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LIL BOOSIE INTERVIEW |
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"TOO BAD"
If you have been keeping your
ears close to the streets of the Southern underground then no doubt
you’ve heard the name and music of Baton Rogue native Lil Boosie.
With six mix tapes and two underground albums Lil Boosie has been
heating up the streets of Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi, Tennessee,
Alabama, Georgia and beyond for the past four and half years. Yet
despite his impressive buzz stretching back in 2002, major label
were reluctant to sign him. That all changed when Trill
Entertainment inked a major deal with Asylum Records and the world
caught a glimpse of what Boosie Bad Azz was capable of on his
compatriot’s Lil Webbie’s national debut Savage Life. He also made a
strong showing on David Banner’s single “I Ain’t Got Nothin’” All of
this plus a ton of more mix tape appearances has brought the
anticipation level for his debut album Bad Ass to a fever pitch.
With this in mind Down-South.com dispatched ace reporter Charlie
Braxton to talk to the self proclaimed bad azz trouble maker and
here’s what he had to say. |
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Down-South.com:
You’re from Baton Rogue Louisiana; tell what it’s like growing up
down there?
Boosie: It’s like mostly family. Baton
Rogue is mostly like a family city. It ain’t no gang banging, it’s
mostly like hood for hood, but it’s mostly family. Growing up it was
mostly hard on us coming up, but it’s hard on everybody growing up
in the ghetto. Mostly Baton Rogue is a nice environment, but it’s a
lotta trouble down here.
Down-South.com: Who did you listen to
growing up, music wise?
Boosie: Tupac. Coming up I mostly
listen to Tupac. I didn’t really listen to nobody else except Tupac
and a little No Limit and a little Cash Money, but mostly I listened
to Tupac.
Down-South.com: How did you get started
in the rap game?
Boosie: I got started in rap
game…..well I was rapping to people in the neighborhood and people
got to talking so I met a guy name Frog. He was one of C-Loc’s best
friends. He brung C-Loc to me and I rapped fro C-loc and every since
then I been rapping.
Down-South.com: I know that when C-Loc
got incarcerated for a while you were kind of quite on the regional
scene but you were still doing your thing in Baton Rogue real tough.
Boosie: Yeah, when C-Loc went to jail I
was pretty much on my own. I was like disgusted and shit. After I
got over that I started messing with Trill Entertainment. They took
me to Texas and I started working with Pimp C. I did a couple of
songs with Pimp C and that’s how I got with Trill and everything
started taking off. But by me losing my CEO that like really hurt my
stride for the game. I really ain’t give a fuck.
Down-South.com: One of the strategies
that you used to blow yourself up in the streets was mix tapes. In
many ways you like the Southern version of 50 Cent.
Boosie: Yeah, I’m like King of the Mix
Tapes bruh. I feel like I was supposed to have a national album out
in 2002…2003, but unfortunately it didn’t work like that but that
mix tape shit I’m the king of all that.
Down-South.com: I wanna go back to what
you said about listening to Tupac. One of the things that I do find
similarities between you and Pac is that you’re not afraid to talk
about what’s going on in your life, good or bad.
Boosie: Man, that’s how I am. Whatever
I go through in my life I’m gone rap about the shit. That’s why I
used to listen to Pac. I don’t give a fuck what happen I’m gonna
tell you about it. Pac [taught] me to be like whatever is on my mind
I’m gonna talk ‘bout the shit. Pac really made me believe. I’m a
trouble maker like Pac. I stay in trouble. Pac made me wanna say
whatever it is I wanna say. If I’m gonna fuck a nigga up then I’m
gonna say I’m gonna fuck a nigga up. Them deep mama songs…..that’s
why I used to love Pac, that nigga’s is so deep.
Down-South.com: Now that kids are
listening to you the way you listened to Pac, how did that make you
feel?
Boosie: That makes me feel good when
people come up to me at the club and say man you like Tupac. When
you rap your shit I just know you real. I just feel this shit deep
inside. Being compared to Tupac….that shit [is] like immortal; so
right now people are just showing me much love. I got the best music
in the streets, mix tapes or otherwise. It’s just much love right
now. Pac still motivates me right now. I got Pac in the deck right
now.
Down-South.com: One thing about you is
that you express your pain very well; does rapping about it help you
to deal with it?
Boosie: Sometimes. Sometimes it helps
me deal with it, sometimes it don’t. I just can’t hold nothing back.
That’s how I made it through all this time, rapping [about] my life.
Whatever’s going on in my life sometimes it might be some shit that
I wanna keep secret but I just let it out anyway. I just don’t have
no cut on me, bruh.
Down-South.com: How many mix tapes have
you put out?
Boosie: I done put out like six or
seven mix tapes bruh. I did everything from selling them on my own.
No contacts with distributors. I was just on the streets selling
them my own self, whatever it takes to get in the door.
Down-South.com: I understand that you,
Webbie and Pimp C have a group called B-12…..
Boosie: Yeah, me, Webbie and Pimp C
suppose to be working on a project but it’s been postponed because
me and Webbie are busy working on this album Gangsta Music II, that
hits the streets right after my Bad Ass album. We’re working on the
B-12 album also. We’ve done a few songs, but as of right now it’s
not official when we’re gonna drop the album.
Down-South.com: Tell me something about
your first album?
Boosie: My first album is called The
Youngest of the Camp. That was with C-Loc. I recorded that album in
one weekend. I did it in one weekend in Texas.
Down-South.com: How old were you then?
Boosie: I was like 14 or 15.
Down-South.com: Tell me about the new
album, Bad Azz?
Boosie: With the new album I’m hittin’
‘em from all angles. I got the women songs, I got the gangsta songs,
I got the love songs; it’s just a classic album. I’m hittin’ ‘em
from all areas. It’s not one song that you can just listen to. Like
[on] everybody else album all the songs sound the same. This album
is just versatile. This bitch is the truth.
by: Charlie
Braxton © Down-South.com
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