The Original West Coast Rydaz is back as WestCoastStyles.com. Covering all aspects of West Coast Culture through the eyes of the original West Coast Rydaz curators.
Brooklyn icon Big Daddy Kane was interviewed recently on The Breakfast Club with Charlamagne tha God, Angela Yee, and DJ Envy and discussed his early career battling Biz Markie, working with the late, great Prince on the “Batdance” song for the 1989 Batman movie soundtrack (before Warner Bros. Films had his verse removed), doing his new podcast Did I Ever Tell You The One About…, and much, much more.
Check out the Breakfast Club interview with Big Daddy Kane below:
The following is an unedited Q and A e-mail exchange between Mr. Todd Davis and Shock G from 2008 (part 2 of 3). For Part 1, click here
7). At what point did you decide that you wanted to pursue music on a professional basis??
It kinda just always was. I was voted “Most Talented” at my junior high school, was a paid radio DJ at 16 years old, and produced many artists around Tampa for hire at age 19. At age 20 I had a regular gig playing jazz solo piano at Carmines in Ybor City Tampa, and at Rough Riders, a bar near campus where I attended Hillsborough Community College. At HCC in 1982 & 83 I studied music theory under Jim Burge and piano under Patricia Trice.
I also played keys in Warren Brooks band the year he made the finals in the WTMP Battle of the Bands for a Polygram recording contract. We lost to Edith Langston & the Gospel Myths. (!!??) Gospel groups always won everything in Tampa, and it was all rigged that way. Another reason I skipped town, there was no contemporary music outlets down there back then.
8). How did you all first come together to form the group, and eventually ink a deal with Tommy Boy??
d.u. was just a concept band, a project. We had the idea before we actually had the full cast. I met Money-B through DJ-Fuze, who we asked to DJ for us at our first live show as d.u., a showcase show for Tommy-Boy. They had us opening up for Tone Loc who’s Wild Thing single was huge that year.
We had a 12inch single out doing pretty well, “Underwater Rimes”, and one day the buyer at the big Berkeley record store Rasputins (Darcia Dabney I think her name was) gave the Tommy Boy rep a copy of our record. She said to him.. “You guys have De La Soul, you’ll probably like this too” and gave him the record. Later they contacted us and said they wanna hear more stuff. The next demo consisted of “Doowutchyalike” and “The Way We Swing” which both later made it on to Sex Packets, and 2 other songs that didn’t make the album.
9). Where did the moniker, D.U., originally derive from??
We wanted something modern but deliberately vague, because we didn’t know what our sound or style was gonna be yet. We tried being Black Panther rappers but Public Enemy & X-Clan beat us to it. Then Jimi had an idea for us to be hippie rappers and rep the bays flower-child/peace & love history; but then De-La Soul dropped 3 Feet High & Rising.
So then we were like fuck it, let’s just do like P-Funk and do alittle bit of everything. We needed a name that represented the way the music was being made at the time, on all the new digital sequencing machines & samplers. As well as something that reflected the underground street nature of hip-hop at the time; it was still considered a fad that the industry was going thru, like disco or something. Most people thought rap wouldn’t last, even still in 1988, so we added “underground” to it.
10) a). As a songwriter, when you sit down to pen your rhymes, where do you draw your inspiration(s) from??
Love, life, laughter, the pool party last night, the new girl I just met, the funny joke a friend said that killed everybody in the room!
b). You are also a multi-instrumentalist — What all do, and can, you play??
These days, only keys well enough to say I play it. I gave up drums & turntables long ago, I leave it to the specialists now, like DJ NuStyles, he’s a wild dragon on the turns!
11). Let’s discuss your longevity in this business of music — What do you feel has been, and will continue to be, the key to your success?? And, what will keep sustaining you in this grueling industry??
As a musician, to simply make your living thru music is the true blessing, even if you’re just playing the bar or hotel down the street. Record deals and videos and budgets to make albums with are all icing on the cake. The top-40 people we see on TV & radio, they’re less than 1 percent of the artists surviving in the industry. You may see any of us sit in with any other of us.
