구순돌/연습장/카무 타오 | |
---|---|
기본 정보 | |
출생 | 1977년 6월 26일 |
사망 | 2008년 5월 25일 | (30세)
직업 | Rapper, singer, producer |
장르 | Hip hop |
활동 시기 | 1997–2008 |
레이블 | Definitive Jux, Fat Possum Records, Eastern Conference Records, Smash Bros., B.U.K.A. Entertainment |
관련 활동 | S.A. Smash, The Weathermen, MHz Legacy, Central Services, Nighthawks. Couch Boys |
Tero Smith (June 26, 1977 – May 25, 2008), better known by his stage name Camu Tao, was an American rapper, singer, and producer.
Early life
편집Tao was born Tero Smith in Columbus, Ohio, on June 26, 1977.
Career
편집Tao was signed to Definitive Jux. He was a member of several groups: S.A. Smash, The Weathermen, Central Services (with El-P), and the music collective Cardboard City. He was also part of the MHz crew with Copywrite, RJD2, Jakki da Motamouth, and Tage Future.[1] Partnering with Cage to form Nighthawks, the two crafted an album during a single three-day creative session.[2]
Death
편집Tao died of lung cancer at the age of 30 on May 25, 2008, two years after being diagnosed.[3]
Legacy
편집At the time of his death, Tao was producing a song for Cage's I Never Knew You EP and working on his first solo album for Definitive Jux. On July 9, 2009, El-P announced via Twitter that Tao's album King of Hearts was finished and would be released on October 20, 2009.[4] It was eventually released by Definitive Jux (in collaboration with Fat Possum Records) on August 17, 2010, along with a free download EP from Central Services.[5] About the album, El-P said, "We all expected to get Camu in the studio and go as far as he wanted to go with the record. The songs are bare, but then again a lot of them are just what he wanted. A lot of them wouldn't have changed much. Knowing Camu, he had a lot of talented musician friends he would have liked to have collaborated and have involved. I do think the album would have been different had he lived to complete it."
Aesop Rock stated in a 2008 interview with The A.V. Club that his next album may contain "a couple of songs about [his] friend Camu".[6] In his song "Racing Stripes", Rock reflected on Tao near the end of his life. Specifically, he noted Tao's unusual haircut and habits Tao had developed. Tao is also the main subject in Rock's song "Get Out of the Car" from his 2016 album The Impossible Kid, reflecting on how the death of Tao drove him to an eight-year-long state of "emotional paralysis" and an increasing trend of self-imposed social isolation. In 2017, when the video for this song was released, Rock remarked, "This May 25th marks nine years since the death of my friend Camu Tao, an event that serves as an emotional and narrative anchor in both this song and my life. I wanted to reflect on things that had changed since, and try to connect some events I hadn't realized were potentially related."[7]
El-P, Tao's friend and founder of the Definitive Jux label, dedicated his album Cancer 4 Cure to Tao's memory. The song "The Full Retard" from the album also features El-P remarking on the song's beat by saying, "That's some Camu shit." He later indirectly spoke about Tao in his verse on the track "Thursday in the Danger Room" from Run the Jewels' 2016 album Run the Jewels 3. In a now-deleted tweet responding to a fan's question, El-P confirmed that the verse was about an experience he had with Tao while Tao had cancer.[8]
Discography
편집Albums
편집- Nighthawks (2002) (with Cage, as Nighthawks)
- Forever Frozen in Television Time (2010) (with El-P, as Central Services)
- King of Hearts (2010)
Mixtapes
편집- Blair Cosby: Cape Cod (Going for De Gold) (2004)
- Blair Cosby II: The Wali Era (2005)
- Blair Cosby: Cereal Carpens (97 Season) (2005)
Singles
편집- "Hear Me Talking to You" (2001)
- "Hold the Floor" b/w "Wireless" (2001)
- "Cop Hell" (2003) (with Cage, as Nighthawks)
- "WMR" (2004) (with El-P)
Guest appearances
편집- Copywrite - "Three Words" from The High Exhaulted (2002)
- El-P - "Accidents Don't Happen" from Fantastic Damage (2002)
- Vakill - "Forbidden Scriptures" from "The Darkest Cloud" (2003)
- Aesop Rock - "Rickety Rackety" from Fast Cars, Danger, Fire and Knives (2005)
- The Perceptionists - "Party Hard" from Black Dialogue (2005)
- Cage - "The Death of Chris Palko" from Hell's Winter (2005)
- Prefuse 73 - "Now You're Leaving" from Surrounded by Silence (2005)
- Slow Suicide Stimulus - "Slow Suicide Stimulus" from Slow Suicide Stimulus (2006)
- El-P - "The Overly Dramatic Truth" from I'll Sleep When You're Dead (2007)
- Copywrite - "Mega Mega" from The Life and Times of Peter Nelson (2010)
References
편집- ↑ Eddy, Lincoln (2013년 2월 13일). “Resurrecting a MHz Legacy: RJD2 and Tage Future chase inspiration in "Out of Room"”. 《Alarm》. 2016년 4월 10일에 확인함.
- ↑ Morris, David (2006년 2월 3일). “To Hell and Back: An Interview with Cage”. 《PopMatters》. 2016년 4월 10일에 확인함.
- ↑ Paine, Jake (2008년 5월 26일). “Rapper Camu Tao Dies From Cancer”. 《HipHopDX》. 2008년 5월 26일에 확인함.
- ↑ "@therealelp" on Twitter
- ↑ “Archived copy”. 2010년 5월 28일에 원본 문서에서 보존된 문서. 2010년 5월 25일에 확인함.
- ↑ Wolinsky, David (2008년 12월 11일). “Aesop Rock”. 《The A.V. Club》. 2016년 4월 10일에 확인함.
- ↑ 《Aesop Rock - Get Out of the Car (Official Video)》. 《YouTube》. 2021년 12월 11일에 원본 문서에서 보존된 문서.
- ↑ therealelp (2016년 12월 30일). “.@BasedMoonshine yes.” (트윗).
Further reading
편집- Thill, Scott (2008년 5월 29일). “R.I.P. Camu Tao, 1977-2008”. 《Wired》. 2016년 4월 10일에 확인함.
- Mlynar, Phillip (2010년 8월 18일). “Camu Tao Gets His Due”. 《The Village Voice》. 2016년 4월 10일에 확인함.
- Meara, Paul (2013년 5월 23일). “Locals: Camu Tao: A death remembered and a legacy never forgotten”. 《Columbus Alive》. 2016년 4월 10일에 확인함.
- Downing, Andy (2015년 8월 24일). “Remembering Camu Tao”. 《Columbus Alive》. 2016년 4월 22일에 원본 문서에서 보존된 문서. 2016년 4월 10일에 확인함.
External links
편집- Camu Tao at Fat Possum Records
- Camu Tao at Definitive Jux
- (영어) Camu Tao - 올뮤직
- (영어) Camu Tao - Discogs
- 1977 births
- 2008 deaths
- Deaths from lung cancer
- African-American male rappers
- American male rappers
- Rappers from Columbus, Ohio
- Underground rappers
- Deaths from cancer in the United States
- Definitive Jux artists
- The Weathermen (hip hop group) members
- MHz Legacy members
- 20th-century American male musicians
- 20th-century African-American musicians
- 21st-century African-American people