Topless sensé être sur Detox. TI pose clairement en référence pour Dre et Nas fait un featuring. J'aime moyen le refrain...
Le CDQ dirty sans DJ est dispo.
Le CDQ dirty sans DJ est dispo.
Et si la noisette sort,je pense que ce sera plus de la créme de marron...Gi2les a écrit:genre on est en 2009 et il y'a des gens qui attendent encore cette album comme des écureuils attendent leurs noisettes?
"In a perfect world, I'm
shooting for a November or December release," Dre said in an interview.
"I've never set out to do that," says Dre, 43. "I just make the music
feel the way I want it to feel and I don't put it out until I'm totally
happy with it. Then it does what it does." (USA Today)
How did the recording sessions for “Relapse” differ from previous albums that you’d worked on?
Most of the time, me, Dre, Mark Elizondo and sometimes a guitar player
will just sit together and jam, and eventually we’ll come up with loops
and ideas. With Eminem,
he’d be constantly running in and out of the room and whenever he’d
finish recording his tracks, he’d let us listen. We usually stuck with
it. I was amazed by the level of complexity of the stuff he was
writing, even at the beginning stages.
Em’s a funny guy — he’d draw all kinds of pictures of crazy cartoons
and people flying and tape them to all the doors to keep things
lighthearted. He was just on a tear — every time he’d leave the room
he’d say something more mind-blowing. As a long-time fan, it was an
incredible experience.
Dre’s a notoriously tough critic in the studio. Is he a difficult boss
to satisfy? Does the competitive environment make you a better producer?
I don’t feel like I’m anywhere near his level, but just being around so
many talented people is exciting. It’s about trying to make the best
music I can. I imagine other people could get frustrated but I relish
the fact that I get a chance to work on such interesting material.
Dre’s got an insanely sharp ear. He’ll describe a drum sound to me and
work until we get it just right. It’s that diligence that makes him so
successful and critically acclaimed. I feel the pressure to deliver my
best every time. It’s not necessarily about being perfect or about
pleasing Dre. He’s all about creating the best and most fun environment
around. We try to keep it organic but at the same time we’re not going
to settle for a 7 either.
You guys have been finished with the “Relapse” album for several months. What are you working on now?
We’ve been working on 50 Cent’s “Before I Self Destruct" and "Detox."
I’ve also been slowly putting stuff together for my own group, GodBody.
But working with 50 and Dre have taken up a lot of time.
What’s the status with “Detox?”
There’s been a lot of progress. Every day we create more sounds and
[see] what decisions Dre makes. Whenever he’s ready to put something
out, we will. I think we have some great material, and he sounds
excellent on the microphone. In all likelihood, 50’s album will be next
to drop, then the second installment of “Relapse.”
Sonically, how does the music you’ve created for “Relapse” differ from what you’re creating for “Detox?”
Eminem’s sound is dark with big drums and a lot of space for him to
fill with rhymes. I think he can rhyme over anything but he had ideas
in his head where he was trying to come and create. I’d have to guess
what he wanted, and I knew that I couldn’t repeat. One day you’d create
things that were green, the next you’d have to create things that were
blue.
Judging from the records we’ve made for “Detox,” Dre wants things that
are more soulful. Eminem’s progressions and sounds tend to be
rock-oriented, while Dre’s influences are more rooted in R&B, funk,
and soul.
Source: LA Times
So many hip-hop fans are familiar with Stat Quo’s Shady/Aftermath history, and the controversy surrounding his overly-delayed project. To a label surrounded by the elite giants—the three-headed monster known as Eminem, Dr. Dre and 50 Cent—Stat came, he saw, and he seemingly failed to conquer. He sat frustrated for years waiting for his music to be brought to the world, to no avail.
Now, speaking from the heart about Eminem, Dr. Dre, Jimmy Iovine and everything far and in between, a humble (but true and transparent) Stat Quo opens up to share his side of the story with Jonathan Hay and Chad Kiser for this Dubcnn exclusive.
Without sacrificing his respect for those involved, Stat speaks candidly about his journey seeking the emancipation of his art, in what turned out to be an undoubtedly controversial conversation.
