Godson101
09-07-2003, 03:40 PM
Canibus
What can you take tell us about BlackMilc, and is that the next project you're working on?
Yeah, that's the next project I'm working on. It's started, it's just not completed. It's a hybrid group. I'm not the front man, I'm just part of the group, which is kinda...I'm excited about being part of a group, as opposed to being the front man. Because of the difference in the music, the type of angle the music is coming from, I don't want to let the cat out of the bag too soon. Particularly until I have a finished product to put out there. It's coming out of pretty much what the urban culture has become in America, as far as Rap music, Rock music, alternative, highs and lows of the sound, treble and bass and everything in between. In addition to the part I bring to the table, which is MC'ing from one of the elite artists. I consider myself at least one of the elite in terms of Rap music, you know. Not particularly in sales, moreso in lyrical skill.
Through your history, you've pretty much stolen the show anytime you featured on someone else's track, do you feel like this will provide you that same opportunity?
I've sorta strayed away from that competitiveness, getting in the booth with another artist in 96, 97, 98, all the way through 99, even up until 2000 when I released my second release, 2000 BC. The competitive nature of Hip Hop does come from B-Boys, B-Boys battling, DJ's on turntables, and turntablism. B-Boys breakdancing in the street, so forth and so on. Hip Hop sorta took that over with MC'ing, they started vying for attention on the microphone. I sorta strayed away from that only because I've matured musically, it's not so much about being the best on the song anymore, it's more about saying what I have to say. Bringing around my point of view, which is not really battle orientated at this point. My last release Rip the Jacker was a conceptual album, it dealt pretty much with concepts and the technique, and skill. Not so much anything that was confrontational.
Not confrontational, except for with yourself and your multiple personas...
Yeah, they're always in conflict. Because, musically there's so many different things I want to do on a record, and at times it all boils down to how hard you can be on a track, and other times it's not about being hard, it's about getting your point across. Just being artistic about it. At times I find myself, more now than ever, I sit down to write a rhyme to a track and I'm torn between which direction I want to go. And when there's nobody to compete against, I find myself competing against myself. That's where the alter egoes come into play. I really am just one person, I'm not pscyho here. I don't suffer from OPC here or anything, or MPD. (Laughs) It's something I created so it was tangible, so you could tangibly see the differences between the vigor that I have on a track, and then sometimes I be laid back, and then sometimes I'll be aggressive. Sometimes it'll be a bit of both. It's just to add color to the canvas.
Are the Horsemen still together as of now?
We recorded a full length album. At the moment, the music is still in limbo. We've pretty much gone our own ways. We were doing our own thing anyway, and we kinda got together for the benfit of the project. After the project was done, we split up and went our own ways again. I would like to see the music come out, I would like to see it released, but I really don't have the final say in that. But I will say that it's an incredible album and I'm sure it will be released one day, in the near future even. It's definitely timeless. If it was to come out five years from now, people who still listen to that type of Hip Hop, they won't be disappointed with the quality of it. The rhymes are top notch. I was rhyming with the other elite, Ras Kass, Killah Priest, Kurupt. Regardless of what they do in the future, they were in top form on that album.
Is there anyone you have planned to sign to Mic Club?
There are some artists that we're looking at signing to Mic Club. At the moment right now, we're still just looking. Me in particular, I'm like a perfectionist when it comes to the rhymes. Of course anybody who was to be on Mic Club would have to impress me in a way that I feel that they can take the foundation of what I have done, and my career, and expand on it. If you will, me at my very best and then some. That's what would be impressive to me. I guess any type of artist with that type of caliber of talent, would have to be an artist who can probably fucking do everything. Who can do anything and everything. I haven't found him yet.
Is it true that you recorded the acapellas for Rip the Jacker and Stoupe added the beats? And is that the usual process for you?
That was pretty much out of pocket, but Stoupe pulled it off. Originally, the way the RTJ album happened, we did Mic Club and track number 10 I think it was, Liberal Arts. That track, Stoupe produced and it featured Vinnie Paz from Jedi Mind Tricks. It was an incredible collaboration, but when I listen back to it, I didn't have time to correct it, but my vocals were a little bit off, because I rhymed directly on top of the beat. My timing on beat is impeccable, and I wasn't really pleased with the end product because it was off. The vocals were off. It was about a quarter beat or 1/8th slower than the track, and Stoupe and I spoke about it.
Chuck had introduced me to Stoupe originally, and Chuck proposed the idea of maybe having Stoupe produce a full length album. I liked what he did on Liberal Arts, and as long as he was able to synch the rhymes with the tracks that he was going to create, I would be totally cool about it. Stoupe and I sat down, we spoke about it. He took his time with the project and he did it, which is not an easy thing to do. To put my rhymes in-synch with a beat. If I give you an acapella, 9 out of 10 producers will synch it wrong because they can't keep up with the tempo of my rhyme, they don't know where my emphasis are on some words and syllables, they just get lost. Stoupe was able to pull it off for eleven tracks, which is very impressive.
