One moment a person can either win all or lose all, and “Tres Equis” provides a sobering picture of a group that now lauded, easily could have not been by in-fighting, discrimination, contractual restrictions, and other such obstacles. But readers don’t have to hold their breath – in a medium so respected for it’s painful realism and scoffed at for instilling unrealistic hopes, “Tres Equis” has a happy ending that has never even heard or tasted the concept of corny. Just like a Cypress Hill record, “Tres Equis” is a funky journey into the minds of Sen Dog, B-Real, DJ Muggs and their Soul Assassins associates. It really is a “tribe thing” as lyrics from Run-DMC and Naughty By Nature reverberate off the page like a subwoofer in a deserted parking lot.
The pencils in each chapter are stellar dedications to the phases featured in the legend that is Cypress Hill. My personal favorite was in the way Damion Scott (no stranger to Hip-Hop or comics) drew Muggs scratching on the wheels of steel. It was something to see the liveliness of these men in action on the come up, such presentation made it so easy to forget that this book was only brought for viewing through the 2D. Honestly Scott could have drew the whole book himself – but then what would “Tres Equis” be without the bloody recount of B-Real’s experience at the gates of “Killa King” (provided by Jefte Palo), or the lavish sunbathing days atop a New York skyline during the groups days building a buzz on the underrated Bomb Squad – curated “Juice” soundtrack; expertly interpreted by Angel Hernandez?
My only gripe is that he never drew B-Real with his hair blown out (yes Afro-Hispanics do exist), but that is a short list of complaints, in consideration for a group that I never would have guessed would be interested in the medium. With The Black Eyed Peas (“Masters of The Sun”), The Weeknd (“Starboy”), Public Enemy (“Apocalypse 91”), Pharoahe Monch of Th1rt3en (“Kill Kill Kill”), and many others either dipping their feet in or diving straight into comic book culture with original offerings to bridge the gap between comics and Hip-Hop (which in actuality are deftly intertwined and inseparable) – Cypress Hill is not just another group doing what many have already accomplished. “Tres Equis” is yet just another successful venture in where the group has found only another medium to conquer through their mastered skill of controlling a crowd through the art of storytelling.
Cheers to the Gods from Cypress Ave. ! And with art like this, one with any taste can only pray to them for another 30 more – straight off The Hill !
Score : 4/5
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