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(Steady on the left) Fuck it, blackout niggas! (Steady on the left) Ayo, calm down nigga There’s a famous story floating around about Eminem turning down Aerosmith lead singer Steven Tyler’s offer to re-record the “Dream On” hook for Em’s 2002 song “Sing for the Moment.” Instead, Slim Shady elected to just sample the chorus for his album “The Eminem Show.(Steady on the right) Ayo, calm down nigga While Master Rhymes was in the sharing spirit, we asked the platinum artist a question about one of the other speed-rappers he shouted out.Įminem’s latest album, “Music to Be Murdered By,” includes a track titled “Yah Yah.” Rhymes’ first hit single, “Woo-Hah!! Got You All in Check,” introduced the world to those “Yah Yahs.”
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“So that’s also a part of the showmanship that you learn how to deliver, so that you still can impact people in a significant way - even when you’re standing still and being at your most calmest moment to deliver that the proper way.”Īlso Read: 'The Masked Singer' Season 4: Here Are Fans' Best Guesses for Costumed Celebrities in Group A I might just move my one hand, wiggle my fingers to show you the pattern of how I’m spitting my speed rap, and Spliff Star will be next to me doing all of the physical animation, which will compensate for my standing still,” he continued. “I’ll stand still in one place and keep that mic right there - I won’t even move when I’m doing what I’m doing. You let THAT intensify the performance because people are so fascinated…that you can do it live and it’s not a special effect that you don’t need to throw your hands and feet all over the place and jump around.” And instead of being animated in your physical movement, you allow the animation through the way you deliver the lyrics from your mouth.
It’s understanding how to balance and conserve the energy. “If you ever pay attention to my performances, I might jump all over the stage and go crazy when I’m performing ‘Scenario,’ but when I’m doing ‘Look at Me Now,’ I’m standing in one place. “Also, the key to it is to make sure that you stay calm,” Rhymes said. Lesson 2 from the Bruce Lee disciple: Be water. When you get there, a place where Rhymes says Eminem and Jay Z are also at, “you can spit a few bars without even inhaling.”Īlso Read: Method Man Tells Us Why 1999 Hit 'Da Rockwilder' Is So Short: Redman 'Didn't Like the Track' “So at this point, when I do it, it’s like a sensei level of doing it.” “I learned how to figure that out pretty early in my career,” Rhymes said.
“That math and that timing, science-wise, and the breathing combined is the key to what makes you the more dangerous individual when it comes to swinging that sword.” Even if you’re not necessarily the guy that’s living in the gym and you’re not the healthiest, you just got to understand the art and the science of breathing patterns - and just understand enough the art and the science of word and syllable placement,” Rhymes explained. “The breath control comes from just you understanding what the breathing patterns need to be in order to do it the right way. “It was always a thing to me to want to learn how to master that skillset.”Īlso Read: 'Masked Singer' Dragon Was Not a Dragon Just Because He Spits Fire “It was so mind-blowing to me back when I was like 15, that I always wanted to just do it - as a fan,” Rhymes, who is the Brooklyn-born son of Jamaican immigrants, said. The 48-year-old Rhymes, who first speed-rapped on a song called “Daily Reminder” and only got faster from there, told us that his first exposure to the double-timed version of the art form was a battle between Jamaican deejay Lieutenant Stitchie and reggae artist Papa San. While TheWrap had TheRapper on the horn to talk about his short-lived stint as broadcast television’s Dragon, this fan-porter asked Rhymes to teach us the secret to Rhymes-ing so fast. Perhaps he should have just rapped faster. Busta Rhymes was the first performer eliminated from Season 4 of “The Masked Singer” last night, when he gamely rapped LL Cool J’s “Mama Said Knock You Out” instead of taking a more traditional singing approach to the Fox competition.