Is it safe to assume that there will be future work with stoupe?
I don't know, who knows. I do think the project we did is a milestone for myself, I'm pleased with the end result. I'm sure with his future endeavours, he'll always remember this project. I guess if our paths cross again, I'm sure we'll be able to do something even more explosive than what we did this time.
Considering you just recorded the acapellas and it was out of your hands, was there any fear of bootlegging? Was that a big problem or concern, to basically release your acapellas to the free world?
I want to say that I've never been a...I might have said it in a rhyme or two, maybe even three, maybe a half a dozen rhymes, I might have said something to the effect that I hate bootleggers, or that I'll break their legs, fuck a bootlegger, so on. But really in all truth, I'm pretty much indifferent about bootlegging music, particularly because as an independent artist, if you take it back to the days before my record deal, the days before I had a chance to come out and put my poetry for the world. I would have loved to have listeners be able to download or burn my music. The Internet wasn't a device with the tools people have today to burn and copy music. But back then, I would have loved to have the Internet as a promotional tool. Now knowing between 40,000-70,000 downloads of various parts of Rip the Jacker were made, between the release and right now, I actually feel good about that. I think that's a good thing. I think it's good that someone wants the music bad enough to go burn it, regardless of whether or not it was done illegally, or if it was burned, or whatever. Who cares. The bottom line is the music gets out there, people hear it and they enjoy it.
When did the whole Rip the Jacker alias surface in your mind?
I was toying with the idea right around 2000. After 2000 BC, I wanted to make an album that wasn't as aggressive. I didn't know how to go about it. At the beginning of C: True Hollywood Stories, I had a guy speaking and he pretty much seperated the personalities. After that, I was able to release Mic Club which is Canibus, and RTJ which is Rip the Jacker. So I was able to seperate the aliases, and show how each alias is specific to the music that they produce. It was a necessary thing to start the triology off with CTHS.
Did you have the trilogy planned before CTHS, or did it just work out that way?
Well I had recorded some material and I was going to do a CTHS part 2, and I kinda scratched that idea. I wanted to make an album that was disconnected from CTHS in music quality, so that's how The Curriculum came about. And of course I was going to do something that was even more eccentric than The Curriculum, and that was RTJ. So yes I did plan to have follow-up albums, but I didn't know it was going to be a trilogy, I didn't know if it was going to be two albums, three, maybe four. I still have other material I didn't place on any of the albums. It just kinda worked itself out. That's how my career has been, you know, it works itself out.
What can you take tell us about BlackMilc, and is that the next project you're working on?
Yeah, that's the next project I'm working on. It's started, it's just not completed. It's a hybrid group. I'm not the front man, I'm just part of the group, which is kinda...I'm excited about being part of a group, as opposed to being the front man. Because of the difference in the music, the type of angle the music is coming from, I don't want to let the cat out of the bag too soon. Particularly until I have a finished product to put out there. It's coming out of pretty much what the urban culture has become in America, as far as Rap music, Rock music, alternative, highs and lows of the sound, treble and bass and everything in between. In addition to the part I bring to the table, which is MC'ing from one of the elite artists. I consider myself at least one of the elite in terms of Rap music, you know. Not particularly in sales, moreso in lyrical skill.
Through your history, you've pretty much stolen the show anytime you featured on someone else's track, do you feel like this will provide you that same opportunity?
I've sorta strayed away from that competitiveness, getting in the booth with another artist in 96, 97, 98, all the way through 99, even up until 2000 when I released my second release, 2000 BC. The competitive nature of Hip Hop does come from B-Boys, B-Boys battling, DJ's on turntables, and turntablism. B-Boys breakdancing in the street, so forth and so on. Hip Hop sorta took that over with MC'ing, they started vying for attention on the microphone. I sorta strayed away from that only because I've matured musically, it's not so much about being the best on the song anymore, it's more about saying what I have to say. Bringing around my point of view, which is not really battle orientated at this point. My last release Rip the Jacker was a conceptual album, it dealt pretty much with concepts and the technique, and skill. Not so much anything that was confrontational.
Not confrontational, except for with yourself and your multiple personas...
Yeah, they're always in conflict. Because, musically there's so many different things I want to do on a record, and at times it all boils down to how hard you can be on a track, and other times it's not about being hard, it's about getting your point across. Just being artistic about it. At times I find myself, more now than ever, I sit down to write a rhyme to a track and I'm torn between which direction I want to go. And when there's nobody to compete against, I find myself competing against myself. That's where the alter egoes come into play. I really am just one person, I'm not pscyho here. I don't suffer from OPC here or anything, or MPD. (Laughs) It's something I created so it was tangible, so you could tangibly see the differences between the vigor that I have on a track, and then sometimes I be laid back, and then sometimes I'll be aggressive. Sometimes it'll be a bit of both. It's just to add color to the canvas.
Are the Horsemen still together as of now?
