YYKKES
WC2K: First of all,
can you introduce yourself to the people who dont know you and give
a little background information?
Yykkes: Yes, I'm
Yykkes the toothless wonder from LA Confidential Entertainment.
You may be able to find me on Dave Hollister's album which is "Real
Talk" titled. You can also find me on Knoc-Turnal's album which
is called "The Way I Am". On the song number 8 which is
called "Click Click". I've been with LA Confidential for
4 1/2 years now. You may have known my name from the "Chronic
2001" album featuring Dr. Dre. We doing it real big this season,
so its appreciated we can do this interview with you.
WC2K: Alright, What
or who inspired you to rap?
Yykkes: Actually
I have to say Marvin Gaye, because he's always been a big inspiration
in my life and I always listen to his music and I feel people like
him have the power to change the world. So I must say that Marvin
Gaye was a giant inspiration in my life.
WC2K: When did you
get your first big break in rap?
Yykkes: Around in
1991, I started out with a guy named Charles Stanton from Drama
Sound Entertainment which you all may know as Big Chuck, formerly
from Aftermath Entertainment. Thats where I really got my big break
from. Ohh and big up to Gerald Levert and Mark Wooten, they had
a lot to do with this as well.
WC2K: How did you
get your name?
Yykkes: Dr. Dre gave
me my name actually, that was in 1992.
WC2K: Knoc got his
break on Dre's "2001" album, did you do anything for that
record?
Yykkes: "Whats
the Difference [between me and you]". I was on that song, but
it was minor stipulations because my manager was A&R director
for Aftermath at that time as well. And I really couldnt work like
that, it was gonna be conflict of interest, so they edited the verse,
but thats aight cause me and Dre we still good friends. I wrote
Dre's verse, and numours other verses with Dre. But I didnt drop
any verses, I ended up just moving on with my carreer, there was
no need to just stand still and stay with Dre when I knew I had
the talent. So I said Im just gonna go on and take everything that
Ive learned and move on and make my life successful. Im not gonna
let anybody stagnate anything that Im doing in my life. And Dre
is well known for shelving albums. And I dont wanna sit around in
the lab and the artists that are there take what I know, then blow
up and I still get shelved. I rather just take my talent all as
one big package and just leave with it.
WC2K: You probably
knew about all the Aftermath artists that got dropped before so
you didnt wanna get into that same situation?
Yykkes: Exactly,
thats what Im talkin about.
WC2K: So were you
actually signed to Dre's label or just worked with them?
Yykkes: Yeah Dre
always wanted to sign me, but then Big D beat him to the punch,
so I went with D cause you know, I knew D wouldnt gonna shelve me
or anything and he was gonna give me the proper and correct artist
developement. Cause at that time thats all I needed, artist developement.
So when I came out I perfected my craft and here I am in 2004 ready
to do it big!
WC2K: Do you feel
properly appreciated and credited for the work you did on Dre's
"2001" record?
Yykkes: Yes sir,
yes sir.
WC2K: So how did
that go down, did Knocturnal call you and say come down to the studio?
Yykkes: Actually
Big D heard about me in a Dr. Dre meeting, but I really never met
him before. He sent a friend of mine by the name of S-Class down
to come get me. I went to meet him and I had a few battles against
some of the artists Dre had there signed at that time. And after
that it was all history in the making.
WC2K: You mentioned
you battled some of Dre's artists, I heard you battled Eminem, is
that right?
Yykkes: Well you
know, not actually...I wouldnt say that, but I wouldnt mind doing
a song with him!
WC2K: Are there any
plans of writing for Dre's camp again? I heard Knoc's writing for
Dre again.
Yykkes: Yeah Knocturnal
is currently writing for Dre's projects. Knoc is a very gifted individual
and special, and a very good friend to me as well, and I love him
dearly. But he's a hooked genius, its something about what God did
to use his words. He's an extraordinary individual.
WC2K: What's been
your most memorable moment?
Yykkes: My most memorable
moment I had has to be the recording sessions for the "Chronic
2001" album, because Ive got the opportunity to meet alot of
celebrities that I was actually looking up to in the game at that
time and work with them. Oh wait, actually my most memorable moment
was the "Chicken & Beer" tour, I just got off Ludacris'
"Chicken & Beer" tour. It was wonderful, 31 days on
the tour with Ludacris, I-20, Shawnna, Chingy, my dogg David Banner,
Marques. A few people, it was wonderful, big ups to DTP, I love
them!
WC2K: So who are
the artists signd to LAC?
Yykkes: Slip Capone
from Dogg Pound Gangstas formerly, formerly of Death Row. Knoc-turn'al,
Yykkes. We have a new artist which is is Mystikal's cousin, his
name is Young Tyma from Louisiana. Man he's wonderful. then we have
Whoiswho from the Aftermath Compilation. I mean we got a nice squad.
WC2K: When did you
sign to LAC? Right after Knocturnal signed?
