By Gentle Jones
Before Del the Funky Homosapien debuted as a solo artist he ghostwrote for N.W.A.'s ace writer, his cousin Ice Cube, who put him to work on
AmeriKKK's Most Wanted. Surrounding himself with brilliance even as a teenager, Del's debut album,
I Wish My Brother George Was Here, was well received. But it was his second album,
No Need for Alarm, which established him as the spearhead of a modern Hip-Hop movement located in Oakland with his Hieroglyphics crew; cultivating an original sound while experimenting with various distribution structures.
Firmly independent, Del has succeeded in many incarnations, whether he is in the mainstream as a cartoon character in Gorillaz, or underground with musings of a futurist pugilist on
Deltron 3030. On March 11th Del will release his latest self-produced solo album,
11th Hour, on Definitive Jux, courtesy of El Producto. Del has left crazy broads and heavy drugs behind him while building a homespun digital arsenal similar to other fellow Handsome Boy Modeling School alumni. Currently out supporting his album, the rapper who will never turn actor says his Hiero crew will be dropping a surprise new album with Prince Paul next. Shhh.
AllHipHop.com: What are you working on, man?
Del the Funky Homosapien: I'm doing a little bit of promotion right now. We are working on a new Hieroglyphics album right now. It’s pretty much done. Also, me and El-P is trying to do an EP called
Del-P. The song “Offspring” was the first time we worked together and I've been knowing him for years since then. That was a big reason why I [wanted] to go to Def Jux. If it was another company I might not wanted to do it. But since its Def Jux, I respect his hustle.
AllHipHop.com: What does Def Jux have to offer you, Del? You are already a star.
Del: This fool said I'm a star. When the last time you checked? I am not no star, dude. What they are offering me is that I can even talk to you right now. This would not be popping off if it wasn't for Def Jux.
AllHipHop.com: I have to ask, did you really date Jerry Garcia's daughter?
Del: Yup, Trixie Garcia, she was cool. In the late 90s, we kicked if for a while. I still consider her one of my good friends.
AllHipHop.com: There was a story that you saved some girl's life?
Del: (Laughs) Sort of. This ho that I was f***ing with, b***h tried to hang herself in my garage. Twice. I had to cut her down. She had deep disturbing mental problems. Like she be wiling out, blacking out, doing all kind of crazy ho s**t. So I guess she got to the point that she couldn't stand herself no more and decided to just kill herself. In my house.
AllHiHop.com: So do you attract crazy women?
Del: Man, s**t I don't know. I guess I kind of like them kind of crazy but now that was kind of too crazy.
AllHipHop.com: Did you approach
11th Hour differently from
Both Sides of the Brain?
Del: My main theme was to keep it funky. Keep the attitude funky, keep the music funky. I wanted to have some Hip-Hop feel to it too. Lyrically, I wanted to make some s**t that the average person could feel like they could love Hip-Hop again. I feel like fools just started getting hella complex and technical and people couldn't feel us. The way I tried to do it, I didn't try to make it to where you know "I got a club song", "I got this song" like that. I tried to make everything overall like if you wanted to get into it you could. And if you want to get deeper into it you can get deeper into it.
AllHipHop.com: What is it about your new flow that you are trying to get across?
Del: I am a lot more direct with what I got to say. At a certain point it just occurred to me that if you're so smart how come you can't say something in a way that I can understand it? Once I thought about that I started spitting in a way that there wasn't no extravagant effort to get into the s**t. I felt like I was doing too much.
I took heed and was like, "Let me pump my brakes a little bit and let you know what’s really on my mind. That wordplay s**t is played out, everybody can do that. That's the whole underground s**t." I was like, "What's going to separate you?" I tend to look at things different than the average person. I think that's my gift and I try to put that in my raps.
[Del the Funky Homosapien "Workin' It" Video]