There
are no microphones tonight, so authors Dave Haslam and Will Ashon agree to speak up.
“If
there are any DJs whose ears are completely fucked, then I'm sorry,”
Dave says. “Themes may be of an adult nature. If you're
sensitive... why are you here?”
It's
Monday, 12th November. Both men are at Waterstones Deansgate to discuss Will's new
book, Chamber Music: About the Wu Tang (in 36 Pieces), a biography of
90 hip hop crew The Wu Tang Clan. Will
describes his journey into hip hop via jazz, seeing Miles Davies in
Wembley (whose hands
were 'too fucked' to play), and being surrounded by much older
people. He noticed hip hop's emergence as the young equivalent, and
how 36 Chambers, The Wu Tang Clan's first hip hop album- released in
1993- had the same energy as jazz.
Later
in life Will founded the Big Dada
label, and signed Roots Manuva (the
label later signed Wiley). After 15
years at the label, he wrote a novel, then entered non-fiction. He
describes meeting and interviewing Wu Tang rapper
RZA 3 times, then losing the tapes.
“The
encounters were brilliant,” he claims. “He listens to what you
say, then riffs off it.”
The
word of rap and the world of non-fiction authoring has its
similarities, Will says. “You take quotes from different places,
and put them together. It's a hip-hop methodology.” The Wu Tang's
albums are all laced with samples from old kung fu movies, which the
group loved, and this genre of movies became one of their rap themes.
To
put together a book like this, there are countless people who knew
each person, but with 9 original members, it wasn't practical to find
full networks for each rapper. He did notice one serious positive to
hip hop groups: that's when artists produce their best work.
“Q-Tip was best in A Tribe Called Quest. Andre 3000 was best in
Outkast. The competition is fierce, so
their verses must be at their best.”
(I'm
assuming he hasn't listened to D12's albums
who's main cohort is Eminem. That's probably for the best.)
“25
years in,” says Will, “Wu Tang are still producing brilliant
tracks. The Rolling Stones after 25 years were releasing shit.”
The
Q and A comes after this. Will describes the difficulties of race: a
middle class white guy from Leicester, writing about East-Coast hip
hop from a 9-strong collective straight out of a drug-ridden Brooklyn
ghetto. He tells of the guy who released Ol' Dirty Bastard's FBI
file, the race to get the book delivered in time for the 25th
anniversary of 36 Chambers, and about rap battles teaching youngsters
to keep their cool in confrontational situations.
It's
a fascinating evening. He signs the book with the bastardised lyric
from the track CREAM:
Matt
rules everything around me!
No comments:
Post a Comment