Tag Archives: Cage

Cage: Life Changes AllHipHop Feature

cage

The Moral of this story is Cage doesnt like opinions,

via AHH

Imagine this: You grow up getting abused by a psychotic father that leads you to numb your pain with drugs. After spending time in a mental institution as a test subject for fluoxetine (an antidepressant), you trade the straitjacket for a microphone, and begin a critically acclaimed—if commercially overlooked—rap career.

 

That would be a quick glimpse at the life of Chris Palko, better known as Cage, a Definitive Jux-signed artist who’s experienced a long-winding, strange career for the last 16 years. His latest release, Depart from Me—a “hip-hop-influenced” experimental follow-up to the highly acclaimed Hell’s Winter—has garnered criticism from both fans and critics. (Not to mention the comments on the new “emo” look he’s been rocking.) But, despite a hint of irritation in his voice, Cage claims he’s not annoyed. “I don’t really care,” he says. “Everything is trivial to me right now besides music, family, and friends.”

 

A calmer, gentler Cage? Well, overall he’s in a better place both mentally and physically. The long-awaited Weathermen album is in the works, and his biopic project with Shia Lebouf is still happening. Although the death of Camu Tao has damaged his spirit, Cage says he hasn’t consoled himself with drugs. “I just got sick of doing that shit,” he says. “People change you know?” And change, at least for Cage, has been good.

 

AllHipHop.com: How’s the reception for the new album so far?

 

Cage: I got one shitty review from Pitchfork, but it’s not like I care about what they think. I got 4/5 in Spin. That means a lot to me than getting a 10 from Pitchfork. I mean I didn’t even know what Pitchfork was until they reviewed it so I could care less what they’re thinking.

 

AllHipHop.com: Don’t you think they had a point? The album received some negative feedbacks from the hip-hop crowd.

 

Cage: I don’t live for anyone else. And I damn sure not live for a bunch of f**king-s***ty-dirt rags, f**king newspapers, and f**king blogs. If you add up collectively, all these reviews, and all these opinions add up to like 40 people. There’s a bunch of Hip-Hop blogs saying, “Oh, this isn’t Hip-Hop.” I don’t give a f**k what some dude who doesn’t make rap records thinks of it. If you don’t even write music, or make music for a living, why do you publicly critique music? I mean I don’t think Hip-Hop music needs me or anyone else to expand it bigger than what it is already. And if you loved Movies for The Blind, and Hell’s Winter so much more than this, well, where the f**k was you when I was making them? I rather have a 16-year-old who found out my music two months ago and loves it than kids who loved my music for 10 years, and hate it now.

 

AllHipHop.com: What lead to this type of music in the first place?

 

Cage: I just got tired of making the same s**t as everyone else. What was I supposed to do? Use auto-tune?

 

AllHipHop.com: Were you happy with Jay-Z’s response?

 

Cage: Yea, good for him! For not f**king going the same route as everyone else.

 

AllHipHop.com: Obviously, the record is very rock-influenced. Can you tell me certain rock artists that you were influenced by?

 

Cage: To correct you, it’s a Hip-Hop-influenced record. It’s just a very different Hip-Hop record. I kind of wanted to take what I was doing as a rap artist, and turn rap on its side and kick it in the balls.

 

AllHipHop.com: Ouch. But I recall hearing that Nine Inch Nails was an influence.

 

Cage: No, not at all. People who are writing rap articles or whatever; their point of reference is so fucked up. What we said about the Nine Inch Nails influence was for one song called “I Found My Mind In Connecticut.” We had been listening to Nine Inch Nails a lot that week and there was a sound that was stuck in our heads, and we said, “This sounds so much like Nine Inch Nails! I’m going to write a Nine Inch Nails-style hook.” Yea, I grew up listening to them in the early ’90s and I still like them, but it’s not my sole influence. I grew up listening to Slick Rick. That’s how the record is inspired. I wanted to write visual stories, didn’t want to dress like a bum, and look different from the rest like Slick Rick.

 

AllHipHop.com: He’s definitely one of the pioneers who brought those factors out.

 

Cage: Yea, from angel dust, storytelling raps, being institutionalized, and caring about the appearance—I have a lot in common with Slick Rick.

 

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about the latest projects Cardboard City’s been working on.

 

Cage: We’re working on the new Weathermen stuff. I know there’s a song that leaked with Breeze, Yak, and El called “Reports Of A Possible Kidnapping.” The main project I’m working on right now is with me, and Shia. He’s in New York and working on the new Oliver Stone film Money Never Sleeps [Wall Street 2] and we’re going to be getting a lot of work done going towards the Cage film.

 

AllHipHop.com: Since you mentioned The Weathermen, can we expect an album?

Cage: Yes, we’re putting music together for an album, and the lineup is: myself, Tame One, Aesop [Rock], Breeze Brewin, El-P, Yak Ballz, and Camu Tao who’s also on the record…also look out for Camu Tao’s record King of Hearts, which is an unfinished album.

 

AllHipHop.com: Did Camu Tao’s passing affect the creative process of Depart from Me?

 

Cage: I just kept going in the direction that we had been going in, which was a more rock approach. It seems like rap went to a more R&B route, so Camu and I decided to go onto a different route. Originally, it was supposed to be Sean doing the guitars, and Camu doing the drum programs, like a hybrid throwback.

 

AllHipHop.com: What’s Camu Tao’s album like?

 

Cage: It’s a hard record to describe. There’s almost like a Buddy Holly-vibe to certain songs mixed with electro-futuristic rap. When he passed, a lot of us were really sad because he had all these materials back in ’04. You hear his music and you hear how insanely brilliant, and catchy it is. It’s going to sound really current like it came out right now.

 

AllHipHop.com: What is Camu’s involvement in The Weathermen album?

 

Cage: It wasn’t until Camu got sick. When we got around wanting to do it, he was too sick to even finish his own records. Instead of getting checked up when he felt ill, he wrote songs about thinking he was dying and how ill he was. Instead of going to the hospital, he wrote music. This kid literally died for music. He would write songs like, “Death, where have you been all my life” before he was diagnosed with cancer. He was out on the road performing, and tumbling over in pain every night, and it just adds creepiness to the story. The Weathermen project is something we unfortunately didn’t get to do when Camu was alive.

 

AllHipHop.com: Is there a specific theme that The Weathermen project is trying to approach?

 

Cage: Originally, people expected more of a political-type record, and I feel like politics will be a major tone of the record, but not necessarily government politics, but more politics of life, and corporate rule.

 

AllHipHop.com: Can the fans expect to hear you rap again?

 

Cage: Pretty much, I still love doing that music. I write that shit all the f**king time because it’s where I came from, but I know that it’s not going to get me anywhere.

 

AllHipHop.com: Can you expand?

 

Cage: It’s not challenging to me anymore, and to be honest with you, it was doing absolutely nothing for me. You wouldn’t read a review about me in The Source or XXL, see me on BET, or listen to me on Hot 97. That world rejected me and doesn’t want anything to do with me. I’m going to make and write music that challenges me. That’s not a challenge; it’s impossibility.

 

AllHipHop.com: Good point.

 

Cage: I don’t know, I think again its politics; Eminim just opens the door for everyone and just shuts it upon entering it.

 

AllHipHop.com: Why do you say that?

 

Cage: Because everything after him is going to be [considered] fraud. Everything after him is killing other artists of similar backgrounds rather than making a credible doorway for those artists.

 

AllHipHop.com: Are you saying it wasn’t his skills but the support he got from people like Dr. Dre that made him successful?

 

Cage: I think it’s a matter of skill. It’s definitely clear now he’s very talented. But of course, you don’t see too many artists that come out and be successful in the mainstream without some sort of co-signs involved. Maybe my music just wasn’t for the masses at the time, maybe it still isn’t.

 

AllHipHop.com: What were your thoughts on a former member of The Weathermen—Copyright—doing a song criticizing Asher Roth?

