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Se’
Divine The Master Mind of the Legendary Supreme Team Show on Radio Station
WHBI with hit songs Buffalo Gals, Hey D.J., World Famous, etc!
By
Troy L. Smith
Fall of 2007
What’s up my brother thank
you very much for giving me this time. From the beginning where were you
born and raised?
I was born in
Baltimore, Maryland and moved to New York in the early 60’s. My father
was already up in New York working so by the time I hit 12, 13 years old
me and my mother moved up they’re to be with him. We went straight to
Brooklyn’s Bed Stuy, over on Washington Avenue and Green.
What was the junior high
school and high school you went to over there?
I didn’t go to school
in New York. Man when I came
to New York I was already getting money from when I was in Maryland.
School wasn’t a thing because my parents couldn’t control me. I was
doing my own thing back in those days. See I bought that GAME with me
out of Baltimore. I was in the streets hustling, playing. When I was in
Baltimore as a youngster I was in different reform schools. This is 8, 9
years old, probably even before that. But I was always intelligent going
to school. I didn’t pay attention in class, see I would fall asleep
in class and then ace the test.
I hear you.
The teachers could
never understand that, they always thought I was cheating in class. But
I never had to; it was simple math, especially when it came to
mathematics. I could do whatever problem you put before me. Now moms and
pops weren’t doing that well financially but they always kept a roof
over our head, and we ate everyday. The little extras I learned to get
myself. This might have been because my pops didn’t know how to be a
pops, or perhaps he did and I didn’t know how to be a son. But there
were certain things I felt today that he could have shown me then that
could have lead me a different way as a young man, but it just didn’t
happen. When I got the first whiff of them streets and came home and got
that whipping for being out late, they warned me not to do it again but
it came a time were I just stopped coming home because I wasn’t going for
any more whippings. Although we never lived in the projects in Baltimore
I was attracted to them and hung out in them on the regular. There was
Lafayette, Faragut and so many more; today a lot of them have been torn
down.
How close were you to that
type of situation on that HBO show the wire and Showtime’s the Corner?
Well that situation
didn’t exist back then. The locations that they show on the Wire today
wasn’t like that at all back in the days; those were really nice
neighborhoods back then! Back then I lived on the east side where it was
rough. What they do on the Wire is on the west side where the white
people once lived and people that were getting money. Park Heights,
Private Row etc. these were places people moved to from the east side
like moving from Brooklyn going to Queens and Long Island.
Right, I understand you.
I was really amazed
when I went back to Baltimore years later and seen all those people on
dope. See when I first came to New York when I was 13 cats were already
on dope but it wasn’t like that in Baltimore. You seen a little weed
here and there but not the dope. I came to New York with the weed, a
little loose joint here, and a little loose joint there. While growing
up in Baltimore it didn’t take long before I was in some reform
school. I think it was called Boys Village, and it was never for
committing a crime it was because I would never went to school.
So you were a truant?
Right I was bad with it, I
just would not go. The only time I would go was when it got cold. Then I
would go and I would come straight home! But soon as the springtime hit
my mother would look me in my eyes and say, “oh lord, that boy is
getting ready to go.”
I feel you.
When the birds started
tweeting I would be out the front door. If I seen one head on the
streets I’d be gone. Whenever they would put me in one of those
reform schools I would run away and go to the projects or hang out where
ever my boys were at. I would never run to my house because they would
know where to find me. So I would go to my homies houses and their
parents didn’t care because they would be hanging out all night themselves, especially on the weekends and just leave their kids alone. I
had already known about New York before I got there. I read about Man
Child in The Promise Land when I was 9, 10 years old.
A good book by Claude Brown.
Right,
so I said I couldn’t wait to get to that town! When I got to New York
I was ready, because I already knew the game because I read the game. I
read the Ice Berg Slim and all that stuff, and the codes that went with
it. So when I came up the real players already taught me. When we was
coming up on that Grey Dog (Grey Hound bus.) I had the window seat and
when I seen us rolling up on New York it was fly, real fly. I will never
forget it. You remember that song by Stevie Wonder….
Yeah “Living for the
City” and the guy gets busted in the end.

That was me. That was my
attitude, I was so happy, I had to be about 13 years old. When we got
off that Grey Dog we went down into the train station and caught the A
train that lead to the GG. We got off on Clinton and Washington and went
to live with my father. The next day at 7 o’clock in the morning I was
back on Broadway. I took that GG and just reversed it.
Back to 42nd
street?
Right. Went back to
Broadway or 8th avenue and 42nd street where that
Grey Dog was at or bus terminal and never left. Bust it; some cat sold
me some slum (fake) piece of jewelry. I had a few dollars; he probably
got me for a dub (slang for $20.)! Somebody from around the way later
told me “this ring isn’t real, somebody got you country boy!”
I went around the corner shedded some tears and I flipped that
ring by selling it to somebody else.
Right I got you.
So I said, “its all
good, I wonder where money (that person that sold it to him.) got that
from!” So I found a little slum spot to cop (buy.). And this was
before them Chain Gang dudes that we used to call them came out of
Brooklyn. They use to sell the chains up on the deuce (42nd
street area. Mainly Times Square area.) back in the day.
Yeah slumming was big back in
the late 70’s and early 80’s.
Yeah it was good for a
youngster back in the days if they were 12 or 13 years old. You could cry
some hard luck tears and people are going to buy something from you. I
was making a little something off of it. The slum spot was on 14th
street.
Over there by Union
Square. Today it is further up on 26th street and say 6th
avenue.
Right, but back in the
days that area didn’t have anything like that. In Union Square you
found all the bootleg, but as you started going uptown the more
expensive the stuff got, and you ran into the real merchandise. Now it
is just saturated with knockoffs. I have to say I have been to school but
that just wasn’t my thing, there was just too much money in them
streets and it was too easy to come up on.
All right I want to pause for
a minute, as I am listening to you I am saying its almost impossible to
believe you got down like this because when I used to listen to your
shows I felt you had a great deal of discipline because you would never
bark on people and you always talked about positive things.
Well I am going to keep
it real - I caught a bid at a young age and maxed out in Comstock prison.
I caught a case for something I didn’t do, but someone else did. And
that is were I realized all niggers looked alike.
(Troy starts laughing.)
No for real!
No I am laughing because I
know exactly what you mean.
I believed in Jesus Christ
and all that. My mother was coming to court and saying son it’s going
to be al right. And she was my witness because she knew the truth and I
believed what she was telling me. But when they hit me with that nickel,
(5 years.) that kind of f----- my head up for a minute. I think I stayed
on the rock fighting it for two years over in HDM (a section in Rikers
Island Prison.). I went from Elmira, to Glennen to Napanoch and last
stop Comstock . In prison is where I learned about the 5 Percent Nation
and studied the lessons and believed in my heart that the white man
had
to be the devil, especially after what I went through in the court
systems. I stayed in
trouble in jail, always warring with them cops, took
some
ass
whippings
from them cops too. I stayed in solitary confinement and I was so
institutionalized at that time I didn’t care. Although I was fighting
cats and prison guards I still stayed in my literature such as Malcolm X
or Before the Mayflower, and read other strong literature and history. I
maxed out in Comstock and didn’t owe anybody anything once I got out.
So now you make it home, how
did you catch this hip-hop bug?
