bigted Posted May 17, 2010 Report Share Posted May 17, 2010 Kool G Rap was interviewed extensively about his rapping techniques for the book How to Rap: The Art and Science of the Hip-Hop MC. The following are previously unreleased highlights from that interview, covering his story-rap writing methods, writing to the beat, writing on a phone, recording, and his thoughts on today’s emcees. As the conversation did not appear in the book, author Paul Edwards exclusively provided HipHopDX with insights to the mind, method and techniques for a true master. Those interested should note: Kool G Rap also penned the Foreward to the increasingly popular book. Interview by Paul Edwards How to Rap: Do you have a set process when you’re writing lyrics? Kool G Rap: I wouldn’t really say there is a set process, it’s me just trying to go in that zone. I just try to zone out and let the beat tell me exactly what should be placed on it and let the beat give me the lyrics. Each track calls for something different, whether it’s a flow, whether it’s a subject matter, whatever it is. Some tracks call for you to be a little more hyper, some tracks call for you to fall back a little more and to just talk to them. How to Rap: Do you write everything down on paper? Kool G Rap: Now I don’t use paper, I type now. It took a long time to do that transformation, but I finally got the transformation to typing now. I just type in my phone, I don’t really type on the laptop or nothing like that because who’s gonna lug a big laptop around with them everywhere, so I just type in my [sharp] Sidekick. I can go to the studio or wherever, do a feature with somebody else and my phone is always gonna be there. Typing it [helps you play around with it more], because instead of crossing out, you’re going back and deleting words and replacing them. And it’s not sloppy, as opposed to writing—with typing it’s easy and simple and it’s not a bunch of cross-outs and scratches on the paper. How to Rap: Some people say they write in their head, do you think that’s a good way of writing? Kool G Rap: To me—I could do that, but it’d take time. I don’t even play like that because sometimes you don’t wanna forget one simple word. Sometimes it could be a three letter word, and if you use another word instead of that word it can make the whole line sound a lot more harder. Simple little words make a difference on how the line hits. So when you’re trying to write [in your] head, sometimes you might forget those little things like that, and that **** might not hit as hard. When you’re writing [on your phone or paper], you've got time to sit down and think about it and play with the words and replace one word for that word and be like, “Oh yeah, it hits better if I say this instead of that.” You’re not going to remember little small details like that when you’re just trying to store all that **** in your memory and do it real quick. I mean, a lot of times it can work too. A lot of times you can rhyme off the top of your head and get lucky and that **** just hit crazy. But when you’re a professional and you’re making records for masses of people to listen to, or masses of people to get into—your creativity, that’s something I wouldn’t play with. It’s hard enough writing it sometimes and getting as complex and as intricate as you wanna get. So trying to just do it in your head like that, I mean that’s crazy, unless you got a "Beautiful Mind" like my man Russell Crowe did in that movie. Or you some Rainman type dude or something where you can just remember all that **** like it’s nothing, but I don’t have that gift right there, so I don’t even play with it. How to Rap: When you write a story, do you figure out the whole plot on paper first, or do you come up with it as you’re going along? Kool G Rap: I do it as I’m going along. For my story rhymes I never really had