Ice Cube brings the heat American rapper gives fans a generous dose of West Coast nostalgia
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 28/02/2024 (763 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
From Compton to the ice cold centre of Canada.
American rapper Ice Cube gave Winnipeg fans a generous dose of West Coast nostalgia during a fast-paced, engaging show at Canada Life Centre on Wednesday night.
The renowned musician, producer, actor and three-on-three basketball entrepreneur has been selling out arenas across the country on his Straight Into Canada Tour — a second leg was added last week to meet demand.
His local stop was no different, with 11,000 people packing the downtown venue from the floor to the nosebleeds for the sold out mid-week concert.
Dwayne Larson / Free Press Ice Cube performs at Canada Life Centre Wednesday during his Straight Into Canada Tour. Calgary's DJ Nav and American rapper Xzibit opened.
Ice Cube was heard before he was seen, amping up the crowd from offstage while a pair of giant blow-up hands flashing the West Side “W” symbol inflated.
After bounding onto the stage in a black snapback and sunglasses, he implored the crowd to “keep it gangsta” before launching into Natural Born Killaz, a filmtrack single recorded with Dr. Dre.
Concert Review
Ice Cube
With Xzibit and DJ Kav
Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2024
Canada Life Centre
Attendance: 11,000 people
4 out of 5 stars
Ice Cube — given name O’Shea Jackson — is credited for popularizing the gangsta rap genre. He was a founding member (along with Dre and the late Eazy-E) of the legendary rap group N.W.A., which rose to prominence following the late ‘80s release of Straight Outta Compton. At press time, the rapper had paid homage to his early days with the album’s title track.
Cube was joined onstage by WC, a member of his next group project, Westside Connection.
The pair performed together for an hour-plus on a small stage that was dwarfed by the large room. Save for a few large video screens and the aforementioned inflatable hands, the production was minimal — but it worked. The lack of fireballs and glitter cannons kept audience attention glued on the artists, making their constant light-speed rapping all the more impressive.
They ran through a hitlist of Ice Cube’s extensive solo catalogue — he’s released 10 studio albums and has another on the way this spring — with songs such as Check Yo Self and You Know How We Do It. And played a few Westside tunes, including Bow Down.
Ice Cube last performed in town in 2007, opening for Snoop Dogg show at the Winnipeg Convention Centre. A local headlining tour was apparently well past due.
Dwayne Larson / Free Press Ice Cube was a founding member of legendary rap group N.W.A., which rose to prominence following the late ‘80s release of Straight Outta Compton.
The hyped crowd came to party. Many were dressed in black (a nod to the headliner’s monochromatic uniform) and some were seen splurging on the evening’s signature “It Was A Good Day” cocktail — a blood-red concoction of vodka, Sprite and grenadine topped with a lollipop available for a cool $21.50. Themed drinks have been a concession trend at several recent arena rap shows.
Calgary-based DJ Kav acted as an effective hype man, kicking off the show and keeping the energy high between the main acts. He played a tight set filled with popular hip-hop tracks from the likes of Ol’ Dirty Bastard, Rihanna and Kendrick Lamar.
The audience was primed from the get-go. Xzibit picked up the baton and ran with it. The 49-year-old American rapper and former host of MTV’s Pimp My Ride jumped on stage immediately following the opener for a non-stop 45-minute set peppered with enthusiastic chants and arm-waving.
At one point, he challenged the entire arena to a drinking contest as a lead-in to Alkaholik, a hard-partying hit from his 2000 album, Restless. Xzibit’s musical heyday was in the early aughts and his setlist stuck mostly to that era, featuring snippets of his collabs with Snoop and Dr. Dre and closing with the anthem X.
Wednesday’s show was a no-frills celebration of rap artistry, unencumbered by flashy stage dressing and gimmicks. It was all about the music.
eva.wasney@winnipegfreepress.com
X: @evawasney
Eva Wasney has been a reporter with the Free Press Arts & Life department since 2019. Read more about Eva.
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