 

Cage: I don’t think that’s moving forward, I don’t think it either affects Asher Roth one bit, or Copyright. I don’t think anything’s going to come from it. In this insane-f**king business, where people’s lives are just destroyed, I don’t wish anyone ill.

 

AllHipHop.com: I see. I feel like, compared to the Cage in the past, you’ve changed—from your music to the way you’re conducting this interview for example.

 

Cage: I think it was about ’03 when I just stopped doing all the angel dust. Once I cleared my head up a little bit, I realized that I was completely unhappy. I couldn’t pay my bills, I was doing shows for little money, and you just have that moment of clarity and think, “How many pies in the face are you going to take?” It’s a culmination of a lot of things, and if I’m more aware during interviews, it’s because I’m not f**ked up every day, and looking to say stupid things and be an idiot.

 

AllHipHop.com: Did you quit drugs completely?

 

Cage: I mess around with weed, and alcohol. Everything else I have no time for. No time for pills, never was into cocaine, no heroin, no narcotics of any sort.

 

AllHipHop.com: Let’s talk about the video that Shia just directed for you.

 

Cage: It was interesting. He was on “106 & Park,” and he shouted me out, and the entire audience clapped and cheered, as if they knew who the f**k I was, and I thought it was amazing, because I realized that was the first and the last time I would ever be on BET. [Laughs.] Yea he shot the video, we wanted to make it something different, since its not your typical single.

 

AllHipHop.com: Any naysayers?

 

Cage: There are people who hate it, or say, “It’s a disgrace to Hip-Hop!” That’s coming from the mouths of people who have never done anything for Hip-Hop. Like, you write a f**king blog, you’re not doing anything but giving your f**king opinion. Go out and f**king create rather than sitting there and critiquing things, and expecting the world to give a f**k about what you think.

 

AllHipHop.com: You don’t like bloggers?

 

Cage: Suddenly, music fans have become some sort of business-savvy-opinionated writers or A&Rs. Like whenever you get way-over-the-top criticism, just the fact that there are so many pseudo-writers popping out with faux journalism like, “I have a blog, I’m a journalist!” No you’re not! What’s crazy to me is to all those self-proclaimed idiots we’re all a bunch of f**king clowns at the end of the day. So when people are critiquing my music, I’ll have you all know, I make silly-ass-fucking music so the only thing that’s sillier than my music, is some f**king retard whose f**king a** hurts over listening to my silly-a** music.

Cage: Life Changes AllHipHop Feature

cage

The Moral of this story is Cage doesnt like opinions,

via AHH

Imagine this: You grow up getting abused by a psychotic father that leads you to numb your pain with drugs. After spending time in a mental institution as a test subject for fluoxetine (an antidepressant), you trade the straitjacket for a microphone, and begin a critically acclaimed—if commercially overlooked—rap career.

 

That would be a quick glimpse at the life of Chris Palko, better known as Cage, a Definitive Jux-signed artist who’s experienced a long-winding, strange career for the last 16 years. His latest release, Depart from Me—a “hip-hop-influenced” experimental follow-up to the highly acclaimed Hell’s Winter—has garnered criticism from both fans and critics. (Not to mention the comments on the new “emo” look he’s been rocking.) But, despite a hint of irritation in his voice, Cage claims he’s not annoyed. “I don’t really care,” he says. “Everything is trivial to me right now besides music, family, and friends.”

 

A calmer, gentler Cage? Well, overall he’s in a better place both mentally and physically. The long-awaited Weathermen album is in the works, and his biopic project with Shia Lebouf is still happening. Although the death of Camu Tao has damaged his spirit, Cage says he hasn’t consoled himself with drugs. “I just got sick of doing that shit,” he says. “People change you know?” And change, at least for Cage, has been good.

 

AllHipHop.com: How’s the reception for the new album so far?

 

Cage: I got one shitty review from Pitchfork, but it’s not like I care about what they think. I got 4/5 in Spin. That means a lot to me than getting a 10 from Pitchfork. I mean I didn’t even know what Pitchfork was until they reviewed it so I could care less what they’re thinking.

 

AllHipHop.com: Don’t you think they had a point? The album received some negative feedbacks from the hip-hop crowd.

 

Cage: I don’t live for anyone else. And I damn sure not live for a bunch of f**king-s***ty-dirt rags, f**king newspapers, and f**king blogs. If you add up collectively, all these reviews, and all these opinions add up to like 40 people. There’s a bunch of Hip-Hop blogs saying, “Oh, this isn’t Hip-Hop.” I don’t give a f**k what some dude who doesn’t make rap records thinks of it. If you don’t even write music, or make music for a living, why do you publicly critique music? I mean I don’t think Hip-Hop music needs me or anyone else to expand it bigger than what it is already. And if you loved Movies for The Blind, and Hell’s Winter so much more than this, well, where the f**k was you when I was making them? I rather have a 16-year-old who found out my music two months ago and loves it than kids who loved my music for 10 years, and hate it now.

 

AllHipHop.com: What lead to this type of music in the first place?

 

Cage: I just got tired of making the same s**t as everyone else. What was I supposed to do? Use auto-tune?

 

AllHipHop.com: Were you happy with Jay-Z’s response?

 

Cage: Yea, good for him! For not f**king going the same route as everyone else.

 

AllHipHop.com: Obviously, the record is very rock-influenced. Can you tell me certain rock artists that you were influenced by?

 

Cage: To correct you, it’s a Hip-Hop-influenced record. It’s just a very different Hip-Hop record. I kind of wanted to take what I was doing as a rap artist, and turn rap on its side and kick it in the balls.

 

AllHipHop.com: Ouch. But I recall hearing that Nine Inch Nails was an influence.

 

Cage: No, not at all. People who are writing rap articles or whatever; their point of reference is so fucked up. What we said about the Nine Inch Nails influence was for one song called “I Found My Mind In Connecticut.” We had been listening to Nine Inch Nails a lot that week and there was a sound that was stuck in our heads, and we said, “This sounds so much like Nine Inch Nails! I’m going to write a Nine Inch Nails-style hook.” Yea, I grew up listening to them in the early ’90s and I still like them, but it’s not my sole influence. I grew up listening to Slick Rick. That’s how the record is inspired. I wanted to write visual stories, didn’t want to dress like a bum, and look different from the rest like Slick Rick.

 

AllHipHop.com: He’s definitely one of the pioneers who brought those factors out.

 

Cage: Yea, from angel dust, storytelling raps, being institutionalized, and caring about the appearance—I have a lot in common with Slick Rick.

 

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about the latest projects Cardboard City’s been working on.

 

Cage: We’re working on the new Weathermen stuff. I know there’s a song that leaked with Breeze, Yak, and El called “Reports Of A Possible Kidnapping.” The main project I’m working on right now is with me, and Shia. He’s in New York and working on the new Oliver Stone film Money Never Sleeps [Wall Street 2] and we’re going to be getting a lot of work done going towards the Cage film.

 

AllHipHop.com: Since you mentioned The Weathermen, can we expect an album?

Cage: Yes, we’re putting music together for an album, and the lineup is: myself, Tame One, Aesop [Rock], Breeze Brewin, El-P, Yak Ballz, and Camu Tao who’s also on the record…also look out for Camu Tao’s record King of Hearts, which is an unfinished album.

 

AllHipHop.com: Did Camu Tao’s passing affect the creative process of Depart from Me?

 

Cage: I just kept going in the direction that we had been going in, which was a more rock approach. It seems like rap went to a more R&B route, so Camu and I decided to go onto a different route. Originally, it was supposed to be Sean doing the guitars, and Camu doing the drum programs, like a hybrid throwback.

 

AllHipHop.com: What’s Camu Tao’s album like?

 

Cage: It’s a hard record to describe. There’s almost like a Buddy Holly-vibe to certain songs mixed with electro-futuristic rap. When he passed, a lot of us were really sad because he had all these materials back in ’04. You hear his music and you hear how insanely brilliant, and catchy it is. It’s going to sound really current like it came out right now.