like – “Okay, this is how I’ma start, this is what I’ll say in the middle to make it juicy,” or “I’ma end it with this.” I start from the first line, and I just go from there and the story just comes out. I think that’s the best way to do it, because if you sit there and study too much on how you gonna end it and all that it might not come out as dope. I don’t usually have the ending and how the story is going to go, I just do it as I go along. That way it keeps me hyped about it, because I’m seeing it form in front of my own eyes, I’m not knowing how it’s going to turn out, so it’s like I’m presenting myself with a movie too. How to Rap: When you do that, are there ever times when words that rhyme together will influence where the story is going to go? Kool G Rap: Nah, it’s gotta make sense, you can’t just put whatever comes next that rhymes, the story gotta be right too. You can’t just go from: “went to see Papi and picked up a key /… and now I’m by the tree,” nah, that **** gotta be put together beautifully. If it’s not, you’re not going to be credited as a good story rapper. It’ll still be as I go along, but once I start going in a certain direction, once I start writing the first few lines and it’s going in a certain direction, I’ma keep it that direction until it’s the right time to do a switch up and I’ll make it like scenes of a movie. How to Rap: How do you come up with the flow? Kool G Rap: When I first start listening to the track and I start zoning out, the track is basically telling me how to flow on it. Especially when I write the first maybe four lines or whatever, I know where I’m going with it as far as the flow. The flow is nothing but G Rap just staying with a flow that’s not dated, but is still G Rap at the same time. Because I could never flow with somebody else’s flow like that. And if I did, it might sound like somebody else’s flow, but these dudes was inspired by G Rap and so they took pieces of G Rap with them and became what they became. So what might sound like somebody else’s flow—nah, not really, that’s a part of G Rap and if we could go back and listen to each and every record I made you’ll probably hear those flows and **** that I did before. Somebody might have took a certain flow of mine and just based their whole style around that and just ran with it. I never just did one flow, I mean you hear a flow I did on "Men at Work" and you heard a different flow on "Road to the Riches," so it’s like I never just did only one flow. How to Rap: Does it take a long time to write raps with lots of complex multisyllable rhymes? Kool G Rap: It depends, sometimes if you’re really zoning and your wheels is turning, once you start with the first few, they just come to you. And not just **** that just rhyme, but **** that hit hard too, like oh my God, like you can’t even believe you thought of some ill **** like that. How to Rap: Do you ever practice just coming up with rhymes… not for a song, but just to practice rhyming? Kool G Rap: What I might do sometimes, if I’m not writing but my mind is still zoning, like sometimes once you open your mind it’s hard to stop it from ****ing going... like once you put yourself in that zone you can sit down and try to watch a movie, you can try to do anything else, but your wheels is gonna keep turning. So, you’ll be looking at a movie with your eyes but your mind is totally, totally different and sometimes **** will keep coming in your head. So sometimes when **** like that happen to me and I think of something crazy, I might write down that rhyme so I don’t forget that **** because that **** is crazy. And maybe I’ll put it in something, like one day when you’re writing something and it fits in then, you just throw it in. How to Rap: Do you usually write to the beat that you’re going to be using? Kool G Rap: In the early part of my career I would