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WOLF EYES http://www.thefader.com/blog/articles/2006/09/28/wolf-eyes
On October 3rd, Stones Throw and [adult swim] release their collaborative
Chrome Children CD/DVD, a celebration of dusty and dusted (there's
a difference!) gems from the Stones Throw famalam. We chatted with label
head Peanut Butter Wolf recently about Chrome Children, remembering
Dilla, Madlib's Nikes and much more, you can read up on it after the jump.
The DVD portion of Chrome Children was shot at the FADER
SXSW tent.What do you remember from the night that it was being filmed?
There was a lot of stuff going on, I just remember I was DJing for some
of the artists and I also had to worry about my own DJ sets. But as far
as the show it all worked out well, I didn’t even realize it was going
to be filmed and put on the DVD, it’s probably better that I didn’t.
Are you happy with the finished Chrome Children as a representation
of the label?
The DVD I always thought of as extra content. But as far as that component,
we hadn’t done a show with everybody there together outside of LA. I don’t
know when the last time was, if ever. I don’t know if we’ve had that many
artists from the roster in the same place at the same time. For me, that
was like a huge celebration, you know? We had a lot of our friends there,
it really made it more of a house party vibe. I was on the mic a lot just
acting kind of stupid, not really taking anything too seriously other
than just partying and performing our songs for the people. As far as
the CD itself, I basically told everybody before the album was getting
done, You’d better give me a few songs and let me pick the best ones,
I don’t want this to be just like another compilation where everybody
just gives me a throwaway song that didn’t make their album. I told them
to treat this like a real big opportunity to get your stuff heard. A lot
of the artists on the label, I think they are super talented and haven’t
reached as many people as they need to, so I think they understood that
and realized this was an opportunity as well.
I thought it was cool that you included the Dilla song [“Never Felt
Like This”] from his Rough Draft EP. Did you know in advance that
you wanted to use that one?
I knew right away when we got the multitracks for it. The way that the
vinyl came out for Rough Draft, I always felt that it could have
been mixed down again or whatever. I would talk to Dilla about putting
Rough Draft in its entirety on Stones Throw because it was a vinyl
only release on a European label. But that track…I would ask him about
doing a whole album like that, where he is singing. It’s not like R&B
singing or anything, its like some dark, early 80s Cabaret Voltaire…I
don’t know, new wave’s not really the word for it, but like early industrial,
you know? Like early Front 242, goth music like Joy Division or something.
Whenever I would bug him about that when I saw him, he would kinda just
laugh it off and stuff. I don’t know that he was ever interested in doing
a whole album like that, but that song to me…I don’t know what it was
about it, but I really fell in love with it.
Donuts has really given Stones Throw one of it’s biggest years
ever.
Possibly, we’ll see when the year-end charts come out and everything.
If we get voted label of the year then I will tell you yes. I think Dilla’s
passing…he definitely uplifted us in his passing. I personally think he
and Madlb are the two most important musicians of our generation. They
are like the Jimi Hendrix and John Lennon of our generation.
The attention that release got must have been so bittersweet though.
When Dilla passed away I wanted to close down the office and just re-evaluate
everything. For me it was really frustrating that his passing was almost
what it took for so many people to even listen to his stuff. I had really
high profile people in hip-hop calling me like, “I never knew about this
cat, and when I heard the De La song and the Pharcyde song, and the Tribe,
and so on, and Common, I had no idea he was doing all this.” That kind
of stuff was really tough for me to understand.
How do you feel about it now? Is it any easier to work through?
Well, when he passed away right away we all knew that his suffering would
be over, so that was the one thing that helped us get through it. Even
people that didn’t know him were extremely touched by it because his music
was so powerful, it wasn’t just another Top 40 hit song, it was so meaningful.
What were your feelings on how the Baron Zen project was recieved?
There were definitely people that got it right away. Man, I was happy
for that. Like Other Music, you know, those are people that I really respect
their opinion, and they gave it a really good review. There was this guy
that tried to book Baron Zen for a live show, but they wanted Baron Zen
to open for Daniel Johnston, I wasn’t familiar with Daniel Johnston’s
work so I looked him up on the internet and found out there was a movie
on his life and I went and saw the movie and I fell in love with Daniel
Johnston’s stuff so I was like, Wow, this guy put Baron Zen in the same
category. So that’s cool. Steve, the guy that did the Baron Zen album,
he’s been my best friend since like fourth grade. We grew up listening
to the same music and that’s why I put out that podcast with “DJ Chris
and DJ Steve.” It was like a radio show—you know, a fictitious radio show
we did when we were 12 years old, pretending like we were radio DJs. Even
if nobody understood it I would be happy that the record came out.
I read somewhere that you were planning various remixes for the Baron
Zen songs.
