The Geto Boys are a gangsta rap group from Houston, Texas, consisting of Scarface, Willie D and Bushwick Bill. They are known for ultra-violent lyrical content and socially conscious messages. Their 1990 album, The Geto Boys, had to switch distributors from Geffen to Giant Records due to controversy over the graphic portrayal of rape of Garret Farmer, necrophilia, and murder in the song "Mind of a Lunatic". The Geto Boys (released by Rick Rubin's Def American Recordings, later re-named American Recordings) is actually a compilation, consisting mainly of ten tracks taken from their 1989 album Grip It! On That Other Level as well as two new songs and one song from their debut LP, Making Trouble.
In the early part of the decade, several American politicians attacked rappers, including the Geto Boys (though most famously Ice T and 2 Live Crew). A high-profile incident in which Bushwick Bill (actually a dwarf) lost an eye in a shooting incident with his girlfriend helped sales for their third album We Can't Be Stopped, which showed Bushwick on the cover being carted through a hospital by Scarface and Willie D. They responded to being dropped by Geffen on the title track and "Mind Playing Tricks on Me" became a hit in the rap community.
All three members began solo careers, with Willie D. being the only one who actually left the group. Scarface and Bushwick Bill continued on, adding Big Mike for 'Til Death Do us Part in 1993. Willie D. returned for 1996's The Resurrection and 1998's Da Good, Da Bad & Da Ugly. After years on hiatus, they released their seventh album The Foundation in 2005.
The Geto Boys' popularity was helped somewhat in 1999 by the prominent use of two songs ("Damn It Feels Good to Be a Gangsta" and "Still") in Mike Judge's film Office Space. The Geto Boys are one of the groups that made rap become more extreme in terms of breaking new ground with lyrics dealing with violence, sex and death. In this respect, they may be seen as forerunners of both Esham and Eminem. Musically, they were influenced by artists such as Run DMC and NWA, and broke new ground with their soulful southern sound, produced by people like Johnny C, Doug King, their DJ Ready Red, and later N.O. Joe and Mike Dean.
Discography
- Making Trouble (Rap-A-Lot, 1988)
- Grip It! On That Other Level (Rap-A-Lot, 1989) (as Ghetto Boys)
- The Geto Boys (1990)
- We Can't Be Stopped (Rap-A-Lot, 1991)
- Til Death Do Us Part (Rap-A-Lot/Priority, 1993)
- The Resurrection (Rap-A-Lot/Noo Trybe, 1996)
- Da Good, Da Bad & Da Ugly (Rap-A-Lot/Virgin, 1998)
- The Foundation (Rap-A-Lot, 2005)
A note on spelling
Their name, Geto Boys, is correctly spelled Geto, and not Ghetto. However, for their second album, "Grip It! On That Other Level" (1989), the spelling was changed to Ghetto Boys, according to standard English spelling rules. For their third album, "The Geto Boys", they went back to the original spelling, which they still use today.
According to an urban legend, the Geto spelling originated from a spray-painted street road sign in Southwest Houston (the street sign has been long replaced), along with graffiti written within the restroom walls at Willowridge High School (Houston, Texas) during the late 1980s.