 

AllHipHop.com: What is Camu’s involvement in The Weathermen album?

 

Cage: It wasn’t until Camu got sick. When we got around wanting to do it, he was too sick to even finish his own records. Instead of getting checked up when he felt ill, he wrote songs about thinking he was dying and how ill he was. Instead of going to the hospital, he wrote music. This kid literally died for music. He would write songs like, “Death, where have you been all my life” before he was diagnosed with cancer. He was out on the road performing, and tumbling over in pain every night, and it just adds creepiness to the story. The Weathermen project is something we unfortunately didn’t get to do when Camu was alive.

 

AllHipHop.com: Is there a specific theme that The Weathermen project is trying to approach?

 

Cage: Originally, people expected more of a political-type record, and I feel like politics will be a major tone of the record, but not necessarily government politics, but more politics of life, and corporate rule.

 

AllHipHop.com: Can the fans expect to hear you rap again?

 

Cage: Pretty much, I still love doing that music. I write that shit all the f**king time because it’s where I came from, but I know that it’s not going to get me anywhere.

 

AllHipHop.com: Can you expand?

 

Cage: It’s not challenging to me anymore, and to be honest with you, it was doing absolutely nothing for me. You wouldn’t read a review about me in The Source or XXL, see me on BET, or listen to me on Hot 97. That world rejected me and doesn’t want anything to do with me. I’m going to make and write music that challenges me. That’s not a challenge; it’s impossibility.

 

AllHipHop.com: Good point.

 

Cage: I don’t know, I think again its politics; Eminim just opens the door for everyone and just shuts it upon entering it.

 

AllHipHop.com: Why do you say that?

 

Cage: Because everything after him is going to be [considered] fraud. Everything after him is killing other artists of similar backgrounds rather than making a credible doorway for those artists.

 

AllHipHop.com: Are you saying it wasn’t his skills but the support he got from people like Dr. Dre that made him successful?

 

Cage: I think it’s a matter of skill. It’s definitely clear now he’s very talented. But of course, you don’t see too many artists that come out and be successful in the mainstream without some sort of co-signs involved. Maybe my music just wasn’t for the masses at the time, maybe it still isn’t.

 

AllHipHop.com: What were your thoughts on a former member of The Weathermen—Copyright—doing a song criticizing Asher Roth?

 

Cage: I don’t think that’s moving forward, I don’t think it either affects Asher Roth one bit, or Copyright. I don’t think anything’s going to come from it. In this insane-f**king business, where people’s lives are just destroyed, I don’t wish anyone ill.

 

AllHipHop.com: I see. I feel like, compared to the Cage in the past, you’ve changed—from your music to the way you’re conducting this interview for example.

 

Cage: I think it was about ’03 when I just stopped doing all the angel dust. Once I cleared my head up a little bit, I realized that I was completely unhappy. I couldn’t pay my bills, I was doing shows for little money, and you just have that moment of clarity and think, “How many pies in the face are you going to take?” It’s a culmination of a lot of things, and if I’m more aware during interviews, it’s because I’m not f**ked up every day, and looking to say stupid things and be an idiot.

 

AllHipHop.com: Did you quit drugs completely?

 

Cage: I mess around with weed, and alcohol. Everything else I have no time for. No time for pills, never was into cocaine, no heroin, no narcotics of any sort.

 

AllHipHop.com: Let’s talk about the video that Shia just directed for you.

 

Cage: It was interesting. He was on “106 & Park,” and he shouted me out, and the entire audience clapped and cheered, as if they knew who the f**k I was, and I thought it was amazing, because I realized that was the first and the last time I would ever be on BET. [Laughs.] Yea he shot the video, we wanted to make it something different, since its not your typical single.

 

AllHipHop.com: Any naysayers?

 

Cage: There are people who hate it, or say, “It’s a disgrace to Hip-Hop!” That’s coming from the mouths of people who have never done anything for Hip-Hop. Like, you write a f**king blog, you’re not doing anything but giving your f**king opinion. Go out and f**king create rather than sitting there and critiquing things, and expecting the world to give a f**k about what you think.

 

AllHipHop.com: You don’t like bloggers?

 

Cage: Suddenly, music fans have become some sort of business-savvy-opinionated writers or A&Rs. Like whenever you get way-over-the-top criticism, just the fact that there are so many pseudo-writers popping out with faux journalism like, “I have a blog, I’m a journalist!” No you’re not! What’s crazy to me is to all those self-proclaimed idiots we’re all a bunch of f**king clowns at the end of the day. So when people are critiquing my music, I’ll have you all know, I make silly-ass-fucking music so the only thing that’s sillier than my music, is some f**king retard whose f**king a** hurts over listening to my silly-a** music.

Cage: Life Changes AllHipHop Feature

cage

The Moral of this story is Cage doesnt like opinions,

via AHH

Imagine this: You grow up getting abused by a psychotic father that leads you to numb your pain with drugs. After spending time in a mental institution as a test subject for fluoxetine (an antidepressant), you trade the straitjacket for a microphone, and begin a critically acclaimed—if commercially overlooked—rap career.

 

That would be a quick glimpse at the life of Chris Palko, better known as Cage, a Definitive Jux-signed artist who’s experienced a long-winding, strange career for the last 16 years. His latest release, Depart from Me—a “hip-hop-influenced” experimental follow-up to the highly acclaimed Hell’s Winter—has garnered criticism from both fans and critics. (Not to mention the comments on the new “emo” look he’s been rocking.) But, despite a hint of irritation in his voice, Cage claims he’s not annoyed. “I don’t really care,” he says. “Everything is trivial to me right now besides music, family, and friends.”

 

A calmer, gentler Cage? Well, overall he’s in a better place both mentally and physically. The long-awaited Weathermen album is in the works, and his biopic project with Shia Lebouf is still happening. Although the death of Camu Tao has damaged his spirit, Cage says he hasn’t consoled himself with drugs. “I just got sick of doing that shit,” he says. “People change you know?” And change, at least for Cage, has been good.

 

AllHipHop.com: How’s the reception for the new album so far?

 

Cage: I got one shitty review from Pitchfork, but it’s not like I care about what they think. I got 4/5 in Spin. That means a lot to me than getting a 10 from Pitchfork. I mean I didn’t even know what Pitchfork was until they reviewed it so I could care less what they’re thinking.

 

AllHipHop.com: Don’t you think they had a point? The album received some negative feedbacks from the hip-hop crowd.

 

Cage: I don’t live for anyone else. And I damn sure not live for a bunch of f**king-s***ty-dirt rags, f**king newspapers, and f**king blogs. If you add up collectively, all these reviews, and all these opinions add up to like 40 people. There’s a bunch of Hip-Hop blogs saying, “Oh, this isn’t Hip-Hop.” I don’t give a f**k what some dude who doesn’t make rap records thinks of it. If you don’t even write music, or make music for a living, why do you publicly critique music? I mean I don’t think Hip-Hop music needs me or anyone else to expand it bigger than what it is already. And if you loved Movies for The Blind, and Hell’s Winter so much more than this, well, where the f**k was you when I was making them? I rather have a 16-year-old who found out my music two months ago and loves it than kids who loved my music for 10 years, and hate it now.

 

AllHipHop.com: What lead to this type of music in the first place?

 

Cage: I just got tired of making the same s**t as everyone else. What was I supposed to do? Use auto-tune?

 

AllHipHop.com: Were you happy with Jay-Z’s response?

 

Cage: Yea, good for him! For not f**king going the same route as everyone else.

 

AllHipHop.com: Obviously, the record is very rock-influenced. Can you tell me certain rock artists that you were influenced by?

 

Cage: To correct you, it’s a Hip-Hop-influenced record. It’s just a very different Hip-Hop record. I kind of wanted to take what I was doing as a rap artist, and turn rap on its side and kick it in the balls.

