Interview with Madlib !

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sunrah
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Interview with Madlib !

Post by sunrah »

interview with madlib the bad kid ... this interview is pretty lengthy, but a good read... if you're a fan... :!:

Do you ever run into troubles with sample clearance? Nah, I'm not on no big label. We ain't no Def Jam. Somebody might pay attention, but not yet. And I don't sample no Rick James or shit like that.

But if you sell a beat to, say, Common or Busta, you're going to have to clear that, right?
They're going to have to clear it. But half of the time I can't even remember the record I sampled! When I make beats, I just pick a record up and go. A lot of times I don't even look at what it is.

& so on .. other Madlib projects :wink:
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sop
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Post by sop »

Acest interview nu ma pot obosi sa-l citesc deoarece e o prostie ce faci tu si in mare parte altii, te sfatuiesc pe tine si pe ceilalti sa renuntati sa mai umpleti forumul cu linkuri doar asa "ca sa ne facem Post-uri", daca ar fi sa ma pun o zi intreaga sa caut interviuri in prostie si sa umflu forumul cu asa ceva nu cred ca i-ar conveni nimanui, gaseste alte subiecte.

No offense :x
Gimme the Loot Gimme the Loot !
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sunrah
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Post by sunrah »

te contrazic, nu mi se pare deloc o prostie, poate ca multi nu au timp sa caute, sau nu stiu .. :wink: chiar nu vad de ce te`ar deranja aceste posturi :wink: parca ziceai la alt subiect sa punem linkuri..ca vrei sa vezi si tu.. una, alta..acum nu mai e bine ca facem asta .. ok
you just never know when you're living in a golden age.
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sop
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Post by sop »

in locul tau daca eram, la ce am scris eu nu mai postam nimic, eventual stergeam topicul.


nu ai cu ce sa te scoti
e o prostie mare

:x
Gimme the Loot Gimme the Loot !
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Deena
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Post by Deena »

Am o mare rugaminte pt toti cei care vor citi asta!
Incercati sa NU va mai "intepati" intre voi! Cred k este suficient lok pt toata lumea in HH & pe ACEST forum!
Imi place sa cred k suneti suficient de maturi & cu kapul pe umeri inkat sa intelegeti k fiecare are dreptul de a'si exprima o parere/opinie , DAR fara sa'l jigneska pe celalalt!
Sunteti liberi sa postati ONTOPIC!

PUNCT

:!: P.S. va multumesk de intelegere & invatati sa tolerati !Take care ppl! :)
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Deena
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Post by Deena »

asaaaa...si k sa fiu ONtopik :mrgreen: ...muzika pe care Madlib o face rupeeeeeee :lol:
Nu numai k DJ , dar si k producator (pt el & altii) e foarte bun!. . . parerea mea!
askultati'l pt k merita! :wink:
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Post by arigo »

video-interviu cu madlib in studio:

http://homepage.mac.com/hookieandbaba/s ... ow_nrk.wmv

interviu audio aici:

http://cgi.omroep.nl/cgi-bin/streams?/7 ... 0050404.rm
(derulati la 1h29')
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Post by arigo »

"The Quasimoto Mixtape" - Madlib on BBC's Giles Peterson Worldwide, May 1, 2005

Playlist:

Sun Ra ??€?Intro??€?
Budda Temple Meets Rock ??€?People??€? | Produced by Madlib
Frenza ??€?Yo-Yo Affair??€? | Produced by Madlib
Sun Ra ??€? Real Talk??€? (Jazz Records)
Quasimoto ??€?Seasons Change??€? (White Label) | Produced by Madlib
Kwanza ??€?Karma??€? (White Label)
Mark Murphy ??€?Slide??€? (White Label)
Madlib ??€?Raw Humps??€? Beats #23, 15, 30, 88, and 17 | Produced by Madlib
Young Jazz Rebels ??€?Kamala??€? (Stones Throw) | Produced by Madlib
Unknown ??€?Miss Kitty??€?
Unknown ??€?Deception??€?
Percee P ??€?The Untitled??€? aka ??€?Put It On The Line??€? (Stones Throw) | Produced by Madlib
Young Jazz Rebels ??€?Miss K??€? (Stones Throw) | Produced by Madlib
J Dilla ??€?Untitled??€? | Produced by J Dilla
Jaylib ??€?Take It Back??€? (aka ??€?The Unofficial??€?) | Produced by J Dilla
Unknown ??€?Secret Jazz Jems??€?
Herbie Hanncock ??€?Live Bootleg in France??€?
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Post by sunrah »

frumos.. frumos :mrgreen: :bow:
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Post by arigo »

Quasimoto in The New York Times May 19, 2005

Bay Area Rap World Takes In the Brash and the Eccentric

By KELEFA SANNEH

Two of the most exciting new CD's out of California could be described as underground hip-hop, though they have almost nothing else in common. And maybe that's reason enough not to describe them that way.

One is a new collaboration between a cultic Los Angeles producer called Madlib and an even more cultic rapper called Quasimoto - two proudly subterranean weirdo geniuses who are also, as it happens, the same person.

And then there's the thrilling new CD from Turf Talk, a hard-spitting rapper from Vallejo who takes no pride in his underground status. For him, the underground isn't a place to live, it's a place to leave.

Ever since the late 1990's, Madlib has been at the center of his own hip-hop subculture, releasing a series of dusty and dazed singles and albums. (His long r?©sum?© includes the acclaimed 2004 album "Madvillainy," a collaboration with MF Doom.) Listening to his mellow, beat-driven collages is like spending time with a pothead record-shop owner who keeps remembering something funkier or weirder or funnier that he wants you to hear.

