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MY INTERVIEW WITH ALLHIPHOP.COM
March 06, 2006 I have great respect for Allhiphop.com and heres my latest views
during a real blizzard of interviews during Black History Month 2006.
Chuck D: You're Gonna Get Yours
By Paine
IIn their independence, Public Enemy has released some outstanding
albums. Still,
according to some critics, those albums struggled to reach the
masses. For the last two
years, there has been talk of Public Enemy allowing their creative
vessels to be directed by
Bay Area legend, Paris in Rebirth of a Nation. This album, written
and produced by Paris,
features Public Enemy, dead prez, Immortal Technique, MC Ren, Kam,
and the Conscious
Daughters in one place. If ever there was an album that Conservative
White America would
try and stop, they should have attempted with this album. Consider it
an opportunity
missed.
Chuck D discusses his experience in making this album, with
AllHipHop.com. He reflects
on that distribution system that has made PE’s plans harder than
Chuck would hope. The
Strong Island icon also touches upon some issues from a recent
Elemental magazine
column – including why “Stop Snitchin’” is hurting us all. Suckas to
the side… Chuck D
speaks.
AllHipHop.com: It was interesting to me that on Rebirth of a Nation,
you have this song,
“Invisible Man”. Originally, those lyrics appeared as “I” on There’s
a Poison Goin’ On. Was it
your idea or Paris’ idea to revisit that? Why?
Chuck D: Paris renamed it “Invisible Man”. I think he looked into it,
and took it to the next
level. When I originally wrote it [as “I”], I wrote it as a story of
just a day walkin’ through
the hood. When I first wrote “I”, it was actually inspired off of
when I saw a video of Bruce
Springsteen [“Philadelphia”] walkin’ through Philadelphia. That’s as
simple as it was for
me.
AllHipHop.com: I just loved the opening lines, “I came from a place I
forgot / woke up in a
parking lot / far from a meal and a cot.” It means something
different each time.
Chuck D: That’s why we write songs. Sometimes they’ll make an
immediate impact,
sometimes they’ll be time capsules in themselves. I’m glad you dug
the song.
AllHipHop.com: On the stuff from this album, “Hard Rhymin’” with
Sister Souljah is that
classic Public Enemy sound. At one point in the song, you say that
young kids are probably
confusing the term ‘ghetto’ with the term ‘ignorance’. That said,
what does ‘ghetto’ mean
to you?
Chuck D: Number one: I’d like to clarify – I wrote no lyrics on this
album except for
“Invisible Man”, and that was the whole gift of the great
experimentation of the project.
What would it sound like to be actually [written for] and produced by
somebody you truly
admire from brick to mortar? But my take is that there is nothing
ever fabulous about the
ghetto, ‘cause the ghetto is forced upon you. Yes, maybe it’s making
sugar out of salt. But
to me, the “stay in the ghetto” mentality is to accept what the slave-
master has forced
upon you. That’s always been my belief. Maybe the world is the
ultimate ghetto? But let
yourself be exposed to all the [things] that the world has to offer
instead of saying [that
the ghetto] is only your world, and you can’t go no further. That’s
some bulls**t, for real.
AllHipHop.com: This album was supposed to be released a lot earlier –
like a year ago, the
campaign started. What was the hold up?
Chuck D: I have my own label [SlamJamz], and we also release Public
Enemy records all
around the world. We wanted to release three albums in a short period
of time. But in the
route, distribution has a bottom line of dictating to you what
they’re gonna take, as far as
a title from an artist. They’re only gonna take one [release] at a
time within a six month
window. [laughs] So, it wasn’t so much as what we wanted to do as
record labels, artists,
or creators – it’s what distribution dictates. I’ve worked very hard
to try and balance that
playing-field out. But I don’t have a wand that waves over that
world. At the end of the
day, I’m still using the same distributors that go to the same retail
shops which shows how
quite primitive that whole system is. We just released a record [New
Whirl Odor], and the
other record we’re releasing, How You Sell Soul to a Souless People
Who Sold Their Soul,
which is a real gem – that’s gonna wait till next year. I wanted to
release three albums in
the period of a year, like they used to do in the 60’s. Distribution
dictated that we spread
them. Ain’t that some s**t?
AllHipHop.com: Except, they did allow Nelly to release Sweat and Suit
on the same day last
year…
Chuck D: Yeah, well, he can release them on the same day. But in
essence, it’s the same
barcode numbers. Plus, it comes from a major. A major has a ruling
thumb on what their
gonna dictate to the retail audience. It’s a business that's unusual,
right?
AllHipHop.com: Now as far as New Whirl Odor, how have you perceived
the fan reaction
from that album so far?
Chuck D: Based upon performance or the recording?
AllHipHop.com: The recording.
