Los Angeles Times

AROUND THE BLOCKS

- — Randall Roberts

Since the rise of rap in the 1980s, Rosecrans Avenue has served as the music’s West Coast spiritual home. Extending 27 miles from Fullerton to its end at Pacific Coast Highway in Manhattan Beach, the street, named after a Union soldier, has been an actor in songs by Kendrick Lamar, YG, Problem, DJ Quik, 2Pac and dozens of others. Here’s an overview of addresses and locations that have served as backdrops for rhymed drama.

1 McDonald’s. The earliest known mention of Rosecrans in a rap song arrived in 1987 via the rapper King Tee’s “Ya Better Bring a Gun.” Featuring a bouncy but menacing old-school beat, the track helped define the neighborho­od in bloody 1980s Compton by warning would-be tourists to arrive well armed: “From block to block everybody’s bad / And if you don’t know where you’re at, then your life’s been had.”

Near the end of the track, almost as an afterthoug­ht, the rapper wonders aloud on an unsolved mystery: “Who blew up that McDonald’s on Central and Rosecrans, dude?”

Tacos Mexico. On the 2017 album “Rosecrans,” the rapper Problem offers some sage advice for rivals: “Get out the way — you ain’t got no business this side of Santa Fe,” he raps, a reference to a crucial north-south avenue that separates gang factions. Like most major intersecti­ons in South Los Angeles, it’s occupied by fast-food joints, gas stations or strip malls. In this case, the intersecti­on is home to the midsize chain Tacos Mexico.

Tam’s Burgers. From a historical perspectiv­e, the little spot at the corner of Rosecrans and Central avenues is the center. “I grew up off of Rosecrans and Central / Tam’s Burger on the corner,” raps J3 in the Game’s track “Support Compton.” In “Compton State of Mind,” Lamar recalls “the good old days / Eating Tam’s Burgers while my Juvenile CD had played.” Suge Knight is alleged to have rammed his truck into two men outside Tam’s after a dispute on the set of “Straight Outta Compton.” Terry Carter, 55, died of his injuries. Most recently, Compton rap star YG celebrates the restaurant in his track “Bompton” by setting himself “on Rosecrans ... at Tam’s Burgers / I’m buying AK’s and handguns.”

Church’s Chicken. The Atlanta-based fried chicken chain is one of many fast-food joints appearing in songs about Compton. Lamar references it in two tracks. In “Money Trees,” Lamar shouts out Church’s with a line about screeching out of its parking lot.

In “Backstreet Freestyle” he suggests to an unnamed other to park their car “in front of Lueders next to that Church’s Chicken.” He also locates Louis Burgers, also on Rosecrans.

Food for Less. During the musical interlude “Real” from Lamar’s “good kid, m.A.A.d city,” the artist’s mother is captured in a voice recording: “Look, the neighbors say they seen you and your little friends over there by Food for Less,” she says, then relays a message about his label Top Dawg. During “Compton State of Mind,” the rapper describes “chilling right inside best outlets / Five dollar Little Caesar — mama shopped at Food for Less.”

Compton Swap Meet. This vanished landmark has served as a setting for songs by Lamar, Nipsey Hussle, the Game, Mack 10, Snoop and others. Often used in reference to the many bootlegs and mixtapes acquired within, the Compton Swap Meet was most famously immortaliz­ed in a skit on Dr. Dre’s classic album “The Chronic.” For his part, Lamar promises in “Wesley’s Theory” that someday soon he’s going to “put the Compton Swap Meet by the White House.”

Gonzales Park. For “Sing About Me, I’m Dying of Thirst,” Lamar inhabits the perspectiv­e of a prostitute working out of the Rosecrans-adjacent park. Lamar-as-hooker describes being in the Gonzales Park lot and being followed “by a married man, and father of three” who’s a favorite client because he tips her in MDMA pills.

Lueders Park. The 1993 song “Piru Love” — a reference to a Compton street and a Bloodaffil­iated gang — by the rap group Bloods & Crips offers a primer on the many gang chapters running Rosecrans, and their warning features one of the earliest shoutouts to Lueders Park.

“Every town has an Elm Street but not a Freddy Krueger,” Bloody Mary raps about Compton’s most prominent public space. “Don’t get caught in the Jungles or a park called Lueders.” Others who have memorializ­ed the park include Compton icons Lamar (“Keisha’s Song” and “Backseat Freestyle”), the Game (“Murda”) and Jay Rock (“Real Bloods”).

Intersecti­on of Rosecrans and Aranbe. The longtime Compton producer and rapper DJ Quik has been a neighborho­od chronicler for more than 25 years. On “Scanless,” from his 1991 album “Quik Is the Name,” he and his collaborat­ors document lawless action up and down Rosecrans but cite this intersecti­on in particular. The rapper KK describes “bailin’ down ’Crans with my khakis creased” and a woman in his lap. DJ Quik’s verse depicts a Rosecrans carjacking in progress, “rollin with a [passenger] with doo-doo in his pants.”

10 Rosecrans Avenue. Even more so than specific map points, Rosecrans asserts itself in dozens more songs as an ideal, a kind of secret handshake among the Compton-proud musicians. Most famously, 2Pac’s Dr. Dreproduce­d “California Love” helped codify the avenue as a major spot. In it, he called on fans “worldwide, let them recognize from Long Beach to Rosecrans / Bumpin’ and grindin’ like a slow jam.”

Chicago rapper Lupe Fiasco echoed that line on his 2011 track “Joaquin Phoenix,” and Grammynomi­nated lyricist Rapsody’s 2013 track “Complacent” featured her rhyming “rollin’ on Rosecran” with “La-La Land, a Kobe fan.”

 ?? Priya Krishnakum­ar Los Angeles Times ??
Priya Krishnakum­ar Los Angeles Times

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