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Black Milk: Carrying the Torch 
Published Friday, December 07, 2007 12:00 PM
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By: Kris Schumacher
It’s often hard for young artists to break away from comparisons to the artists that inspired them, as flattering as they may be. In light of his early work with Slum Village, and being from the talented yet relatively untapped city of Detroit, Black Milk has been striving to carry the torch that J Dilla lit, without riding any coattails. Sure he’s being heralded as the next big Hip-Hop act to emerge from the Motor City, but these days he’s just happy to finally have the name Black Milk speak for itself.


While he couldn’t be happier with the response he’s received so far for his solo album Popular Demand, he’s also feeling blessed about the results of his recent European tours. With plans to produce albums from Sean Price, Guilty Simpson and Fat Ray, as well as the official Caltroit mixtape with Bishop Lamont set to drop in December, 2008 is looking to be a big year for the 24-year-old. Driving the I-95 in Detroit on a Friday night is where AllHipHop.com caught up with him, and here’s how the conversation went.
 

AllHipHop.com: You were overseas touring in October. Tell me about the experience you had performing and getting to see another part of the world.


Black Milk: That was my second time going over to Europe this year, and it was way better than the first time. The first time it was live, but this second time was even crazier, because every show was sold out, or damn near sold out. Every show the club was filled up. Me, Guilty [Simpson], and Sean Price all did our thing, every set was vibing and people was just enjoying it. I hit up a few spots I didn’t get to hit up, finally hit up Paris and couple other spots. Paris and Amsterdam was two of the livest shows out of all, but it was crazy.


AllHipHop.com: I feel like growing up listening to Detroit radio, and they put me on to a lot of artists but really never gave us the exclusive Detroit stuff. They definitely weren’t first place I never heard Eminem or Slum Village. I haven’t been at home for few years, but is it still the same thing? 


Black Milk: Yeah it’s basically still the same man. Detroit got a lot of talented artists, from Hip-Hop to R&B singers and all of that. They might show you a little love every once in a while, spin a record or put you in the mix show. But other than that, not rotation. You not gonna get none of that, just what you see on 106 and Park or MTV, what you hear on the radio from big artists. It’s kind of shocking, because there’s a good amount of artists in Detroit doing quality music, so you would think they’d play some of that stuff or at least fit it in with the other artists in rotation. But it’s still the same basically. To tell you truth, they showed me a little love through the connections I had with the radio at 98 WJLB, they were playing “Sound The Alarm” for a while. Most of the time in the mix show, but they was still playing it, so I couldn’t be mad, you know what I’m saying? (Laughs)


AllHipHop.com: It’s a shame they don’t do more.
 


Black Milk: Especially after you got other cities that do it. When you see down south, how they do it in Atlanta and other cities, they got their movement. You’d think that another city would do that for their artists, when you’ve got quality artists. It’s enough of us out here. But I don’t know man, it’s a different thing up here. It’s up top.
 


AllHipHop.com: It’s been nearly two years since the passing of J Dilla. Is the Detroit community finally coming to terms with no longer having the legend around?
 


Black Milk: It’s been a minute, so I guess people is starting to get closure with it. Ain’t nobody forgot about him or Proof, if you go to the Hip Hop spots we’re still spinning Dilla records and Proof records all night. So we ain’t forgot, but we’re kind of coming to closure. Ain’t too much mourning like around the time when it happened. We’re always going to be repping them two dudes.
 


AllHipHop.com: For those that don’t know, how much of an influence was his music as far as coming into your own as a producer?
 


Black Milk: Dilla had a bigger influence on my music than any artist in music history. Him and Prince, the two dudes I look up to a lot. He made me want to start doing beats basically, when I heard Slum Village. Before I even met those dudes, I was listening to those dudes through my boys and cousins, they was into Slum like that and put me on. And I realized it was different than what you usually hear in Hip Hop, and I just grew attached to it. So he influenced my style hella big. Even though I’m coming into my own sound, you’ll still hear that Detroit bounce. I’m not the only artist or producer he influenced, but yeah you’ll hear that a little bit in my music.
 


AllHipHop.com: You said before that you feel like you’re starting your career all over again now, trying to make a name for Black Milk the solo artist and producer. You feel like it’s working now?
 


Black Milk: Yeah man I do. People are starting to recognize me for what I do, and separate me from the whole Slum Village thing, Dilla thing, B.R. Gunna thing, and look at me as Black Milk. So I feel good, I feel like I’m doing what I’m doing and accomplishing what I need to. But I still ain’t met my goals, I’m still not all the way. It’s working out good for me now though. Like when you can go overseas and rock shows by yourself to 500 people and up, that means you doing something.


AllHipHop.com: You’ve got to be happy with the consensus that Popular Demand was one of the better projects to come out this year. Did you really expect that type of response from the project, or were you prepared for the worst?


Black Milk: I kind of expected people to enjoy the music. I’ve been producing for a minute now, and most of the stuff we’ve been putting out people like it and take to it. They cop it, whether it was stuff for Slum or B.R. Gunna, people got it and we never really got no bad feedback. So I didn’t really have any worries about the album. The only worry I had was when the album got pushed back a few times. To me, it was old because it got pushed back like 6 months from the original date. So I’m like music changes so much, especially with me, cause I’m changing my style up or come up with something new almost damn near every few week. So I was hoping the album wouldn’t sound dated when it came out, but people still took to it and I got good feedback from the record so it was dope. 


AllHipHop.com: How do you feel about the way Fat Beats Records is working as a label for artists like yourself? 


