9th Wonder Tells It Like It Is (Blasts R.Kelly & Others)

luvpussy

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Dunno if this was posted already but I didnt see it after searching for it.


AllHipHop.com: What was the first song or artist that inspired you to produce?

9th Wonder: “They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.)” by Pete Rock & CL Smooth. I saw the video first before I heard the song, and it’s just the whole atmosphere of the video. Then the classic horn break in the beginning. And Pete Rock’s whole vibe in the video. It made me think, “I’d like to produce for those dudes.” I thought I was going to go to law school since I was a history major, live a normal American life, but it just didn’t turn out that way. Now, here I am.

AllHipHop.com: It’s obvious that you’re an '80s cat. So, hypothetically speaking, if you could make the soundtrack to any '80s cartoon being made into a major motion picture, what would it be?

9th Wonder: Because Transformers is out now, I can’t say that. But then I heard Pharrell is making the soundtrack to Voltron, so that cancels that out. G.I. Joe, there we go. If they make that into a major motion picture, please call me up. Those were my top three favorite '80s cartoons.

AllHipHop.com: The South has really risen since you first stepped on the scene with God’s Stepson. Are you proud of the recognition that the South has been getting lately?

9th Wonder: I’m happy that Black people are making money, legally. I’m happy for that. Any Black man getting money, and as crooked as this industry is, and they ain’t out hurting nobody, I’m all for that; but the quality and the sound of it, I ain’t with none of that. I mean, I’m from the South, but I don’t get into that whole territory thing. I like good music, no matter where it comes from. I will champion good music before I champion a region any day.

And I try to look at it like this music isn’t made for me and my generation, it’s for these high school kids. But then I get concerned when 35 year-olds listen to the same stuff. And I’m analytical, so I start to look at that man’s life. My dad didn’t come sit down and listen to N.W.A. with me. He made me sit down and listen to his music, which helped my music and enriched my soul. That’s what’s missing today.

Now everything has slowed down, drastically, and everything is two and three syllables. [Lil' Boosie's] “Wipe Me Down,” [Hurricane Chris'] “Aye Baby,” [MIMS'] “This Is Why I’m Hot”... everything is just so simple. I ain’t got no problem with it, it just ain’t me.

And I’ve come to realize, as I grow older, that there’s more followers than leaders in this world. And I also feel like…you know how you feel like you’re alone? You’re in a party and all your peers are going crazy, and you’re standing around like “I don’t get it.” And you know they don’t really deep down like it, but that they just want to jump on the bandwagon? I want to be one of those people that stands up and says, “I don’t like it.” I also don’t think it’s carrying the tradition of Black music and teaching the kids. And not everyone is meant to teach, but just don’t ask me to play it in a party. I just can’t do it.

AllHipHop.com: People know you’re laid back, but they don’t know you’re really a family man, which I think is dope. How do you balance family life in an industry that seems to thrive on deteriorating households?

9th Wonder: I don’t get into the Hollywood stuff. For instance, me doing this interview…most times you have to go through five people to get to the person. I think that’s ridiculous. People do that to seem elite. I’m no into that. I’m from the South and that’s one thing I can say about the South, we grow up, go to college, get married, support our families, and we die. I still live that lifestyle; I just make beats for a living. But with my family, I leave 9th Wonder at the door.

It’s funny. People seem surprised that you aren’t an a**hole. Like, people always say I’m so cool when they meet me, and I’m thinking, “How am I supposed to be?” But my family comes first, and I just can’t see myself being Hollywood. I’d rather be like Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis than like Kanye [West], no offense to Kanye or anything. And I feel like if I can do that, I can still go into Wal-Mart and Best Buy, and have one or two people come up to me and say they like my music, instead of having people screaming anytime they see me. I don’t want that.

AllHipHop.com: The game right now is really bleak. It seems that everyone is struggling to stay afloat, and attaching themselves to anything that sounds hot to do so. If you could pick one artists who really needs your help right now, who would it be?

9th Wonder: Man, I don’t know. Umm, I’d have to say Lauryn Hill. We need Lauryn. Women need Lauryn. Umm, Heavy D. And yes, I said Heavy D. I really want old LL Cool J back.

AllHipHop.com: Yeah, he’s with G-Unit now.

9th Wonder: Yeah, he needs some guidance.

AllHipHop.com: [Laughs] You’ve been in the game for a minute, and have accomplished things that other producers strive for. Still, you seem to fly below the radar, while someone like Nitty makes one hot track and people are all over it. Do you ever feel pressure to adapt or conform to stay afloat?

