
Ice-T (born Tracy
Morrow) has proven to be one of hip-hop's most articulate and intelligent stars,
as well as one of its most frustrating. At his best, the rapper has written
some of the best portraits of ghetto life and gangsters, as well as some of
the best social commentary hip-hop has produced. Just as often, he can slip
into sexism and gratuitous violence, and even then his rhymes are clever and
biting. Ice-T's best recordings have always been made in conjunction with strong
collaborators, whether it's The Bomb Squad or Jello Biafra. With his music,
Ice-T has made a conscious effort to win the vast audience of white male adolescents,
as his frequent excursions with his heavy metal band Body Count show. All the
while, he has withstood a constant barrage of criticism and controversy to become
a respected figure not only in the music press, but the mainstream media as
well.
Although he was one of the leading figures of Californian hip-hop in the '80s,
Ice-T was born in Newark, NJ. When he was a child, he moved from his native
Newark to California after his parents died in an auto accident. While he was
in high school, he became obsessed with rap while he went to Crenshaw High School
in South Central Los Angeles. Ice-T took his name from Iceberg Slim, a pimp
that wrote novels and poetry. Ice-T used to memorize lines of Iceberg Slim's
poetry, reciting them for friends and classmates. After he left high school,
he recorded several undistinguished 12-inch singles in the early '80s. He also
appeared in the low-budget hip-hop films Rappin', Breakin', and Breakin' II:
Electric Boogaloo as he was trying to establish a career.

Ice-T finally landed a major label
record deal with Sire Records in 1987, releasing his debut album, Rhyme Pays.
On the record, he is supported by DJ Aladdin and producer Afrika Islam, who
helped create the rolling, spare beats and samples that provided a backdrop
for the rapper's charismatic rhymes, which were mainly party-oriented; the record
wound up going gold. That same year, he recorded the theme song for Dennis Hopper's
Colors, a film about inner-city life in Los Angeles. The song — also called
"Colors" — was stronger, both lyrically and musically, and more incisive
than anything he had previously released. Ice-T formed his own record label,
Rhyme Syndicate (which was distributed through Sire/Warner) in 1988, and released
Power. Power was a more assured and impressive record, earning him strong reviews
and his second gold record. Released in 1989, The Iceberg / Freedom of Speech
... Just Watch What You Say established him as a true hip-hop superstar by matching
excellent abrasive music with fierce, intelligent narratives and political commentaries,
especially about hip-hop censorship.

Two years later, Ice-T began an
acting career, starring in the updated blaxploitation film New Jack City; he
also recorded "New Jack Hustler" for the film. "New Jack Hustler"
became one of the centerpieces of 1991's O.G.: Original Gangster, which became
his most successful album to date. O.G. also featured a metal track called "Body
Count" recorded with Ice-T's band of the same name. Ice-T took the band
out on tour that summer, as he performed on the first Lollapalooza tour. The
tour set up increased his appeal with both alternative music fans and middle
class teenagers. The following year, the rapper decided to released an entire
album with the band, also called Body Count.

Body Count proved to be a major
turning point in Ice-T's career. On the basis of the track "Cop Killer"
— where he sang from the point-of-view of a police murderer — the record ignited
a national controversy; it was protested by the NRA and police activist groups.
Time-Warner Records initially supported Ice-T, yet they refused to release his
new rap album, Home Invasion, on basis of the record cover. Ice-T and the label
parted ways by the end of the year. Home Invasion was released on Priority Records
in the spring of 1993 to lukewarm reviews and sales. Somewhere along the way,
Ice-T had begun to lose most of his original hip-hop audience; now he appealed
primarily to suburban White teens. In 1994, he wrote a book and released the
second Body Count album, Born Dead which failed to stir up the same controversy
as the first record — indeed, it failed to gain much attention of any sort.
Nevertheless, Body Count was successful in clubs and Ice-T continued to tour
with the band.

In the summer of 1996, Ice-T released
his first rap album since 1993, Return of the Real. The album was greeted by
mixed reviews and it failed to live up to commercial expectations. 7th Deadly
Sin followed in 1999. — Stephen Thomas Erlewine