Hip-Hop Made

Audacy
Hip-Hop Made

We’re celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the birth of Hip-Hop with a journey through the years, the artists, the cities, the events, the stories, and the music that "made" us. Check out audacy.com/hiphopmade all through 2023 for more.

  1. Hip-Hop Made: Fatman Scoop

    13/07/2023

    Hip-Hop Made: Fatman Scoop

    Back with another installment of Audacy’s Hip-Hop Made, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the birth of Hip-Hop, Fatman Scoop zoomed in to chat with Mike Street all about his Hip-Hop beginnings in Harlem, opting not to work with Diddy, having no plan B if the music biz didn’t work out, and more. Scoop started the conversation off with some back story about being one of the well known rappers in Harlem, his connections to Teddy Riley, Rob Base, and Markell Riley, and how he was supposed to release a project under Teddy but it got dropped when Teddy and Gene Griffin broke up. After that all went down he “went to Puff,” as in Puff Daddy, now known as Diddy. “Puff wanted me to be the first Notorious B.I.G.,” Scoop shared. “He was like keep rapping hard, we gonna put you in a suit and tie and make raps for women — that’s Biggie," he added. “Something in my heart and soul made me understand even though I was rapping hard, I was dancing and performing like Doug E. Fresh. I wasn’t that guy. And something at the last minute told me not to do it. And I went into the music business and now here I am. I become who I was really supposed to be at the end of the day.” After working with Teddy Riley, Scoop got “a regular job” at Mount Sinai Hospital. However after continuously getting written up, he ended up going to intern for Diamond D. After putting in the work and “being such a great intern” for a year and a half, Tommy Boy Records found me and that’s when they gave me a job. Scoop also shared that when it came to his plans, not making it, was simply not an option. “If you’re gonna do something, do it all the way,” he said, of having no plan B. “You’ve got to do this like nothing else is gonna work. There’s no way that you can become successful at anything unless you put your heart, your soul, your time, and your dedication in…. I didn’t even get into women until I was 19, 20 years old, because my whole focus was Hip-Hop.” As for people on the internet telling him he’s a one-hit wonder, Scoop has a message. “Well, I’m a one-hit wonder that wakes up in Osaka, Japan, and go to sleep in Montana. I’m a one-hit wonder that wakes up in New York and goes to sleep in the South of France… I’ve been blessed to do this, and Hip-Hop has brought me there.” Also up for discussion was the current state of the genre. “The fact that we have not had a #1 song this year is indicative of how the marketplace feels about the quality of the music,” Scoop said, simply and plainly. “You can call it hate, you can call it whatever, but the numbers and the facts are never gonna tell a lie.” For all that and more listen to the entire conversation above. p data-uri="www.audacy.com/_compo ...