9th Wonder: No, I don’t feel pressure because for some people, music is all that they have. For some people, its like “If I don’t do music, what the hell am I going to do?” Or like this imaginary building that people say they’re in; they will do whatever it takes to be in the building. Like “I’m in the building!” What is that? Me, I deejay. I spin, so I will always have a job. I teach college, that’s another avenue, so I will always have a job.

I started below the radar in this “underground” era, and use that term loosely. I did music just because, and I just started to get paid for it and that led to other things. So I think that there’s a difference between staying current and doing what’s hot. Like if you have dial up and you get a modem, that’s staying current. But having a [Dodge] Roadrunner and then going out and getting chromed out spinners, that’s doing what’s hot. Pharrell told me a while ago to always think six months ahead of the game, so when people are doing whatever they’re doing, you’re always working on something new, on a different level. I just try to do that.

AllHipHop.com: I feel like that’s a big issue right now-people trying to do what they think is hot. Like have you heard R. Kelly’s album?

9th Wonder: I think the R. Kelly album is an abomination of Black people. The zoo song- if that’s not the most ridiculous s**t. It really hurts me that Black people are going around playing that mess. Like one, you know the n***a is going around peeing on little girls, and past that, he is talking about monkeys and trees. If you support that you don’t even deserve to be Black no more. He wants to jump on records with all these young cats, damn T-Pain. He is supposed to lead not follow, and I think that only happens with Black music. That doesn’t happen with White music. Bon Jovi and U2 are going to play their jams that everybody knows, and everyone is going to go home and be happy.

I just think it’s a problem when you’re 36 years-old and sitting on the 106 & Park couch. I mean, I know that is the only medium sometimes, but look at the audience. Those kids are 14 and 15, screaming “I love you.” Something is wrong with that. I’d just rather appeal to my peers. If a 17 year-old likes me, it’s because they like my music. I’m not going to pander my music to suit them. Big ups to Omarion, he’s trying to do it. He’s trying to bring real music back for the younger generation. It’s hard getting a 33 year-old dude to buy Omarion’s album. But the album is hot.

AllHipHop.com: I wanted to talk to you about your new teaching career. You started teaching a Hip-Hop course at North Carolina Central, how is that going? What have the students been teaching you?

9th Wonder: The class is “Hip-Hop in Context” and it covers Hip-Hop from 1973 to 1997. We do that because we know the age bracket we’re dealing with doesn’t really know anything about those years. They may know up to '84 because of their parents. I bring turntables to class everyday so I can play the song that I’m talking about. Last year we had Dana Dane, Doug E. Fresh, Monie Love, DMC, Buckshot, Kurtis Blow and a few other people come by the class to talk or come to a panel. It’s cool. We are trying to bridge the gap and get to the youth before some White school gets their hands on it, and begins to take it away from us.

What I’ve learned from students is that they don’t view Hip-Hop the way we used to. [KRS-One's] “Black Cop” was a party song with a message. [Public Enemy's] “911 is A Joke” was a party song with a message. [Boogie Down Productions'] “Jimmy” was a party song but also taught you about safe sex. But now, if it’s a message, I got to be still and burn incense to listen to it. They think they can’t party to Common. They figure, “I need something I can party to, so I’m going to listen to something ignorant.”

And I also learned that its mainstream effects are different. I had to wait a week for Yo! MTV Raps to come on. Like, we starved for it. But now, Hip-Hop is everywhere, on the McDonald’s commercials, on the cell phones, everywhere.

AllHipHop.com: It's been said that you are no longer associated with the group Little Brother, is that true?

9th Wonder: Yes, it’s true, but that’s all I’m going to say about that.

AllHipHop.com: Okay. But you are still a part of the Justus League, right? Do you guys have anything on the platform right now?

9th Wonder: Yeah, we’re always working on something, whether it’s on the surface or not. The Little Brother album, Get Back, is coming out soon. I don’t know when.

Within the next year, I have five albums coming out. The Dream Merchant 2, it’s going to be a lot of cursing, umm, a lot of rap joints more so than R&B joints. But I'm doing another album called The Wonder Years that will probably be half and half. And that’s going to be an album where there’s no cursing. I do that because I’m 32 and I know there’s a lot of parents that have kids my kids’ age, and the recurring statement I get is, “Man I love to listen to your music, but I can't listen to it around my kids.” So that’s what I'm aiming for. It ain't gonna be a Christian album, but Tribe Called Quest’s first two albums didn’t have a lot of cursing on it, so I figure it can be done. Then Buckshot and I just finished The Formula and then Jean Grae’s Jeanius is coming out, that we did like three years ago. And then I’m doing an album with Murs entitled Sweet Lord, which has no cursing either. Then outside of that, I have an Erykah Badu single coming out, and people will hear that soon. And I hope that song really pushes me into the category I want to be in R&B, but with a bottom to it. Umm, I did a joint for Small World, an artist on DTP; Teedra Moses.

