're awesome. Together they're
unbeatable.
Tariq and Gunz met in the late 1980s, when they were each the top
dog MC at their respective high schools. "It started out
with rappers from both schools battling each other," Peter
vividly recalls. "When the smoke cleared, only Tariq and I
were left standing. But instead of continuing to battle each
other...," "...we knew that someday we'd join
forces," Tariq smoothly finished Peter's sentence, almost as
if the slick verbal move was one of their seamless rap routines
that have rocked crowds on both sides of the Atlantic.
The relevance of rap and the preservation of its street roots and
integrity are important to Lord Tariq & Peter Gunz. Their
diverse, explicit, hard-core reality as well as party-up subject
matter, amplified by lethal lyrical flows, is surrounded by bomb
beats and power production. A sonic bridge between hip-hop's
past, present and future, Make It Reign has all the makings of a
truly classic album.
The title track is represented by an off-the-hook baseball
concept video that slams a visual homerun out the box. Introduced
by Wyclef Jean, who also produced a CD cut, it sets up Tariq and
Gunz as tough team players and long ball hitters. They step to
the plate swinging their bats and slinging their rhymes in an
Uptown field of inner-city dreams. Filmed in New York, the
ballpark they play in symbolizes the famous home of the Bronx
Bombers, Yankee Stadium. The baseball metaphor, as well as the
smooth, intense track, illuminating lyrics and off-the-hook
performances work - Big Time!
Keeping the hard-core hip-hop flavor flowing, more future shocks
to the entertainment system are ready to roll from this powerful
pair of Boogie Down Bronx-inspired MCs. Imminent are more
chart-topping hits, a possible feature film (they're writing a
phat screenplay), major concert tours, separate solo albums, and
the presentation of new artists signed to their Codeine/Columbia
label.
In a classic case of "deja Vu" all over again, Lord
Tariq & Peter Gunz are takin' hip-hop back to where it
all started--"Uptown, Baby."
In EveryGhetto, USA, hip-hop is the soundtrack of young Black
America. However, hip-hop's true birthplace, "Da Boogie Down
Bronx," has been shortchanged for too long on the rap anthem
tip. Getting ready to set the record right, enter hard-edged
Codeine/Columbia Records rap duo Lord Tariq & Peter Gunz.
Their certified smash hit single, "deja Vu (Uptown
Baby)" -- from Make It Reign, the pair's debut album -- has
become a Bronx battle cry heard around the world and played
around the clock. Indeed, on the landscape of famous urban turf
defining phrases like "Brooklyn's in da house" and
"Money-earnin' Mount Vernon," " deja Vu (Uptown
Baby)" is now the official Bronx street-speak contribution
to urban America's large-and-in-charge lexicon.
Taken From their official
homepage