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Subject: "Rakim Is A Top MC, But He Ain’t No Joke As A Producer Either (swipe) " Previous topic | Next topic
obsidianchrysalis
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Mon Oct-28-19 02:17 AM

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"Rakim Is A Top MC, But He Ain’t No Joke As A Producer Either (swipe) "


  

          

OCTOBER 26, 2019 | PUBLISHED BY MS. BENZO

Rakim is widely revered as one of the greatest MCs in Hip-Hop history. However, as the lyrical legend continues to speak about his career in a new light, he may also deserve recognition as one of the culture’s great producers.

Earlier this week, Rakim stopped by HOT 97’s Ebro In The Morning to promote his new memoir, Sweat The Technique: Revelations On Creativity From The Lyrical Genius. Per usual, Rakim Allah dropped some gems. He touched on many aspects of his career, including time with Dr. Dre, his famous musical aunt Ruth Brown, and influence from Grandmaster Caz, Melle Mel, and Kool Moe Dee. Perhaps most notably, the Wyandanch, Long Island legend opened about his work behind the production boards.

Around the 28:00 mark, Ebro Darden asks Rakim about how his beat selection process works and how involved was he for every track he every rhymed on. The R states, “ Eric B. & Rakim catalog—I may have done 80% of the music myself. early years, I didn’t know how to sample. Peace to my man Patrick Adams, he was the engineer. He’s a big producer and songwriter, but I would go to the studio with a crate full of records. Pat’ looped the beat put this bassline on it, put these horns on it. Back then, I was grabbing samples from these different records. Luckily, Pat knew how to tune the samples. So if I put a horn on it, he made sure the horn was on key with the baseline. Earlier, I had Patrick Adams on that first album, and he facilitated a lot the music the right way.” Patrick Adams worked on Paid In Full and went on to work on 1988’s Follow The Leader.

The production credits on Eric B. & Rakim albums has been a subject of debate. Producers including Large Professor, 45 King, and the late Paul “C” McKasty are among the names said to be responsible, despite credits reverting to the group. In a recent Breakfast Club interview, Rakim credited Paul C. with teaching him things, and with producing “In The Ghetto.”

While speaking to Stretch Armstrong & Bobbito’s What’s Good last year about Paid in Full, Rakim described his input on the sounds. “At that point, you know, fresh out the street, fresh out the park, fresh out the basement parties and things of that nature. 1985, I was, you know, considered like, you know, a B-boy MC. I liked rhyming off of break-beats. A lot of the songs that we picked was joints I used to rhyme off in the park. Paid In Full, I used to rhyme off of Dennis Edwards’ all the time.”

At Ebro In The Morning, Rakim credited collaborator Pete Rock for his input on the God MC producing 1992’s “Juice (Know The Ledge).” At 37:00, Rakim recalls how, after viewing the crime-thriller, he was asked to do the title track to match the on-screen action. “I just seen , and I got the whole idea of what I just seen in my head. Maybe a week before that, I went shopping. I used to do my little record shopping and I would play my joints, listen to them, and then I would take the good ones, and put them at the front of the stack. So I get back to the crib and I know I got that stack waiting. I pulled the record out. First record.” Rakim, an avid Jazz fan since childhood, mimics Nat Adderley’s “Rise, Sally Rise” bassline. “I started looking around the room like, ‘this sh*t is too easy, man.’ took the record off looped the beat up. I had the SP12 in the crib, and you only get like 12 seconds . Pete Rock taught me how to manipulate it. Sample fast, and then slow it down. What up, Pete! I ain’t forget, kid,” Rakim salutes.

At 29:00, Rakim tells Ebro In The Morning about that Jazz foundation. He recalls, “My moms and pops would play a lot of Jazz in the crib. I noticed young that Jazz didn’t have to have words on it to give you a feeling. I always knew that music is supposed to feel. So when I was picking records, I would listen.” Rakim describes the different feelings he got from those records. If they were evocative, he’d sample them. “I always like writing to records that attracted me to it right away. Sometimes it wasn’t the popular choice that I guess was the universal sound. , I would pick abstract beats, that brought ‘the abstract’ Rakim out.”

In addition to rapping and producing, Rakim is a DJ. Back in 2016, Rakim showed off his DJ skills (embedded below) in a video paying homage to Jam Master Jay with DJ Hurricane. He also displayed his other competence at the Rock The Bells festival in 2010 during a few live shows.

  

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Rakim Is A Top MC, But He Ain’t No Joke As A Producer Either (swipe) [View all] , obsidianchrysalis, Mon Oct-28-19 02:17 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
Sooo what did Eric B do, exactly ?
Oct 28th 2019
1
RE: Sooo what did Eric B do, exactly ?
Oct 28th 2019
2
My only question is why is the Eric B and Rakim stuff much better?
Oct 28th 2019
3
because Premier, Pete Rock, Clark Kent are better....
Oct 28th 2019
4
      this is "out there" ?
Oct 28th 2019
5
           it's a white label from early 96..
Oct 28th 2019
6
he's also a great DJ, both in the booth and as a turntablist
Oct 28th 2019
7
on Dr.Dre
Oct 29th 2019
8
For all Dre's genius and contributions to hip hop, his career is ...
Oct 29th 2019
10
      Dre had Rakim & Last Emperor.. and fumbled both...
Oct 29th 2019
11
      wasn't Dre going to work with LL too?
Oct 30th 2019
12
      I believe so. Ugh.
Oct 30th 2019
14
      UGH I forgot he ruined Last Emperor. That may be the most egregious.
Oct 30th 2019
13
      Bishop Lamont basically broke it down a while back:.
Oct 30th 2019
15
           I get that, but then why sign those artists?
Nov 01st 2019
16
                This is what's so brutal.
Nov 01st 2019
17
                It’s not Dre. It’s Jimmy
Nov 01st 2019
18
                     Got any evidence for this or is this just your own speculation ?
Nov 01st 2019
19
RE: Rakim Is A Top MC, But He Ain’t No Joke As A Producer Either (swip...
Oct 29th 2019
9

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