just write the rhymes with no tracks, no nothing and just place them on beats later. "Road to the Riches" I did like that, I did a lot of records like that, "Kool is Back" …all my early records I didn’t write to the tracks. I didn’t start really writing to tracks maybe until [Live and Let Die], some of the [Wanted Dead Or Alive] as well. "Talk Like Sex"—I wrote the first two verses with no track and then my man, Large Professor played that track for "Talk Like Sex" and I just started thinking what could go with this ****. I remembered I wrote that "Talk Like Sex" **** and it went with it perfect, so then I wrote the third verse to the track because now I know the direction. He gave me the track and the track was crazy so I wrote the third verse to the track. But by [Live and Let Die] I was writing everything to the tracks. How to Rap: Do you find it comes out better if you write to the track? Kool G Rap: No, because "Talk Like Sex" is a classic! It’s about what works with what. I love to write to the track now because I feel like I can tailor make the rhyme to the track a little more. How to Rap: When you record lyrics, do you have them memorized? Kool G Rap: No, a lot of times I read them, because when you first finish writing something you’re still excited over it. Even though you don’t have the memory of it down pat yet, you don’t have the flow all the way down pat, you still got that energy of it being fresh and new because it’s still new to you, you’re entertaining yourself when you hear how good you sound on the track, because it’s new to you. You don’t exactly know what’s coming next. So I like to record reading off the paper, it’s more fun if I read it. Even if I make some mistakes, I just do the punch-ins because I’m so charged up over this **** because it’s brand new, I’m amped up over it, I might have surprised myself with this particular verse or whatever. All that energy is still there, so you want to get that **** out while that energy is at peak level like that. Once you start to know something by heart it’s not at peak level no more, it might go down to an eight. So you might lose something… even though it’s still up there, it still sounds good, it’s still hitting hard, but you still lose a little something. They call it that ‘umph’, you lose that little ‘umph’ and I don’t want to lose that. How to Rap: Do you ever have something that looks great on paper but doesn’t work when you go to record it? Kool G Rap: Yeah, I’ve been through that, I’ve got something in my head and I think it’s going to come out sounding a certain way and then you go to lay it down and it don’t come out exactly how you imagined, I scratch those ****s, back to the drawing board, that’s how I do it, **** gotta come out perfect. If it don’t move me, then I don’t like to put it out there because it’s not even moving me. The first person I gotta entertain is me. How to Rap: Does everything you write get recorded? Kool G Rap: Some things I just keep in the bag like for freestyles, competition. If anyone ever call G Rap out in the streets, I got something – I got clips I’ma blaze at niggas. Those be the clips, like don’t get it ****ed up, I got something that’s gonna stop a ****ing horse so don’t play. If niggas come, man, they better come with some ****ing elephant guns because I’ma knock a ****ing horse on its side – real talk. How to Rap: Do you prefer recording or performing live? Kool G Rap: I’m more of a studio person, like that’s really my comfort zone because I love being in the studio, I love hearing the **** I’ve been keeping in my head materialize, like it fascinates me. I love just sitting there and being creative and shooting ideas back and forth with the engineer or producer or whatever to make something come out amazing. How to Rap: What do you think about today’s emcees compared to older emcees? Kool G Rap: The era I’m from, everybody strived to stand out and be their own person and to have their own character and have their own image. It’s like you didn’t wanna come out and be another Chuck D, you didn’t wanna come out and be another KRS-One. You wanted to be as good as those rappers but you wanted to be you though. But nowadays so many people are like trying to be the same. Somebody gonna want to be T.I., somebody gonna want to be Jay-Z, or somebody gonna want to be 50 Cent, but you can’t knock people [trying to be like other people] sometimes, because these are very credible, influential rappers. But when it’s on a mass scale, when everybody’s sounding the same then that’s when the music gets ****ed up, because it’s like you’re buying the same **** over and over again, just different pitch tones and voices and **** like that. It’s not only the rappers trying to be another rapper, he got the same producers, so it’s like you hear the same music and you hear the same song over and over again. As opposed to [in the past when] the same people that love Rakim also love G Rap and vice versa, but G Rap and Rakim was totally different. Same people that love G Rap, love Big Daddy Kane, love KRS-One, love Chuck D, love EPMD… but nobody can say, yo, their **** sound all the same. So that’s how the rappers today differ from the rappers in the golden era of Hip Hop – there’s less variety, it’s [mostly] the same type of **** over and over again, just different groups. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bigted Posted May 20, 2010 Author Report Share Posted May 20, 2010 I got some more info on this book, I'm gonna get this book and read it as soon as I can: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Rap Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VIsqo Posted May 21, 2010 Report Share Posted May 21, 2010 I think I'll get it too.. Sounds really interesting! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bigted Posted May 22, 2010 Author Report Share Posted May 22, 2010 These are the tracks mentioned in How to Rap, quite an impressive list, too bad there's no JJFP tracks mentioned 'cause I'd like to know how songs like "Summertime" and "Brand New Funk" were created: pg. xi - Jaz-O featuring Jay-Z - Hawaiian Sophie pg. xi - Stetsasonic - Talkin’ All That Jazz pg. 9 - Boogie Down Productions (KRS-One) - Poetry pg. 15 - Cannibal Ox - The F-Word pg. 20 - Black Eyed Peas - My Humps, Where Is the Love pg. 21 - Nelly - Hot in Herre, Shake Ya Tailfeather, Party People pg. 24 - Pharoahe Monch (Organized Konfusion) - Who Stole My Last Piece of Chicken?, Fudge Pudge, My Life, Oh No, Agent Orange, Hypnotical Gases, Rape, Trilogy pg. 26 - Eric B. & Rakim - No Omega pg. 30 - Lil Wayne - Dr. Carter pg. 30 - Blackalicious - Alphabet Aerobics pg. 30 - Papoose - Alphabetical Slaughter pg. 30 - Nas - Rewind pg. 32-33 - Lateef (Latyrx) - Storm Warning pg. 33 - Wordsworth - Trust pg. 34 - Slick Rick - Indian Girl, La Di Da Di pg. 35 - Kool G Rap - A Thug’s Love Story pg. 37 - Schoolly D - Saturday Night pg. 38 - Pharcyde - Ya Mama pg. 38 - Eminem - Rain Man pg. 39 - Slick Rick - Indian Girl pg. 39 - 50 Cent - Window Shopper pg. 43 - GZA featuring Killah Priest, Ghostface Killah, RZA - 4th Chamber pg. 44 - Geto Boys - Mind Playing Tricks on Me pg. 45 - Blackalicious - Clockwork pg. 45 - Chino XL - No Complex pg. 45 - Masta Ace - Acknowledge pg. 45 - M.O.P. - Cold as Ice pg. 46 - Blackalicious - Clockwork pg. 46 - Master P - Hot Boys and Girls pg. 46-47 - Jedi Mind Tricks - Uncommon Valor: A Vietnam Story pg. 47 - 2Pac - Me and My Girlfriend pg. 49 - E-40 - Tell Me When to Go pg. 49 - N.O.R.E. - Oh No pg. 49 - Snoop Dogg - Drop It Like It’s Hot pg. 56 - R.A. the Rugged Man - Black and White pg. 56-57 - De La Soul featuring Pharoahe Monch - Ghost Weed #1 pg. 58 - Heltah Skeltah, Canibus, Ras Kass - Uni-4-Orm