French DJ tells MTV News Gartner opened up an important discussion but wishes he’d called him out by name in ‘Beatport top 10’ rant. By Sarah Karp Ward
Hov was only supposed to contribute an ad-lib, but he and Beanie Sigel ended up dropping verses, Free recalls on ‘RapFix Live.’ By Rob Markman, with reporting by Sway Calloway Freeway and Sway Calloway Photo: MTV News Freeway has quite a few gems in his catalog, one being the Jay-Z and Beanie Sigel -assisted single “What We Do” from his 2003 debut, Philadelphia Freeway. The trio trade vivid verses filled with sarcastic regret over a Just Blaze-produced soul beat. While the track remains a fan favorite, Free admitted on Wednesday’s “RapFix Live” that he originally planned for the song to be a solo affair. Freeway recalled recording the track at Roc-A-Fella’s Bassline Studios in New York City. On any given night, the entire Roc roster would be milling about the studio, and the bearded MC often sought musical advice from his labelmates. “It was always that family vibe that they said was around. So I can go like, “Cam, how this sound?” Or “Jay, how that sound?” ” Free remembered. While recording “What We Do,” Philly Freezer asked Jay to record an ad-lib for the song. On the track, after Free spits the line “When the teeth stop showing, and the stomach start growling, then the heat start blowin’/ If you from the ‘hood, I know you feel me,” Jay jumps in and adds, “Keep goin’.” But after hearing what Free had already laid down, the God MC decided to contribute an entire verse. “So when I was recording “What We Do,” I originally called Jay just to do the “keep goin’.” So when he heard it, he sat down on the bench in Bassline and was just vibin’ out,” Free said before crossing his arms and nodding his head to mimic Jay’s writing technique. “He sat there for 10 minutes, then he was like, “I got you. This sh– crazy, I got you.” ” The then-rookie rapper got more than he bargained for, because after Jay offered his verse, Beanie Sigel came in to complete the trifecta. “Beans came in and heard that, and Beans was like, “Oh no, I’m next. I’m getting on that joint,” ” Free said. Would “What We Do” be the same without Jay and Beans? Let us know in the comments below! Related Videos Freeway On ‘RapFix Live’ Related Artists Freeway Jay-Z Beanie Sigel
‘This was meant to be,’ Gartner tells MTV News of their collaboration. By Akshay Bhansali Eve Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/ WireImage When MTV News caught up with rapper Eve and famed electronic dance music DJ/ producer , they were full of compliments for each other. The two collaborated on “Get Em,” the latest single from Gartner’s new album, Weekend in America, which dropped on Tuesday. “She’s a genius,” gushed Gartner, who was born Joey Youngman. “The only two people on this album that I actually worked with in person were Eve and will.i.am. And I would say the same thing about both of them: that they are musical and lyrical geniuses. “The hook that she wrote for this song, there is something that can’t really be put into words about it,” he continued. “I’ve compared it to Sugar Hill Gang before. It’s just got this old-school innocent-chant catchiness to it.” When MTV News’ Sway caught up with Eve, she too spoke very highly of working with Gartner. “I think he’s great,” Eve said. “What’s crazy is that I had just finished doing a record with him, but I had never seen him perform. So I wrote the first verse to the record and felt like I needed to see him perform to finish the record because I don’t know that world. So after I saw him perform I was like, ‘Whoa, that’s a whole other world.’ I think he’s great. In his lane he does amazing work. So I’m happy to be a part of that movement.” In fact, Gartner has roped in quite a few hip-hop collaborators for Weekend, including will.i.am, Omarion and Cam’ron and Jim Jones. But observing Eve do her thing in the studio appeared to be extra-special for Gartner, who plans to shoot a video for “Get Em.” “In the studio with her, just the way that she starts throwing out ideas and the way that stuff comes to her — they were things that obviously I would never think of, but I’m not a lyricist, so my mind doesn’t work that way,” Gartner said. “But the way that she wrote this song over the music, it flows with the song. The words work with the rhythm. It just forms one cohesive sound. “Whereas you hear a lot of dance rap tracks and it’s like they wrote a rap and threw it over somebody else’s beat, she wrote this thing to work with it and get embedded into it,” he continued. “She was obviously feeling the beat. This was meant to be. These two things were meant to be together.” Related Videos Wolfgang Gartner: The ‘Weekend’ Trip Related Artists Wolfgang Gartner Eve
‘He has a major role in the younger generation to this music,’ producer/DJ tells MTV News of his collaborator. By Adam Stewart Deadmau5 Photo: Charley Gallay/ Getty Images It’s no secret that 2010 was a pivotal year for electronic dance music (EDM) here in the States. With deadmau5 and suddenly becoming household names, EDM’s momentum shows no signs of slowing down. Using a conduit of collaboration, artists such as deadmau5 (a.k.a. Joel Zimmerman) have paired up with various underground acts to further the rapid expansion of the genre. Perhaps one of the most notable movers and shakers of the year is now-Grammy-Award-nominated producer and DJ Wolfgang Gartner , who recently sat down to chat with MTV News about deadmau5 and dance music’s rise to the top. “He has a major role in the younger generation to this music,” Gartner says, “but there have been certain artists that have been instrumental in helping it cross over and reach the mainstream — which I think is a good thing. I think rap artists using dance beats is a great thing. I think it just brings more people towards this music that we all love.” Thanks to several key moments, such as deadmau5 taking the helm as house DJ (well, technically “House Artist”) for the 2010 VMAs, EDM has been thrown into the forefront of America’s youth, a key demographic for any genre. “Everybody knows who he is now and he’s kind of exposing the masses to dance music. These little five-, six- and seven-year-old kids latch on to this ‘mau5head’ logo — they get into the music and he’s bringing this tiny young generation into this music that probably wouldn’t be exposed to it.” Gartner certainly doesn’t mind the exposure either. Unless you were living under a rock for the past six months, you probably heard one of this past summer’s hottest anthems, “Animal Rights,” a collaborative effort brought forth by deadmau5 and Gartner. “It was interesting because I kind of had a preconceived notion about how he would be to work [with].” said Gartner. “I think our sounds are really similar, so I figured he would work in a similar way to me, but the way that he writes music is actually completely different to me. But he achieves kind of the same sound through a completely different process.” Recorded in deadmau5’s favorite Los Angeles studio — that would be rocker Tommy Lee’s House — “Animal Rights” is a thumping progressive house anthem that melds Wolfgang’s unmistakable harmonics and funk riffs with the driving baseline and wobbly synths that make deadmau5 one of the unique forces in the dance music world. “[Deadmau5] writes these rich complex chord progressions and he does it by drawing these little bars on a grid, which is just amazing that you can do that and get that result,” Gartner goes on to say. “It just proves you don’t have to be able to play keyboards to write amazing music.” The two sound pioneers never cease to stop pushing the limits on what they are able to produce. Using drastically difference production approaches, deadmau5 and Gartner had the ability to play off each other’s strengths while recording the track. “I’d say the biggest thing is that I play everything in on a keyboard, like even my drums,” says Gartner. “I play everything in live and he draws it in with notes on a mouse, which blew me away because his music is very musical.” What do you think 2011 will hold for deadmau5 and Gartner? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists deadmau5 Usher