Black Milk: When I signed to Fat Beats, I kinda knew what it was. I knew they was going to do what I needed them to do on an underground level. I knew I was going to have to put in a lot of footwork myself and be on the grind myself, because I knew they was only going to do so much. But like I said, it did good man. We shot a real dope video for the first single “Sound The Alarm,” and when we did that and put it on YouTube, we got so many calls from people. MTV and even BET hollered at us. MTV hollered first like “Yo, we want the video.” It wasn’t like the real MTV, but like MTV Jams or one of the lower ones But it was still dope to be on MTV’s radar. So the only thing we had to do was shoot a clean version of the video, and that was where the dilemma came. The guy that shot the video did it all on green screen, so it was hard for him to go back and take the bullet scene out, or any gun gestures out. It was hard for him to go back and re-edit all that, because he was done with it. But now we know (Laughs).


AllHipHop.com: Let’s talk about the Caltroit mixtape you did with Bishop Lamont. That must have increased your fanbase substantially.
 


Black Milk: Yeah, I was reading a couple message boards on sites where the song was up, and people was like “Who’s the Black Milk cat?” They knew Bishop, but I was new to them and they was saying I was dope on the verses or whatever. I didn’t see nothing negative, so it’s opened me up to a whole new fan base and given me more exposure. Bishop’s on Aftermath, so that in itself is going to have certain people checking for you that wouldn’t usually. Caltroit is still getting a lot of buzz, we did the internet download thing. The CD should be dropping in December with none of the talking over it, and the mix and mastering is going to be nothing like the grimy version that was on the internet. The quality version sounds way better than the one from the net. That was the plan from the beginning, leak it out and give people a little taste of what it is. We got Cali artist, Detroit artists, even some East Coast artists on there, it’s just a real good project.
 


AllHipHop.com: How did that even come together? It seems like it’s bridging a big distance between you guys geographically.
 


Black Milk: I met Bishop at the Slum Village video shoot for “EZ Up” in Cali. Matter of fact I had my “Sound of the City” project out that I was pushing, and he was one of the cats I gave the CD too. We talked for a minute and exchanged contacts, and when I got back to the crib we stayed in contact. Unfortunately when Proof passed, he came out to Detroit for the funeral. Me and him kicked it a little bit and recorded a couple songs, and when he went back my manager had the idea like “Why don’t you do a project together on some Cali-Detroit shit?” And we thought the idea was dope, so there it was. I went out to Cali, recorded a few times out there, we were sending tracks back and forth. That was how we got Caltroit.
 


AllHipHop.com: It’s cool when your manager can come up with a few ideas, remind you why you’re paying them.
 


Black Milk: Right, right. That’s my manger all day, he just be brainstorming. Matter of fact, he’s the one that came with the idea of the Guilty Simpson/Sean Price album with me producing it. So that was another one of his ideas that I give him credit for.


"Bad Man"  Fat Ray ft. Guilty Simpson   Produced by Black Milk



"Sound the Alarm" Black Milk ft. Guilty Simpson




Comments

 

King1122 said:

Black Milk is a beast.  Go cop that Popular Demand, its fiyah.
December 7, 2007 1:15 PM
 

MACCAPONE said:

COOL KEEP IT UP BLACC MILK KEEP DOING YOU....
December 7, 2007 1:37 PM
 

Curry Media said:

yeah, this cat is real inventive...he sampled a vocal from the rock /prog group Yes, and he killed that shit...
December 7, 2007 2:33 PM
 

ENOT said:

ENOT

Props to homey........
December 7, 2007 4:57 PM
 

Way2Kool said:

My ears just ingested this young brother's music for the first time a couple of weeks ago; I'm definitely feeling his contribution to Hip-Hop.  Them Detroit cats got fire; keep bubbling Black Milk.
December 7, 2007 5:45 PM
 

MAK™ said:

BLACK MILK IS THE NEW "MONSTA"...

American Gangster ² Coming Soon!

http://myspace.com/crackproductions

-MAK-
December 7, 2007 6:09 PM
 

SPATE Magazine All Day said:

December 7, 2007 6:17 PM
 

ARSUN FiST said:

yeah Black Milk been that dude...as usual it takes heads awhile to recognize flames but i'm glad this man is in the game...him and Bishop should have quite the banger with Caltroit...


CONTINUE TO SUPPORT GOOD MUSIC!!!
December 7, 2007 7:31 PM
 

MattLee said:

milk is dangerous on the mic and on the boards
December 7, 2007 8:50 PM
 

j.johnson said:

thats whats up, glad black starting to get some shine on these hip hop websites

Love to all the detroit cats, Petey Pistolz, Slum,gulity,beta,nick speed,black milk,stretch money, tone tone, k deezy...

www.blackcitygov.com
December 8, 2007 12:16 PM
 

DetroitsDaughter said:

Detroit, What?!
December 8, 2007 5:08 PM
 

junclassic said:

I really respeck Black Milk's hustle man. Ain't hard to tell that brother be workin hard!

"Go At It" on Caltroit is the troof!!!

Much Respeck Black Milk. That Sean Price/Guilty Simpson album gon be kerrazee...
December 8, 2007 5:55 PM
 

Eminem News » Blog Archive » Black Milk: Carrying the Torch said:

December 8, 2007 8:20 PM
 

karljohn » Black Milk: Carrying the Torch said:

December 9, 2007 11:10 PM
 

MattLee said:

@j.johnson

dont forget about young RJ :P
December 10, 2007 1:19 PM
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