I saw George Clinton do a blues onstage with Bonnie Raitt the country singer at Slims in San Francisco once. I caught Sly Stone with Billy Preston on piano in a tiny 75-seat theater in hollywood back in 87. At a d.u. show in Austin Texas recently, RZA walked out and grabbed the mic while I was on keys. Throughout d.u.’s heydey in the early nineties u may have spotted me sittin in on organ w/Eric Baker & his blues band at the Fifth Ammendment, a tiny jazz dive in Oakland. Erykah Badu jumped on drum-machine while me & Money-B improvised “I Get Around” during the grand finale at a Tupac birthday celebration in LA a few years back; she’s MURDER on the drums & percussion. She could’ve made it as just a drum programmer had she preferred to.
Speaking of Tupac, he can be seen playing congas onstage with us during our MTV-Raps performance of “No Nose Job” way after Juice and after his own album was out. He’s also featured in the Gold Money video on Saxophone acting out the horn parts in the song.
The singer L. Dubois who we featured on “And 2morrow” from the Tupac “Rose From Concrete; Volume 2” album, we had just met in the street on our way to the studio 2 days earlier. He was singing for spare change in the Santa Monica Promenade, but peep how good he was!
It’s all one language.
My favorite story of this kind happened at Woodstock 99. I was enjoying P-Funks performance from backstage, when this little kid rips the most amazing trumpet solo in the middle of Flashlight. By the end of the solo, he was just screaming notes out of it, the crowd was going insane. Afterwards he came backstage and I said “Wow, that was ridiculous. How long have u been on tour with them?” and he said..
I just met George last night in the hotel lobby. I told him I play for my school and he told me ta bring my horn”. The kid was like 14 years old.
Episode 2 of the Too Short‘s $hort Stories series, the West Coast pioneer details his favorite Eazy-E story from their time touring together on the Straight Outta Compton tour in 1989.
In the episode Short recounts the time they were traveling from the show on the freeway, and a fan pulled up beside them after recognizing Eazy-E in the passenger side of the van. To give the fan an “experience”, Eazy puts his gun out of the window of the van and fires shots in the air.
“Eazy-E, with no hesitation, rolled down the window, like to holla at homeboy, and just fires like six shots in the air. Scared the shit out that motherfucker,” recalls Too Short.
Check out episode 2 of $hort Stories below:
In the premiere episode of $hort Stories, the Oakland, California icon and Mount Westmore supergroup member Too Short shared a story about hanging out and partying with comedians Dave Chappelle and Katt Williams after one of Chapelle’s impromptu shows in Oakland.
Shortdog also mentioned how he and the actor/comedian are often mistaken for each other by fans. “People have come up to me and hit me with the, ‘Dave Chapelle!’, and I don’t say, no I’m Too Short, I just go along with it and say, ‘hey, what’s up?’. Just give them a good moment for Dave Chappelle. And he’s said that he’s done the same for me in return.”
Check out the premiere episode of $hort Stories below:
West Coast icon Ice Cube was recently a featured guest on multi-hyphenate filmmaker-comic book writer-podcaster Kevin Smith‘s SModcast to talk about a multitude of topics including what it feels like to be the voice of a generation, putting gold plaques up in his mother’s house and his parent’s reaction to his success, working on the Boyz n the Hood film and so much more.
Ice Cube shouts out Ice-T for taking West Coast hip-hop nationwide and breaking down the doors for N.W.A, and says of that, “Ice-T was going on a Dope Jam tour, so he was actually touring and taking West Coast hip-hop nationwide and softening the people up for N.W.A. So I think without Ice-T, N.W.A would have took a little longer to break.”
The two entertainment stars sing the intro to the Boogie Down Productions classic “Criminal Minded”, and Cube shares that Eazy-E was always playing that record.
Throughout the episode, Ice Cube shouts out other West Coast groups like Compton’s Most Wanted, DJ Quik, King T and others, while flashback footage is peppered like showing a young Ice Cube and Sir Jinx in the studio together
Check out Kevin Smith’s smodcast episode with Ice Cube below:
Former Death Row Records producer Curtis “Kurt Kobane” Couthon was featured on the latest Art of Dialogue show and detailed seeing Halle Berry around Can-Am Studios and sending love letters to former label owner to Suge Knight.
The multi-platinum producer also recounts making the “Bad Boy Killaz” track with a lost 2Pac verse.
Westcoast Styles doesn’t only represent the West Coast, we represent the entire western region. Today we have new music from the Southwest from rapper Polo Jordan. This track is called Dennis Rodman featuring Laq Jones & Cooley Sha.
New Uce Lee song which he co produced with WestsideWebb. This perfect LA bounce record also features some West Coast Legends Dom Kennedy, G Perico and Too $hort.