 

AllHipHop.com: Ouch. But I recall hearing that Nine Inch Nails was an influence.

 

Cage: No, not at all. People who are writing rap articles or whatever; their point of reference is so fucked up. What we said about the Nine Inch Nails influence was for one song called “I Found My Mind In Connecticut.” We had been listening to Nine Inch Nails a lot that week and there was a sound that was stuck in our heads, and we said, “This sounds so much like Nine Inch Nails! I’m going to write a Nine Inch Nails-style hook.” Yea, I grew up listening to them in the early ’90s and I still like them, but it’s not my sole influence. I grew up listening to Slick Rick. That’s how the record is inspired. I wanted to write visual stories, didn’t want to dress like a bum, and look different from the rest like Slick Rick.

 

AllHipHop.com: He’s definitely one of the pioneers who brought those factors out.

 

Cage: Yea, from angel dust, storytelling raps, being institutionalized, and caring about the appearance—I have a lot in common with Slick Rick.

 

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about the latest projects Cardboard City’s been working on.

 

Cage: We’re working on the new Weathermen stuff. I know there’s a song that leaked with Breeze, Yak, and El called “Reports Of A Possible Kidnapping.” The main project I’m working on right now is with me, and Shia. He’s in New York and working on the new Oliver Stone film Money Never Sleeps [Wall Street 2] and we’re going to be getting a lot of work done going towards the Cage film.

 

AllHipHop.com: Since you mentioned The Weathermen, can we expect an album?

Cage: Yes, we’re putting music together for an album, and the lineup is: myself, Tame One, Aesop [Rock], Breeze Brewin, El-P, Yak Ballz, and Camu Tao who’s also on the record…also look out for Camu Tao’s record King of Hearts, which is an unfinished album.

 

AllHipHop.com: Did Camu Tao’s passing affect the creative process of Depart from Me?

 

Cage: I just kept going in the direction that we had been going in, which was a more rock approach. It seems like rap went to a more R&B route, so Camu and I decided to go onto a different route. Originally, it was supposed to be Sean doing the guitars, and Camu doing the drum programs, like a hybrid throwback.

 

AllHipHop.com: What’s Camu Tao’s album like?

 

Cage: It’s a hard record to describe. There’s almost like a Buddy Holly-vibe to certain songs mixed with electro-futuristic rap. When he passed, a lot of us were really sad because he had all these materials back in ’04. You hear his music and you hear how insanely brilliant, and catchy it is. It’s going to sound really current like it came out right now.

 

AllHipHop.com: What is Camu’s involvement in The Weathermen album?

 

Cage: It wasn’t until Camu got sick. When we got around wanting to do it, he was too sick to even finish his own records. Instead of getting checked up when he felt ill, he wrote songs about thinking he was dying and how ill he was. Instead of going to the hospital, he wrote music. This kid literally died for music. He would write songs like, “Death, where have you been all my life” before he was diagnosed with cancer. He was out on the road performing, and tumbling over in pain every night, and it just adds creepiness to the story. The Weathermen project is something we unfortunately didn’t get to do when Camu was alive.

 

AllHipHop.com: Is there a specific theme that The Weathermen project is trying to approach?

 

Cage: Originally, people expected more of a political-type record, and I feel like politics will be a major tone of the record, but not necessarily government politics, but more politics of life, and corporate rule.

 

AllHipHop.com: Can the fans expect to hear you rap again?

 

Cage: Pretty much, I still love doing that music. I write that shit all the f**king time because it’s where I came from, but I know that it’s not going to get me anywhere.

 

AllHipHop.com: Can you expand?

 

Cage: It’s not challenging to me anymore, and to be honest with you, it was doing absolutely nothing for me. You wouldn’t read a review about me in The Source or XXL, see me on BET, or listen to me on Hot 97. That world rejected me and doesn’t want anything to do with me. I’m going to make and write music that challenges me. That’s not a challenge; it’s impossibility.

 

AllHipHop.com: Good point.

 

Cage: I don’t know, I think again its politics; Eminim just opens the door for everyone and just shuts it upon entering it.

 

AllHipHop.com: Why do you say that?

 

Cage: Because everything after him is going to be [considered] fraud. Everything after him is killing other artists of similar backgrounds rather than making a credible doorway for those artists.

 

AllHipHop.com: Are you saying it wasn’t his skills but the support he got from people like Dr. Dre that made him successful?

 

Cage: I think it’s a matter of skill. It’s definitely clear now he’s very talented. But of course, you don’t see too many artists that come out and be successful in the mainstream without some sort of co-signs involved. Maybe my music just wasn’t for the masses at the time, maybe it still isn’t.

 

AllHipHop.com: What were your thoughts on a former member of The Weathermen—Copyright—doing a song criticizing Asher Roth?

 

Cage: I don’t think that’s moving forward, I don’t think it either affects Asher Roth one bit, or Copyright. I don’t think anything’s going to come from it. In this insane-f**king business, where people’s lives are just destroyed, I don’t wish anyone ill.

 

AllHipHop.com: I see. I feel like, compared to the Cage in the past, you’ve changed—from your music to the way you’re conducting this interview for example.

 

Cage: I think it was about ’03 when I just stopped doing all the angel dust. Once I cleared my head up a little bit, I realized that I was completely unhappy. I couldn’t pay my bills, I was doing shows for little money, and you just have that moment of clarity and think, “How many pies in the face are you going to take?” It’s a culmination of a lot of things, and if I’m more aware during interviews, it’s because I’m not f**ked up every day, and looking to say stupid things and be an idiot.

 

AllHipHop.com: Did you quit drugs completely?

 

Cage: I mess around with weed, and alcohol. Everything else I have no time for. No time for pills, never was into cocaine, no heroin, no narcotics of any sort.

 

AllHipHop.com: Let’s talk about the video that Shia just directed for you.

 

Cage: It was interesting. He was on “106 & Park,” and he shouted me out, and the entire audience clapped and cheered, as if they knew who the f**k I was, and I thought it was amazing, because I realized that was the first and the last time I would ever be on BET. [Laughs.] Yea he shot the video, we wanted to make it something different, since its not your typical single.

 

AllHipHop.com: Any naysayers?

 

Cage: There are people who hate it, or say, “It’s a disgrace to Hip-Hop!” That’s coming from the mouths of people who have never done anything for Hip-Hop. Like, you write a f**king blog, you’re not doing anything but giving your f**king opinion. Go out and f**king create rather than sitting there and critiquing things, and expecting the world to give a f**k about what you think.

 

AllHipHop.com: You don’t like bloggers?

 

Cage: Suddenly, music fans have become some sort of business-savvy-opinionated writers or A&Rs. Like whenever you get way-over-the-top criticism, just the fact that there are so many pseudo-writers popping out with faux journalism like, “I have a blog, I’m a journalist!” No you’re not! What’s crazy to me is to all those self-proclaimed idiots we’re all a bunch of f**king clowns at the end of the day. So when people are critiquing my music, I’ll have you all know, I make silly-ass-fucking music so the only thing that’s sillier than my music, is some f**king retard whose f**king a** hurts over listening to my silly-a** music.

Vast Aire Speaks about his falling out with Def Jux and The Weathermen

vast

FIRST, PEACE LOVE AND RESPECT TO CAMU TAO {R.I.P.}

i would like to say i never started any beef, but i will an end to it
im going to answer some questions from the fans so a basic understanding can be reached.

WHY DID YOU LEAVE DEF JUX? AND WHEN?

