Web www.pit5.com
Home
Auction
Artist List A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Main News Albums Comments Buy Links Ranking
2 Skinnee Js Information
2 Skinnee Js
'2 Skinnee J's' is the name of a musical band, sometimes characterized as nerdcore hip hop or rap metal (although one of their songs is, in fact, entitled "Friends Don't Let Friends Listen to Rap Metal"). Individuals from in and around the area of Columbia University formed the band. It was founded in February 1991 by a pair of college friends going by stage names Special J and Rabbi J-Slim; the name of the group is derived from the letters in their names and their similar girths. In May 1995 J-Slim left the band (he now works for the Children's Television Workshop), as did the guitarist, Joey Viturbo. Not long after, most of the horn section disbanded to attend graduate school. There followed a chaotic summer in which J-Slim's spot was filled by J. Jonah Jamison, but Jamison was replaced in September 1995 with the addition of former accordianist J Guevara. As of 2004, the band consists of:
* Special J (MC)
* J Guevara (MC)
* Mikey B (drums)
* Eddie Eyeball (bass guitar)
* Lance Rockworthy (guitar)
* Stevie Spice (trombone, keyboards)
One of their most famous and influential song was "Riot Nrrrd" (1998), which would later appear in the movie Never Been Kissed (1999). (The term "riot nrrrd", a pun on "riot grrrl", was first used in Douglas Coupland's Microserfs, to describe someone wearing "Dockers and Gap pocket-T". Whether the name of the song was a deliberate reference to the book is unclear.) Riot Nrrrd, along with several other songs on their first full-length album, $upermercado (1998), would later cause MC Frontalot to include them in his list of nerdcore rappers. The album mostly featured playful, nerdy songs about such subjects as Pluto and Star Wars.
Another of their most famous songs was "718," a reference to the eponymous area code shared by The Bronx, Queens, Staten Island and Brooklyn, the four outer boroughs of New York City. This song was also on the 1998 Supermercado album.
In 2001, their second album, Volumizer, was finally released after a two-year delay. The tenor was perhaps a bit less intellectual and a bit more serious than $upermercado, but the overall trend remained playful and light. That changed somewhat in 2003 with Sexy Karate, which had a slightly angrier, more political tone.