The Mercury News

Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, Ice Cube highlight Shoreline concert

- By Jim Harrington jharringto­n@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

The 2018 concert season at Shoreline Amphitheat­re came to a close Saturday with a big hip-hop party.

A packed house at the Mountain View venue watched the genre’s icons Ice Cube, Bone Thugs-nHarmony, Too Short and Warren G rap down memory lane.

It goes to show the power of the package tour.

Ice Cube, the evening’s headliner, would probably have a hard time selling out a 2,500-capacity theater in the Bay Area if he’s touring

on his own.

And the other acts on the bill certainly don’t come close to matching Cube’s draw.

Yet, stick them all on the same bill, and we’re talking about big business at the 22,000-capacity Shoreline.

The lively crowd had a good time throughout the concert, singing along with the lyrics to songs that many of these fans fell in love with back in the ’80s and ’90s.

The best act I saw during the five-hour-plus show was Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, the Cleveland gangsta-rap outfit that signed with Eazy-E’s Ruthless Records

in 1993.

Bone is certainly one of the greatest vocal groups in hip-hop history, especially if one is making that assessment based strictly on the quality of the voices represente­d.

So it was a treat to hear the five band members — Bizzy Bone, Wish Bone, Layzie Bone, Krayzie Bone and Flesh-n-Bone — blend their voices in often amazing fashion on songs such as “1st of tha Month” (from the sophomore release “E. 1999 Eternal”).

The group also used its time onstage to pay tribute to three of hip-hop’s greats, individual­ly spotlighti­ng

Eazy-E, 2Pac and the Notorious B.I.G. in both song and on the big screen at the back of the stage.

Ice Cube had a somewhat hard time following Bone Thugs-N-Harmony. His performanc­e felt a bit anticlimac­tic after the vocal fireworks on display in the previous set.

Yet Cube brought his Agame, filling his songs with his signature blend of edge, attitude and pure power.

He opened his show with a great version of “Natural Born Killaz,” which some incorrectl­y assume hails from director Oliver Stone’s “Natural Born Killers,” but rather can be found on

the soundtrack to the film “Murder Was the Case.”

One of the best moments of the entire concert was when Ice Cube reached back to his N.W.A. days and performed three fierce cuts from the band’s legendary game-changer “Straight Outta Compton” — the title track, “Gangsta Gangsta” and “(Expletive) tha Police.”

The rapper followed up the “Police” offering with what he called a “public service announceme­nt,” basically telling fans not to take the advice of the N.W.A. anthem “(Expletive) tha Police” to heart. He didn’t want to see any

of his fans end up in handcuffs on this night.

“Don’t go (expletive) with the police because Ice Cube did a song,” he said. “They will arrest your ass — or worse.”

Oakland talent Too Short appeared earlier in the night, performing a number of raunchy sex raps and uttering the B-word more times in 30 minutes than I’ll (hopefully) hear the rest of the year.

Warren G also took the stage, delivering a mostly lackluster and uneven set of music that thankfully ended on a high note with his signature song, “Regulate.”

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