When I first came home
it wasn’t hip-hop that I heard, but I always loved music, singing and
all that stuff. We used to have the doo-wop in the joint and I had a good
voice for it. But when I came home that cat Flowers (Grand Master
Flowers.) was rocking Brooklyn. He used to set up in this park I lived
across from Elevens park or P.S. 11 park, over on Green Avenue and
Washington Avenue. When Flowers came out with that system and started
rocking that sound I was like “damn I like this.”
What year was this when you
first heard Flowers?
This was about 1974. I
needed money so instead of going back to the streets and doing my thing
I went to this place called Street Academy in Brooklyn on
Nostrom Avenue
(The
Education of Sonny Carson players came from The Street Academy as
well.) over by Boys High school. They taught drama class in there as
well as education. I became very popular there and a very dynamic
speaker there as well. I love speaking, especially talking about what
the black man should do. But I have to say those streets still had me,
so my moms said I had to do something. So I went into Job Corps, and
they shipped me out to Indiana and I rose to the top out there also. But
after awhile this Job Corp thing started to feel like jail, cats
fighting everyday. Dudes saying Chicago this, Brooklyn or New York that!
I am arguing with cats non stop…so I ended up leaving Job Corps and
went into Indianapolis and started living there. I got me a little
apartment and my Earth (Woman) came over from New York. I met this cat
named King Gypsy from the West Coast and he was selling that slum like I
did earlier. His girl who was in the witness protection program, and my
girl got cool. Which made him and I start talking, and he started
telling me about the game. He told me about the Red Card (3 card Molly.)
He also put me on to the Insurance
game.
The cat knew all the games and I picked up a few things from him. I was
on that public assistance for a minute. The Public assistance over there
would pay your rent give you food stamps but would not give you green
money. But when he showed
me that Red Card I became a monster! My whole thing with that Red Card
had him and I arguing on the regular about it. I had many arguments with
folks even up in New York. I was so nice with it I was unstoppable. I
could not be beat. I got hit once, and that was my mistake. I leaned
left when I should have leaned right. But I never leaned left again.
Also I would have to say I never played black people. I just could never
do it because they had their own money problems.
So how could you not catch
blacks when all the marks on 42nd street were black and
Hispanic? There were a few whites but mostly blacks and Hispanics.
Nah see this is how you
would get around that. When we played even if you played on the deuce
you played at a certain time. The deuce is not where I really laid them
cards down. We laid them cards down on Wall Street. I took my crew down
to Wall Street, because the money wasn’t really on the deuce. Plus you
have to remember I learned the game from a west coast cat and the west
coast had a slower pace of playing. In New York they were like “red
card, black card, red card, black card who see it, who got 10
dollars?” West coast game was real smooth; they
would have a story to
go with it. But at the end of that story whatever you had in your
pocket they were taking. So if he had a G (Thousand.) you could get that
G. If a cat had 5G you could get that whole 5G’s. You had to know how
to ask for your money and I learned that from the West Coast. So for the
cats on 42nd street asking for 10 and 20 dollars taking all
day to grind, I say “man I need to go down on Wall Street to get some
paper.”
I feel you.
See they don’t have any
protection for one. They would never expect it to happen.
Exactly
As far as a crime it
was a misdemeanor. They writing you a desk appearance ticket right on
the street. It isn’t like they are taking you to jail. You are going
to go to court and pay your fine, come back out and keep playing. It
couldn’t have been any sweeter.
Yeah you could have done that
all day.
Right, but we would all
go down on Wall Street and cats were nervous, but I was young energetic
and could write my own story. That is how much I was into the game. I
would just do stuff that was out of the ordinary. The first time I took
my team to Wall Street they were shaking like a leaf on a tree. All I
told them was “hold me down” which means watch out for the police. I
took those cards out and started rocking right there on the Bank steps.
In fact I dropped them cards right on top of a guys shoes and caught him
for about 3 hundred dollars quick. Then the team started to loosen up.
Now the deuce was just a place where
cats would meet. In the morning we might meet up at the bagel shop, the
locations would change over the years. It might be the bagel or the
donut shop, or the park if it is a nice day. So the teams would come out
and every one would then disperse. But the only time cats would really
play on 42nd street would be at night for that night action.
5th avenue was sweet.
So let me ask you this
- wouldn’t that night action be risky being as those cats at night would
be more vicious, so you would be taking more of a chance. Or would you
be up on the deuce because you just felt like hanging out up there?
Yes of course certain
times I just loved the deuce and being in the game. We had a little bar
cats use to go to afterwards. I think it was called Steve’s Pigpen. It
was a little hole in the wall to the left of the bus station on about 43rd
street or 44th street. A lot of the players used to hang out
over there putting that thing up their nose. All that type of nonsense
and I have to say I never got into that type of thing because the guy
that taught me, told me this is all a game. And you got players that are
going to play on players. So if you out grinding all day long and you
got another cat that is out here selling drugs, he’s grinding too. So
he is waiting for you to get done then he gets paid.
Right, exactly.
So I said I could never
get caught like that. Also I have to say because of what I did a lot of
cats in the hip-hop game during that time did not like the idea of me
being a hustler. Now today it is accepted! A hustler to me is a
confidence man. That is some one who can walk up to you and talk you out
of your money, or talk a woman out of her p----.
Would you say the art of a
confidence man is to think fast and talk fast as well as think slick as
possible.
No, see it is wrong to say
that, people think to be a confidence man you must talk fast. To be a
confidence man you talk slow because a person has to understand what you
are telling them.
Well when I say talking fast
the mark is missing the point of what you are trying to do. That is what
I mean by talking fast.
But they don’t miss the
point.
No when I say miss the point
I mean they missed the idea that they are about to be taken for their
possessions, valuables or money.
Oh yes, of course. But I
have to say I never played a black man. That was for them .....,
because that was who had the paper. For instance this cat broke a sister
on the Deuce one day. I just happened to be hanging around this day and
watched it go down. She said, “That was my rent money.” There have
been so many situations where this has happened. Where these girls have
been crying, and I just couldn’t take that. No I couldn’t take
anybody’s money like that and leave him or her in pain like that.
Well what about the black
brothers with the suit and ties down on Wall Street that did work the
stock market, were they part of the cats that you would consider marks
because I know they had loot too. Even if it weren’t that many
brothers down there.
Well I can’t lie to you
I have got some of the brothers. But when we played we had a move were
we knew how to block out people. Where you might throw your hips at them
or you move your position. Then you always have that black person that
will say “dam n----- my money isn’t good enough!”
(Troy busts out laughing.) I
understand you. You giving him every chance to not play and lose his
money and he still don’t get the message. Then you say, “To hell
with it you can get got too.”
Exactly “bang, have a
nice day”. Oh we had a way of playing even when we stood up with that
fox. Troy I had a fly game. We had a way of playing with newspapers,
anything to block visions, put your hand in front of some ones face. As
soon as who ever the Vic was bent down to pick up that card, everybody
else who was in the game got blocked out.
Right I got you.
My man Bubba aka Lucky
Pierre was good at blocking that vision for me. He was one of them cats
on the team, he was a good slinger too, but he died possibly from
getting high, God bless him. That
killed a lot of players and a lot of them got out of that drug thing
later on. So we had moves were we could block out the whole crowd and
then move the cards to where
people thought they were anyway.
So now how did ya’ll handle
a slick dude that knew what time it was and was game tight like ya’ll?
