Go Back   Hip Hop Board > Hip Hop > Hip Hop Interviews
Connect with Facebook

Hip Hop Interviews Get all the latest interviews here from any Hip Hop icon.


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 03-19-2007, 01:50 PM   #1
True Rhymer
 
stray-bullet's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Moscow, Russia baby
Posts: 873
Repped: 391
Repped 312 Times in 79 Posts
Neg Reps: 0
Neg Repped at 0 Times in 0 Posts
stray-bullet is a made manstray-bullet is a made manstray-bullet is a made manstray-bullet is a made manstray-bullet is a made man
Arrow 03/19/07 - 8 Ball & MJG: Get In Where You Fit In

03/19/07 - 8 Ball & MJG: Get In Where You Fit In

Two classic rap dudes from the south set out to make another classic southern rap album. There’s only one problem: nobody’s making classic southern rap albums anymore. Anyone thirteen years deep deserves respect, but 8Ball & MJG aren’t your average industry vets. If it’s hard out here for a pimp, than it’s impossible out here for the original hustlers. From Memphis, Tenn and back again 8Ball and MJG grant hiphopdx a rare joint-interview where they speak their mind on Bad Boy Records, snap music, 3-6 Mafia’s success, and their new album Ridin High.
HHDX: It’s been 13 years since Ridin High, tell me what’s changed with 8Ball & MJG?
8Ball: Umm, well about uh, we’ve definitely gotten older, other than that, I mean the music comes out as the same thing, we just tried to get better at how we do 8Ball and MJG, other than that we tried to stick to the format as much as possible: MJG: Yeah I think we still the same Ball and G, just different times.
HHDX: It’s been a minute since you got with Bad Boy, how’s the business relationship with Diddy these days?
MJG: It’s cool man. (Long pause). It’s cool man (sarcastically).
HHDX: Ha ha, ok. Where does 8Ball and MJG fit into the overall Bad Boy legacy?
MJG: I don’t think we fit. I think this was just something, cause its really Bad Boy South, Bad Boy South was created when 8Ball and MJG came along, so I guess that kinda speaks for itself that we really not part of the Bad Boy legacy.
8Ball: Yeah I don’t think we fit, because I done read a lot of interviews and uh, they never mention us as part of the roster, you know, we never get mentioned as a part of Bad Boy, you know, unless we mention it. So, I don’t think we fit.
HHDX: Was it tough to sit back and watch 3-6 Mafia blow and put Memphis on the map?
MJG: Naw, it wasn’t nothing hard about that… that was beautiful man. We respect them cats to the utmost man, we love everything that they do and that was a big milestone for the Memphis rap community and for the rap community as a whole.

8Ball: …And for black people because still out of all this time we work hard a lot, and most artists, and most black people can only get rewarded on awards shows that we made up for ourselves. You know? That’s the most…most things like the academy awards it’s still just only a handful of black people and minorities that win those awards, we normally have to wind up making up our own awards and presenting them to ourselves.

HHDX: Obviously both of you have done solo projects, Is there a different approach when you’re working together versus doing the solo thing?
8Ball: Yeah um, I think that yeah because we’re a group but we’re two different people at the same time. At the end of the day it’s still the same format. It’s the same format, whether it’s solo or as a group thing. Its always gonna be some Ball and G shit.

HHDX: Ridin High is supposed to be the ultimate 8Ball and MJG album…
8Ball: It’s like everything we did over the years all rolled into one. You will not be highly disappointed. It will put you in the mood of some of the older stuff- so its new stuff so it’ll definitely be fresh, but it has all the 8Ball and MJG format, we kept it gritty and gutter and it’s reminiscent of our older stuff.

MJG: We got 3-6 Mafia of course, we got them and Slim from 112 on a song together, we got Project Pat on the first single, Juve, Jazzy Phae, Killer Mike, Pimp C and Yung Joc. And that’s about it man, its really an 8Ball and MJG on this album.
HHDX: How do you really feel about snap music? Do you embrace it?
8Ball: I mean, snap music is an Atlanta style of music. It’s an Atlanta style of music that blew up, and started off underground and it blew up like almost pop like, and I mean its just an Atlanta style of music. My fans wouldn’t expect me to rap over nothing like that. But I mean it’s all music.

MJG: Its just another version, I can respect that.

source-hiphopdx

HIT DA PROPZZZ
__________________
stray-bullet is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Lower Navigation
Go Back   Hip Hop Board > Hip Hop > Hip Hop Interviews

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:46 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.3.0