I left def jux in late 2002 / 2003, i started working on my lp “Look Mom No Hands”
at this time, me and camu {SA SMASH} were living together in BKNY. camu was working on “Smashy Trashy” his only lp on Def jux. at the time, Def jux was trying to expand their amount of artist, and they staterted giving out “recording advances”. at the time COLD VEIN had sold over 100,000 cd’s and a maxi single of the F-word sold about 30,000 at the time {140,000 records sold}. 

can ox at the time didnt have a “deal”, we recorded everything as friends, but we blew up over night, and def jux didnt know how to handle it, so you can imagine that can ox was mad!  {CAN OX WAS ONLY MAKING MONEY FROM SHOWS}

we bult this label with you {el-p} but your giving money to outsiders first????
DEF JUX SHOULD HAVE PAID CAN OX AND RJD2 BEFORE YOU PAID MURS AND 9TH WONDER, C-RAYZ AND ETC? {PEACE TO THEM, IM JUST MAKING A POINT}

at this time, dj Mr Len told me that El-p’s biz-partner {DEF JUX / OZONE} Ameechi stole $5000 from co-flow, and this is why MR LEN didnt hang around or do cuts for def jux any more!!!!

so, its 3 years after my great lp {cold vein} blows up, but el-p and ameechi dont have any money for me and vordul??????? but more than 5 groups are getting advances????
AND MR LEN SAID $5000 WAS GONE! DUE TO AMEECHI!???

THAT STARTED A HUGE BEEF! me and el-p  had some VERBAL fights, and i moved to red hook brooklyn. this is when me camu and metro had a crib, they moved from ohio to do their lp for def jux,

CAN OX GOT A LAWYER AND THEIR MONEY…but the vibe was different, its like when your girl friends catches you cheating, its never the same after that! we should have never had to chase our own money!!!!  we could record as friends, but when it was time to pay me i was told to get a lawyer?????

so we {can ox} wanted to move forward, but when it wasnt the biz problems, we had creative problems and lack of control.

El-p is a control freak, if he cant produced every song, he starts to throw fits! at this time {2003} im getting crazy ill beats from Mf doom, Madlib, Ayatollah Camu tao etc.
i wasnt thinking about el-p, his sound was dope, but its was limted. it was the same type of style, i wanted somthing new, and i wanted control! hence the name LOOK MOM NO HANDS! all that ment was “freedom”  at def jux in those days, el-p was cencering a line or 2 out of dudes rhymes. i watched him do it to camu tao and vordul mega!

el-p told camu tao he could not “slap a girl” in his rap song, and he told vordul “you put to many ‘nigga’s’ in your raps”

the last thing i needed was some emo white kid telling me how many ‘niggas’ i can have in my rap songs! and one of my favorote hip hop songs is “top billing” and in that song milk says very clearly “if your girl is out of line…its your girl i slap” and as far as black people using the word ‘nigga’ q-tip already broke tha down! so ME CAMU AND VORDUl hated that day! this is why i left def jux bad biz and lack of creative control!

WHAT WENT DOWN WITH CAN OX’S 2ND RECORD?

To be real, we started that project, but vordul dropped the ball on that, vordul became very distant and was drunk and coked up all the time, he became this way after his jaw was broken in a bar fight that was ment for el-p. long story short, that helped wake up vorduls “dark side” and we only did like 5 songs. El-p got mad at me as if i should have been vordul’s baby sitter! vordul is a grown man, he mad his choices, dont get mad at me!  so then we had our final fall out and the last thing we recorded was Mr Lif’s songs “Brothaz rmx wit can ox”  me and vordul are cool, and  we still are recording! thats my family!  he’s on my new lp “OX 2010”

WHY DID YOU LEAVE WEATHERMEN CREW?

AT THIS TIME….I WASNT ON DEF JUX BUT I WAS STILL A WEATHERMAN MEMBER!
I did a Tour with SSS {TAME ONE AND D-DONS in late 2006} with my homie 4th p, it was called the teen wolf tour, it was fun and cool, but then it turned for the worst!
cage claims i took money from yak ballz and tame one????
according to whom since cage wasnt on the tour??????

the tour was set up for me to get an average  of about $850 a night {i was told i was going to get $1000 to head line, but i left it alone because im wit my peoples, SO I THOUGHT}

one of the shows was not part of the tour, it was a show i already had as a solo artist, but i added it to the tour {teen wolf tour} long story short, I should have gotten $900 dollars that night, but yak ballz felt i should take $750.  now….i understand yak ballz was paying for extra gas {and i was also} and i understand that yak was feeding Tame one {and so was i} but he had no right to to try and get more money from a show that was never his? he got the same money he got every night, that $150 or $75 bucks had nothing to do with him? AND ITS IMPOSSIBLE FOR ME TO STEAL MY OWN MONEY!

so if that makes me a crook, then im muthafuckin robin hood!
i dont have anything to hide!  i gave yak the $150 THE NEXT DAY! we had 4 more shows and i wanted to dead the beef, but i made it clear it was my money to begin with!

also on that same tour we had dinner at a mexican spot, and we all are talking about projects etc. i told every one at the table {yak incluuded} that i didnt like aesop’s new lp at the time {bazooka tooth} I LOVE AESOP! but i didnt like that record, all i said was “you cant hear his words anymore” and yak turned that into me being a hater!!!!

meanwhile all these bitch emo kids do is talk shit about you in emails, blogs and or 2-ways!

Tame showed me a 2-ways convo with cage trying to get votes to kick me out of weathermen! THATS RIGHT TAME SHOWED ME A 2-WAY EMAIL WIT CAGE TRYING TO VOTE ME OUT! SO BEFORE THE ELECTION WAS DONE, I LEFT THE NEW LEFT. BECAUSE I KNEW THEY WERE ALL FAKES.

AT THE END OF THE DAY IF CAMU HATED ME, WHY IS HIS RIGHT HAND MAN {METRO} CLOSE FRIENDS WITH ME AND IS ON MY NEW LP? WHY AM I STILL COOL WITH ALL OF CAMU’S OHIO PEOPLES LIKE BIG JT!!!!!!!!!!!!!

METRO IS PROOF THAT ME AND CAMU WERE GOOD, HOW ELSE DID I GET MY BEATS FOR MIGHTY JOSEPH {BLOOD SPORT PROD BY CAMU!}

THE ONLY LIARS AND CROOKS HERE ARE THESE EMO BITCHES!

like i said before if they are angels that never did nothing wrong

WHERE IS

SPACE?
BIG JUS?
MR LEN?
J-TREDS?
BREEZLY BREWIN?
C-RAYZ?
MASAI BEY?
MURS?
RJD2?
CAN OX?
MR LIF?
AND B.M.S.?

NONE OF THEM WORK WITH DEF JUX ANYMORE…LETS BE REAL ABOUT THIS!

and look at cage’s history!!!!

he worked with NECRO?
and HIGH AND MIGHTY?

…ONLY TO TURN ON THEM???

HE TURNED ON COPY, MASAI BEY, B.M.S. SPACE AND ME!

JUST THINK ABOUT HOW CAMU FELT WHEN EL-P’S CENSORSHIP DESTROYED SMASHY TRASHY THE LP! CAMU HATED DEF JUX’S CENSORSHIP, IF HE HATED ANYTHING AT ALL!

WHAT TYPE OF RECORD LABEL IS THAT???
AND I CANT BE DOWN WITH A CREW OF “YES MEN”

IF I DONT LIKE YOUR BEAT I DONT LIKE IT, YOU FUCKING EMO BITCH!
AND EL-P IS A BITCH BECAUSE HE KNOWS CAGE SHITTED ON HIM!!!! BUT HE KISSES HIS ASS!

ANY REAL FAN CAN LOOK AT THE PATTERNS AND FIGURE IT OUT!

LAST BUT NT LEAST, I HAVE A SECRET UNRELEASED “BLAIR COSBY” SONG OF CAMU TAO DISSING DEF JUX AND EL-P!

BUT, DID I RELEASE IT, NO!

IM GONNA LET THEM KEEP DIGGING THEIR SHIT HOLE
AND THEN IM GOING PRESS PLAY AND BRING CAMU BACK TO LIFE DISSING THEM!

IF IM A LIAR, ASK METRO!!!!!!!!!!

PEACE-

OX 2010 COMING SOON!

REAL RAP IS BACK!

