Source:
Iran Times
Iranian-American emcee Yashar Zadeh, who goes by the rap name of
Yak Ballz and his
Israeli-American cohort, Rami Even-Esh, whose rap name is Kosha Dillz, are two
rappers making a name for themselves through their conscious lyrics and their
efforts at battling stereotypes.

Yashar Zadeh (Yak Ballz)
at Flushing Meadow Park
credit: Westphal, Todd,
Todd Westphal photography
"I recorded my first single, "Flossin,' when I was 16," Ballz,
now 26, told The Boston Herald. "I grew up in Queens [New York] around a lot of
emcees, so I was really in the mix even before I got my own opportunities.
Fortunately, I finally got my chance to flex."
The two rappers were childhood friends. Though he was mostly
raised in Queens, Ballz also spent time at his father's house in Edison, New
Jersey, where Dillz lived around the corner.
"Yak was the emcee in the neighborhood," Dillz said. "Then I
started rapping on the weekends when we would get together, whether it was just
hanging out in the back of someone's whip or wherever."
Following Ballz's lead, Dillz started entering the Braggin'
Rights emcee battles at the Nuyorican Poets Café in Manhattan. Ballz became the
youngest rapper to reach the finals, and it was there that both aspiring emcees
met producers including Mondee, who helped further their music careers.
"One time when I was 17 I went to see Yak at Braggin' Rights and
there was extra space, so I just got up on stage," Dillz said. "I had something
written already. Even back then we were battling with conscious lyrics, not
talking about how fat the other person's mother was."
Despite their shared history and tours, Ballz's and Dillz's rap
styles vary; while Dillz's rhymes push into religious and geo-political realms,
Ballz keeps his music largely secular and abstract.
"I never really incorporated my ethnicity into my music," Ballz
said. "It only came out that I was Persian later in my career. Most people
thought that I was just a white kid from Queens. Actually, from what I
understand, some people even thought that I was a black kid."
Dillz also reported misunderstandings about his Jewish
background. Judaism, he told The Boston Herald, often is misrepresented in the
rap scene. With his new CD-a duet project with freestyle guru C-Rayz Walz
titled "Freestyle vs. Written"-Dillz said he hopes to teach the rap community
that hip-hop transcends racial and religious boundaries and stereotypes.
"On my last tour, this dude in Georgia told me that he thought
all Jews hate black people," Dillz said. "That was funny, especially since I
was on tour with (Wu-Tang affiliate) Killah Priest [who is connected to the
Black Hebrew Israelites and who raps about highly Afrocentric themes], and that
I have an album coming out with C-Rayz Walz [anoth
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... Payvand News - 10/19/08 ... --