Dubcnn: Have you talked to Eminem or Dr. Dre since the falling out or whatever?
it wasn't a falling out, but no, I haven't talked to them. I have spoken to other artists and people at the label [Shady Records]. I think Em kind of expected me to be bitter about the whole situation, but when he was sick and I sent him a card, I think that kind of threw him for a loop. I ain't that kind of dude, this is a business and I understand that and I'm not going to sit around and be bitter, that’s just not my style. If they were talking shit about me it would be different, but it's cool and I fuck with them. We are cool from my understanding. If I see them out in the streets, it's all love, I’ll ask Em and Dre about their kids, and they would do the same…
Dubcnn: So when did you realize that nothing was going to happen and it was time for you to bounce? Was there a specific instance or event that made you realize that Stat Quo and Statlanta weren't going to come out through Shady/Aftermath?
You know what did it for me and made me realize that it wasn't going to work out was when Busta Rhymes album [The Big Bang] didn't sell a lot of records. I knew how much Dre put into that album, as far as time and production, and when it didn't sell great, I knew he was going to fall back into his shell and I was going to have to seek other means. But, that album didn't do well because it wasn't marketed properly. If you remember when Touch It and the Touch It Remix came out, there was a big controversy around Busta and he should have put his album out right then, if so, he probably sells half a million or so in the first week because the buzz would have been so crazy. What they did was wait too long, because from my understanding, it was taking Dre so long to get the shit mixed down and mastered and tight to where he was cool with it and, at that point, the buzz died down and the album didn't do that well.
Busta is one of my favorite rappers and that was one of his best albums ever, so he should have sold way more than that, but when they came with the I Love My Chic, the overall success wasn't what was anticipated then. I knew Dre was going to shut down and shit was going to get extra crazy. The Re-Up came and did well, like 2 million worldwide, and I got some confidence that maybe I was going to get a shot, but then I had a conversation with Em about how he wanted to put his record out and I heard Jimmy [Iovine] talking to Dre, Em, and 50 about how they wanted to put out their records, so at that point, I pretty much realized that I wasn't going to put out a record with them. From a business standpoint, it makes sense for Jimmy and them to put out a 50 cent, Eminem and Dr Dre record before you put out a Stat Quo record.
Dubcnn: Speaking on that, how correct is some of the public perception that Jimmy Iovine is fucking up Aftermath [Entertainment] and Shady [Records] by letting all those cats go like Rakim, Busta [Rhymes], Obie [Trice], you, and everybody else?
Jimmy is not fucking anything up. He is one of the few executives that actually has an ear. He knows the business and he can pick out a hit record. Jimmy is handcuffed just like the rest of us; he is at the mercy of Dre. Dre is going to put music out when Dre wants to put music out, if it is not perfect in his eyes, it's not coming out. People need to look at the position Jimmy is in, because he wants Dre to put out an album, too, from both a business and a fan standpoint. Then you got Em who puts out music, but he has a lot of personal issues in his life, like with Proof, who was my friend, too… so it's hard to only talk about music with all the personal issues going on. The label can only carry so many artists, so they almost had to let people go like Busta, and Obie, and myself. From a business standpoint, you can't carry all kinds of artists if their records aren't a priority for the label. The priority is Em, Dre, and 50, so it doesn't make sense for Stat Quo or any of those other guys to stay with the label. They pushed back the 50 record, so when is that coming out? From a label standpoint, when you go from like 9 to 10 million—even 25 million—down to 3 to 4 million records, that a big hit. Jimmy is waiting on Dre just like us; he said, “Aftermath is the greatest tragedy of all time.” He said that was when the [New England] Patriots were doing their thing, he said that Dre is like if Tom Brady decided that he didn't want to play on Sundays, only practice. Tom Brady is killing it and you're like, man, he is the best, why isn't he playing on Sundays and he's like, nah, I'm not going to do it, man, I'm just going to practice. Football sucks and Tom Brady is over here killing it, but he won't play in the game, ya know. From an executive standpoint, that shit got to eat you alive, ya know. I couldn't imagine being in Jimmy’s shoes. He isn't fucking anything up; he is dealing with shit like us. Dre said it to me "Stat I do shit when I want to do it and I've made music in this business to where I can live like that." So you have to respect that. He talks to people and sees people when he wants to. Dre is a very complicated man…
Dubcnn: When you hear that conversation, doesn’t that seem unfair because, yeah they have the massive sales history, but you and some other people have never had the chance to get that sales history yourself…