pg. 65 - Jay-Z - Money, Cash, Hoes pg. 66 - Kool G Rap - Men at Work, Road to the Riches pg. 68-73 - Pharcyde - Drop pg. 75 - N.O.R.E. - Superthug pg. 75 - Blackalicious - One of a Kind pg. 79 - Clipse - Keys Open Doors pg. 79 - O.C. - Time’s Up pg. 83 - Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five (Melle Mel) - The Message pg. 84 - Madvillain - America’s Most Blunted pg. 85 - Eminem - Lose Yourself pg. 86 - Dr. Dre featuring Snoop Dogg - Dre Day pg. 87 - Kool G Rap - A Thug’s Love Story pg. 87 - Wu-Tang Clan - Triumph pg. 89 - Lady of Rage - Unfucwitable pg. 90 - Dr. Dre featuring Snoop Dogg - Nuthin’ but a G Thang pg. 91 - Jay-Z - 22 Twos pg. 97 - Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five (Melle Mel) - The Message pg. 97 - Eric B. & Rakim - Eric B. Is President pg. 99 - Beastie Boys - Shadrach pg. 100 - The Game - Put You on the Game pg. 101 - Public Enemy - Bring the Noise pg. 101 - KRS-One - MCs Act Like They Don’t Know pg. 101 - Pharoahe Monch - Simon Says pg. 103 - Busta Rhymes - Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See pg. 103 - Sway & King Tech - The Anthem pg. 103-104 - Outkast featuring B-Real - Xplosion pg. 104-105 - Run DMC - Sucker MCs pg. 105 - Frankie Cutlass featuring Kool G Rap, Mobb Deep, M.O.P. - Know Da Game pg. 107 - LL Cool J - I Can’t Live Without My Radio pg. 107 - Eminem - Yellow Brick Road pg. 107-108 - Wu-Tang Clan - Shame on a Nigga pg. 108 - Nas - N.Y. State of Mind pg. 108-109 - Notorious B.I.G. - Ready to Die pg. 110 - Redman - Rated R, Green Island, Redman Meets Reggie Noble, Tonight’s Da Night Remix pg. 116 - 117 - Pharcyde - Drop pg. 119-120 - Gift of Gab - Rat Race pg. 120 - Busta Rhymes - Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See pg. 120 - D12 (Eminem) - Git Up pg. 120 - Tech N9ne - Killer pg. 121 - Big Daddy Kane - Set It Off pg. 122-123 - Das EFX - Mic Checka pg. 124 - Tech N9ne - Welcome to the Midwest, Be Warned pg. 124 - Twista - Mista Tung Twista pg. 126 - Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five (Melle Mel) - The Message pg. 127 - Blackalicious (Gift of Gab) - Swan Lake pg. 129 - Jay-Z - 22 Twos pg. 129 - Slick Rick - I Own America pg. 129 - Eminem - Yellow Brick Road pg. 129 - Lady of Rage - Get with Da Wickedness (Flow Like That) pg. 129 - Mystikal - Danger, Shake Ya Ass pg. 130 - Wu-Tang Clan (GZA) - Clan in Da Front pg. 130 - 2Pac - Dear Mama pg. 136 - Ill Bill - The Anatomy of a School Shooting pg. 137-138 - Jedi Mind Tricks - Uncommon Valor: A Vietnam Story pg. 138 - Blackalicious (Gift of Gab) - Chemical Calisthenics pg. 158 - Immortal Technique - Bin Laden, You Never Know, Dance with the Devil, Caught in the Hustle pg. 158 - 50 Cent - In Da Club pg. 158 - Cypress Hill - Insane in the Brain, Rock Superstar, Dr Greenthumb pg. 159 - Tech N9ne - The Rain pg. 159 - Schoolly D - Aqua Teen Hunger Force theme song pg. 159 - Public Enemy - Harder Than You Think pg. 160 - O.C. - Time’s Up pg. 160 - Pharoahe Monch (Organized Konfusion) - Thirteen pg. 162-163 - MC Serch (3rd Bass) - Pop Goes the Weasel, Daily Commute, Steppin’ to the AM, Wordz of Wisdom, Back to the Grill pg. 168 - A Tribe Called Quest - Excursions pg. 169 - Digital Underground featuring 2Pac - Same Song pg. 169 - Digital Underground - Kiss You Back pg. 169 - 2Pac featuring Digital Underground - I Get Around pg. 171 - Schoolly D - Gangsta Boogie pg. 171 - The Game - Compton pg. 171-172 - Digital Underground - Humpty Dance, Freaks of the Industry, Doowutchyalike pg. 173 - Killah Priest - Heavy Mental pg. 175 - Dilated Peoples - Worst Comes to Worst pg. 176 - Lady of Rage - Unfucwitable pg. 186-187 - Wu-Tang Clan - Triumph pg. 188 - Dead Prez - D.O.W.N. pg. 188 - Jay-Z - Hardknock Life (Ghetto Anthem) pg. 188 - Ludacris - Get Back pg. 188 - Nas - One Love pg. 189 - Eric B. & Rakim - No Omega pg. 189 - Slick Rick - Children’s