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Remember “Because I Got High,” Afroman‘s 2001 smash about failing to clean his room and graduate high school while managing to lose his wife and children and start sleeping on the sidewalk just because he, you know, got high? Some of you probably (cough) don’t, but that’s OK. About 13 years later, the Cali rapper has remixed his paean to the pitfalls of smoking weed for a new, worthy cause: marijuana legalization.
In partnership with green-friendly nonprofit lobbying organization Norml and the “Yelp of weed dispensaries,” Weedmaps, Afroman has given his favorite bud a facelift. This time, Afroman (born Joseph Edgar Foreman) sings about how smoking helped him clean his room, inspired him to go back to school and learn, and eased his glaucoma with “cannabis aroma.” Plus, if it’s legalized, he says, he won’t have to buy dime bags from “gangbangers shooting craps” anymore.
See more 12 Pivotal Moments in Pot Culture
“There’s a line about anxiety and Xanax and no longer needing to take prescription pills, and marijuana being a substitute for alcohol, money going to building schools in Colorado, funding drug treatment in Washington,” says Sabrina Fendrick, director of strategic partnerships at Norml. “Every single verse in this song is accurate and can be corroborated by research.”
Afroman said he had been in touch with Norml since 2006 or 2007. “They’ve been educating me and giving me information,” he tells Billboard. “I got on a conference call with Sabrina, who enlightened me about some things: how states benefit from money raised from it, and how Colorado and Washington have money for drug treatment. There’s hope now, so I’m intrigued. This is a free track for education, helping the legalization of marijuana.”
Indeed, public opinion on marijuana legalization seems to be shifting (aside from a few hiccups surrounding the potency of edibles). In November’s midterm elections, there are ballot initiatives to legalize pot in Alaska, Washington, D.C., and Oregon. “This [song] is taking advantage of the public tide in favor of it,” says Fendrick.
As for Weedmaps’ involvment, it’s decidedly nonpartisan. “It’s a spiritual thing,” says company CEO Justin Hartfield, who reached out to Afroman about six months ago with the remix idea. “We want people thinking differently about marijuana, in the creative sense and how people have harnessed it. Musicians throughout centuries have been making amazing art that pleases everyone.”
The remix also launches Elevated Inspirations, Weedmaps’ initiative that every month will see an artist (the first one will be Cherub) producing a song that shows how cannabis influences their creative process, including shots of them behind the scenes, smoking bongs in the studio FlyLo-style, etc. “All these artists use marijuana to inspire their own creativity,” says Hartfield. “We wanted to shed light on that creative process.”
Read more Washington State Issues First Licenses for Pot Retail Stores
For his part, Afroman believes this is “just a chance to write a remix that’ll help with the legalization of pot,” he says. The pot bard spent about 30 minutes on this version (the original allegedly took him only a few) and laid down live guitar tracks with his signature double-neck Gibson. The remix percolates with gentle guitar noodlings like vapor curling out from underneath a bathroom door. Though he’s said he regrets “damaging the process of marijuana” with his original, he doesn’t begrudge its massive success.
“I was a broke kid trying to write a hit that would get me into the music game and get me some money,” he says. “The original is good, it’s got a whole bunch of views on YouTube, but I wanted to write another song about what marijuana’s doing. [Marijuana] made me feel good, but I came to understand it helps economically, socially, everything.”
Whoa, dude.
Watch the video below.
This post originally appeared on Billboard.com.
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