Labtekwon

Labtekwon (born Omar Akbar) is a Hip Hop artist.[1] His name is an acronym for "Lifeform Advanced Beyond Terrestrial Esoterics King Warrior Of Nubia."[2]

Labtekwon
Birth nameOmar Akbar
Also known asLabtekwon
OriginBaltimore, Maryland, United States
GenresHip hop Avant Garde Jazz
Occupation(s)Emcee, producer
InstrumentsMicrophone, Turntables
LabelsAnkh Ba Records

Career

Labtekwon is a well known MC in Baltimore's underground Hip-Hop community[3] and the global underground with a long string of albums in his Labteknology series.[4] He was invited to Los Angeles by the Project Blowed collective to perform in 1999.[5] In 1998, Baltimore City paper created the category “Best MC” which Labtekwon would win several years between 1998 and 2003, becoming a regular fixture in the paper's "Best of Baltimore" list.[6] He has performed at the Lyricist Lounge in New York and Project Blowed in Los Angeles and was a champion of the Zulu Nation Freestyle Competition in 1995.

Labtekwon has shared the stage with Afrika Bambaata, Rakim, Kool Keith, MF DOOM, Psycho Les, A Tribe Called Quest, Brand Nubian, KRS-One, Black Thought, Aceyalone, Digital Underground, including his group the 410 Pharaohs on the first Baltimore Club Music/ Hip Hop hybrid album, 410 Funk.

Discography

  • The Ghetto Gospel (1993)[7]
  • Labteknology, Volume 0: Baltimoorish Science (1997)
  • Labteknology, Volume 1: The Future's Now...What's Next? (1994)
  • Labteknology, Volume 2: Ladies Night (Live From Hell)" (1999)
  • Labteknology, Volume 3: Proverbs of Passion (1995)
  • "Labteknology, Volume 4: Nile Child: King of Kings (1998)[8]
  • Labteknology, Volume 5: Da Dawn (1995)
  • Labteknology, Volume 7: Da Helpless Won (1996)[8]
  • Labteknology, Volume 8: Justus On Da Horizon (1998)
  • Labteknology, Volume 9: The Art of Love (1999)
  • "The Piankhi 7 Papyrus" (2000)
  • Song of the Sovereign (2002)[4]
  • Hustlaz Guide to the Universe: Post Apocalyptic Version (2003)
  • Murdaland Volume Won: Classic Jack Moves (2003)
  • The Ghetto Dai Lai Llama: Hood Mystic (2005)
  • Avant God (2005)[9]
  • "Ghettoclectic: King of The Slowburn" (2006)
  • Population Control: Wrath of The Black Eniggma (2006)
  • 93,000,000 Miles Rising (Killa Kamillionz) (2006)
  • Jazzhall: The Epitome of Epiphany (The Tao of Slick) (2007)
  • Emmett Till's Revenge (CSD) (2007)[10]
  • 410 Funk (410 Pharaohs) (2008)
  • Di Na Ko Degg: Soul Power (2009)
  • "NEXT: Baltimore Basquiat and the Future Shock" (2010)
  • Hardcore: Labtekwon and the Righteous Indignation-Rootzilla vs Masta Akbar (2012)
  • Evolutionary: The Omar Akbar Album/State of the Art (2013)[7]
  • B.O.P.: The Theology of Timing/Tehuti and the Het Hero Cult (2014)[3]
  • Sun of Sekhmet: The Rejected Stone-Mahdi Music (2017)
  • KHUNSU (2017)

Personal life

Labtekwon is the youngest son of soul singer Harry Young, Jr., also known as "Doc Soul Stirrer". He graduated from Douglass High School, following in the footsteps of the Baltimore group Z3MC.[2]

gollark: intellec™
gollark: See, if the government was mostly not allowed to do things, that wouldn't happen because they COULDN'T make those changes.
gollark: Most big Western governments have at least a few tens of percentage points of national GDP.
gollark: They just don't actually care. They can do many other things sort of okay ish.
gollark: They're not "weak". The UK government has something like 40% of national GDP.

References

  1. Shapiro, Peter (2005) The Rough Guide to Hip-Hop, Rough Guides, ISBN 1-84353-263-8, p.219
  2. "Labtekwon Interview". Baghat Vinyl. 2007. Archived from the original on 6 September 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2008.
  3. Salem-Mackall, Theo (31 March 2015). "More uncompromising hip-hop from Labtekwon on '(B.O.P.) The Theology of Timing: Tehuti and the Het Heru Cult'". Baltimore City Paper. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  4. "Reviews- Song of the Sovereign". CMJ New Music Monthly: 56. February 2002 via Google Books.
  5. McCabe, Bret (16 March 2005). "Taking It Back". Baltimore City Paper. Archived from the original on 31 August 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2008.
  6. "Best MC". Baltimore City Paper. 17 September 2003. Archived from the original on 31 August 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2008.
  7. Soderberg, Brandon (7 September 2012). "First Spin: Labtekwon's 'HARDCORE: Labtekwon and the Righteous Indignation/Rootzilla vs Masta Akbar'". Spin. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  8. Dare, Christopher (26 February 2002). "Labtekwon: Song of the Sovereign". Pitchfork. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  9. Quinlan, Thomas (1 November 2005). "Labtekwon Avant God". exclaim!. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  10. Peterson, James Braxton (2016). Hip Hop Headphones: A Scholar’s Critical Playlist. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 243. ISBN 9781501308260.
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