See my thoughts with the 3-card molly were the dealer would always give
you the opportunity to win in the very beginning to steer you in.
No ,that could never
happen.
Well isn’t that
part of
the game, they allow you to win so you can put more money down and then
you get taken? So my thoughts were put your money down right in the
beginning and then break out once you win.
No, that is not true. It
is a team sport, so if I am passing money off to somebody, that is money
I am going to get back and that is why it is a team sport for those that
can understand it. And you can win if you are that clever, but you
can’t beat me.
So how did you handle those
clever dudes that came at you?
Well one time a cat got
me and that was because I lead left instead of going right. This happened
on Court Street in Brooklyn, where other cats would go to Fulton
Street in Brooklyn we went to Court Street were the money was at. You
have to say the right things out your mouth that is the most important
thing. If a cat says he wants that joint that’s on the left, that’s
the one you paying on. You can’t bet left and go right.
I see what you are saying.
You understand, so if a
cat is so clever you have to say that while you are playing. You ask
which one do you want you are not laying it down like a free for all! If
the cat points to the left and I think he is clever enough I will put
the right one inside my pocket. Or I will turn that left one up for him
and don’t even give him a chance. Say “oops that’s your black,”
all right baby next!
Right.
So that is something I
learned because I leaned left and the guy got me on the right. But guys
that know game are called Pick up Artist! You had guys that would go
around and just pick up on other cats. This day that cat picked up on
me; he might have gotten me for a hundred dollars. He caught me leaning.
The team wanted to beat this cat down. I said leave that man alone, I
gave him a handshake for that one. You not going to win them all so at
this point I am just trying to get him out of the game since I see what
he is doing, and its now a mind thing. So it’s like “do I play him
one on one or do I contemplate winning all this money.” Let that man
walk with that. I will take it out of my pay, I’m not even mad at him.
Well more money can come in
because somebody walked away winning. Now other cats think they have a
better chance of winning.
You saying it right Troy,
because it is almost like he is on your team. But you can’t cry about
that. They really wanted to beat his ass and take it from him but I told
them we players, not robbers!
Yo I ain’t going to front
one time I lost money going against the dealer. See I thought the trick
to this game was put your money down immediately when he is giving you
the opportunity to win. Well I seen the trick go down and it looked
tricky on my eyes but I still went with the flow. This white guy was
watching and told my friend “yo tell your man don’t do it, what is
he doing?” And just as I put the money down the n------s on the
dealers’ team surrounded me, and they surrounded me like they knew I
was going to rebel. All I did was say “yo ya’ll got me” and I was
just stunned like how did I allow this to happen. All I had in my mind
was I am going to rob somebody when I get back uptown, because I got to
get that money back. But I later said to my self “n------ you just
played your self.” “You can’t deal with these cats on no 3 card
molly, don’t ever get involved any more.”
You right just leave that
thing alone because its just not for you. Man we played that game all
over the country. And you are right there are other times I have let
cats win but that is in close quarters. He couldn’t go anywhere. We
might be on a bus riding from Miami to Ft. Lauderdale so we are trapped
in there together. So you don’t want to break him too quick. You have
to keep it interesting.
Right you got to milk him.
Right you have to leave
that man some money to catch the next bus.
So this Red Card came before
the Hip-Hop for you, is that valid?
(Slight
hesitation.) Yeah…right.
And
Grand Master Flowers inspired you, but how long did it take before you
started getting involved with it?
Hard
to answer but I would have to say about 5 or 6 years before Hey D.J.
came out.
Well what were you doing
before WHBI?
We were tearing up
Brooklyn man. See once I got some paper playing all over the place and
hanging out with the hustlers I still loved that music and I still was
writing. If I was in say North Carolina I would try and get on and play.
I kept records with me. They didn’t always let me on but when they did
I got a chance to shine. You have to remember I seen Flowers, I then
left for Indiana; I came back to New York. I then went down to Florida
and then I went out to the west coast L.A. So I love music but I am into
the game at this point. When I came back to New York it had to be two
years later. See
what happened was I seen the cats on the street playing, I seen the
hustling but their morals and principles were not like mines. So it is
not like I had a partner. So I had no interest in their street games at
that time, so I was like “nah I can’t get involved with this.” So
instead of playing Red Card I started peddling again. I went back to 14th
street ran up in them joints, even the ones on 16th street
and 17th street. That’s where I met my man Justice (Just
Allah The Super Star.) I would buy a little merchandise, regular stuff
no slum and come back to the train station by Mays department store and
we got our hustle on. Do you remember back in the days when the transit
authority had the lockers down inside the subways?
Right, right.
I
had keys to all those lockers. I
had lockers stuffed with clothes, umbrellas and if it rained I just ran
down there and got some umbrellas and ran back out and hit them. Then if
it was sunny outside I would come out with the straw hats and whatever and stayed ready. It was all good but I had to go back to the way
of getting larger money!
Right.
So one night I came out on
Broadway two deep and they were playing five deep in this game. The cats
in the game mostly knew me as a peddler, they didn’t know I knew the
game so when cats seen me put that box up and them cards down cats were
like “yeah I am going to pick up on him.” I said yeah come on I am
ready for that type of s---.
(Troy starts laughing.)
“I am bad with this
thing” “I will shut you cats down with this”! So they stood around
and watched the game and we took about $400 and jetted. It was kind of
nervous out there because I never used to do my hustle over there.
So the slick brothers thought
they would be able to take yours and you ended up taking them for theirs!
No, no because see a
player is never going to play a player, all they were doing was talking!
But you could never put that type of fear in me because I was too good.
I would study cards for months. I could take a card and put them
together and sling them across the room and make them land how I wanted
them to land. I could take them joints and flip them up in the air and
make them fall the way I wanted them to, and people didn’t know that
about me. Cats got broke f------ with me back in them days.
So lets get back to the music
you bought the equipment and went to the parks before you got to WHBI?
Yeah we rocked the
parks, like Bed Stuy, Brownsville, Fort Green, East New York.
So where did you rock in the
winter?
Shut it down and go to
Florida!
No I am saying in the winter
where did you rock?
Nah I heard you. I
would go to Florida in the winter, or the west coast. Some where where it
was warm. I don’t like cold weather.
When the seasons changed I slid back up in there. It didn’t take
long though; it might have taken two years to get where I wanted to be
with the music. I also think it might have happened too soon for me. Do
you remember Africa Islam (The Funk Machine, Zulu Beats Show.)?
Sure I do, he had his show as
well.
Right well back in the
days we were doing a show with D Train, who was hot at the time. Africa
Islam and these beautiful young ladies called The Mercedes Ladies
stepped to me and said “yo we are going to do a show with D Train”
They wanted
about
3 or 4 thousand people at a spot I think in the Boston Ball room up in
the Bronx, something like that I not sure of the location. Nice spot, a
brick building right off the highway, or right across the bridge. The
Mercedes Ladies were supposed to be selling these tickets and the cat
wanted half up front and the other half after the show. To promote the
show we went down to WHBI. We did a show with this kid name Chris
Blackwell who was an emcee and he talked like Frankie Crocker. He
pronounced all his words, but he was a real cool cat. During this time
Islam was playing under ground music, but people weren’t into that
underground, they were into that hip-hop.
