by Andy Kellman
A good number of Afrocentric, politically oriented rap groups put out records during the late 80s and early 90s. Very few of those groups were on the level of the hard-hitting X Clan, a Brooklyn-based collective that released a pair of stellar albums — 1990s To the East, Blackwards and 1992s Xodus — before breaking up. The groups primary members were Grand Verbalizer Funkin Lesson Brother J (born Jason Hunter), Lumumba Professor X The Overseer (born Lumumba Carson, the son of prominent and influential activist Sonny Carson), the Rhythem Provider Sugar Shaft (born Anthony Hardin), and Grand Architect Paradise (born Claude Grey), and they were joined by a cast of associates, which included powerful MC Isis (aka Lin Que). X Clan were activists outside of music as well; they were Blackwatch members and were vocal supporters of several pro-black organizations.
Unfortunately, the groups political stance and their bold red-black-green garb often gained more attention than their records, which featured Brother Js accomplished vocal skills and teacher-like lyricism over in-house productions that flipped the overused Parliament/Funkadelic sampling routine on its back as well as any other group. To the East, Blackwards and Xodus were almost equally strong, reflected in the fact that both albums peaked at number 11 on the Top R&B/hip-hop album chart. Before the groups split, both Professor X and Isis released spinoff solo albums. After the groups split, Brother J formed Dark Sun Riders, a project that released an album in 1996. The year before that, Sugar Shaft succumbed to AIDS-related causes. None of this prevented the group from re-forming at the end of the 90s; however, as of 2003, the group had yet to release anything commercially. Professor X passed away in March 2006, a victim of meningitis.