AllHipHop.com: In a previous interview with AllHipHop, you talked about how the mixtape game was getting old. How do you feel when talented cats like Kanye are jumping on the mixtape bandwagon?

9th Wonder: I think it goes back to trying to stay current. There’s power in mixtapes. I have a friend that owns a mixtape store, but he also sells vinyl. So I’m in there recording on wax sometimes, and it was just so many people who came in and said, “Do you have that T-Pain?" You think they want the album, but they want a mix cd of just random T-Pain songs. It’s crazy. It used to be the DJ Clue mixtape and The Doo Wop, those are the ones I remember, but now its like you can barely hear the song because there is so much yelling. So it’s just staying current.

Everyone’s so big on hood love, and the only thing that circulates in the hood is mixtapes. Whatever is recognized in the hood somehow trickles down to White people, which they often times hate to admit. Black people created everything, and people want our swag. So with that hood recognition, you’re hot. Although I must admit, I love Lil' Wayne.

AllHipHop.com: I like Lil' Wayne too, but he’s getting reckless with these mix tapes.

9th Wonder: I know, but he’s clever. He has incredible flow. His voice is dope, and he makes you laugh. So until Jay comes back, he’s the best rapper alive. I’m on his side. I’m not a fan of the “Fireman” and “Go DJ” [from DJ Khaled's album]; I’m just a fan of his style.

AllHipHop.com: So what’s up with a Lil' Wayne album?

9th Wonder: It’s funny you say that. I've been sending him beats and I’m like “Just do a whole mixtape with these beats. I don’t want no money. Just put it out how you put it out, n***a. Just give me production credit.” So that would be hot if he did that.

AllHipHop.com: Before I go, what’s up with Amy Winehouse? People say she thinks she’s Lauryn Hill. Do you like her?

9th Wonder: I love her. I love her album. Black people kill me. When a n***a does it, they don’t pay it no attention, but let a White person do it, everyone has a problem. Like, Robin Thicke had one of the best R&B albums out last year and people are hatin’ because he’s White. People think that I’m going to suffer because they ain’t making no good music, not gonna happen. I will bump the White people. So big ups to Amy Winehouse. [Laughs]
 
I think he contradicts himself when he says he's thinking 6 months ahead of the game but at the same time he's trying to bring the good old days back. And speaking of Kanye, his whole style is Kanye-minus the hit records. 9th is a nice producer and all, but calling people out while you have 0 hit records under your belt is not a good strategy for coming up in the game.
 
peterlongshort said:
I think he contradicts himself when he says he's thinking 6 months ahead of the game but at the same time he's trying to bring the good old days back. And speaking of Kanye, his whole style is Kanye-minus the hit records. 9th is a nice producer and all, but calling people out while you have 0 hit records under your belt is not a good strategy for coming up in the game.

I didn't see anything you mentioned in that interview. Where did he mention bringing the good old days back? He only said that he did not want to be a producer who only did whatever is hot at the time (current)...he wants to stay ahead of the curve.

Where in the article did he diss Kanye? He said that he didn't want the large image that Kanye has and still wants to remain approachable. Where's the diss?
 
Great fuckin read. Dude was droppin a lot of knowledge as far as the state of the recording industry. Especially how black people wanna hate on another talented artist just because they're white. I really believed I was the only one who thought R. Kelly’s album was hot garbage.

Mu’fuckas really need to read this whole article, because I keep hearing from a lot of y’all here on BGOL as well as other cats on myspace that there is just no good music out anymore. I wouldn’t drop Colin Powell on this thread if I wanted to.

Big-ups for this shit pimpin!!!

______________
4lxkwo8.jpg

"I don’t need a dollar-price to compete."
 
peterlongshort said:
I think he contradicts himself when he says he's thinking 6 months ahead of the game but at the same time he's trying to bring the good old days back. And speaking of Kanye, his whole style is Kanye-minus the hit records. 9th is a nice producer and all, but calling people out while you have 0 hit records under your belt is not a good strategy for coming up in the game.
Zero Hit records? 9th produced "Girl" for destiny's child. And how is his style Kanye? He sounds nothing like kanye, Let me guess because he samples all sample producers sound alike? You know nothing about production.
 
luvpussy,

Excellent post! I do not visit AllHipHop.com like I should and this is a great example of why I should be doing so. This cat called all his spades, spades and pulled no punches.