Yykkes: Well Knocturnal
paved the way for LA Confidential. He was the first artist to ever
be signed to LA Confidential. I happened to be signed at least 2
years after him. Knoc was the first and I was almost the last artist
to be signed, besides Young Tyma.
WC2K: Are there any
albums droppin in the near future on LAC?
Yykkes: Yeah, my
album should be droppin in August. It should be in stores, I currently
have mixtape out on the street called "Ear To The Street Vol.2".
I hope people enjoy it. Volume 1 came out last year, and it has
been circulating for a while now.
WC2K: What can people
expect on your album?
Yykkes: Its a very
versatile album. Im really trying to bring laughter back into the
game, cause I mean there is too much hardcore music going around.
And music is raising our generation right now, so I'm trying to
make an album thats gonna reflect on like... bring the comedy rap
back into the game, like remember the Pharcyde, the Leaders of the
New School, or Busta Rhymes, and even PM Dawn in some aspect of
the game. I just wanna bring back the truth, the laughter, instead
of all the anger. I mean we need peace, our world is already in
a state of emergency right now with all the war and crisis. I mean
we wanna bring laughter back, we dont want everybody to feel like
its all about killing, or its good for you to run into some place
and rob a store or shoot some kids and get mad. Everybodys goin
Hollywood but they're not changing with the lyrics. You have to
change the lyrics, thats why I really respect groups like Black
Eyed Peas, or Dilated Peoples. I like Dead Prez, I like real groups,
I miss the real groups. I'm just trying to bring that part of the
game back, cause it seems like the world has forgotten about it.
WC2K: So people shouldnt
expect a Gangsta Rap album from you?
Yykkes: Oh, no sir,
no sir. Not at all.
WC2K: What can we
expect as far as guests and producers?
Yykkes: You can expect to hear Baby S on a few songs, Shade Sheist,
Jayo Felony, Knoc-Turn'al of course. I even have a song with Usher
on there. Its really gonna be a diverse album. Production is mostly
inhouse, we got this guy named Pidgeron. He's extremely gifted.
I have some Jelly Roll tracks, I got some Scott Storch. I got some
nice producers, but the majority of the album is inhouse production.
WC2K: So you not really takin the same route as Knocturnal, content
wise?
Yykkes: Oh no sir,
no sir.
WC2K: I remember
Slip Capone told me he was up next with his album, but that was
like in 2002. What happened to that?
Yykkes: I'm not too
sure about that, I think there was a minor complication about the
budget or whatever. So Big D just prefered to shop his deal somewhere
else. But he's still gonna be on LAC, we're just switching up the
major distribution for him. We were gonna go with Elektra in the
beginning but since they closed down their entire Urban section
up at Elektra we had to find some good business elsewhere.
WC2K: I heard there
is a LA Confidential compilation coming out, is that still planned?
Yykkes: Oh Yea, LA
Confidential compilation is still coming, it should be droppin real
soon. Knocturnal and I are headlining it, since we happen to be
one of the hottest artists on the West Coast right now, and the
most different of course. D is the CEO, he doesnt really just search
for talent. He searches for distinctive voices, he looks for the
difference in each artist and he looks for the voice. You have a
different voice and you have style to go with it, cause the originality
and the creativity is whats gonna sell you in this game. Thats what
he searches for.
WC2K: So talk about
that "Ear to the Streets Mixtape" which came out not too
long ago and the whole grind behind it.
Yykkes: So the "Ear
to the Streets Mixtape" is really just alot of old stuff which
we dreamed of doing when we first came out. We always wanted to
meet the artists who did the original tracks to it, but probably
didnt get the opportunity to do it. But we knew if we were on these
songs we got the opportunity to shine as well. So what we did is
we just took the beats and we just did it with a LA Confidential
twist to it. Because we give the distinctive style with the LA Confidential
sound to it, everyone doesnt have the LA Confidential sound. And
once you have that sound you know how to really record a song, and
make a song sound like a song. So with this mixape we're just showing
the world that even if we were on these beats, then we could have
made it sound hot too. So thats how you really just show that you
have style. But we could have used our own beats but I didnt prefer
to do it like that, it sounds better the way it is now.
WC2K: What type of
buzz you gotten from the mixtape?
Yykkes: Well actually,
people really love my style of music, they love my voice first and
foremost. And it's about that time for the West to really open up
and bring somebody new into the doorway thats just now all about
the N.W.A. era, the whole gangsta gangsta type of stuff. I mean
do it the right way, just because we come from the West and we see
alot of things that happen in life, a lot of murders, a lot of robberies,
a lot of killing. I mean its not wise to just focus on all that,
cause you should always think like 'How can I change this?' I might
not be able to change the whole world, but I can change a few.
WC2K: There are so
many artists droppin mixtapes to get the word out. What did you
guys do to separate yourselves from the rest?