We recorded a full length album. At the moment, the music is still in limbo. We've pretty much gone our own ways. We were doing our own thing anyway, and we kinda got together for the benfit of the project. After the project was done, we split up and went our own ways again. I would like to see the music come out, I would like to see it released, but I really don't have the final say in that. But I will say that it's an incredible album and I'm sure it will be released one day, in the near future even. It's definitely timeless. If it was to come out five years from now, people who still listen to that type of Hip Hop, they won't be disappointed with the quality of it. The rhymes are top notch. I was rhyming with the other elite, Ras Kass, Killah Priest, Kurupt. Regardless of what they do in the future, they were in top form on that album.
Is there anyone you have planned to sign to Mic Club?
There are some artists that we're looking at signing to Mic Club. At the moment right now, we're still just looking. Me in particular, I'm like a perfectionist when it comes to the rhymes. Of course anybody who was to be on Mic Club would have to impress me in a way that I feel that they can take the foundation of what I have done, and my career, and expand on it. If you will, me at my very best and then some. That's what would be impressive to me. I guess any type of artist with that type of caliber of talent, would have to be an artist who can probably fucking do everything. Who can do anything and everything. I haven't found him yet.
Is it true that you recorded the acapellas for Rip the Jacker and Stoupe added the beats? And is that the usual process for you?
That was pretty much out of pocket, but Stoupe pulled it off. Originally, the way the RTJ album happened, we did Mic Club and track number 10 I think it was, Liberal Arts. That track, Stoupe produced and it featured Vinnie Paz from Jedi Mind Tricks. It was an incredible collaboration, but when I listen back to it, I didn't have time to correct it, but my vocals were a little bit off, because I rhymed directly on top of the beat. My timing on beat is impeccable, and I wasn't really pleased with the end product because it was off. The vocals were off. It was about a quarter beat or 1/8th slower than the track, and Stoupe and I spoke about it.
Chuck had introduced me to Stoupe originally, and Chuck proposed the idea of maybe having Stoupe produce a full length album. I liked what he did on Liberal Arts, and as long as he was able to synch the rhymes with the tracks that he was going to create, I would be totally cool about it. Stoupe and I sat down, we spoke about it. He took his time with the project and he did it, which is not an easy thing to do. To put my rhymes in-synch with a beat. If I give you an acapella, 9 out of 10 producers will synch it wrong because they can't keep up with the tempo of my rhyme, they don't know where my emphasis are on some words and syllables, they just get lost. Stoupe was able to pull it off for eleven tracks, which is very impressive.
Is it safe to assume that there will be future work with stoupe?
I don't know, who knows. I do think the project we did is a milestone for myself, I'm pleased with the end result. I'm sure with his future endeavours, he'll always remember this project. I guess if our paths cross again, I'm sure we'll be able to do something even more explosive than what we did this time.
Considering you just recorded the acapellas and it was out of your hands, was there any fear of bootlegging? Was that a big problem or concern, to basically release your acapellas to the free world?
I want to say that I've never been a...I might have said it in a rhyme or two, maybe even three, maybe a half a dozen rhymes, I might have said something to the effect that I hate bootleggers, or that I'll break their legs, fuck a bootlegger, so on. But really in all truth, I'm pretty much indifferent about bootlegging music, particularly because as an independent artist, if you take it back to the days before my record deal, the days before I had a chance to come out and put my poetry for the world. I would have loved to have listeners be able to download or burn my music. The Internet wasn't a device with the tools people have today to burn and copy music. But back then, I would have loved to have the Internet as a promotional tool. Now knowing between 40,000-70,000 downloads of various parts of Rip the Jacker were made, between the release and right now, I actually feel good about that. I think that's a good thing. I think it's good that someone wants the music bad enough to go burn it, regardless of whether or not it was done illegally, or if it was burned, or whatever. Who cares. The bottom line is the music gets out there, people hear it and they enjoy it.
When did the whole Rip the Jacker alias surface in your mind?
I was toying with the idea right around 2000. After 2000 BC, I wanted to make an album that wasn't as aggressive. I didn't know how to go about it. At the beginning of C: True Hollywood Stories, I had a guy speaking and he pretty much seperated the personalities. After that, I was able to release Mic Club which is Canibus, and RTJ which is Rip the Jacker. So I was able to seperate the aliases, and show how each alias is specific to the music that they produce. It was a necessary thing to start the triology off with CTHS.
Did you have the trilogy planned before CTHS, or did it just work out that way?
Well I had recorded some material and I was going to do a CTHS part 2, and I kinda scratched that idea. I wanted to make an album that was disconnected from CTHS in music quality, so that's how The Curriculum came about. And of course I was going to do something that was even more eccentric than The Curriculum, and that was RTJ. So yes I did plan to have follow-up albums, but I didn't know it was going to be a trilogy, I didn't know if it was going to be two albums, three, maybe four. I still have other material I didn't place on any of the albums. It just kinda worked itself out. That's how my career has been, you know, it works itself out.