Story pg. 189 - Aesop Rock - None Shall Pass pg. 190 - Pharoahe Monch - Simon Says pg. 192 - Big Noyd - Things Done Changed pg. 192 - People Under the Stairs - Acid Raindrops pg. 193 - C-Murder featuring Akon - One False Move pg. 198 - Clipse - Grindin pg. 205 - Das EFX - They Want EFX pg. 205 - Black Eyed Peas - Where Is the Love pg. 205 - Twista featuring Kanye West and Jamie Foxx - Slow Jamz pg. 206 - Souls of Mischief - 93 Til Infinity pg. 206 - Pharoahe Monch - Simon Says pg. 206 - LL Cool J - I Can’t Live Without My Radio pg. 206-207 - Twista - Overnight Celebrity, Girl Tonite pg. 207 - Cypress Hill - Insane in the Brain, Rock Superstar pg. 207-208 - Devin the Dude featuring Snoop Dogg and Andre 3000 - What a Job pg. 208 - Dilated Peoples - Worst Comes to Worst pg. 208-209 - O.C. - Time’s Up pg. 212 - 2Pac featuring Digital Underground - I Get Around pg. 212 - 2Pac - So Many Tears pg. 212-213 - Digital Underground - Humpty Dance, Doowutchyalike pg. 213 - Digital Underground featuring 2Pac - Same Song pg. 215 - Pharcyde - Officer, Ya Mama pg. 216 - Brand Nubian - Slow Down pg. 218 - Beastie Boys - Paul Revere pg. 218-219 - Latyrx - Latyrx pg. 221 - A Tribe Called Quest - Scenario pg. 221 - Marley Marl - The Symphony pg. 221 - Wu-Tang Clan - Triumph pg. 221 - The Game - One Blood (Remix) pg. 221 - Sway & King Tech - The Anthem pg. 223 - Eminem featuring Bobby Creekwater, Obie Trice, Stat Quo, Cashis - We’re Back pg. 225 - UGK featuring Big Daddy Kane, Kool G Rap - Next Up pg. 229 - Dr. Dre - Let Me Ride pg. 230-231 - 2Pac featuring Digital Underground - I Get Around pg. 233 - Sheek Louch - Good Love pg. 236 - Twista - Overnight Celebrity, Lavish pg. 240 - Boogie Down Productions (KRS-One) - Breath Control, Breath Control II pg. 240-241 - Papoose - Alphabetical Slaughter pg. 249 - UGK - Murder pg. 250 - Kool Moe Dee - Wild, Wild West pg. 251 - Arrested Development - Tennessee pg. 252 - Arrested Development - Raining Revolution pg. 253 - Slick Rick - Hey Young World pg. 254 - Yukmouth - Puffin Lah pg. 255 - John Coltrane - Africa (1/2), Africa (2/2) pg. 256 - Pharoahe Monch (Organized Konfusion) - Hypnotical Gases, Prisoners of War, Who Stole My Last Piece of Chicken?, Simon Says, Behind Closed Doors, Desire pg. 272 - Tech N9ne - Einstein pg. 283 - Onyx - Throw Ya Gunz, Slam pg. 290 - Kool G Rap - Men at Work pg. 290 - The Roots - Men at Work (Kool G Rap cover) pg. 279 - Onyx - Slam pg. 303 - Schoolly D - Gucci Time, PSK, Saturday Night pg. 309 - R.A. the Rugged Man featuring J-Live - Give It Up pg. 309 - Jedi Mind Tricks - Uncommon Valor: A Vietnam Story pg. 316 - AMG - Bitch Betta Have My Money, Tha Booty Up, pg. 316 - The Fixxers (AMG and DJ Quik) - Can U Werk Wit Dat pg. 316 - Cypress Hill - Insane in the Brain, Dr Greenthumb, Rap Superstar pg. 320 - David Banner - Play, 9mm pg. 320 - Gorillaz - Clint Eastwood pg. 321 - E-40 - Tell Me When to Go, U and Dat pg. 322 - Onyx - Slam pg. 324 - Killah Priest - B.I.B.L.E. pg. 324 - Chemical Brothers featuring K-Os - Get Yourself High pg. 324 - Fatboy Slim featuring Lateef - That Old Pair of Jeans, Wonderful Night pg. 325 - Mighty Casey - White Girls pg. 327 - Clipse - Grindin pg. 328 - Justin Timberlake featuring Clipse - Like I Love You pg. 328 - Craig Mack - Flava in Ya Ear Remix pg. 328 - Busta Rhymes - Woo Hah!! Got You All in Check pg. 328 - Dr. Dre - Let Me Ride pg. 328 - Terror Squad - Lean Back pg. 329 - Schoolly D - PSK, Gucci Time, Saturday Night, Aqua Teen Hunger Force theme song pg. 330 - Arrested Development - Tennessee pg. 331 - Slum Village featuring Kanye West and John Legend - Selfish pg. 332 - Twista - Slow Jamz, Girl Tonite, Overnight Celebrity pg. 333 - Black Eyed Peas - Where Is the Love, Yes We Can pg. 333 - Luniz - I Got 5 on It Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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