And I already knew how to
scratch and mix because I had my own turntables, plus I knew how to
write and I was having fun with it. We were real popular in the parks
and other jams. But the show went bust because enough tickets were not
sold. And Blackwell didn’t have a following! The show was dead because
the crowd was not ready for what Islam was playing; in fact the music
that Islam was playing during that time, they were not ready for him at
least that was the impression I got. In fact that boy was ahead of his
time he was beyond hip-hop! I have to give him that, he was tight I will
never forget that about him. But the main stream was begging for
straight hip-hop. So we took a lost, we took a bath on it. So the WHBI
show came up that next night and they came to the studio, Islam and
Blackwell and I told them “this is my show because you cats didn’t
lose anything I was the one that took the loss.” I didn’t try to
house or take the show, but that was what my feelings were since I took
such a big loss. I needed a way to recoup my money!
So this was right at the time
Mr. Magic had his show on there. So you came on right after he finished
his show?
Right
So you just started spinning
records at first?
Well once I told them I
was going to do the show then I started making my own tapes and taking
them down to the studio. We were already Supreme Team from Brooklyn. See
two or three years before WHBI, before I had a turntable before I had
anything, I was making flyers saying Supreme Team is coming. I was all
over Brooklyn posting these flyers, whether on barbershops walls or
super markets I had these flyers all over the place. So cats were like
“what do you mean they coming, what is this all about!” Three years
later we were on WHBI!
So what was the purpose of
you making those flyers at that time?
Because it was already my
dream, I knew what I was going to do. That is if God kept me living. I
knew I would eventually be on a radio show or have my own radio show. I
also knew I would be doing something having to do with d.j.ing, I seen
it coming. History always repeats it self, I was smart enough to see
that even then.
So how did you rock this in
the studio?
Like I said earlier I had
music that I made at home on tape. While in the studio I would also play
records, but they didn’t have it hooked up in the studio to mix and
scratch. So while I am playing a record on the turntable I then would
say “it is now time for a World Famous Supreme team break” and hit a
button and I might play a 15-minute tape of just cuts of with maybe Big
Beat or Mardi Gras. Then I might cut it off and say “we are going to
take some dedications” and that is what our show became just a lot of
little skits actually and picked up a few sponsors. Like O.J. limousine
service, which was rocking up in the Bronx and Manhattan. Then there is
Sylva’s restaurant, which used to give us money too. We
stepped to her, I was just out hunting and I told her we got a show and
we need sponsors. WHBI was making money and we had listeners also
because I am a God, the Nation was right there with me, although it
scared the hell out of me.
(Troy laughs.) Why do you say
that?
Well being so early in the
game I didn’t know how they were going to respond to it. Gods were out
there spitting the truth and I am on the air cutting and scratching and
hollering and screaming. So I didn’t know how it we be received by
them and I didn’t know how it would effect my hustling.
Well how much did it cost you
to pay for a slot on the WHBI show?
I think one of the shows
was like $300.00 and that was on Tuesday’s. I think from 1am to 2am.
The other two might have been about $150.00 or $200.00 and those nights
were Thursday morning from 4am to 5 am and Sunday from 4am to 5am. I
can’t remember right now. I know we were dam near hitting a G for
those 3 shows.
Ya’ll rocked for about 3
years am I right?
I don’t really remember
it might have only been just a year.
So while you played there how
was your relationship with Mr. Magic while he was rocking there also?
Well he was cool with me
or I should say cool to me. We had two shows that were different but
everybody was trying to be a star. To me I was like I don’t give a
f--- one way or another! I am just trying to do my thing. It’s kind of
hard for me to speak for him.
Speak for him? What do you
mean?
Well I don’t think I was
somebody he really liked from what other people had told me. My response
was so the f------- what! I mean he was on one side of the glass and we were
on the other side. He would say “this is Mr. Magic going of the air”
and it was cool because he had his fan base. Then the engineer, I think
his name was George he would say alright Supreme Team you're on. And he
would go 5,4,3,2,1 and we would be sitting down and we would jump up out
the chair and say, “yo wake up your mother your father your sister and
brother and let them know that the world famous Supreme Team is on the
air.” That’s heart-taking s---, for somebody to be sitting right
there in the chair looking at you. But like I said Magic and me had two
different shows. I wasn’t trying to take anything from him! You know
that was how that was back in the days,
cats was
like that. Flash didn’t like Theodore so folks say! Other emcees just
didn’t get along. You go to battles and they pull the plug on you.

So bust it once the Supreme
Team show started making waves how did the established groups and artists
like Cold Crush, Grand Master Flash and the Furious 5, Kurtis Blow, Star
Ski etc receive ya’ll now?
See I really don’t know
because I was doing my own thing and I really didn’t care about what
they were doing. A lot of them hung out in the Fever. I have been to the
Fever and I have been to the back room were they was putting that s---
up their nose. That wasn’t my place. I had my own plan. Also I have to
say a lot of cats didn’t like the fact that I was a hustler, which is
accepted now. If they had accepted it then, it would have been
all-good! I am going to jump ahead for a minute. When Malcolm Mcclaren
came to America I think he was like $350,000 in debt with a company
called
Charisma
Records in England. Malcolm was a player for them England cats to give
him that kind of money and he wasn’t producing anything. He might have
been on the road for about 8 months and they hadn’t heard a note from
him or lyric. The budget might have been 250 and he had 350 and pushing.
He
went up to the Fever and met Kurtis Blow etc., and you name it he met
them and he is chatting with them. Africa Bambaataa who is by the way a
good friend of mine back in them days, he chatted with him. Then he came
to WHBI. A friend of his, I think his name is Terry a white guy told him
“you need to go down to this radio station and check him out.” See
he came to me but those guys he chatted with before me he could have put
them on.
Alright I don’t want to
go to fast because I have a lot for Malcolm Macclaren. How did you get
so cool with the Force M.C.s, or Sweet Slick and Sly from New Jersey?
Well the Force M.C.s were
in the streets just like us. So I used to always walk past them while
they were performing.
Was this on 42nd
street, or down by the Staten Island Ferry?
Yeah this was in
Midtown and I would see them on the Ferry later. But I thought they were
very talented, so when we got WHBI I asked them to come down, and being
as I had the equipment if they was throwing a jam out in Staten Island I
would come out there and rock with them. We also took them into Brooklyn
and they rocked with us and they blew up. Brooklyn blew them up.
So you were pretty tight with
Mercury, God bless him as well as Steveie Dee.
Yeah I was cool with them
but I was little older then them. But what really attracted me to them
was they reminded me of your Smokey Robinson’s, and they were
unpolished!
Right
But
like the Smokey Robinson’s, Temptations, Moments and Delphonics, to me
the Force M.D.s are the fore fathers of all of them groups like Jodeci,
Boys II Men you name
it. They all heard the Force M.C.s.. We did a party up in Ossining and I
took them and something happened with the lights or the equipment
because cats were real shady back then. Force M.C.s rocked that joint
with no music!
I believe you.
They rocked for two hours
just like that. As well as doing little skits of the Chinese man.
Yeah they love that, which is
their m.o., Billie Jean, Michael Jackson, Karate Flicks all that.
