Rap began to spread beyond its East Coast
confines to the West Coast. Bid the mid-80's, West Coast hip-hop
had begun to come in its own, and Los Angeles served as ground
0. In 1987, when two East Coast groups dropped their debut
LPs - Public Enemy gave us Yo!
Bum Rush The Show and
Boogie Down Productions released
Criminal Minded -
a Los Angeles-based rapper by the name of Ice-T released his
full-length debut, Rhyme Pays.
Public Enemy - Read more about him
here

One of the most influential, controversial and revolutionary
rap groups of all time, Public Enemy released their debut
LP, Yo! Bum Rush the Jam on Def Jam in 1987. Containing tracks
like "Rightstarted (Message to a Black Man)" and
"Miuzi Weighs a Ton", it mixed hard-core rap with
strong socio-political messages. Though this initial Public
Enemy release didn't make a huge impact on mainstream audiences,
the writing was on the wall: before long they would be impossible
to ignore.
"Criminal Minded"

Bronx based duo KRS-One and DJ Scott La Rock of Boogie Down
Productions released
Criminal Minded in 1987. On the
album, KRS-One rapped about life in ghetto using blunt, stark
language to make his point. The track "9MM Goes Bang",
for example, dealt openly with guns and violence. As rap music
became increasingly reality-based, KRS-One emerged as one
of its primary storytellers.
"Rhyme Pays" - Read more about Ice-T
here

West Coast rapper Ice-T rose out of the Los Angeles hip-hop
community of the mid-80s. Though many people associated hip-hop
with East Coast, Ice-T proved that the West Coast had a thriving
culture its own. In 1987, when he released his debut album
Rhyme Pays on Sire Records, his music earned the label
"gangster rap". Songs like "6 In the Morning"
were explicit, brutal and controversial - garnering respect
for Ice-T and igniting interest in West Coast rappers on one
hand, and inviting condemnation and criticism on the other.
Life in
Los Angeles was different, form life in
New
York, a difference reflected in Ice-T's rhymes. Like East
Coast counterparts Public Enemy or KRS-One, Ice-T's rhymes
were labeled harsh and hardcore, but with a difference: Ice-T
rapped primarily about living the gangster/player lifestyle
- with its money, women, cars and violence - rather than any
overtly political issues. So when people (most critics) began
to label his style as gangster rap, the label stuck - and
would continue to be associated with Ice-T and other like-minded
West Coast rappers.