Yeah to me, my real album should have come out a year or maybe a year and a half after I signed. It would have sold ridiculously and I could have become part of that group, like we going to put the Stat album out… we going to put the Game album out, ya know, but we missed the boat. It was a wave and that wave isn't the same anymore. People like different shit now [because] hip-hop fans are so fickle and they change like the weather. 50 knew that shit and took advantage of it. His shit was hot, but it was like fire for what the fans were into at that time. Dre is about more than going platinum… With Dre, it’s more about being iconic with him, but what he doesn't understand is its always going to be iconic because it is him. He is the icon that puts out icons, so if he had put out a record at that time, it would have been colossal. Everyone gets their spurt. You remember when everything Ja Rule put out was a smash? Now, today, everything T-Pain and Akon drops is a smash. 5 years from now, you don't know who is going to be running the game, so you got to take advantage. Plies, everyone wants to talk shit about him, but he did what DMX did; he put out 2 records in a year and he is riding that wave and he knows whatever he puts out is going to be a smash. You have to ride that wave; they didn't ride that wave when it came to me and the other artists and it was a bad business move and we all missed out on a substantial amount of money. If I was just on Shady Records, I would have dropped my album I think, but when you put the dynamic of Dre in the equation, it's going to be dope, but who knows when it's going to get done.
Dubcnn: From a general perception, I thought for sure that after the verse you dropped on Eminem’s Encore album [“Spend Some Time”] that your album was going to be coming out shortly after…
It made sense, but Dre is one of those genius's that you will never understand – and I’m not saying it’s totally Dre’s fault. People might say, well Stat can't write a hit, but Stat can right good songs and we could have put out a great CD with all kinds of good songs on it, because we weren't selling the CDs then, we were selling the perception of Shady/Aftermath – the whole entity and brand. The precedent had already been set and all we had to do was stay in that lane; behind the Em albums and the Dre albums and 50s albums – just keep with that kind of music and it would have sold like crazy. You remember when Bad Boy was on their wave, and everything they made was selling like crazy? Everything that Puff put out was selling crazy, because it was all similar music and they were selling the vibe of Bad Boy Records and Puff made millions…but I guess that they are so rich, that a couple extra hundred don't mean nothing.
Dubcnn: I agree…
I told them going in the door, I said ya’ll got the game on lock, you got Dre and Cali, Em and the Midwest, 50 and New York, and I'm from the South. I'm from Atlanta and can you imagine them coming down south and rocking? They would shut it down; the whole state of Georgia, right on Peachtree in downtown Atlanta, but I guess they didn't see that. I'm still going to make it in this game and I'm still going to do my thing and I still got love for them and it's all going to come full circle…
Dubcnn: A lot of people speculate that Bishop Lamont might get dropped…
He leaked that Dre record and the rest of the label weren’t behind that record, and they didn't want him to put that song out, even though it was hot. The record didn't do anything because the rest of the label wasn't behind it. Dre didn't like it. I called Bishop when I heard that record and was like "yo that the shit" and I was pumped about it, but Dre obviously felt differently… so that record didn't get where it was supposed to go. When an artist comes out, everyone has to be 100% behind that artist and that project, or the project it is doomed to fail. Another reason I don't work there anymore is that the people don't want a Bishop Lamont album… They want Detox, Relapse and Before I Self Destruct. So the stockholders who want those albums and when the rich, I mean the billionaires in this game start to suffer, then they are not feeling that. They don't care about Stat Quo or Bishop or anything else, all they want is Eminem and Dre and that is it. The business side of me understands that, but the artistry part of me is upset. As a business person, I can only respect the move that is going to bring in more dollars, but I feel like it’s about more than money, so I had to split… its 90% business, 5% creative and 5% perception of the music. You're not buying the music, you’re buying the person. The shareholders want their money and they know that Eminem, 50 cent, and Dre will sell lots of records.
Dubcnn: Prior to you leaving, was there anything that you worked on, or any indication that you were going to still be on a part of any of those records?
I was supposed to be on all of them but 50's record…and I'm pretty sure now that I'm not going to be on any of the upcoming albums. But who knows, Dre might use some of the things that I wrote for the album, but I have no idea really. I don't have to lie anymore; I can be honest with people.