Father's Day came a few weeks early for members of the Rhymesayers hip-hop crew -- or at least that's how it looked backstage at the Soundset '08 festival.
Held over Memorial Day weekend in front of 12,000 fans outside the Metrodome, the day-long concert was an all-out family affair. The Twin Cities' best-known rappers came out tough and cool on stage but were pussycats behind the scenes. As rappers' kids played and moms talked over picnic tables, the dads made sure that their kids had proper ear protection and were drinking enough under the hot sun. So much for groupies and Cristal or whatever else 50 Cent will have you believe is behind every rap show.
"I know you understand why I go out of town," the scene's ringleader, Atmosphere's Slug (Sean Daley), sang on stage near the end of the day. "I also know my days are colder when you're not around."
Slug's song "Little Man" -- an open letter to his son Jacob, 13 -- is one of several in the Atmosphere canon to address fatherhood in realistic, sometimes painful but more often elated terms. Brother Ali has a few such songs, too, notably "Faheem," named for his 8-year-old son, in which he shares hard truths: "I just pray that you don't remember us sleeping on the floor/ And me cleaning mouse droppings out of your toys/ It took a lot of hard work for us to get where we at/ And young man, we ain't quitting at that."
Now that success has come for many of the Rhymesayers rappers, parenting hasn't necessarily gotten easier. Ali lamented the fact that he would be on a monthlong European tour over Father's Day, which meant that his wife, Tiffany, would be home alone with Faheem and their 2-month-old daughter, Soul. "I'll have some making up to do when I get home -- if my wife even takes me back," he said sheepishly.
BROTHER ALI
Background: Ali (last name: Newman) fought for custody of Faheem, 8, with his ex-wife, a battle recounted on last year's acclaimed album "The Undisputed Truth." Faheem has become the youngest Rhymesayers star, thanks to an MTV commercial for the new Atmosphere album in which he battle-raps Slug (and wins). Ali and his new wife welcomed a daughter, Soul, in April.
Favorite thing about being a dad: "I love everything about it, even the parts that are hard. It feels like one of the very few things I'm on this earth to do. I basically have my music, my spirituality and my family. That's my life."
Biggest challenge as a rapper dad: "Being gone. I'm gone a lot. It's really unfortunate, but the positive side of it is that when I'm home, I get to make my own schedule. I go work on my music after he goes to bed until he wakes up. I sleep when he's at school. I wake up when he gets home."