Vast Aire Speaks about his falling out with Def Jux and The Weathermen

vast

FIRST, PEACE LOVE AND RESPECT TO CAMU TAO {R.I.P.}

i would like to say i never started any beef, but i will an end to it
im going to answer some questions from the fans so a basic understanding can be reached.

WHY DID YOU LEAVE DEF JUX? AND WHEN?

I left def jux in late 2002 / 2003, i started working on my lp “Look Mom No Hands”
at this time, me and camu {SA SMASH} were living together in BKNY. camu was working on “Smashy Trashy” his only lp on Def jux. at the time, Def jux was trying to expand their amount of artist, and they staterted giving out “recording advances”. at the time COLD VEIN had sold over 100,000 cd’s and a maxi single of the F-word sold about 30,000 at the time {140,000 records sold}. 

can ox at the time didnt have a “deal”, we recorded everything as friends, but we blew up over night, and def jux didnt know how to handle it, so you can imagine that can ox was mad!  {CAN OX WAS ONLY MAKING MONEY FROM SHOWS}

we bult this label with you {el-p} but your giving money to outsiders first????
DEF JUX SHOULD HAVE PAID CAN OX AND RJD2 BEFORE YOU PAID MURS AND 9TH WONDER, C-RAYZ AND ETC? {PEACE TO THEM, IM JUST MAKING A POINT}

at this time, dj Mr Len told me that El-p’s biz-partner {DEF JUX / OZONE} Ameechi stole $5000 from co-flow, and this is why MR LEN didnt hang around or do cuts for def jux any more!!!!

so, its 3 years after my great lp {cold vein} blows up, but el-p and ameechi dont have any money for me and vordul??????? but more than 5 groups are getting advances????
AND MR LEN SAID $5000 WAS GONE! DUE TO AMEECHI!???

THAT STARTED A HUGE BEEF! me and el-p  had some VERBAL fights, and i moved to red hook brooklyn. this is when me camu and metro had a crib, they moved from ohio to do their lp for def jux,

CAN OX GOT A LAWYER AND THEIR MONEY…but the vibe was different, its like when your girl friends catches you cheating, its never the same after that! we should have never had to chase our own money!!!!  we could record as friends, but when it was time to pay me i was told to get a lawyer?????

so we {can ox} wanted to move forward, but when it wasnt the biz problems, we had creative problems and lack of control.

El-p is a control freak, if he cant produced every song, he starts to throw fits! at this time {2003} im getting crazy ill beats from Mf doom, Madlib, Ayatollah Camu tao etc.
i wasnt thinking about el-p, his sound was dope, but its was limted. it was the same type of style, i wanted somthing new, and i wanted control! hence the name LOOK MOM NO HANDS! all that ment was “freedom”  at def jux in those days, el-p was cencering a line or 2 out of dudes rhymes. i watched him do it to camu tao and vordul mega!

el-p told camu tao he could not “slap a girl” in his rap song, and he told vordul “you put to many ‘nigga’s’ in your raps”

the last thing i needed was some emo white kid telling me how many ‘niggas’ i can have in my rap songs! and one of my favorote hip hop songs is “top billing” and in that song milk says very clearly “if your girl is out of line…its your girl i slap” and as far as black people using the word ‘nigga’ q-tip already broke tha down! so ME CAMU AND VORDUl hated that day! this is why i left def jux bad biz and lack of creative control!

WHAT WENT DOWN WITH CAN OX’S 2ND RECORD?

To be real, we started that project, but vordul dropped the ball on that, vordul became very distant and was drunk and coked up all the time, he became this way after his jaw was broken in a bar fight that was ment for el-p. long story short, that helped wake up vorduls “dark side” and we only did like 5 songs. El-p got mad at me as if i should have been vordul’s baby sitter! vordul is a grown man, he mad his choices, dont get mad at me!  so then we had our final fall out and the last thing we recorded was Mr Lif’s songs “Brothaz rmx wit can ox”  me and vordul are cool, and  we still are recording! thats my family!  he’s on my new lp “OX 2010”

WHY DID YOU LEAVE WEATHERMEN CREW?

AT THIS TIME….I WASNT ON DEF JUX BUT I WAS STILL A WEATHERMAN MEMBER!
I did a Tour with SSS {TAME ONE AND D-DONS in late 2006} with my homie 4th p, it was called the teen wolf tour, it was fun and cool, but then it turned for the worst!
cage claims i took money from yak ballz and tame one????
according to whom since cage wasnt on the tour??????

the tour was set up for me to get an average  of about $850 a night {i was told i was going to get $1000 to head line, but i left it alone because im wit my peoples, SO I THOUGHT}

one of the shows was not part of the tour, it was a show i already had as a solo artist, but i added it to the tour {teen wolf tour} long story short, I should have gotten $900 dollars that night, but yak ballz felt i should take $750.  now….i understand yak ballz was paying for extra gas {and i was also} and i understand that yak was feeding Tame one {and so was i} but he had no right to to try and get more money from a show that was never his? he got the same money he got every night, that $150 or $75 bucks had nothing to do with him? AND ITS IMPOSSIBLE FOR ME TO STEAL MY OWN MONEY!

so if that makes me a crook, then im muthafuckin robin hood!
i dont have anything to hide!  i gave yak the $150 THE NEXT DAY! we had 4 more shows and i wanted to dead the beef, but i made it clear it was my money to begin with!

also on that same tour we had dinner at a mexican spot, and we all are talking about projects etc. i told every one at the table {yak incluuded} that i didnt like aesop’s new lp at the time {bazooka tooth} I LOVE AESOP! but i didnt like that record, all i said was “you cant hear his words anymore” and yak turned that into me being a hater!!!!

meanwhile all these bitch emo kids do is talk shit about you in emails, blogs and or 2-ways!

Tame showed me a 2-ways convo with cage trying to get votes to kick me out of weathermen! THATS RIGHT TAME SHOWED ME A 2-WAY EMAIL WIT CAGE TRYING TO VOTE ME OUT! SO BEFORE THE ELECTION WAS DONE, I LEFT THE NEW LEFT. BECAUSE I KNEW THEY WERE ALL FAKES.

AT THE END OF THE DAY IF CAMU HATED ME, WHY IS HIS RIGHT HAND MAN {METRO} CLOSE FRIENDS WITH ME AND IS ON MY NEW LP? WHY AM I STILL COOL WITH ALL OF CAMU’S OHIO PEOPLES LIKE BIG JT!!!!!!!!!!!!!

METRO IS PROOF THAT ME AND CAMU WERE GOOD, HOW ELSE DID I GET MY BEATS FOR MIGHTY JOSEPH {BLOOD SPORT PROD BY CAMU!}

THE ONLY LIARS AND CROOKS HERE ARE THESE EMO BITCHES!

like i said before if they are angels that never did nothing wrong

WHERE IS

SPACE?
BIG JUS?
MR LEN?
J-TREDS?
BREEZLY BREWIN?
C-RAYZ?
MASAI BEY?
MURS?
RJD2?
CAN OX?
MR LIF?
AND B.M.S.?

NONE OF THEM WORK WITH DEF JUX ANYMORE…LETS BE REAL ABOUT THIS!

and look at cage’s history!!!!

he worked with NECRO?
and HIGH AND MIGHTY?

…ONLY TO TURN ON THEM???

HE TURNED ON COPY, MASAI BEY, B.M.S. SPACE AND ME!

JUST THINK ABOUT HOW CAMU FELT WHEN EL-P’S CENSORSHIP DESTROYED SMASHY TRASHY THE LP! CAMU HATED DEF JUX’S CENSORSHIP, IF HE HATED ANYTHING AT ALL!

WHAT TYPE OF RECORD LABEL IS THAT???
AND I CANT BE DOWN WITH A CREW OF “YES MEN”

IF I DONT LIKE YOUR BEAT I DONT LIKE IT, YOU FUCKING EMO BITCH!
AND EL-P IS A BITCH BECAUSE HE KNOWS CAGE SHITTED ON HIM!!!! BUT HE KISSES HIS ASS!