Yykkes: Uhh actually,
we really didnt do much. [Big] D allowed us to get microphones and
just do ourselves. If he tries to structure it a lot it would take
some of our talent, so what he did is just let us create our own
concepts and everything, go in there and do it with the best of
our ability. And what really separates us is that we went nationwide
and worldwide to go and put our mixtape out. From here all the way
to New York we went everywhere. Most people that make a mixtape
keep it local, maybe take it to a few radio stations, so they never
really get the buzz that they deserve. So we had to go let the world
hear it and get a global judging from everyone.
WC2K: Do you know
how many copies there were pressed for the mixtape?
Yykkes: 500.000 copies.
WC2K: That many for
a mixtape?
Yykkes: Yes sir,
yes sir. And its doing good.
WC2K: You are not
really a newcomer, but alot of new artists come quickly and leave
just as fast. Whats gonna keep Yykkes from that pitfall?
Yykkes: The drive,
the love for the music, the longevity. I was always taught that
you cannot plan to fail, you can only fail to plan. So as long as
I continuously do what Im doing now, and as long as I continuously
learn through the years, I'm not planning on falling off or leaving
this game anytime soon.
WC2K: Are you gonna
lean on peoples shoulder or really try to make it on your own without
anyones help?
Yykkes: I'm really
gonna try to do it myself, I dont really like to use people as a
crutch or only like to lean on anyone because I cant depend on anyone's
judgement like I can depend on mine. So I like to really do things
myself and I like to be independent.
WC2K: I like to ask
people this question cause you get all kinds of different answers.
What's your views on todays West Coast Rap and Hip Hop in general?
Yykkes: Well West
Coast Rap, I feel like they are really shutting down alot of West
Coast artists because of the lack of originality, because of the
lack of creativity. They feel that they can just get on a song and
say this and say that and its gonna be a smah hit, but its NOT gonna
be like that. Its a new era of music with the Outkast's, the Lil
Jon's and all those. Its a different generation of people growing
up now, so the style of music eventually is gonna change, if it
didnt already has. So with me, Im just gonna continuously be Yykkes
as long as I can be Yykkes. I always try to sound different on each
song, if you listen to me I will never sound the same on a song,
I always try to change it up.
WC2K: Yeah I noticed
that on the mixtape. But when you say there is no creativity, do
you think artists need to step up their lyrics or get better production?
Yykkes: With the
lyrics, and partially production too because a lot of producers
out here are not really trying to give you the club hits, they are
still used to the Ice Cube and Westside Connection sound. But people
wanna go to clubs, people wanna go dance, people wanna go have a
nice time. They wanna go party and express themselves through that
way, through dancing to music. I mean alot of artists and producers
they dont really try to upgrade their standards, they just wanna
stick with who they are, and thats idiocy.
WC2K: So you think
this is the main problem why it doesn't really work for new artists
on a national level?
Yykkes: Well it doesnt
really work because I feel the industry has given the West Coast
so many chances, and lost so much money behind, and invested in
so many artists that never sold a unit practically. It really took
alot of trust from the distributors and everything, because they
dont really wanna put their faith and their money behind most West
Coast artists because most West Coast artists are if not drug dealers
formal gangbangers who havent actually completely left that lifestyle
alone. So they tend to backslide and backtrack which makes you look
like a bad investement in the long run, so they dont really wanna
trust you.
WC2K: So you're all
for a new sound rather than just run with the old formula?
Yykkes: Yes sir,
I consider myself a alive pokemon, I like to evolve continuously
cause I dont like to stand still. I mean the sound in the 90's and
early 80's was beautiful, its what made my style what it is today.
It was the Kurupts and the whole Death Row and Aftermath era that
brought me into changing. And then people like Eminem was coming
into the game and completely tore it up and moved and pushed the
black artists away beause his vocabulary is so mastered. And I think
people really dont take education very serious the way they supposed
to. So of course you have to have words and even if you have words
and mastered vocabulary you must know the definition. So education
is definitely the key to success, cause if you dont have the education
you cant's speak on anything successful.
WC2K: So what else
can we expect from you in the future?
Yykkes: You can expect
to see a young guy with a mission that I will never get busy even
if I had a million dollars (laughs). You will see more laughter,
you will see alot of energy, you will see a walking explosion. I'm
like a volcano waiting to errupt. For the children Im gonna make
music, cause those are our future and I love them dearly. And to
my fans everywhere, I love them and I'm gonna continuously give
you laugh-mathic music cause thats what I'm about.
WC2K: You got a message
for all the people reading this?
Yykkes: Yes sir,
yes sir, yes indeed. For all the people reading this, let me tell
you something. Life, you only get one chance at it. Make the best
out of it, whatever you have to do in life. Stay positive, keep
your head to the sky and place God first because due God all things
are possible, without him there is nothing that can be in existence.
So if in fact you try to make it, always go to school, always go
try to attain some type of knowledge because this game is only 10%
talent and 90% business.
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