Otherwize
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for music. (March 2024) |
Otherwize | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Alex Harris |
Origin | Los Angeles, California |
Genres | Underground hip hop, battle rap |
Occupation(s) | Rapper |
Years active | 1996-present |
Website | www |
Alex Harris, known by his stage name Otherwize, is a rapper from Los Angeles, California affiliated with Project Blowed and Blak Forest. Otherwize is most notable for defeating Eminem in a battle rap tournament at the '97 Rap Olympics.[1][2][3]
Battle Rap
MC Juice and Otherwize are the only two battle rappers to defeat Eminem in official tournaments.[4] Otherwize placed third at Scribble Jam '99, losing to the winner of the tournament, Eyedea. His reign as battle champion at Club Elements in Los Angeles was covered in the documentary Where We're From: The Elements Documentary. In Where We're From, rapper Seefor Yourself stated, "Otherwize was that top dude in LA."[citation needed]
Film
Otherwize was featured in the documentaries Freestyle: The Art of Rhyme and Where We're From: The Elements Documentary.[5] [6]
Publications
Riddlore's book Born a Villain has an oral history of the '97 Rap Olympics which features quotes from an interview with Otherwize.[7]
In Dan Charnas's book The Big Payback, Otherwize is erroneously referred to as "Overdose."[8]
Discography
Studio albums
Solo
- Disturbing the Peace (2001) (with Longevity)
- C.U.N. Traffic (2003)
- Burnt Out Bizness (2003) (with DJ Obi)
- Point of View (2010) (with Jizzm High Definition)
- Half Monster Half Amazing (2015)
- Alex (2016)
- Run Black Man Run (2017)
- One Day Theory (2018) (with DJ JahBluez)
- In the Mix Collection (2022) (with DJ JahBluez)
- Next Day Theory (2023) (with DJ JahBluez)
- Skabz (2023)
Group Albums
- Hip Hop Kclan – Kclandestine Kclas'sicz (2000)
- Cobra LA – 18 Ways (2003)
- Blak Forest – Without Further Adieu... (2003)
Guest appearances
- Quincy Jones – Back on the Block (1989) (back-up singer for Tevin Campbell)
- Chillin Villain Empire – Declassified (1998)
- OD – Beneath the Surface (1998)
- Fat Jack – Cater to the DJ (1999)
- Various – Project Blowed 10th Anniversary (2005)
References
- ^ Mathers, Marshall “Eminem” (2009). The Way I Am. Plume.
- ^ Eustice, Kyle (September 7, 2021). "How Eminem's Loss at 1997 Rap Olympics Ultimately Led to Dr. Dre Deal". hiphopdx.com.
- ^ Fu, Eddie (March 23, 2020). "Eminem Recalls Being Evicted the Day Before the Rap Olympics Loss that Helped Him Get Signed". genius.com.
- ^ Fruchter, Alexander (August 2, 2021). "The Legend of MC Juice". rockthebells.com.
- ^ DJ Bonds & DJ Breeze (directors) (August 24, 2021). Where We're From: The Elements Documentary (Documentary). Los Angeles.
- ^ "Otherwize Remembers Beating Eminem In Rap Battle". eminem.news. September 8, 2021.
{{cite web}}
:|first=
missing|last=
(help) - ^ Owens, Hamadi “Riddlore” (2023). Born a Villain. Parker Pubs Press.
- ^ Charnas, Dan (2011). The Big Payback. Penguin.