The Bone thugs-n-harmony saga began in 1993 when Layzie, Krazyie, Flesh,
Wish and Bizzy, broke and hungry, but loaded with talent, confidence and the bravado to try anything to achieve
success, boarded a bus to Los Angeles.
Their destination was the offices of Ruthless Records, home to the legendary rap group NWA. Bone auditioned
over the phone but Eazy didn't get back with them. When Bone heard that Eazy-E was doing a show in their
hometown, they scraped their money together and hustled back to Cleveland. They auditioned live for Eazy
backstage and he signed them on the spot.
Within weeks they were in the studio recording their '94 debut EP, Creepin' On Ah Come Up. They turned the
hip-hop nation onto a fresh new style of rap and in the process sold over two million copies of Creepin', fueled
by their hit single, "Thuggish Ruggish Bone." Bone thugs-n-harmony followed with the '95 release of the five
times platinum LP, E. 1999 Eternal which debuted at #1 on top of the pop charts. The group made history when
their hit single, "Tha Crossroads," tied a record the Beatles set in 1964 as the fastest rising single on the
charts.
Bone thugs-n-harmony recently won the 1997 Grammy Award for Best Rap Duo or Group and the 1997 Soul
Train Music Award for Best Video, "Tha Crossroads."
From the streets of Cleveland to TV sets across the nation, it's been a long journey for Bone thugs-n-harmony.
Their rise commenced in '93 when they scraped up every penny they had for one-way bus tickets to Los
Angeles. It wasn't until they hooked up with their departed mentor, Eazy-E, that things began rollin'. As the
famed story goes, Eazy-E returned a call to Bone in L.A. where they auditioned for him over the phone. He was
impressed but the deal wasn't done until a short time later when the former NWA leader was doing a show in
Cleveland. Bone immediately headed back home and gave a back stage audition in person. Eazy had tickets
ready for them the next morning to return to L.A. to begin recording their debut EP.
That EP, Creepin' On Ah Come Up, exploded onto the rap scene with the singles "Thuggish Ruggish Bone" and
"Foe Tha Love Of $" and went on to quadruple-platinum success, but '94's E. 1999 Eternal, entered all charts at
#1 and hasn't slowed down, selling five million plus copies and counting.
Eternal's most celebrated cut--the stunning, spiritually-charged single, "Tha Crossroads"--won a grammy, went
double-platinum and made history when it tied with the Beatles' 32-year-old record ('64's "Can't Buy Me Love")
for the fastest rising single on the pop charts.
There seems to be no end in sight to the Bone phenomenon. The Cleveland clan established their own Mo
Thugs Records last year and released the Mo Thugs Family Scriptures compilation album to introduce many of
the Cleveland-based artists they're developing. The joint shipped platinum. They're following with solo albums
by many of their artists as well as solo albums from Bone.
With all their success, it's hard to believe that the days of struggling were very much a reality for Bone not too
long ago. "First Of Tha Month," their glorious ode to government cheese, was something that Bone was living
rather than just rapping about. As Layzie recalls, "It was like this man, we come from zero, straight from the dirt,
dog." Wish adds, "We were in the streets doin' whatever it took to survive."
But through these rough times, the Bone family strengthened. Layzie and Wish, who are cousins, first
hooked-up with Bizzy and Krayzie under the name Band-Aid Boyz. During this era, the flow that would make
them famous developed. Wish breaks it down like this, "Our style just came from us sittin' in our house with
nothing to eat, just trippin' and writin', and just building on it. And we finally came up with what we got." Krayzie
adds, "We knew we had something different. Our music is just coming from the heart. We always knew we were
gonna make it somehow."
Not only do Bone speak about their hard times, they choose to tell the positive as well on The Art Of War. Songs
like "If I Could Teach The World" finds Bone delivering a message of upliftment to kids all over the planet. "To all
the lil' boys and girls all over the world/The shit we say is for the streets/Not for you to go and do or to repeat."
On "Friends," a remake of the Whodini classic, Bone pay tribute to those who have remained close and loyal to
them. And "Family Tree Bone" is a remarkable personal account that illustrates the highs and lows of each
Bone member's lives.
"All our albums have a dark feeling to them, but it is so smooth that you don't really focus on the dark too much,"
says Krayzie. "The dark themes come from how we used to live. Then, every day and every night was dark in
our eyes. That's changed."
Asked about fame, Layzie concludes, "In my wildest dreams, where I'm comin' from, I couldn't even dream shit
would be like this. Fame, it's cool to be famous, but some people take it out of control. I look at it like the Lord
got us to the front of the line for some reason."