Right they just had so
much ammo and energy so I would take them any where with me. The
situation with Sweet Slick and Sly was they just popped up on me. But it
is not like I hung out with them like the Force. This other group I
liked was from Queens. For a minute I had lived out in Elmhurst Queens
and the Turn Out Brothers were from there. The Turn Out Brothers had
showed out the Force one night. You know the Force; they would just come
out gangster. They didn’t have any real money at the time, just got
finish hustling on the street and they would run up on the mic and do
their thing. When the Turn Out Brothers got on the mic they came on
dressed in all white with red handkerchiefs sticking out of their jacket
pockets and they looked real nice and had their dance steps down good.
So I remember when the show was over the Force said “man we got to
start dressing alike”, it was funny. I think one of the members of Kid
and Play was down with the Turn Out Brothers with Grand Wiz.
Its strange you tell me that
because Biz Markie used to call me a lot about those Supreme Team tapes and
ask me to play them for him through the phone. He kept telling me that
Kid and Play was on your show, asking me did I have it. I told him what
I had (tapes 116, 117, 118,) but no Kid and Play.
No he is right Kid or Play
was running with Turn Out Brothers, but also Herbie from Salt and Pepper
was running with them. Them cats all came up together. I tried to do a
party out there in East Elmhurst but it wasn’t like Brooklyn they
wouldn’t let me plug it in. In Brooklyn you plug up and you can rock
to like 4, 5 o’clock in the morning! The one thing I will say about
Brooklyn, Brooklyn was wild but when Supreme Team would go to Brooklyn
it would be no problem. The Gods and cats that knew us would get on that
mic and say “yo ya’ll n------ know Supreme Team is up in this joint
and it ain’t going to be no s--- out here tonight.” Guess what it
wouldn’t be no s--- either! I loved that about
Brooklyn, they supported us. They made sure we left and came o.k.
Who were the other cats that
came up in the show to perform or just hang out?
I remember one time Doug E
Fresh came and it broke my heart because he had came at the wrong time.
A lot of cats used to come down there and think they could just walk up
in there and just do their thing but we might already be doing
something else. All cats had to do was call me up because I wasn’t
hard to find. Doug E. Fresh came in one night and I think the show was
already half gone and I was playing a tape and we had to do the
dedications and he wanted to go on. We were like “man we have to
finish this thing off, this thing is almost done.” I didn’t see Doug
again until we did a show up in the Audubon together. That is one cool
brother there.
You are right he is
definitely a cool brother even to this day. Now with the name Supreme
Team, I remember you telling me that you had the name before Fat Cat and
his crew.
That is correct in fact I
didn’t even hang out in Queens. I never knew about that Fat Cat
brother and the fact that there was another Supreme Team anywhere. In
fact somebody out of town asked me one day “are you Divine from the
Supreme Team I said yes because that is my name.” But they weren’t
talking about Divine from the Supreme Team on WHBI that was doing the
music. So I found out months later that he mentioned it to someone else
that “that is that dude Divine from Supreme Team, them n----- that be
doing that thing up in 40 projects. I said doing what thing!” And cats
started questioning me about Cat and I said “nah baby we talking about
two different things. I said I am World Famous Supreme Team WHBI 105 FM
on your dial partner. I said “I don’t sell no drugs.” I said “if
they picked that name up they did it on their own.” That Supreme Team
means something and it don’t mean that. It was me, Just Allah The
Super Star and another brother name Black God. We were grinding in them
streets together. We did everything together, whatever. We said we are
the Supreme Team and we are always going to be together and it just
carried on.
So how did the radio station
feel about ya’ll once ya’ll really started to blow up?
The station didn’t
have any problem, they was just trying to get money. They didn’t like
us giving out the phone number because it came a time were we started
putting their lights out.
What does that mean?
The old style phones
we had to push the buttons 1120 or 1121. If we were to say “give us
a call 873- 1120 and 1121.” Folks start calling.
So that means the station
can’t get any phone calls because your listeners are clogging up the
line with their phone calls?
Yes and a couple times
the phones went out. There weren’t any lights. I guess it was just too
much traffic. When the phones would go out then the calls would roll
over to the neighborhoods. And WHBI was down by Riverside Drive.
Right over there by West End
Avenue a block away from Riverside Drive on the west side of Manhattan.
Right it was on
something like 79th street, down in the basement of a hotel.
It was little rattrap not a big station. “Station with a little
static” we used to call it.
(Troy laughs.) Station with a
little static?
Yeah that is what we
used to call it. Yeah we used to say, “yo man if you turning your dial
trying to get us and it sounds staticy leave it alone because that’s
us.” (We both start laughing.)
So all right in the very
beginning it was quiet and silent from Mr. Magic, but did his respect
ever change for the better as you started to get popular on the radio,
or did he remain the same?
I doubt it, and there
might have been a little tension there. I always speak when I see some
one but you can always feel tension. Perhaps it was positive tension I
don’t know, I just wanted to do my thing. Don’t get any blows thrown
at me and I don’t throw any. Just try and live in peace.
Were any other stations
calling on you to sign with them such as the main stations Kiss, WBLS or
92KTU?
Nah, which I probably
could have went into that but I started getting tired of the radio.
Why is that?
Well by this time we had
went into England with Malcolm and it just got too hard to do. We would
do tapes in England and ship them back. It was a six-hour difference.
What really made me lose interest was when we did the records I could
not get the company to get behind us on the records. That is what really
broke my spirit because I broke Buffalo Girls on WHBI, and the next day
that song sky rocketed to number one in New York, Connecticut and
Jersey. They went crazy for that song. When we did Hey D.J. the same
thing happened and I told them ya’ll need to get behind this! Their
response was it doesn’t sound like Buffalo Girls. I told them I know
because its called Hey D.J.. But I broke that song on WHBI as well. So
how much of that can you take. Bust it you got your other cats coming up
on these independent labels and cats like Russell Simmons and then you
got a cat that comes up out of nowhere with a deal and selling numbers,
but you can’t move no numbers if they don’t believe in you.
So this takes me to how did
you and Malcolm Maclaren first meet?
Well we had a lot of white
listeners on the WHBI show as well. So this white cat name Terry called
the show and said this guy wanted to meet us. So we hooked up a time and
place, which was the Park Meridian hotel. So we sat down to some Steak
and Eggs and he told us a little about him self, and how he is doing his
thing for Virgin records over seas. He also said he liked the show and
wanted to do a record with us. So I said what type of money is ya’ll
talking about. He said we could probably give you guys a thousand
dollars apiece or something like that. I was taken back with that
number. I said you couldn’t be talking about no 1000 dollars; I could
go on the street corner and get that!
Right
So from that we did some
real negotiating. I can’t think of what he gave us right now but he
would have done better fooling with those other cats that didn’t know
better and what I was saying was the truth.
On Buffalo Girls we got a
hefty fee for that, and that was because of what we wanted. I said if it
hit or miss we need some money! So hit us off lovely. The next day I
came to the studio and they hit me off with a large sum of money. I then
got a passport and said were going to England and make this song. No
one knew what the song was going to be because they didn’t have a
concept.
So ya’ll recorded in
England and not in New York?
Right, I cannot remember
the studio over there. But when I went over there it wasn’t like
America. They had the real equipment, the Fare Light for example. They
had instruments that you weren’t seeing in recording studios over
here. All of the stuff was top of the line. That Solid State Logic,
all the spots were already sitting on that. America was still using a
lot of analog stuff.
Yeah I heard about that,
homeboy from Whodini was telling my partner about that when they were
recording over there back in the 80’s as well! It was like they were
years ahead of America in their sound! I find it hard to believe. Why do
you think it is like that?
