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Cypress Hill drummer: national pot legalization getting ever closer to reality

Rodney Ho, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on

Published in Entertainment News

Cypress Hill broke the mold in the early 1990s with a unique blend of hip-hop, Latin and rock on top of its unabashedly open embrace of legalizing marijuana.

Three decades later, the core group Sen Dog, B-Real, DJ Muggs and drummer Eric “Bobo” Correa remain intact, still hitting the road as acceptance of pot both as a medicinal and recreational drug continues to grow. And they aren’t shy about bragging. The tour name is “We Legalized It.”

”We have a come a long way,” said Correa in a recent interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “But I think that we’re still trying to keep our eye on the prize as far as going forward with awareness of cannabis.”

Pot is already legal and decriminalized in half the states and in various stages of legality in most other states. In Georgia, marijuana is still illegal for recreational use but is available in a limited way for medical use.

And there was even more good news for pot advocates recently: the Biden administration is working to reclassify cannabis on a federal level so it is no longer in the strictest Schedule I category with heroin, methamphetamines and LSD. Instead, Biden officials plan to move it to Schedule III, along the lines of Tylenol with codeine, steroids and testosterone.

“It’s a step in the right direction,” Correa said. “I think it should be de-scheduled completely. This keeps the government’s hands in regulating cannabis so they may not necessarily do what’s in the best interest of people who really need the plant.”

 

Cypress Hill built their fan base through music festivals over the decades.

“We do them all over the world,” Correa said. “Sometimes we get invited to play more alternative festivals where we’d be the only hip-hop band on the bill. Our music is able to transcend genres. We can play these festivals and still be accepted.”

It helps, he said, that they incorporate guitars and drums. “There’s a darkness in our sound that allowed us to be played on alternative stations as well as hip-hop stations,” he said. “It’s a blessing. Not everybody gets that shine.”

Correa spent several years with the Beastie Boys, then for three years juggled duties with both the Beastie Boys and Cypress Hill. In 1998, Cypress Hill was hitting the road and he committed to that.

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©2024 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Visit at ajc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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