Chuck D: [laughs] I don’t look at albums like – you drop an album and
wait for the first
month’s reaction. I think it’s a tragedy that they’ve turned the
recording industry into the
movie industry. That’s so ridiculous. Anything I kinda record and
write is always step one.
The next step, the main step is – can we perform those songs? If you
really don’t perform
a song, it’s just a song. When you perform a song, and it’s able to
have a part of you, then
it takes on another form of life. That’s one thing that Public Enemy
[can do]. We can do
concert tours with the U2’s or the Dilated Peoples. We can do it till
2026. [laughs] My thing
is – always make sure a performance is enjoyable. It’s the thing
that’s allowed us our
passport to the windows of the world. We deal with about 30
countries, and there’s
nothing sweeter than that.
AllHipHop.com: You pen a monthly column in Elemental magazine. In the
latest issue, you
wrote two pages on “What I Want to See From Hip-Hop in 2006”. In
particular, you address
your displeasure with the Stop Snitchin’ campaign. I urge people to
read the article, but
tell me, in a nutshell, why you feel that way…
Chuck D: What I’m sayin’ is – to make this even smaller than a
nutshell – is that I’m so
ticked off of smarter people havin’ to dumb themselves down to feel
comfortable with
themselves in society. It’s not a Black thing homie, it’s an American
thing. Americanism
encourages people not to be smart, not to figure out what’s really
goin’ on in the first
place. So when it comes down to it, to see college journalists
actually accept these aspects
in Hip-Hop just so they can feel like they’re down with it, or down
with the streets, this is
a ridiculous notion. At the end of the streets, are two industries –
jail and death, which are
highly profitable for everybody other than who comes up out of the
hood. [laughs] So I
think, if somebody’s smart, and they know better, than they should
say better. The whole
snitchin’ aspect – if your mom needs to get from one place to another
safely, how you
gonna actually say she don’t need no protection? If you can’t protect
her, who the hell can?
I just think a lot of these cats in Hip-Hop who know better, are so
hypocritical to the way
things are really supposed to be.
AllHipHop.com: What do you tell those people?
Chuck D: I would tell them that I don’t care how rough they say they
life is in America. I
deal with cats who are from Russia, and I ain’t never seen no hard
life as Russia. How will
people know if they don’t respect themselves? My job is also to give
as much respect to
them as possible. When I see wrong, I say, “That s**t’s wack, that’s
f**ked up.” Hip-Hop is
also known as the artform that points at s**t as being wack.
Snitchin’ came out of the
60’s, when you had revolutionaries who had the neighborhood in the
best interest, [as]
they were actually being disassembled by COINTELPRO. But if you don’t
know what
happened in the 60’s, and you don’t know COINTELPRO, and you just
lookin’ at snitchin’
as somebody who just rattin’ out on a drug-dealer who ain’t doing no
good for no f**kin’
body any God damned way, you’re grossly misunderstood - and Hip-Hop’s
not about that.
When it comes down to that criminal element, it affects Black people
first. They can say I’m
a racist, but that’s just the way it is. When I say I’m a ‘race man’,
it’s easy for people to run
away from me, or say, “Ah, I heard it before.” This ain’t a passing
trend, this is what it is.
I’mma die Black. That’s just the way it is. Society doesn’t need dumb
mothaf**kas actually
speaking for us - that needs to stop. The country already has a
village idiot at the top. We
don’t need that same attitude in Hip-Hop. Quote me on that.
AllHipHop.com: In the same column, you also said, “Rap albums need
decent liner notes
by good journalists.” Tell me why…
Chuck D: I think everything needs an interpretation – not to be
studied immediately. I take
it yourself, just like myself, can actually have a portal into
something we might not have
previously been into, based on the liner notes. I mean, if I’m
reading into some album by
Prestige that they happened to have graciously given us in CD form,
with the liner notes
included. That allows me to get into the psyche of the music – and
also get an idea of the
sense of the time that it was [recorded] in. I think that’s very
important, to squeeze in the
elements of what surrounded the musicianship with clear-cut
interpretations. I think that
Rap music now has a better chance of being enhanced by the liner
notes because what we
deal with is dealt with the written word. Having an interpretation by
some journalists who
have an idea of music history of Hip-Hop, can actually bring the best
out of an artist, and
explain the best out of an artist to somebody who might grossly be
misdirected just on
time [period] alone. People need to step away from anti-
intellectualism and
dumbassification. You always need a think-tank, and it doesn’t always
need to be for the
sake of money. Believe me, if these motherf**kers were so smart on
the money tip, then
they should go straight to Wall Street, and make they money that way.
This industry is
based on the communication and spreading of souls. Yes, it has a
profitable window
somewhere in the picture, but it is not the theme that we should look
and aspire to, and
[have it] be the reason that we do it.
http://www.allhiphop.com/features/?ID=1334
Mistachuck@rapstation.com
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