On a broader spectrum in response to white artist, yeah white people have f*cked us but now we have f*cked ourselves. That is called an enabler. Allowing white people to define blackness for you when it comes to entertainment confusing the hell out of us black people. We should have never been naive enough to let it happen.

Ok, back on task. Knowledge abound in this intierview. Community take notice.
 
Good read, and that Kelly album is trash... That zoo song and some others I care not to mention are proof that you can put anything out nowadays and sell.
 
goos post i wish he was still with little brother but i think they'll be allright since they are still with justus league
 
:wepraise: :wepraise: :wepraise: I love that he called R. Kelly out on his b.s!!! This interview is GREAT!!! It makes me realize that I too need to frequent allhiphop more frequently, and not just the rumors section...

And yes, we women do need Lauryn she is much needed!! in fact, i'm about to go listen to her unplugged cd right now!!!
 
eewwll said:
He had me into he said Lil' Wayne is the best rapper alive...
yeah then the fool said that omarion is trying to bring real music back WTF? hes just another talentless singer from a shitty boy band.
 
About dam time!!! This article is straight fire and to the point.

If anybody says Hip hop is fine, needs to be fuckin' arrested for high treason, cause you ain't a real hip hop fan.
 
peterlongshort said:
I think he contradicts himself when he says he's thinking 6 months ahead of the game but at the same time he's trying to bring the good old days back. And speaking of Kanye, his whole style is Kanye-minus the hit records. 9th is a nice producer and all, but calling people out while you have 0 hit records under your belt is not a good strategy for coming up in the game.


thats a lie dude people must have forgotten he had two songs on the last destinty child album "girl" is one of them ans as far as kayne they are different 9th finds the dope loops and then chops then into somthing else kayne will take the same loop and lace it with live players and turn into somthing else but both are dope in the same sense
 
theblast said:
I didn't see anything you mentioned in that interview. Where did he mention bringing the good old days back? He only said that he did not want to be a producer who only did whatever is hot at the time (current)...he wants to stay ahead of the curve.

Where in the article did he diss Kanye? He said that he didn't want the large image that Kanye has and still wants to remain approachable. Where's the diss?

CO-SIGN :yes:
 
shams said:
everyone isn't perfect.

good interview minus the lil wayne part.

yeah then the fool said that omarion is trying to bring real music back WTF? hes just another talentless singer from a shitty boy band.

Then ya'll neglect the part where he says that its for the kids. You arent suppose to like Omarion or Lil Wayne. I have just come to my peace with wayne. He is my favorite rapper with nothing to say (formerly Cam spot). But you take it for what it is.

But great read. I think he has a grammy too from a Mary J Blige song that he produced. My favorite current producer my cousin took his class at Central last semester said he is a super cornball though :lol:
 
peterlongshort said:
I think he contradicts himself when he says he's thinking 6 months ahead of the game but at the same time he's trying to bring the good old days back. And speaking of Kanye, his whole style is Kanye-minus the hit records. 9th is a nice producer and all, but calling people out while you have 0 hit records under your belt is not a good strategy for coming up in the game.

WRONG!!!

He produced Destiny's Child "Girl" and Usher and Alicia Key's "My Boo" Were they hits? Did they get lots and lots of airplay? Now go kill yourself.
 
phanatic said:
WRONG!!!

He produced Destiny's Child "Girl" and Usher and Alicia Key's "My Boo" Were they hits? Did they get lots and lots of airplay? Now go kill yourself.

9th didn't do "My Boo", don't know where you getting that from. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but when your in 9th's position and still on the comeup, I think he should chill with that. R Kelly is the most successful male R&B artist of the last 10-15 years, dude has alotta power in the game and could get 9th shut outta some opportunities. 9th has appeared on some commercially successful albums, but in the grand scheme of things he's not really popping like that, he should continue to do his thing on the low before trashing Kells.
 
ANYONE WHO THINKS 9TH WONDER IS BITIN KANYE'S STYLE IS A FUCKIN RETARD.
ANYONE WHO THINKS KANYE EVEN HAS A STYLE IS A FUCKIN RETARD.

9TH AND KANYE GOT THEIR STYLE FROM 2 MEN,
AND 2 MEN ONLY....


PeteRock2.jpg


AND,

premier_full.jpg


IF U DONT KNOW THESE CATS,
THEN U DONT KNOW HIP HOP.