In 2000, Madlib released "The Unseen" (Stones Throw), a free-associative album credited to Quasimoto, an id with a sped-up voice who's interested in nothing you can't spin or inhale. One track stopped halfway through so our hero could ask a clueless clerk, "Would you happen to have any, uh, Stanley Cowell, 1970's stuff?" Like his creator, Quasimoto is a record collector first, and everything else second.

Now comes the dizzying follow-up, "The Further Adventures of Lord Quas" (Stones Throw). It's even more disjointed and unpredictable than its predecessor, thanks in part to a series of Melvin Van Peebles samples. And throughout the album, Quasimoto delivers meter-busting lyrics full of inside jokes, nonsensical leaps. "Quasimoto, all around you like V.D.'s/Only the strong survive, so eat your Wheaties," he mumbles, apropos of nothing in particular, while riding a funk beat fit for a long-gone space age. While most rappers fight to hold your attention, Quasimoto can barely hold his own; he's always getting interrupted by skits and snippets, and he never seems to mind.

As you can imagine, Quasimoto isn't the kind of hip-hop star who appears in big-budget music videos, although there is a great low-budget one, which he made himself. It's a clip for "Rappcats Pt. 3" (found at www.rappcats.com), a track that pays tribute to pioneering rappers, famous and otherwise. For the video, he has painstakingly assembled snippets and photographs of every single one. "I take it back like L.O.N.S./Remember Daddy Fresh?/Or Maestro Fresh Wes?" he rhymes, and the faces go flickering by.

Listen to enough of this stuff and you might start hearing hip-hop the way Madlib hears it: as a collection of scratchy old records to be bent and borrowed, tweaked and transformed. His world is a place where hip-hop is history, and he has attracted lots of listeners and critics who take that notion literally. To be a Quasimoto fan you don't have to believe that mainstream hip-hop died in the early 1990's, but it certainly doesn't hurt. His grubby underground lair is, for those who want one, a refuge from the shiny gansgta rap that continues to dominate the pop charts.

So where does that leave Turf Talk? Not (yet) popular enough to join the mainstream, not dissident enough to be adopted by the underground, rappers like Turf Talk exist in limbo. In the booming Bay Area hip-hop scene, Turf Talk is a rising rapper, the man behind the regional hits "It's ah Slumper" and "Sav Out." But Turf Talk's most recent CD, "Turf Talk Brings the Hood Colabilation" (Sick Wid It), has earned only a fraction of the critical attention paid to Quasimoto's latest.

Turf Talk's cousin and mentor is E-40, a Vallejo hip-hop pioneer who has spent more than a decade perfecting his own idiosyncratic version of California gangsta rap: his warp-speed rhymes are full of huge, distended vowels bounded by hyper-enunciated plosives. And on his 2004 debut album, "The Street Novelist," Turf Talk showed that he had developed his own version of the Vallejo sound.

He has a high, pinched voice, less cartoonish than his cousin's and more ferocious. When he snarled, "Cookin' and cuttin', dumpin' and dumpin' on one/Figure-eightin' and skatin' through intersections," the rat-a-tat syllables made their own sort of sense. Whereas Quasimoto drifts back in time, Turf Talk rushes furiously forward, propelled by gleaming digital beats.

Bay Area hip-hop is enjoying an unexpected boom. And so, faced with fierce competition from hungry veterans (like Keak da Sneak and Celly Cel) and even hungrier newcomers (like Federation and the Frontline), Turf Talk wasted no time: six months after his debut, he has returned with "Hood Colabilation," featuring an hour of crazed computer music and rowdy trash-talking.

Like many rappers from his part of California, Turf Talk often multitracks his vocals so he can echo himself, which makes his lyrics sound at once clearer and woozier: "Can't rep nothing but the Vall-e-joe (Vall-e-joe!)/7-0-7, say it backwards, ho (say it backwards, ho!)." And in "Throw It in They Face Turf," he starts with a Q and A that Quasimoto might admire: "Why your face stay mugged up?/I'unno, prob'ly 'cause I'm intoxicated and all drugged up."

In magazines and newspapers, on blogs and message boards, "underground hip-hop" isn't usually a neutral description but a self-selecting club - one that's closed to uncouth neighborhood hustlers like Turf Talk.

And Turf Talk himself probably doesn't care: he's planning to come up from the basement as soon as possible, anyway. His cousin E-40 is to release his new album through Lil Jon's BME Recordings, and this fall Turf Talk plans to release his third CD, about a year after his first.

If Turf Talk succeeds, lots of people will wonder where on earth he came from. If he doesn't, most will never know he existed. But whatever happens, when Turf Talk's journey toward the mainstream (however long or short) is over, here's hoping that someone like Madlib is still around, obsessing over a new generation of old pioneers. The least Turf Talk deserves is a loving and deeply idiosyncratic collector, ready to recycle his weird old records into weird new ones.

sursa: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/19/arts/ ... nted=print
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Post by Chill Will »

offtopic : s-a deschis subiectul "INTERVIEWS" ...mutati subiectul acolo! :wink:
http://listen.radionomy.com/classic-rap.m3u Classic Rap radio 24/7 - 101% dopeness
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Post by arigo »

on topic, e deja deschis subiect madlib/quasimoto si cred ca e mai bine sa bagam aici tot ce e related ;)
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Post by sunrah »

aaaight :D.. Madlib chiar merita ceva mai aparte :wink:
you just never know when you're living in a golden age.
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Post by arigo »

brain killer
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Post by brain killer »

foarte tare :bow: am si eu clipul la rapcats si come on feet dar sa uit sigood morning sunshine! buna treaba cu mf doom c clipuri ai inafara d questions si mr. clean ?paC
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