Author Topic: Twista new interview!  (Read 492 times)

Myrealname

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Twista new interview!
« on: September 26, 2002, 09:49:49 PM »
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"Damon Brown: You have a serious connection to Chicago. How has living there influenced your music style as opposed to, say, being from New York?
Twista: By being central, we feel the vibe from every coast. We may feel east coast, then we'll feel the west, and then feel the south. It's like a mixture from everyone.

DB: I found that with music, especially hip-hop, where you're from influences you a lot.

T: Yeah, it's all about where I'm from. In the hood I had all kinds of influences: what the guys talk about, riding around the hood, going to the clubs, at the parties.

DB: I'm feeling your new single, "Tattoo (Remix)." Are you really feeling women with tatts more than those without?



"I think tattoos are sexy [...] if you see a tat, it's just something that can make you interested."

T: I think tattoos are sexy. It started as a group song, then we started rolling with it, but I definitely feel tattoos on women. I mean, guys in Chicago -- and I'm not sure if it's a Chicago thing or not -- but if you see a tat, it's just something that can make you interested. A woman can pass by, dressed normal or whatever, and can have a little of skin showing, but if that skin has ink on it, it's just gets your attention. Maybe it's something about women taking the pain under a needle {*laughing*}.
DB: Yeah, "Tattoo" is a pretty sexy song {*laughing*}. Can we expect a similar vibe throughout the whole album "Kamakazee" or will it be pretty varied?

T: Nah, it's definitely a mixture -- kind of an "Adrenaline Rush" kind of vibe, but more fresh. It's the Chicago sound, changed up.

DB: How has your music matured?

"I mean, what happened to niggaz that got styles? My flow's not only one way, but going fast and slow in different ways."

T: I finesse it a little bit more now. I'm older now, so I select my topics better. If I want to get grimy, I get it grimy, or if I want to get commercial, but not too commercial, then I can do it. I'm a style person. One person may say "I'm going to come more gangsta this time," and another may say "I'm going to change my voice." Me, I got styles. I mean, what happened to niggaz that got styles? My flow's not only one way, but going fast and slow in different ways.
DB: Now about the album: I was told Lil' Kim's doing a joint for your album, and vice versa. Can you tell me about that? Did you do it yet?

T: Yeah, it's already done. It's called "Thug Love." Yeah, that's my homegirl. I met her a lot of times, but I didn't get a chance to mess with her until now. That's a dope girl.

DB: Who else do you have on there?

T: Got Ludacris, got Eightball, got Too $hort, Freeway, and on the production side I got Jazze Pha, Kanye West, and Timbaland did a beat, too.

DB: Whoa. I guess you're going all out.

T: Trying to.

DB: So what type of audience do you want to listen to your upcoming album?

"I want the gangstas to say 'That's some hard street shit,' and at the same time, that regular white guy saying 'Wow, that's tight.'"

T: I'm really trying to tap into all audiences. When you first come out, you want homeboys to feel it and you're straight with that. But now, I want guys, women, and mainstream to feel it. I want them all. I mean, I want the gangstas to say "That's some hard street shit," and, at the same time, that regular white guy saying "Wow, that's tight."
DB: Word! {*laughing*} You've worked with major artists like Puffy and Usher. Who else would you like to do a collabo with?

T: I always wanted to get with OutKast.

DB: Who were your influences early in your career?

T: Really, it was the first rappers, like the Kurtis Blows, Grandmaster Flashes and stuff, but when I saw "Krush Groove" -- it was over. Actually, when I first heard "The Show," with Doug E. Fresh and Slick Rick, I knew I wanted to rap. And the Fat Boys, too. They were crazy, but that's what kicked it off.

DB: When you got started, were you in a cipher or was it more a sitting down with your notepad type of thing?

T: My little brother and a guy from down the street had our own thing. We called each other the "Cold Heart Boys." We was putting our little stuff together. I was beatboxing and doing the rhymes for the group, since they couldn't write. And saw that movie ["Krush Groove"], I was like "Shit man, let me start kicking shit on my porch."

DB: You've been in the game for a while, not like someone that just started in hip-hop, so I imagine you've got a bigger vision than the average Joe. Where do you see you and your group Legit Ballaz in five years?

« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 04:00:00 PM by 1034398800 »
 

Myrealname

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Re: Twista new interview!
« Reply #1 on: September 26, 2002, 09:50:10 PM »
"I want to really have a Legit Ballaz artist roster [...] and get each artist a major record deal."

T: I want to really have a Legit Ballaz artist roster, to be able to get out there and get each artist a major record deal. Trying to do the Cash Money thing.
DB: Now, do you plan on getting involved in producing beats or anything like that?

T: Not too much. I'm new to the making beats side, so I'm fiddling with keyboards and MP [samplers] and stuff, but I'm more focused on the actual production side. Actually, I've got a couple of fellas back home that I'm planning to do my thing with, more from a business standpoint.

« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 04:00:00 PM by 1034398800 »
 

Peter-5150

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Re: Twista new interview!
« Reply #2 on: September 27, 2002, 06:37:41 PM »
Quote
(rapreviews)

DB: Who were your influences early in your career?

T: Really, it was the first rappers, like the Kurtis Blows, Grandmaster Flashes and stuff, but when I saw "Krush Groove" -- it was over. Actually, when I first heard "The Show," with Doug E. Fresh and Slick Rick, I knew I wanted to rap. And the Fat Boys, too. They were crazy, but that's what kicked it off.




HAHA i remeber the Fat Boys. THey were cool. Thanks for postin up the interview.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 04:00:00 PM by 1034398800 »