A sad day for Hip Hop! Always been a fan of Slum Village. Baatin RIP!
Read the article below and click on the following links to read an interview with Baatin by Phonte of the Foreign Exchange & Little Brother.
Part 1: http://schememag.com/hip-hop/phonte-interviews-baatin-of-slum-village-part-i/
Part 2: http://schememag.com/hip-hop/phonte-baatin-interview-part-ii/
Baatin, a Detroit rapper and member of Detroit rap collective Slum Village, has died according to reports.
News of Baatin's death spread virally around noon Saturday. A cause of death is not known.
Baatin, born Titus Glover in 1974, said he started rapping while a student at Pershing High School on Detroit's east side.
"I was going by Eazy-T and Scandalous-T back then; it was me, Al Nuke and a few others," Baatin told the Metro Times in a 2007 interview.
Baatin, Jay Dee -- who died in 2006 of cardiac arrest -- and T3 formed a group and called themselves Ssenepod. In 1991, they changed their name to Slum Village. Baatin also changed his stage name.
"When I got spiritual, I wanted a different name," he said. "(Baatin) is Islamic for 'hidden.' "
Slum Village underwent several lineup changes over the years. The original trio released "Fantastic, Vol. 1" and "Fantastic, Vol. 2." Jay Dee (also known as J Dilla) left the group and was replaced with Elzhi. That trio scored one of their bigger mainstream hits, "Tainted," which also featured Detroit native singer Dwele.
Baatin told the Metro Times that he struggled with several emotional problems. He left a European tour in 2003 to rest, but later asked to be released from the group.
Slum Village, now a duo, continued to perform. During a show at the State Theatre in Detroit, Baatin demanded to be on stage. He was arrested and jailed; after that, he was evicted from his apartment that he says was being paid for by his record label.
In 2004, Baatin was diagnosed with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression; he later developed a crack habit, living homeless for more than a year.
A European promoter offered Baatin a chance to revitalize his career with some shows overseas. Baatin accepted, cleaned up and began work on a solo album.
Baatin also reunited with T3 and Elzhi, and a new album, "Villa Manifesto," was scheduled to be released September 22. The first single, "Cloud 9" features Floetry's Marsha Ambrosious.
Several offered online condolencenes as the news spread. On his Twitter, Dwele wrote "R.I.P. baatin of slum village forever." Fans also left thoughts on Baatin's MySpace page and comments on Slum Village videos across YouTube.
Stay tuned to www.mlive.com/detroit for more on this developing story.
(via @THEREALDWELE & www.mlive.com/detroit)
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