Album Notes -
Peace Warriors captures daily life in an urban war zone as young talented artists from Watts raised in the midst of gang violence speak to real issues. The album was originally released in 2005 through a Diverse Entertainment partnership label, Watts Records, as a unique collaboration featuring Watts Hip Hop and R&B artists performing songs that inspire listeners to support an end to gang warfare and other senseless violence that plagues U.S. cities. This music carries a message of peace that began with the signing of the historic Crips and Bloods Peace Treaty in Watts in 1992.
The project features as artist and producer Terrace Martin, a musical genius who has produced for and collaborated with Kendrick Lamar, Snoop Dogg, Talib Kweli, YG, Game, Lala Hathaway and others. Also featured was producer Jamahl “J-Hits” Listentbee, better known by his stage name GoonRock, a songwriter and producer for electronic dance music duo LMFAO who co-wrote and co-produced the group's hit singles Party Rock Anthem and Sexy and I Know It.
This album includes --for the first time ever--a live-band remake of “Express Yourself” featuring the legendary Charles Wright of the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band performing a new, socially conscious Hip Hop version of the 1970 hit. The original “Express Yourself,” which made it to number 12 on the Billboard charts, has seen remakes before including the NWA version, but never with a live band! Wright’s funk-infused vocals and the wicked flows of the various peace warrior rappers and vocalists make this new version the perfect song for young and old alike and establishes peace on the streets as the new way to “express yourself.”
This collaboration mixes funk-infused vocals with wicked flows, stories of pain and redemption with sensuous ballads, and edgy, haunting beats with smooth melodies, painting a vivid picture of the reality of gang violence without its glorification. While the album is primarily Hip Hop and R&B, there are dancehall, gospel and jazz songs that add variety.
Former Death Row/OFTB rapper Flipside, who was raised in Watts, delivers a hard core rhyme with “Something Wicked,” painting a vivid picture of the reality of gangs in Watts...it’s where we took the American flag and tore it in half...made red and blue rags and let our pants sag...brainwashed to protect our community, bustin’ at any nigga’ that came through new to me. The first single from the CD “Tears in the Rain” reveals the self-reflecting, insightful thoughts of rapper Pipe the Snipe from Watts Jordan Downs Projects. The song is set to a haunting, melodic beat, offering ambience to a story of personal pain and redemption.
The satirical narrative on police abuse, “Mr. Officer,” addresses the issue of racial profiling in a fun west coast laid-back style. The sensuous yet hard-edged ballad “Dark Side” tells the story of a woman struggling with the reality that the man she loves is still tied to the dangerous street life she fears will be his doom. While the album is full of message lyrics, the club rocking “Bank Roll” is a straight party cut that will have listeners bouncing in their cars and at the hottest nightspots.