Welcome to Past the Margin where we go beyond the beats, beyond the rhymes, beyond the cars, girls and diamonds. At Past The Margin we dig a little deeper into the topics that deal with this thing we call "Hip-Hop".

We plan to bring to you those serious, comical and controversial ideas and opinions that you've had with your "peoples" whether it was on the block or in your crib. There's hundreds of conversations going on right now about Hip-Hop and everyone has something to say about it. So don't think outside the box... take it Past the Margin.

Updated Daily...

Monday, March 17, 2008

A Classic...

I Got 5 On It
written by JusHH

2Pac never got it. It took Jay-Z six tries to get it. A Tribe Called Quest got two, and Nas built his entire career on his first one. It was the single greatest accolade that an album could receive at one point – 5 Mics. Every month, The Source magazine would use the back pages of its issue to rate albums. Rather than stars, The Source awarded an album Microphones or “Mics” on a scale of 1 to 5. Getting 5 Mics meant that your album was a certified classic and gave that emcee unbridled bragging rights. With Hip-Hop being relatively ignored by the mainstream award shows, getting a high rating in The Source became a rapper’s Grammy. These ratings were the most captivating part of the magazine. I personally grabbed a new issue and immediately flipped to the back to see if anyone’s album was good enough to get a 5. At the time, a 5 Mic album was as rare as a UFO sighting and it kept rappers hungry. You can find many rappers referencing their own Mic ratings, often griping about not getting the extra Mic that would have made them classic:

“F**k five mics/ I don’t need no mics!” – Sticky Fingaz

“I gotta hit The Source, I need my other half a mic/ because that Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik was a classic” Big Boi of Outkast

Who got how many Mics was always a hot topic and everyone had an opinion. Before the downloading era, we often relied on The Source to tell us who was bringing it and which albums we should spend our $15 on. Then something happened. Rappers who we all knew couldn’t really spit suddenly got 4 Mics and underground rappers who used to find love within the pages of The Source couldn’t seem to get high ratings, if they were even mentioned at all. Our collective skepticism came to a head when the Made Men, a Boston trio who could be considered mediocre at best, received 4.5 Mics for their album. Combine that with countless advertisements that pushed an album no one cared about, and all kinds of red flags went up. It was at that point where we learned that one of the co-owners of the Source was none other than Raymond “Benzino” Scott. Benzino who was an aspiring rapper (his skills left much to be desired) himself, was a member of the Made Men. This fact gave the credibility of the 4.5 Mic rating a black eye. The Source was forced to put out a press release saying that it would no longer rate any albums affiliated with its owner.

However the damage was already done and it got worse. Benzino stepped out of his silent partner role and decided to use his magazine to self-promote. He would publicly take sides in rapper beefs and turned the advertising pages into his personal commercials. In 2005, the Editor-in-Chief, quit his job at The Source when his 5 Mic rating of Little Brother’s The Minstrel Show, got reduced to a 4.5 by the owners because they had planned to give Lil’ Kim’s new album a 5 and they didn’t want to take attention away from the larger star. The Mic rating system was no longer worth the paper it was printed on. You simply couldn’t trust it. Rappers stopped caring what they received and fans put down the magazine in favor of XXL and internet websites.

Facing extinction, The Source’s board of directors, in 2007, forced Benzino and others to step down. The Source continues to award Mics and some levels of credibility have been restored, however, it’s far from where it used to be. Other magazines and publications have tried to fill the void with their own ratings but it’ll never be quite like it was. Although I won’t pick up The Source any more, I’ll still ask my boys, “Yo, you think Lupe new joint is a 5?”

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sidenote:

The Source released an issue where they re-rated certain albums that fans complained deserved 5 Mics. It was here that Jay-Z's Reasonable Doubt and 2Pac's Me Against The World received "Classic" status.

Anonymous said...

The source used to kill me, they started throwing 5 mics to some of the most garbage albums ever

Mr. Hutson said...

Fam, the demise of The Source was a complete heart-breaker. I remember when an album got 5 Mics it was an automatic huge endorsement. At least one or two people would cop that joint, the rest of us would drain the batteries on their discman listening to it, then we'd argue over whether that CD was really a classic or not. Benzino in his blue valour suit really bodies the source. Heart-breaker. What did ya'll think about The Source going back and reissuing 5 Mic ratings to CDs?

Anonymous said...

Umm, to be honest I can't say that I'm mad at it because they definitely gave albums 5's that really deserved it. I mean how could The Chronic not be a 5. I think sometimes you gotta let time dictate whether or not an album is a 5. Like time should tell the people at the Source that Lil' Kim's album ain't a 5 and they should take it back.

Anonymous said...

It's Pieces like this that make me love this site! The "classic"/5 mic debate really made or broke rappers careers. The fact that it doesnt exist anymore leads me to ask, "What defines a rappers career now?" If it wasnt "going platinum" atleast it was receiving
"5 mics" becaues platinum selling artists these days are definitely not worthy of "classic" status...most of them anyways.

Anonymous said...

Dot, son I really think this whole "first week sales" then going platinum is the new standard. Clearly its not any particular rating, award or simply having people say that you're "nice". Fif and Kanye didn't battle over who's album would be better but who's album would sell the most. It seems to be all about the "benjies" now.

I mean, does anyone even know what the Purple Tape sold during its first week? hell nah, we didn't care and it didn't matter. lol.

Mimi said...

Our opinions are what count. That on the blog-o-sphere. Which I really think is the new album rating committee. Of course, not all sites, but rappers care what SOME think. First week sales mean nothing. I mean Rick Ross just did what? 127? We all know he may be hard but he's not a GREAT rapper. I think artists care about the general perception... wack or not. The album could flop... but if the general consensus is the shit was crack-- they're satisfied.

Just my opinion.

Post Script... the 5-mic conspiracy broke my heart too. So did the fall of Unsigned Hype.

Anonymous said...

I do think that certain rappers who don't sell well, yet receive critical acclaim (i.e. little brother) do find some solace in that. However I don't think these "ringtone" rappers care what you or I think about their skills. If their making they paper then that's what makes them happy and they are glad to write us off as nostalgic haters.

I don't know when we started paying attention to first week sales or how well an album is doing in stores, but it used to never be about sales...

hmm, i see a post coming.

Mr. Hutson said...

The purple tape. Classic indeed. Speaking of nostalgia and going back, have you ever listened to a CD that you first bought back in middle school or high school and realized how much of it you didn't understand?

I was just listening to SpottieOttiedopalicious (yup, that song was on a 5Mic album) and Big Boi was talking about a dude failing a piss test and falling back into a trap. Man, had T.I. and Jeezy not come out, I still wouldn't have known trap had a double meaning.

Anonymous said...

great point... there's a ton of stuff that i listen to now that I didn't pick up when i was 12 or 13. Mostly sex references but i'll hear a witty metaphor and be like, "oooooh snap"