ANY REAL FAN CAN LOOK AT THE PATTERNS AND FIGURE IT OUT!

LAST BUT NT LEAST, I HAVE A SECRET UNRELEASED “BLAIR COSBY” SONG OF CAMU TAO DISSING DEF JUX AND EL-P!

BUT, DID I RELEASE IT, NO!

IM GONNA LET THEM KEEP DIGGING THEIR SHIT HOLE
AND THEN IM GOING PRESS PLAY AND BRING CAMU BACK TO LIFE DISSING THEM!

IF IM A LIAR, ASK METRO!!!!!!!!!!

PEACE-

OX 2010 COMING SOON!

REAL RAP IS BACK!

Vast Aire Speaks about his falling out with Def Jux and The Weathermen

vast

FIRST, PEACE LOVE AND RESPECT TO CAMU TAO {R.I.P.}

i would like to say i never started any beef, but i will an end to it
im going to answer some questions from the fans so a basic understanding can be reached.

WHY DID YOU LEAVE DEF JUX? AND WHEN?

I left def jux in late 2002 / 2003, i started working on my lp “Look Mom No Hands”
at this time, me and camu {SA SMASH} were living together in BKNY. camu was working on “Smashy Trashy” his only lp on Def jux. at the time, Def jux was trying to expand their amount of artist, and they staterted giving out “recording advances”. at the time COLD VEIN had sold over 100,000 cd’s and a maxi single of the F-word sold about 30,000 at the time {140,000 records sold}. 

can ox at the time didnt have a “deal”, we recorded everything as friends, but we blew up over night, and def jux didnt know how to handle it, so you can imagine that can ox was mad!  {CAN OX WAS ONLY MAKING MONEY FROM SHOWS}

we bult this label with you {el-p} but your giving money to outsiders first????
DEF JUX SHOULD HAVE PAID CAN OX AND RJD2 BEFORE YOU PAID MURS AND 9TH WONDER, C-RAYZ AND ETC? {PEACE TO THEM, IM JUST MAKING A POINT}

at this time, dj Mr Len told me that El-p’s biz-partner {DEF JUX / OZONE} Ameechi stole $5000 from co-flow, and this is why MR LEN didnt hang around or do cuts for def jux any more!!!!

so, its 3 years after my great lp {cold vein} blows up, but el-p and ameechi dont have any money for me and vordul??????? but more than 5 groups are getting advances????
AND MR LEN SAID $5000 WAS GONE! DUE TO AMEECHI!???

THAT STARTED A HUGE BEEF! me and el-p  had some VERBAL fights, and i moved to red hook brooklyn. this is when me camu and metro had a crib, they moved from ohio to do their lp for def jux,

CAN OX GOT A LAWYER AND THEIR MONEY…but the vibe was different, its like when your girl friends catches you cheating, its never the same after that! we should have never had to chase our own money!!!!  we could record as friends, but when it was time to pay me i was told to get a lawyer?????

so we {can ox} wanted to move forward, but when it wasnt the biz problems, we had creative problems and lack of control.

El-p is a control freak, if he cant produced every song, he starts to throw fits! at this time {2003} im getting crazy ill beats from Mf doom, Madlib, Ayatollah Camu tao etc.
i wasnt thinking about el-p, his sound was dope, but its was limted. it was the same type of style, i wanted somthing new, and i wanted control! hence the name LOOK MOM NO HANDS! all that ment was “freedom”  at def jux in those days, el-p was cencering a line or 2 out of dudes rhymes. i watched him do it to camu tao and vordul mega!

el-p told camu tao he could not “slap a girl” in his rap song, and he told vordul “you put to many ‘nigga’s’ in your raps”

the last thing i needed was some emo white kid telling me how many ‘niggas’ i can have in my rap songs! and one of my favorote hip hop songs is “top billing” and in that song milk says very clearly “if your girl is out of line…its your girl i slap” and as far as black people using the word ‘nigga’ q-tip already broke tha down! so ME CAMU AND VORDUl hated that day! this is why i left def jux bad biz and lack of creative control!

WHAT WENT DOWN WITH CAN OX’S 2ND RECORD?

To be real, we started that project, but vordul dropped the ball on that, vordul became very distant and was drunk and coked up all the time, he became this way after his jaw was broken in a bar fight that was ment for el-p. long story short, that helped wake up vorduls “dark side” and we only did like 5 songs. El-p got mad at me as if i should have been vordul’s baby sitter! vordul is a grown man, he mad his choices, dont get mad at me!  so then we had our final fall out and the last thing we recorded was Mr Lif’s songs “Brothaz rmx wit can ox”  me and vordul are cool, and  we still are recording! thats my family!  he’s on my new lp “OX 2010”

WHY DID YOU LEAVE WEATHERMEN CREW?

AT THIS TIME….I WASNT ON DEF JUX BUT I WAS STILL A WEATHERMAN MEMBER!
I did a Tour with SSS {TAME ONE AND D-DONS in late 2006} with my homie 4th p, it was called the teen wolf tour, it was fun and cool, but then it turned for the worst!
cage claims i took money from yak ballz and tame one????
according to whom since cage wasnt on the tour??????

the tour was set up for me to get an average  of about $850 a night {i was told i was going to get $1000 to head line, but i left it alone because im wit my peoples, SO I THOUGHT}

one of the shows was not part of the tour, it was a show i already had as a solo artist, but i added it to the tour {teen wolf tour} long story short, I should have gotten $900 dollars that night, but yak ballz felt i should take $750.  now….i understand yak ballz was paying for extra gas {and i was also} and i understand that yak was feeding Tame one {and so was i} but he had no right to to try and get more money from a show that was never his? he got the same money he got every night, that $150 or $75 bucks had nothing to do with him? AND ITS IMPOSSIBLE FOR ME TO STEAL MY OWN MONEY!

so if that makes me a crook, then im muthafuckin robin hood!
i dont have anything to hide!  i gave yak the $150 THE NEXT DAY! we had 4 more shows and i wanted to dead the beef, but i made it clear it was my money to begin with!

also on that same tour we had dinner at a mexican spot, and we all are talking about projects etc. i told every one at the table {yak incluuded} that i didnt like aesop’s new lp at the time {bazooka tooth} I LOVE AESOP! but i didnt like that record, all i said was “you cant hear his words anymore” and yak turned that into me being a hater!!!!

meanwhile all these bitch emo kids do is talk shit about you in emails, blogs and or 2-ways!

Tame showed me a 2-ways convo with cage trying to get votes to kick me out of weathermen! THATS RIGHT TAME SHOWED ME A 2-WAY EMAIL WIT CAGE TRYING TO VOTE ME OUT! SO BEFORE THE ELECTION WAS DONE, I LEFT THE NEW LEFT. BECAUSE I KNEW THEY WERE ALL FAKES.

AT THE END OF THE DAY IF CAMU HATED ME, WHY IS HIS RIGHT HAND MAN {METRO} CLOSE FRIENDS WITH ME AND IS ON MY NEW LP? WHY AM I STILL COOL WITH ALL OF CAMU’S OHIO PEOPLES LIKE BIG JT!!!!!!!!!!!!!

METRO IS PROOF THAT ME AND CAMU WERE GOOD, HOW ELSE DID I GET MY BEATS FOR MIGHTY JOSEPH {BLOOD SPORT PROD BY CAMU!}

THE ONLY LIARS AND CROOKS HERE ARE THESE EMO BITCHES!

like i said before if they are angels that never did nothing wrong

WHERE IS

SPACE?
BIG JUS?
MR LEN?
J-TREDS?
BREEZLY BREWIN?
C-RAYZ?
MASAI BEY?
MURS?
RJD2?
CAN OX?
MR LIF?
AND B.M.S.?

