Monday, March 8, 2010
Xzibit Keeps His Pen Game Inking, "I'm Not One Of These Newfangled Rappers Who Don't Have To Write Sh*t Down"
West Coast rapper Xzibit has discussed how he composes records and why he does not feel pressured to mentally write his raps like Jay-Z and Lil Wayne.
X says he always uses paper to write his rhymes.
"Nope when I approach music [it] is totally different then when I used to approach it on my other albums it's a whole new formula, a whole new format," X to the Z explained in an interview. "Musically the way I write is the same because sometimes I write with a beat without a beat but I always write it on paper. I'm not one of these new fangled rappers who don't have to write sh*t down or put it in their BlackBerry, I'm old school. What's gonna happen in the Hip-Hop Hall of Fame when rappers have to put their BlackBerry's in because they never wrote stuff down on paper? (laughs) I want lyric sheets."
The Clipse's Pusha T said he also prefers to physically ink his lyrics.
"I have the coolest little writing journal. I love to just blackout in it, and I can't wait! It's like everything. I'm just taking on all beats and all types of sh*t and just spilling," Pusha said about his pen game. "To me, not too many people are good at freestyling. Everyone always talks about how they freestyle lyrics. Freestyling lyrics with no depth is stupid to me. That's corny. I can do that. I've done it, and it's never as detailed as it could be. Someone like Jay-Z that does that has mastered it. People try to mimic, but they don't understand, you can mimic the process but you have to master it to have that type of effect. I freestyle melodies. I'll find a melody by just vibing with a record, but not actual lyrics. That's a puzzle."
Young Money's Drake also spoke on the process of writing.
"I'll never forget how nervous I was," Drake explained in an interview when he freestyled from his BlackBerry phone. "It was such a rookie hip-hop moment -- and, obviously, the controversy of me pulling out my phone and rapping off my phone because I just wasn't prepared. A lot of people don't know the difference between freestyle or off the top and coming to a radio show knowing you got to go there, so you got verses cued up in your head, whether they be off your upcoming album or verses just that you have laying around. A lot of artists get that preparation time...I'm a writer, man. I appreciate the elements of hip-hop. I appreciate a guy like Common who goes city to city and just spits at the crowd for 10 minutes about everything he sees. I admire talent like that, because that's just not my creative process."
Rapper Nicki Minaj recently spoke on writing for Rihanna and wanting to be responsible for her own raps.
"I am so territorial, that [from the start] I just felt like whatever I was gonna do I was gonna write it myself," she says in the new Fader Magazine. "it's my personal preference to always be in control of everything I do in life...This [Rihanna song] wasn't supposed to come out in the world with Nicki Minaj on it. This was written for someone else, and I felt so f*cked up behind it. But I thought the beat was very different, and I wanted to write something for Rihanna that showed like, I already shut that sh*t down."
Check out some past Xzibit footage below:
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