    12 min
  2. Hip-Hop Made: Kid Capri

    14/06/2023

    Hip-Hop Made: Kid Capri

    Switching it on 'em last minute with a brand new list of questions he doesn’t usually get asked instead of the ones he had planned, Mike Street caught up with DJ Kid Capri to talk about everything from the struggle of carrying crates of vinyl back in the day to events and places he wants to perform at in the future, and more. After expressing how the new era of entertainers would never know the struggles of the old school way of doing things, Kid Capri recalled, “I carried 15 crates around the world man. I was the first dude to own two tour buses… in Hip-Hop. Because of traveling with 15 crates of albums on airplanes, paying for all the weight, paying for all the extra baggage, I just said you know what I’m gonna buy me a bus.” "When I went to go buy me a bus, they laughed at me, like ‘people don’t buy buses, the album come out they go on tour for three or four months, they send the bus back,’” Not concerned, Kid bought his first bus and eventually another even bigger one. Learning to embrace the new wave of using Serato instead of vinyl on turntables after a push from DJ Jazzy Jeff, these days Kid Capri is back to traveling on planes for gigs. But, as he explained, the conversion wasn’t easy. “As many things as I innovated, I like to keep things lookin’ a certain way. And when I had all the records behind me, it just made it look like a big production. Running to get the record, catching it at the last minute, dropping it, you know, it amazes the crowds. So I thought that once we get on the Serato it was gonna take that feeling away from it, but it just got even more crazier… my shows they be nuts.” While Serato has made its way into Capri’s scope of skills, he has no plans of making the switch to controllers any time in the future. Speaking of future, when asked if there are any events or places he has yet to but wants to DJ at, Capri didn’t really have anything in mind, and focused his answer more on appreciating the amazing places he’s already been and the incredible crowds he’s been blessed to perform for. “I’m sure there’s lots of places I haven’t been, plenty events I haven’t done. But I’ve done so many it’s kind of hard to like think of it,” Capri expressed. “Because everything that comes out they either call me first to do, or do the last of it, or do the main event of it, and it be in every city, every state.” He continued, “I’ve been to every state, every island, all through Europe, and to get that kind of love for as long as I have, it’s truly a blessing. Because they got people in they own city that can entertain them, and for them to call me… they don’t have to do that… but that’s what we work for.  As long as you work and you really work hard and you really care about your fans, it’s gonna resonate with them and they always gonna wanna feel that energy… so I’m grateful in that way.” Listen to it all plus more, including questioning the common list of Top 5 ...

    17 min
  3. Hip-Hop Made: Janelle Monáe

    12/06/2023

    Hip-Hop Made: Janelle Monáe

    Back with another installment of Hip-Hop Made, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the birth of Hip-Hop. Janelle Monáe talked with Audacy and ATL’s Big Tigger on V-103, sharing a her short list of artists that lead her to fall in love with Hip-Hop, her favorite moment in Hip-Hop history, plus what Hip-Hop means to her. When asked which one song made her fall in love with Hip-Hop, Janelle found it difficult to pinpoint just one. Revealing,“I have so many artists,” in mind, adding, “I mean we’re in Atlanta too, so OutKast c’mon, 'Elevators' I think, made me be like ‘oooh they’re different’… ATLiens… and it was the video too that also help, and that chorus,” she added, before going on to sing a little bit of it. “I was a big Lauryn Hill fan too, so I always listened to her whole Miseducation, even The Fugees, the way she was singing and then rap, when she did the Roberta Flack cover ‘Killing Me Softly.’” "It’s like Hip-Hop is such a spectrum… there’s so many different levels of it. Love Lil Kim… I can rap a lot of Lil Kim stuff,” Janelle admitted, noting she’d have done it if she wasn’t so tired. “Her features are crazy,” she went on to add, “I feel like she changed so much, like she was so free, she’s a free a** motherf***er, like she been on it, and I started to appreciate her even more as I went through my own journey of evolution.” Janelle continued, “Lil Kim was challenging everybody's thoughts about what it was to be a Black woman, what you could say, what you couldn’t say. She was like — you not gonna put me in a box — categorize me, I defy every label — and that’s what I live by too, so I love her.” Revealing her favorite moment in Hip-Hop history, Janelle shared that she “loved Ladies Night, I love seeing like all those women together. That was a moment for me… when I was with my friends, with my girlfriends, we would always pick who we were, or we would have it on as we were getting dressed and ready to go hang out and it just solidified a sisterhood in Hip-Hop." Beyond the music, for Janelle, Hip-Hop “represents freedom, it represents story telling, it represents Blackness… the spectrum of Blackness. We’re not monolithic, we don’t all think the same, eat the same, dress the same. So it just represents an opportunity for us to like continue to teach people about us as a people, our experiences.” Listen to the entire conversation above. Words by Maia Kedem Interview by Big Tigger

    3 min

About

We’re celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the birth of Hip-Hop with a journey through the years, the artists, the cities, the events, the stories, and the music that "made" us. Check out audacy.com/hiphopmade all through 2023 for more.

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