"Spit like a beat box, the way the beat rocks
New version of Pete Rock."
Kanye West- Selfish
 
london said:
Powell.GIF


^^^^^
this guy wants to tell you something


I don't care for 9th too much. his material isn't always solid, I don't live off of fucking Little brother, and I can imagine he just left them becuase he became corporate. He started getting his head blown, but once you leave the niggas that supported you before anybody that didn't give a fuck about you(come on, nobody paid attention until Jay-Z gave him production credit) you're diggin yourself into a hole, reputation-wise. he's got mediocre shit 89.5 percent of the damn time. that Jigga stint wasn't even some personal shit, Jay-Z took his beat and didn't even work with him in person. the other people he's worked with are OK, but they aren't up there where Jigga is so he's another fad producer like the Trackmasters. he'll see his clientelle drop as soon as somebody copies him and know how to filter the samples better than him and won't annoy the artist about that "one time" verse drop that he adheres to. Skyzoo did it becuase he's hungry, I can imagine how much time he jay before he succumbed to his imperialism.

I can't fuck with his music, it's cool, but not nothign I'd listen to all day. it's annoying half the time. the mothafuckas that pick his tracks are out of their fucking minds or washed-up rappers. I'm over 30 and I can attest that most rappers that like his shit are either over 30................the funny shit is that he was trying to shop his besat to Lil' Wayne. He's not gon' fuck wit you for another ten years, nikka.
 
LeftyLuchini said:
ANYONE WHO THINKS 9TH WONDER IS BITIN KANYE'S STYLE IS A FUCKIN RETARD.
ANYONE WHO THINKS KANYE EVEN HAS A STYLE IS A FUCKIN RETARD.

9TH AND KANYE GOT THEIR STYLE FROM 2 MEN,
AND 2 MEN ONLY....


PeteRock2.jpg


AND,

premier_full.jpg


IF U DONT KNOW THESE CATS,
THEN U DONT KNOW HIP HOP.


"Spit like a beat box, the way the beat rocks
New version of Pete Rock."
Kanye West- Selfish

First I'll co sign this hard!!

But wow, this interview brought me out of strong lukerdom.
I mean strong lukerdom.
And it was because he said this:

"And I’ve come to realize, as I grow older, that there’s more followers than leaders in this world. And I also feel like…you know how you feel like you’re alone? You’re in a party and all your peers are going crazy, and you’re standing around like “I don’t get it.” And you know they don’t really deep down like it, but that they just want to jump on the bandwagon? I want to be one of those people that stands up and says, “I don’t like it.” I also don’t think it’s carrying the tradition of Black music and teaching the kids. And not everyone is meant to teach, but just don’t ask me to play it in a party. I just can’t do it."

I've been feeling like that for years about hip hop. You don't hear a lot of folks in the industry say it.

I'm saddened by the fact he is not with Little Brother anymore though(I was wondering why I didn't hear his stuff on the last Little Brother mixtape). But at least they still have Khrysis.

One more thing he said that had me nodding my head:

"9th Wonder: I really want old LL Cool J back.
AllHipHop.com: Yeah, he’s with G-Unit now.
9th Wonder: Yeah, he needs some guidance."


It's a damn shame whats happening to L.
 
Agallah005 said:
I don't care for 9th too much. his material isn't always solid, I don't live off of fucking Little brother, and I can imagine he just left them becuase he became corporate. He started getting his head blown, but once you leave the niggas that supported you before anybody that didn't give a fuck about you(come on, nobody paid attention until Jay-Z gave him production credit) you're diggin yourself into a hole, reputation-wise. he's got mediocre shit 89.5 percent of the damn time. that Jigga stint wasn't even some personal shit, Jay-Z took his beat and didn't even work with him in person. the other people he's worked with are OK, but they aren't up there where Jigga is so he's another fad producer like the Trackmasters. he'll see his clientelle drop as soon as somebody copies him and know how to filter the samples better than him and won't annoy the artist about that "one time" verse drop that he adheres to. Skyzoo did it becuase he's hungry, I can imagine how much time he jay before he succumbed to his imperialism.

I can't fuck with his music, it's cool, but not nothign I'd listen to all day. it's annoying half the time. the mothafuckas that pick his tracks are out of their fucking minds or washed-up rappers. I'm over 30 and I can attest that most rappers that like his shit are either over 30................the funny shit is that he was trying to shop his besat to Lil' Wayne. He's not gon' fuck wit you for another ten years, nikka.

I disagree with that. I mean you are entitled to your opinion but I disagree.

To say he is not going to be around in a couple of years is a stretch.
I will agree that some of his work is something to be desired of but I feel he is like an acquired taste. He reminds me of Alchemist in terms of how he handles his business. Had his style for years, it doesn't really sell well but he ain't changing for no one.

Also, the fact that he has produced two classic albums with Murs shows me that he can branch out, adapt to a different style of rhyme and still produce great work.

Eh....my $0.02.
 
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