The remixes are all done now, actually. We’re just getting ready to release
it next year. We got a remix from Arabian Prince—another guy that Steve
and I really looked up to when we were kids. So you know, that’s the kind
of stuff that, for me, makes it worth it as a label.
Have you done any other production recently?
I did a Baron Zen remix, taking an acapella and just building a whole
song around it. It was one of the first productions I did where I was
using instruments beyond a sampler, a lot of drum machines and synthesizers
and stuff.
Do you still record on your own with any regularity, or is it more
like the occasional project here and there?
It’s more like mixtapes—mix CDs. I did that 666 mix on 6/6/06 halfway
as a joke, but then of course religious people thought it was really distasteful.
And I just did a mix of all my old school hip-hop 7”s, because I’ve been
collecting hip- hop on 45 for years and I thought that would be fun to
do. To me it’s just as much fun as doing production.
One of the funniest parts on the A-Trak DVD that came out this year
was seeing you guys playing around with the toy instruments.
A-Trak was one of the first artists, musicians, whatever that I was able
to be myself around, and just clown around because he was all for it and
does the same thing. That’s something a lot of our artists all have in
common. Madlib, and even Dilla—like when Dilla was alive, he was so funny
all the time. On the mic he was serious but he did have that sense of
humor side to him.
The Quasimoto stuff instantly gets people to loosen up when they hear
it. It’s not comedy music but it has that quality to it.
Definitely, I remember when I first heard it—the little skit where he
is in the record store and the goofy white guy has got it all wrong in
terms of what stuff he’s looking for. It’s a situation we’ve all come
across.
What do you have planned after Chrome Children, looking toward
2007?
There’s so many. We just signed Guilty Simpson, so he’s working towards
his album. Percee P is getting his album finished, his first album even
though he’s been recording since ’88. The Baron Zen remixes obviously.
There’s an Arabian Prince greatest hits record we’re looking to put out.
A lot of early ‘80s electro stuff that kinda hasn’t been heard outside
of like two people.
Is it all him on production, or are there guests on it?
It’s all his production and his rapping. His early ‘80s stuff was really
Kraftwerk influenced, I guess like Cybotron as well, Juan Atkins and stuff.
Do you think now is a particularly ripe time for people to rediscover
that era of LA electro?
I think it is. I’ve always really embraced it, for me electro was…as a
kid, that’s really the first hip-hop that I was religiously going out
and buying the 12”s of. There is so much good west coast electro. Even
living in LA, nobody plays it, we’re more likely to hear it in Germany
where those singles are really rare records to them. I’m glad to be an
LA label and able to put that out, to show what hip-hop was like 25 years
ago in LA.
When you are working on reissues do you ever suggest to the original
artists to work with new people, and do new original tracks with artists
that are out today?
We’ve definitely tried in the past. With Arabian Prince that’s kind of
why I asked him to do the remix for Baron Zen, mainly because Steve loves
his music so much. I think that with all this “electroclash” that’s out
now, I think those artists should be coming to Arabian Prince for a remix,
you know?
Is that something you would want to facilitate? You mentioned the people
that reached out to you to find out more about Dilla—do you make suggestions
to more mainstream people in the industry about Stones Throw artists,
like “There’s this guy you should work with…”
Definitely. Fab 5 Freddy gave me a call and he was saying that Hip-Hop
Honors is coming up, and they want to involve Dilla’s legacy somehow.
I think Dilla’s MPC should be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. And probably
some day it will be, but for now…it’s hard to say. In the mean time we’ll
just keep putting out his music and getting more people to find out about
him.
The label really goes out of its way to keep doing the vinyl releases,
but you guys also have so much stuff on iTunes, and you’re doing the podcasts
and everything else. What other areas would you like to bring Stones Throw
into?
Film and clothing. I really think that there needs to be a documentary
on Madlib, and that’s something that we’ve always talked about. Madlib
is very introverted, I can’t really imagine the camera following him around.
He has said that he’s up for doing it after seeing documentaries on Sun
Ra and a couple other guys. So I think that is something that needs to
be preserved.
As far as the clothing, the response to those Quasimoto Dunks is pretty
crazy.
Yeah I know. Nike did 50 pairs and we had way more than 50 people that
we wanted to get them to. We’re hoping for them to do a second run, it
looks like they are not gonna do it now. But the fact that they even did
it is really cool and we’re really thankful. They could have done that
with anybody, but they did it with us. As far as the clothing, I guess
I’ve always…there’s not enough men’s clothes out there that I like, personally.
Do you consider yourself a fashionable dude?
Haaaaaah….no. In high school I was always just buying stuff at thrift
stores and no one really understood it back then. I’d like to take more
chances than I do, I guess.

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