LOS ANGELES ā It's Sunday night, backstage ahead of the second Los Angeles show of Lauryn Hill and the Fugees' anniversary tour. It will be a few hours yet before Hill opens the concert with a solo set of āThe Miseducation of Lauryn Hill,ā 25 years after its release. The seats in the arena are slowly starting to fill.
Prakazrel āPrasā Michel, a founding member of the Fugees, is sitting in his dressing room at the Kia Forum, watching the Buffalo Bills play the Cincinnati Bengals. Tonight is a celebration ā of his landmark group, of all of the generations who have loved their music ā and of his freedom, however much remains.
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In April, the rapper accused in multimillion-dollar political conspiracies spanning two presidencies was convicted of 10 counts, including conspiracy and acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government, after a trial in Washington, D.C., federal court that saw testimony from the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio.
āSome of the lyrics, this art, is imitating my life right now,ā he reflects on Fugees' legacy and this tour, taking place 27 years after the release of the Grammy-award winning āThe Score,ā his rap trio's second, final, and culture-shaping album. āEspecially when I talk about feds and this and that.ā
The āMs. Lauryn Hill & Fugees: Miseducation of Lauryn Hill 25th Anniversary Tourā has dates scheduled through mid-December. Michel, who faces up to 20 years in prison on the top counts, doesn't have a sentencing date yet. But, he says, he was never concerned about being able to do the tour.
āI trust the process,ā Michel explains. He has a new attorney, Peter Zeidenberg, and is optimistic.
Last month, Michel argued in a motion for a new trial that, among other errors, his previous defense attorney used an āexperimentalā generative AI program to help write closing statements. In the closings, the attorney appeared to confuse key elements of the case and misattributed lyrics ā āEvery single day, every time I pray, I will be missing youā ā to the Fugees instead of Diddy, according to the motion for a new trial.
āObviously thereās been a little bit of progress, so weāll see what happens,ā Michel says.
Despite that run-in with artificial intelligence, though, he hasn't soured on the concept: The world needs to recognize the technology is in āits infancy stage,ā Michel says, and there's a long way to go. āIt's the future.ā
Outside his dressing room, the narrow hallways of the famed Inglewood venue are full of excited spectators made up of friends, family, fans ā including an ecstatic Tiffany Haddish. Wyclef Jeanās room quickly becomes the center of the party, with Drakeās āStarted from the Bottomā playing over a loudspeaker as he shows off his performing fit.
Far too often, reunions feel like cheap plays at nostalgia ā not so much a celebration of the great work that came a couple decades prior, but an attempt at capitalizing on collective memory. There is no such sentiment here. When Jean, the third member of the Fugees, thinks about the way these performances affect him, itās a homecoming ā and the result of many years of hard work.
āIf you ever created a band like in high school the first year of college, thatās what it feels like. So, like the Beatles, for example. Itās almost like you rehearse all your life through high school so you never have to rehearse again,ā he says. āAnd tonight is monumental, because the arena weāre playing here, this is (where) the early Lakers (played). And so thatās how I always explain the Fugees. You know, I said, itās like Showtime Lakers.ā
The Fugees' message is prescient, too ā Michel points out a song like āMask,ā and its resonance with members of a younger generation who have gone through the coronavirus pandemic.
āIt's almost like we prophesized a lot of things,ā he says.
So how does a group know when they've got some magic? That a reunion tour is truly special? Jean compares it to a mountain ā people don't see the ācombustionsā that formed it over years ā only āthe end result, which is beautiful," he says.
āAnd thatās sort of like how music is made," Jean says. "So, when you make music thatās vulnerable, whether it is Stevie Wonder, Earth, Wind & Fire, the Fugees, Nas' āIllmatic,ā 50 Cent's āGet Rich or Die Tryinā,ā itās going to always last forever."
Close to 10 p.m., Hill emerges. She is awarded a plaque for āThe Miseducation of Lauryn Hillā receiving diamond RIAA status; quotes from bell hooks appear on the screen behind her. In the first of many surprises, Nas appears on stage to perform āIf I Ruled the World (Imagine That).ā
Hill is joined by Jean and Michel, and it is as if no time had passed. Then Cypress Hill's B-Real comes out, as does Lil Wayne for āReady or Notā and āA Milli.ā
Afterward, fans pour out into the night. Nearby, rapper Travis Scott's show is wrapping up at SoFi Stadium. The two audiences weave into one in the street; here are the past, present, and future of hip-hop, intertwined.