I really couldn’t
tell you that! America is just America, I mean one that lives here would
think that the technology is born here but its not. Once you leave and
go somewhere else America is a world apart. Even with the Internet
stuff, you have other countries that charge less the money for high
speed. You click that button and you are there. America so busy trying
to drain you for as much as they can and not one for trying to set up
new systems. They hate to spend money, all they want to do is make
money, and they end up getting left behind. Then they end up coming to
your country and steal your s--- any way.
Isn’t that something?
They will find away of
getting it. But I am glad you ask me, this cat name Trevor Horn (English
pop music record producer, song writer and musician) over there was a
producer and the other day I read an article about him and he said that
we came over there and we used their DMX drum machine which we already
had in New York because we were rocking the TR Drum machine also. There
was a lot of Drum Machines out during that time, and black folks got
that beat. But on Buffalo Gals he said that he asked me “what beat do
I like the most and we will program that beat.” He then said it took
me two hours to be able to communicate it to him!
I was like dam why would
he make a statement like that, to take nothing from him because the
statement was true, because it took two hours to communicate it to him
because he was so busy trying to beat on the drum machine with the beat
I was trying to put into his head and he couldn’t do it. And Trevor
Horn was like a Quincy Jones over seas.
Right
I tell him boom da bap and
he would play something like bo da da da, and I would say “whoa what
the hell is that.” So I would say let me do it, but they wouldn’t.
So it took 2 hours. So after an hour of not finding it and me leaving
him alone and sitting on the couch he finally fesses up and says
“Divine you know white people don’t have any rhythm.” I said, “I
heard that but I didn’t believe it, but now I do!”
I hear you. All right check
this out with the Buffalo Gals first version why did the vocals come out
the left speaker and the instrumental come out the right ear.
That was just one of
Malcolm Maclaren’s tricks. That was all that was; I personally
didn’t
think that would work because I knew how clubs were set up. But I
listened to Malcolm because he was playing the game. He said we have to
do as much stuff that is different then what they are doing right now.
He said we are going to do one and call it the stereo mix! It was cool
and it was good that he did it like that because you got so many samples
off that left side. “Too much of that snow white” I hear that stuff
in a lot of songs. Also the African chant & “All that scratching is
making me itch” on other tracks for years.
Who actually came out with
that concept Buffalo Girls?
That was Malcolm’s
stuff, that whole track was him. The only thing that I put on that track
is a drumbeat and I also did the scratching.
I am going to take you back
again for a minute. Being as you are a 5 Percent Nation member, what was
your relationship with Malcolm being as he was considered a White Devil
by the 5 Percent Nation?
We didn’t have a
relationship, Malcolm was a player and I know a player when I see one.
We didn’t do nothing but sit down and chat. The most money I have ever
made was having somebody down with me like that. The best way to get
money depending on who you are, you put somebody down like that. He put
us down and it didn’t bother me that he was white or him considered a
devil or what ever the case maybe. Man we were trying to get money. I
wasn’t trying to have sex with white women. It didn’t change me at
all. But some of the best players I was able to get the most money with
because of their complexion. I had a white boy down with me back in the
day’s name Joe and I got so much money with him it was crazy. But cats
hated Joe.
He was down with the red card
also?
Yeah he was playing red
card with me. But Joe and I were taking more money then anybody.
Right.
And everybody hated this
dude, and I loved Joe. I would go out there with Joe and have a 4000 or
5000 dollar day, and Joe and me were friends. But when Joe would say
“yo Divine come on and hang out with me after the game”, I never did
that. You know when he would go to his little strip clubs and see his
little black chicks all that kind of stuff. I was never a part of that
but I was with him with that money.
I got you but with Malcolm
did he seem sincere about the black culture it self?
..Yeah…you know the
one true thing about Malcolm and I kind of seen it coming out the gate
just by the way he communicated to me. But I hate to call him an
opportunist but that was what it is. Some people are able to see
what’s going to happen, black, white green it don’t matter and
through being in the industry and through his Sex Pistols group back in
the days and that track they put out I think its called God save the
Queen it became a record that was banned in England. He knows how to get
that attention.
Right
And he was just smart,
in fact not smart but seen what was happening. Hip-hop is the new thing.
He was at that time of our first meeting with him $350,000 in debt He
had to come back with something to show and prove and he stumbles in to
hip-hop. And says this is the new thing, like I knew it was the new
thing when I first heard them youngsters rapping at the young age of 12,
13, 14 years old. Same as you Troy, you had to see the same thing.
Right.
And the strange thing is
those 25 year old cats during that time didn’t like hip-hop, or the
30-year-old crew. Frankie Crocker wasn’t playing it. 92 WKTU wasn’t
playing it; they already had their own format. But eventually they
realized hip-hop was taking over because the youth is going to grow.
I got you. So in time your
relationship became cool with Malcolm and you would consider him a
friend?
Yeah! But like I said
we didn’t hang out. He was a friend but it was business.
Now with the Buffalo Gals
who’s idea was it to put the snippets in from the radio show?
Once again Malcolm.
He had a lot to do with this
Buffalo Gal; he did pretty much everything like you said.
Yeah that’s real the cat
did his thing. He was trying to get paid and trying to present something
to these people that would sell. He had a lot of music from all over the
world France, Africa etc but the first cut he played for them at the
boardroom in England was Buffalo Gal. And he is a real good promoter and
I have to say I learned that from him how to make these companies
jump. So when he played it they did the first pass, and every one is
sitting there looking like what the f--- is that, because England had
not heard that type of stuff. They didn’t know what hip-hop was! Their
first time hearing hip-hop was when Malcolm came back with it. He said
when he played it he told them “ya’ll need to listen again because
ya’ll not hearing it.” He told them they need to get behind this
because it is going to be a number one hit. I felt the same way about it
when I heard it completely. Where they went wrong with Buffalo Gals here
in America is that they put so much into MTV playing it and Charisma
records put all there chips on to it as well, and felt the video would
make the record go right to number one. You remember MTV’s commercials
I want my MTV with Eric Clapton and others!
Very much
When MTV took it to the
board I can’t remember how many people were on this board and listened
to the stuff as well as watching the videos to see what they would
accept and what they would reject. They ended up rejecting Buffalo Gals
and it took Charisma’s heart! They didn’t even put them on the
shelf! While this is going on we are sitting up in New York waiting for
it to be released. We down at the studio WHBI just coming back from
England and the fan base is like “yo what’s going on when that new
joint coming out ya’ll said ya’ll was over there in England
recording that what’s happening with the record.” I call them again
and say, “what are ya’ll going to do we got people hitting us up
saying they want to hear the song.” They said another week, and once
MTV told them no they lost their spirit and I went and played it. I
played it right after the intro, and then I played it again before the
show was over that night. The next day it was a big song. Everybody was
rocking it in the streets in their box (Radio.) “First Buffalo gal,
first buffalo Gal this s--- is hot!”
(We both start laughing.)
But they were scared of
it, and rightfully so but that was the ticket and Malcolm saw it.
How long did it take before
it got buck wild in England?
England accepted it. They
released it over there and they called me over there. I have never been
an entertainer. I have never claimed to be an entertainer a rapper none
of that stuff. I am the jack of all trades master of none, my daddy told
me that because I would move on to other things so swiftly. When I went
back over there they offered me something like $5000, something real
stupid.
