By Martin A. Berrios
If you analyze and study the game there is a serious void in Hip-Hop. Back in the day there was more artistic credibility in the music. On the average, you had a greater percentage of MC’s that could actually spit and didn’t vanish off the map after one album. Taking that into consideration, there are very few who have been rocking for more than ten years and are still considered one of the hardest on the streets. Add Styles P to that list.
A founding member of seminal New York group The LOX, Styles Paniro has been putting the drama on wax since the early 90’s. From there the man born David Styles would experience the ups and downs of the game. To rocking with the late Notorious B.I.G. during Bad Boy’s reign and fighting the inevitable industry contractual rape, he has clearly put his time in. With his third album
Super Gangster, Extraordinary Gentleman via Koch on deck, we finally get The Ghost’s entire story. He speaks offering respect, but clearly the code of cobras is still very much in effect.
AllHipHop.com: Who was Styles P before the deal?
Styles P: A kid with a mother from Africa coming up in the hood doing what he got to do to survive, a real smart kid. Real talented in junior high, got kicked out though. I went to three different junior high schools, working stock jobs, selling drugs, doing anything I could to get a buck. You got to understand I was twelve years old in the hood and I had a moms from Africa, so she wasn’t really up on copping Nikes and sh*t. In ‘86 I get into selling crack. At first I used to just bag up and make money off that. Then we got our own sh*t. I was mad young, and had our own block with our own product. While I’m pumping I’m working at a job; just doing everything I got to do. Sheek and Kiss were really polished. I was good in the street but I wasn’t good in the booth. It was like they were EPMD and I was Redman. But then I guess from being together all the time 24/7 I progressed as an MC.
AllHipHop.com: What was your first time meeting B.I.G. like?
Styles P: It was a pleasure meeting B.I.G. We met and we flowed and that ni**a was like, You nice. He was a humble dude. It was crazy; whoever was our man he treated like he was his man; he was a real embracing dude. He had a love for the art. He respected ni***s that could rap. B.I.G. was an MC so he only respected nice ni**as. He didn’t respect ni**as who weren’t nice.
AllHipHop.com: Did The LOX start working on
Money, Power & Respect immediately after signing?
Styles P: I think we started right away. We did “You’ll See” and “Ni**as Done Started Something” and all kind of mixtape sh*t. We were working as soon as we came through the door. We got right at it.
AllHipHop.com: Did you ever bump heads with Puff artistically early on?
Styles P: It be some sh*t like, Damn, with the rhyming. He’ll be like that ain’t it and as an MC you know that’s it! I think that was our only problem. We were from two totally different worlds at that time. He’s from that big money hustle world and we on some hustle sh*t too but on some outsider sh*t. It was a clash of identities.
AllHipHop.com: One of the LOX’s best freestyles is the one you guys did with B.I.G. over the “C.R.E.A.M.” beat. How was the session for that joint?
Styles P: Mad liquor mad smoke and we went in. We would go to his sessions, he would go to ours. It was incredible. Sitting in there for the
Life After Death sessions I can’t even explain to you. To watch that man work was f*cking incredible, it was mad Bacardi Limon, mad weed, mad mayonnaise jars and all of that. To tell you the truth I never seen B.I.G. roll a blunt and I never seen him drive. B.I.G. was a mobster for real. He was smooth, and fly; he was the king of the city for real. I remember some times waking up, everybody in the session f***ed up and I would see B.I.G. nodding his head hard and everyone out! He was going in, it was incredible.
AllHipHop.com: After B.I.G. was murdered in Los Angeles, did Puff ever come to you and ask not to talk to the police about the murder?
Styles P: We were no where near Puff at the time. We had a problem with Puff at the time. We f*cked with B.I.G. heavy. Once he was gone we weren’t chilling with Puff, we had a problem with him.
AllHipHop.com: So after B.I.G. passes Puff and MA$E drop their solos and pop off heavy. The Lox release
Money, Power & Respect. What kind of reception where you getting in the streets when it dropped?
Styles P: I think a lot of people wanted to hear more mixtape sh*t, but we got a lot of love from that album too. That album was classic, I love that album. It was just that we didn’t do the album we wanted. We wanted to do
We Are The Streets the first time. We respected his vision and did what he wanted [us] to do.
AllHipHop.com: So you’re even cool with joints that were more commercial like “If You Think I’m Jiggy”?
Styles P: Hell yeah. That joint is knocking. I could do that right now at a show and people would party to it, straight up. Mad joints on there that were sick. All the solos on there were sick.
AllHipHop.com: Were the streets looking at you guys funny because of the shiny suits?
Styles P: Nah, nobody was talking about the shiny suits until we flipped! Nobody was mad at that at the time. It was part of the industry. We weren’t with that.
AllHipHop.com: So when did things start to get tense between The Lox and Bad Boy?
Styles P: I don’t really recall to tell you the truth. Like me I think I was the one that always had the problem. I was just uncomfortable. If I don’t like something I’m going to say. I was always the most ignorant off scratch.
AllHipHop.com: Is it true you threw a chair at Puff during one of your meetings trying to get out of your deal with Bad Boy?
Styles P: No doubt. I was just frustrated on how things were going down.
AllHipHop.com: Who was in the meeting?
Styles P: Puff and his security were in the meeting. Us three, I think Dee from Ruff Ryders and a couple of other people. It was just instinct. I was like you’re not going to let us off [the label]? I was like f*ck that you going to let us off. The chair didn’t hit him, it missed him the by the skin of his teeth. I hurt my ankle throwing the chair I was so mad. I got up and twisted it. My ni**as hemmed me up. I had the thing on me at the time.
AllHipHop.com: Ya’ll started the “Let The Lox Go” campaign soon after correct? Did you think it was going to be embraced in the streets so heavy?
Styles P: Hell no. I didn’t expect sh*t. I always knew [we] had the streets. We were some new ni**as on some old school sh*t. A lot of people don’t know but Yonkers is a real MC place. If you say you rap you got to be able to hold it.
AllHipHop.com: You get your walking papers from Bad Boy. Do you think Diddy did The Lox dirty by asking for three million dollars and slices of each member’s publishing?