NONE OF THEM WORK WITH DEF JUX ANYMORE…LETS BE REAL ABOUT THIS!

and look at cage’s history!!!!

he worked with NECRO?
and HIGH AND MIGHTY?

…ONLY TO TURN ON THEM???

HE TURNED ON COPY, MASAI BEY, B.M.S. SPACE AND ME!

JUST THINK ABOUT HOW CAMU FELT WHEN EL-P’S CENSORSHIP DESTROYED SMASHY TRASHY THE LP! CAMU HATED DEF JUX’S CENSORSHIP, IF HE HATED ANYTHING AT ALL!

WHAT TYPE OF RECORD LABEL IS THAT???
AND I CANT BE DOWN WITH A CREW OF “YES MEN”

IF I DONT LIKE YOUR BEAT I DONT LIKE IT, YOU FUCKING EMO BITCH!
AND EL-P IS A BITCH BECAUSE HE KNOWS CAGE SHITTED ON HIM!!!! BUT HE KISSES HIS ASS!

ANY REAL FAN CAN LOOK AT THE PATTERNS AND FIGURE IT OUT!

LAST BUT NT LEAST, I HAVE A SECRET UNRELEASED “BLAIR COSBY” SONG OF CAMU TAO DISSING DEF JUX AND EL-P!

BUT, DID I RELEASE IT, NO!

IM GONNA LET THEM KEEP DIGGING THEIR SHIT HOLE
AND THEN IM GOING PRESS PLAY AND BRING CAMU BACK TO LIFE DISSING THEM!

IF IM A LIAR, ASK METRO!!!!!!!!!!

PEACE-

OX 2010 COMING SOON!

REAL RAP IS BACK!

Cage gets in Altercation on Stage in DC

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missed the show last night in Bean but I seen i CAgE half a dozen times before so no worries, peace to Shabooty.

Cage gets in Altercation on Stage in DC

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missed the show last night in Bean but I seen i CAgE half a dozen times before so no worries, peace to Shabooty.

Cage gets in Altercation on Stage in DC

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missed the show last night in Bean but I seen i CAgE half a dozen times before so no worries, peace to Shabooty.

Vast Aire Calls Cage a Fake Along With Every White Kid

vast
Vast apparently is bitter about people trying to ruin his music which is understandable im a fan of Vast and have been for like a decade but hes mad at fake rappers or fake people or maybe just white pepople… like Spencer Pratt… hes not the 1st herb to make rap music, with every generation of music and year you have your good shit and you have your herb this is what makes the world goround imo, I agree with Vast in saying that Spencer shouldnt make music and he’s a giant douchebag, but whats uneducated white kids have to do with anything? so an uneducated black guy or latino or whatever the fuck else can make music and its real cuz there skin color? and they suddenly know what good music is even though they might be just as clueless or even more so than the “white guy”? I think that could be the most retarded and racist shit ive ever heard. Knowing the history of hip-hop or any music is good I know tons of shit about music from all genres much more so than the average person im guessing.. does that make me better than the next guy? does that put me on a upper tier so I can now shit on the people below me?  FUCK NO it’s my job to educate these people tell them whats what. How does Vast expect “kids” as he puts it to know these names hes blairing out? I know them all I know what theyve all done  Ive listened to them all many many many many times among a million other musicians from different genres of music black white brown green and yellow,,, I think what Vast is getting at is he doesnt like white people and white people alone have ruined every genre of music and have never done a thing for it. Whites ruined Rock-N-Roll as well he then says people aka “white kids” who don’t know there shit will buy “white rap” cds and those white people happen to be fake or uneducated to music … I guess there was never a white guy in the Bronx when hip-hop was created not a single one not for hundreds maybe thousands of miles, a pale face wasnt in sight Read what Vast has to say below and feel free to comment I’m curious to see what peoples thoughts are on this

HIP HOP IS A HUGE BUSINESS, AND JUST THINK…. IT WAS CREATED FROM NOTHING, FROM THE SLUMS OF UPTOWN….THE SOUTH BRONX NYC!
MADE BY AFRO-LATINO INDIANS BLOOD SWEAT AND TEARS {AKA BLACK PEOPLE}

…NOW WE HAVE THIS DICK HEAD SPENCER PRATT???? WHERE DOES HE FIT IN IN OUR CULTURE? HE SHOULD STAY IN HIS “REALITY-FAKE-TV” WORLD THAT HE’S IN AND LEAVE HIP HOP ALONE! UNEDUCATED WHITE KIDS NEED TO “CHILL” AND RESPECT WHERE THIS MUSIC COMES FROM AND WHERES ITS GOING!

AT THIS RATE…HIP HOP IS GOING TO BE DESTROYED JUST LIKE REAL ROCK -N- ROLL MUSIC WAS!!! {Peace to MURS im listening to “and this is for”}

HALF THE KIDS THAT LISTEN TO ROCK DONT KNOW WHO B.B. KING, CHUCK BERRY, LITTLE RICHARD, OR MUDDY WATERS ARE OR WHAT THEY HAVE DONE FOR OUR MUSIC!!!!!! THEY DONT KNOW WHO PETER TOSH IS OR EVEN KOOL HERC???

BUT THAT SAME KID WILL BY SPENCER PRATT’S RECORD, ASHER ROTH’S RECORD & CAGE’S RECORD…AND THEY ARE ALL FAKES!

ITS SO COOL TO BE FAKE THAT YOU CAN BRING IT UP IN YOUR INTERVIEWS!
AS LONG AS YOU MAKE MONEY …I GUESS YOU CAN SELL YOUR OWN MOTHER!

Peace to MURS im listening to “and this is for”

HERE IS SPENCER’S INTERVIEW BELOW!

Why on earth would Spencer Pratt make a rap album?
To be honest, my whole life I’ve always been listening to rap music or reggae. But I never heard of rappers making billions of dollars, so being a rapper wasn’t really in my crystal ball. It took people like 50 Cent to come along and, you know, he’s on the Forbes list making $500 million, so I’m like, ‘Wow, there can be a lot of money in this.’

So you’re in it for the money.
This is what I say to people: I’m not in the music industry. I’m in show business. So when people are like, “What are you doing coming into the rap game?” That’s the wrong question. I’m already in the game I’m in, and that’s pop culture and entertainment. I’m not coming in saying, “Oh, I’m the truth, I’m the biggest lyricist ever to walk on the Earth.” I’m not trying to make music that changes history. No one is doing that anymore. Music has become disposable. You’re lucky if your song lasts a month. That’s the state of the music industry right now.

Saying that you’ll be making disposable rap doesn’t make me want to run out and buy your music.
Let me be clear: I’m making phenomenally great music. “I’m a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here” is one of the catchiest songs in years. I plan on making hit music, but I just don’t believe that it’s like when Eminem first came out with “Lose Yourself.” I’m not trying to make an inspiring song right now. I’m just making what the market wants right now. Ringtone rap.

I read an interview where you referred to yourself as the “White Jay-Z.” Seriously?
I have more street cred than any new dudes: I manage a professional fighter, King Kevin Casey — who is also a hip-hop superstar — and every single day I do MMA training with him where I have a 195-pound black belt in Brazilian Ju Jitsu try to punch me in the face. I know for a fact that Jay-Z in his whole life has never been for one hour in the situations I put myself in with my professional fighter.

I thought you were a lover, not a fighter.
I’ll challenge pretty much anyone to a fight, if that’s what is needed to prove my street cred. If it’s about toughness, I’m tough. If it’s about how many guns you have, nobody has more guns that me. If it’s about ammo, nobody has more ammo than me. So when I say I’m the white Jay-Z, I’m just like, “So all this guy does is talk about all the expensive things he buys?” Well I buy expensive things and I’m 30 years younger. I was never a fan of Jay-Z. The only rapper I really was into was Tupac.

How good of a rapper are you?
Incredible. I have the biggest mouth on earth, so why wouldn’t I be the best rapper — you know what I mean?