That’s just to take the
plane ride?
Nah that was the
contract, they wanted to sign me. The only thing they heard on me was
Buffalo Gals and that was Malcolm’s song but he paid me and that was
love. So I said I don’t know. So they said all right why don’t you
go around and do these little promos or what you would say little tours.
So they took me to clubs and stuff like that to do our thing. Now
scratching and cutting I had no problem with that. I get up and catch
that with no problem plus I bought my own turntables, mixer and records
with me. So I was pretty comfortable with that. Now the young white kids
were packing these joints and never heard scratching and cutting before.
So now ya’ll are in England
does that mean ya’ll went out there before Bam, Islam and Rodney Cee?
Probably so, because the
people out there had never heard this music before. I am pretty sure we
did because all of those cats came after us. Whodini came after us once
they got down with Dolby.
Do you remember some of the
clubs you played at out there?
Hard to remember but one
of them might have been called The Palace, a real pretty place. See
while we were on this tour we were just jumping from spot to spot. Every
night I was somewhere else.
Was any one on the tour with
you?
Well there might be other
bands playing but I was so swift I didn’t even get a chance to meet
other groups. We would run up in there and they would say, “The World
Famous Supreme Team is here and they got this new album.” Plus the
company would call ahead because they supported each other over there,
they knew what spots to send you to. So we would run up in there plug up
the turntables do our thing and be out of there. But we really thought
the label just wanted to see if we were good entertainers or not. So I
would roll up into each town and stay for about a week and do t.v. shows
and clubs and stuff like that. After a while we said damn we need to come
up with a plan and we decided to treat it like it was WHBI. So after
about the third show it was getting uncomfortable around these white
people because we talking about hip hop you don’t stop and they never
heard of this stuff! (Se Divine laughs.) So we would come into the club
and start at the front door and start asking people their names and
shaking their hands. I
bought a notebook with me and we would start writing down folk’s names
and asking them stuff like what part of town are you from and stuff like
that.
O.k. so you started the
request line thing over there ?
Yes the same thing
exactly, but this time we are doing it on stage and by the time it ends
we be giving them pounds. (Money.) They had those pounds over there not
dollars. I would have a whole load of dedications. We would get on stage
and say “World Famous Supreme Team, yo D.J. hit me on the one.”
“Ya’ll know we are cutting it up like this”…. Bang! We might hit
them with that Brothers Johnson Jam then hit them with the Rocket in the
Pocket jam or something like that. Then I say yo I am going to give out
a few dedications. Then I say yo yo what’s up with my boy so and so in
the back, let me hear you, let me see you out there. They start putting
their hands up. I had about a hundred dedications to make you know.
I got you.
So we would rock it like
that and you would hear them say yo I am over here. At the end we would
say we came to England and we got all this money and I don’t know if
ya’ll know about dollars but we got these pounds and I don’t know what
to do with these pounds, yo what do you think we need to do with these
pounds? One of the guys on tour with me would say “we need to give
those pounds away, lets leave those pounds right here.” So we say here
is what we are going to do, we are going to have a dance contest. So we
then would bring them cats on stage and they would start dancing, for
like 30 minutes and that is how we would be giving those pounds away and
they was loving it. They would be like “yeah when are those guys
coming back.”
Were there times ya’ll
would come into these clubs and the crowd just didn’t understand the
music and they didn’t say a word, dance or anything?
I think the first club
we went into reminded me of home because there were blacks there like
flies to butter milk and they had never heard cutting before. And just
catching that joint on the four or catching it every four bars I should
say. That was to give them a chance to feel the groove and kind of feel
what I am doing. Not just cut one two, cut one two. You know you confuse
them like that and so they started to get the hang of it, but they would
just be looking like totally spaced out at times.
(Troy starts to laugh and we
both agree that the crowd just looked like “what the hell is this!”)
What the hell is these
n------ on! But we kept doing it and I think they were trying to pick up
on the technique, but the s--- was amazing to them because it wasn’t
like we were missing beats because the stuff still made sense. Plus you
know the beats we were coming out of New York with, these beats were
Gangster.
What inspired the World
Famous cut, and why was it so Jazz influenced? By the way that is one of
my very favorites of all time!
See now there is this
woman name Ann Dudley over in England who they put us with,
and
by the way I came up on Jazz and I came up as a player, and Jazz was old
school. So coming out of The Moments and Delphonics and stuff like that,
and as a youngster in New York coming out of the joint I started going
down to the village a lot because I loved Jazz players. If I had a girl
and she wanted to go out I would take her down to the Village and we
would sit up there and watch Sunny Stick or whatever cat was there that
night. Jazz is just like that, all players are good players and I could
rap to anything that had something going on with it, something melodic.
Once you put that in there for me I am gone, and yes Troy you are right
that is a Jazzy Track.
Exactly
A lot of people might not
know this but the lyrics came one night when I had a problem on WHBI!
See a lot of cats up in New York would say “them n------ ain’t this,
they ain’t that, they hustlers. They aren’t any real emcees! Them
n------- be down town playing that 3 card Monte”. So I got so fed up
with it that I came over there and said “Some People Some People
listen for history, some people listen because they want a mystery, some
people listen and say we're wack, but if the miss the show they
catch a heart attack.” Because all these cats that is talking and
making that noise is cats that listen to the radio station with lemon
faces.
I got you
But then I say “but we
are still World Famous”, and I meant that. So that is were that track
came from. It was something real with some of them New York cats.
That is really a great cut
See well that is another
one of those cuts they did not get behind. See what killed it was when
Buffalo
Gal came out they didn’t get behind it which was
understandable because they didn’t know what they were messing with
and they didn’t know how big that market was going to be. But Malcolm
had seen it and I also. In fact the whole New York seen it, and that was
because that was what we were living at that time. When we did Hey D.J.
Charisma records merged with Virgin Records. So we had trained Charisma
and Charisma was ready. So whatever we put out Charisma was ready to
get behind. But the guy that owned Charisma was Tony Stratton Smith. He
ended up
selling
to Virgin for so many millions and Virgin ate up the whole England at
that time. When they came out they were buying up companies and shutting
people down. Virgin signed I think Phil Collins after he had just left
Genesis. I believe Janet Jackson was doing some work with them, as well
as Sade. So our stuff got put up on the shelf.
I got what you are saying
The same
A&R
people we had and the same relationship we had over at Charisma we know
longer had at Virgin. We had to start all over again and that was what
killed Hey D.J. It became a hit in New York only because we played it
here on WHBI! I wrote Hey D.J. after listening to Frankie Beverly and
Maze sing Before I Let go while I was coming out of North Carolina. I
felt it was a Jazzy song and wondered if I could put together something
like that. When I got back to New York I pulled out the Key Board. Now
at that time I was kind of good with the keyboard, as I knew the
chords, scale and knew how to embellish tracks but I was still kind of
basic with it. So I wrote the bass line to Hey D.J. as well as the chord
pattern and put the melody into it. Then I went to my friend Shawn who
lived around the corner and asked him to play it for me and tighten it
up. Shawn was another one of them cats that was young but gifted. His
parents had money and what ever he wanted they was giving him. He was
still going to school and he was from East Elmhurst.
