Glenn Swagmire
11-02-2006, 01:40 PM
http://www.allhiphop.com/features/?ID=1607
Part 1 ...
Freekey Zeke: Balling Before Bail
By O'Deisel
Freekey Zeke's thoughts in jail sound nothing like a “One Love” letter. Instead, the Harlem Diplomat original is likely just days away from hitting the bricks, and his excitement shows. In between paying homage to Tupac and Biggie as well as George Bush and Saddam, Zeke retraces the movement from its humble beginnings, to its soaring heights.
After a 36-month sentence in a North Carolina prison, the walls are about to open up for a recording career that even the hardcore Dipset fans didn't get to hear much of. With the release forthcoming Book of Ezekiel a new chapter begins in a novel that Zeke believes should have closed a long time ago. Get to know one of Hip-Hop's most outspoken cast members, in Freekey Zeke.
AllHipHop.com: They say it's more money and more problems. Coming from humble beginnings and reaching success only to have it snatched from you along with your freedom had to be frustrating. How did you maintain?
Freekey Zekey: On the real to real, it was a constant struggle since ’97, when a n***a Killa [Cam’ron] rhymed for Biggie and we got on. Like it was ups and downs with Sony. Sony ain’t let us live the way we wanted. They didn’t understand gangsta music when they was supposed to, they was really on R&B s**t. So Killa’s s**t ain’t ride like how it was supposed to. But other than that, when we went in 1.4 million, I hit the streets. I did the street thing that’s why I’m locked up honestly.
So being successful and having it taken away it’s really… there’s no medium in the situation because I fell off a cause. Whenever you do something for a reason, like when troubled waters happen, it’s not too much of a problem in your heart because you know what you did is for a reason and when it becomes successful then you really can just praise up to it. So basically, being locked up over the situation is all good, you know what I mean?
AllHipHop.com: Being away a few years, and watching your peoples grow, do you ever wonder whether you will fit in the same way?
Freekey Zekey: Can it fit in? No homo. No Homo. I’m already in. Being that I’m gone, I have no reason to feel like an outcast to get back in. When I talk to my n***as, it feels like I just spoke to them yesterday, know what I’m sayin’? Juelz, the young Lil’ Hubbard, I call him the Lil’ Hubbard even though he got a little Lil’ Hubbard, but he Lil’ Hubbard. Jim, been with me since third grade, Killa, been with me since I ain’t know how to wipe my ass [to the potty training]. So being back with my n***as is nothing, you smell me? So no. Getting back with them it’s like they in the third lane and I put my blinkers on and got in the third lane with them, so it's on and poppin', smell me?
AllHipHop.com: Juelz did some great numbers. Jim Jones is probably surpassing what anyone ever expected of him as a recording artist. How does that play into the team dynamic?
Freekey Zekey: Everybody, everybody, everybody don’t like to take a chance with a street dude you know what I’m saying because of the fact that, n***as is scared of failure, but look at all the street n***as that prospered, you know what I’m saying? Shout out to Kevin Childs that’s the only one who I could really talk about who did his time like a G. But other than that, Jim, Juelz, Killa, Freek, all of us we did the same damn thing. Everybody is not gonna like… everybody love negativity, but they don’t want to take a chance on it. You smell me? So Jim, Juelz, Killa, and myself when I get out, everybody gonna be itchy to the situation, but that’s what rocks. N***as want to hear the truth. N***as want to hear reality so once you present that on wax and people hear that it’s not an air of fiction. It’s seriousness, and that’s what we present to the world. That’s why Dipset is a movement. But I don’t even really gotta answer that question because it speaks in our numbers. We’re all ballin’.
Part 1 ...
Freekey Zeke: Balling Before Bail
By O'Deisel
Freekey Zeke's thoughts in jail sound nothing like a “One Love” letter. Instead, the Harlem Diplomat original is likely just days away from hitting the bricks, and his excitement shows. In between paying homage to Tupac and Biggie as well as George Bush and Saddam, Zeke retraces the movement from its humble beginnings, to its soaring heights.
After a 36-month sentence in a North Carolina prison, the walls are about to open up for a recording career that even the hardcore Dipset fans didn't get to hear much of. With the release forthcoming Book of Ezekiel a new chapter begins in a novel that Zeke believes should have closed a long time ago. Get to know one of Hip-Hop's most outspoken cast members, in Freekey Zeke.
AllHipHop.com: They say it's more money and more problems. Coming from humble beginnings and reaching success only to have it snatched from you along with your freedom had to be frustrating. How did you maintain?
Freekey Zekey: On the real to real, it was a constant struggle since ’97, when a n***a Killa [Cam’ron] rhymed for Biggie and we got on. Like it was ups and downs with Sony. Sony ain’t let us live the way we wanted. They didn’t understand gangsta music when they was supposed to, they was really on R&B s**t. So Killa’s s**t ain’t ride like how it was supposed to. But other than that, when we went in 1.4 million, I hit the streets. I did the street thing that’s why I’m locked up honestly.
So being successful and having it taken away it’s really… there’s no medium in the situation because I fell off a cause. Whenever you do something for a reason, like when troubled waters happen, it’s not too much of a problem in your heart because you know what you did is for a reason and when it becomes successful then you really can just praise up to it. So basically, being locked up over the situation is all good, you know what I mean?
AllHipHop.com: Being away a few years, and watching your peoples grow, do you ever wonder whether you will fit in the same way?
Freekey Zekey: Can it fit in? No homo. No Homo. I’m already in. Being that I’m gone, I have no reason to feel like an outcast to get back in. When I talk to my n***as, it feels like I just spoke to them yesterday, know what I’m sayin’? Juelz, the young Lil’ Hubbard, I call him the Lil’ Hubbard even though he got a little Lil’ Hubbard, but he Lil’ Hubbard. Jim, been with me since third grade, Killa, been with me since I ain’t know how to wipe my ass [to the potty training]. So being back with my n***as is nothing, you smell me? So no. Getting back with them it’s like they in the third lane and I put my blinkers on and got in the third lane with them, so it's on and poppin', smell me?
AllHipHop.com: Juelz did some great numbers. Jim Jones is probably surpassing what anyone ever expected of him as a recording artist. How does that play into the team dynamic?
Freekey Zekey: Everybody, everybody, everybody don’t like to take a chance with a street dude you know what I’m saying because of the fact that, n***as is scared of failure, but look at all the street n***as that prospered, you know what I’m saying? Shout out to Kevin Childs that’s the only one who I could really talk about who did his time like a G. But other than that, Jim, Juelz, Killa, Freek, all of us we did the same damn thing. Everybody is not gonna like… everybody love negativity, but they don’t want to take a chance on it. You smell me? So Jim, Juelz, Killa, and myself when I get out, everybody gonna be itchy to the situation, but that’s what rocks. N***as want to hear the truth. N***as want to hear reality so once you present that on wax and people hear that it’s not an air of fiction. It’s seriousness, and that’s what we present to the world. That’s why Dipset is a movement. But I don’t even really gotta answer that question because it speaks in our numbers. We’re all ballin’.