I paid him a couple
of hundred dollars and the track became mine. I completed it down in
Philadelphia through Bunny Ziegler because I was trying to get that
Philly sound. I was trying to get away from that New York sound. Although those cats from Philly were pretty much done by the time I
started doing my thing but I still dug that Philly sound as a youngster.
When I got back to New York they finally released it. Of course I got
WHBI playing it but now some how WBLS has a copy of it, probably from a
record pool but they are only playing the B-side, the instrumental. Of
course that was because they weren’t playing hip-hop. Now Ahyae was on
the instrumental side. Ahyae was the female that was singing “Hey D.J.
just play that song and keep me dancing”… real fine girl. We were
just talking to each other earlier in the day because we are going to be
doing another Hey D.J. 2008. She just laid down those same locals again,
and I fattened up the track. She still has the same beautiful voice
after all these years.
Sounds like she got it going
on
She does and the bad thing
about that Hey D.J is she is not on the album credits and I never knew
that. When the album came out I might have been in California I might
have been anywhere. With me I might be on WHBI one day and the next day
be in Florida or on the West Coast some were gambling and then say oh
its time to go to WHBI and we go run over there. So the liner notes of
the album I did not know about because I was not around. But Ahyae was
on a De La Soul track as well as the remake they did of our Hey D.J. A
lot of cats were trying to get at her and she was a pretty young girl
and the industry be trying to run up in them shorties!
Right
And she is not that
kind of person. Do you know that she still had the master tapes from 23
years ago! Which was amazing to me because she said I gave them to her
when we were in Philly making the cut. I said o.k., I see you hold on to
s---!
(We both start laughing.)
But she is a fine young
lady with a nice voice, but I was upset with the fact that they Charisma
did not put her name on the credits and they were supposed to. They put
their folks down. They put folks on there that had nothing to do with
nothing.
So with the World Famous who
thought of the idea with the video to put Martin Luther King at the end?
Well that video I have
never seen!
What!
It is a lot of stuff I
have never seen.
But you were part of this.
Yes, but I was
part of
the song, writing the lyrics and putting together the musical concept. I
have to say Ann Dudley knew what I liked, so even when you hear that
version on it I say “Ann you know I got to have that”
Right
Because I damn near
cannot even start speaking until you gave me some flavor. See if you
just put some snare drums and bass drums with some high hats then I am
kind of lost with that because that’s something that you could just
scream over. But once I hear chords and melodies then yeah I feel good
about that. Yeah-nice song.
Yes that is a
beautiful joint there. So who put ya’ll on to the Ebonetts and the
Double Dutch Girls (Girls from the Grant and Manhattanville Projects in
HARLEM,)?
Well we were never
part
of that. That was a Malcolm Maceration project; see how he got that was
he was just out hunting. This is just my opinion and I feel it is right
but any thing that seemed black that was out and they weren’t doing in
England that is what he was trying to get. He really didn’t do know
more than write a documentary and just put it out as an audiotape or
videotape. But that’s the stuff young girls have been doing for years
along with the break dancing and stuff like that. He just put all that
stuff together. Even the graffiti on the walls he just took everything
during that time and put some music behind it, which was clever.
So now what bought on the
fall out between you and Malcolm Maclerin where you both just seemed to
disappear?
We never had a fall out.
Well how long did your
relationship last with Malcolm because ya’ll did stop doing music with
him am I right?
Yeah but we never fell
out, in fact I talked to Malcolm about two months ago. We were setting
up a date to see each other in New York after he got out of L.A. coming
from Paris. I figure I need to get up with him because Malcolm will lead
you to some money! I know a lot of people think we got jerked or he is
this bad guy that robbed us. But he never robbed us. We actually made
money with that cat. The first deal I got with that cat we were in the 6
figures, and this was right after Buffalo Girls. They offered 5 thousand
on Christmas day I never forget it. After we came off tour traveling all
around Europe and presenting our self here and there. Then we had this
one cat that wanted to be our manager and I am thinking how can you be
our manager and I don’t know you! You about to fall into some money
then folks start coming out the woodwork
Exactly......
Cats said “yo you
need to get this lawyer over here” and they pointed their finger at
who we should deal with. I went and got a dictionary and I went back to
the hotel. I sat in the hotel for like two days. Came down to the lobby
to eat, went back upstairs and took me a nap, later got back into that
dictionary and read some more of the contract. On Christmas day we
signed a deal with them. I wish I still had the contact just to show
people because they had to cross out so much stuff and rewrite the
contract. We stayed in Charisma for like 5 hours just crossing out this
and adding that. They would say “Divine this statement means this and
I would say well if it means that we need to write that!”
Right I feel you.
So they would be like all
right and they had their lawyers and I became my own lawyer. I got a
really good deal from them.
So when they first handed
that contract to you did it look like they were doing something fishy to
you, and once they seen that you were on the ball did they change it
around for you?
Nah they were always on
the up and up. One thing people have to realize and especially for the
youngsters out here, if I have a record company I am going to have a
standard contract and you need to go read it. It is impossible for
somebody to jerk you. You have to go to school or you have to study that
stuff. Let me tell you something, you can even get a lawyer and your
lawyer can work against you. I have seen that happen. I seen a guy try and sign a deal over in London and the
company wanted to give him $200,000 and he was trying to get a million
but in the end he got $300,000 which is really far from the million. But
what they did was pay off the lawyer. So if a cat got a lawyer they
could give his lawyer $300,000 to convince you. So you really have to
handle your own business.
What happened to you and
Malcolm during the 90s since you said ya’ll never fell out. I am
talking about as far as making music, touring or going to Zulu Nation
Anniversaries?
Let me tell you like this
because the spirit can be broken, but not forever but when we did
Buffalo Gals I struggled with them people to get that record out. Now
remember they done gave us a gang of money but this stuff has to be
recouped. So you want to hurry up and let them recoup, so you can start
getting your money. On Hey D.J. when they put that on the shelf that
means we have to wait that much longer for them to recoup. Just say Hey
D.J. don’t hit and it makes only 2 or 3 hundred thousand then we
ain’t going to make a dime because they have to get their money back.
I am talking about the record company and the publishing company who are
giving these advances. They need to get their paper back before they pay
you a dime! So if they are not releasing how can they get paid back!
Right......
When I did Hey D.J. I
begged them to play it. I even flew to England to talk to Virgin; but
still nobody could get anything done. During that time record sales were
hot for a lot of people, you could spit on a record and hit. That’s
how it was in those days. But if you are with a company that is not
putting your stuff on the shelves what can you do? So I took Hey D.J.
down to 42nd street and bootlegged it myself and that was
because it wasn’t on the shelves. I even took them to stores myself,
they were taking it from me on a plain cover, no picture on it, no
nothing! Just a plain white sheet, saying World Famous Supreme Team, Hey
D.J.
I hear that.
I wrote another song
called “I am in Love” with a fly hip-hop beat. I wrote a fly jazz
joint with the piano playing behind this joint. I also had the horns in
there and it wasn’t over powering because I still had my lyrics in
there. So I told them this is the next piece for them to put out. They
were on some “I don’t know because hip hop and love songs don’t go
together.” What happens two months later, L.L. comes out with I need
Love.
And it went right to the
top, and now they see it! I said damn I put this right in y'alls lap. A
lot of that stuff I could have bought out but a lot of it never was
recorded. I gave it to them in the demo stage where they never even had
copies. I believe that was one of the best songs I have ever written.
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