By Brandon Ross
Tech N9ne is nothing like your typical rapper; he doesn't need big name producers or an outsized budget to generate sales. His new double-disc album
Killer is on deck, and it's generating momentum toward his millionth album sold independently. There is also a thirty-city Strange Noize tour about to take life, as well as his Strange Music record label to man.
But Tech isn't sweating all the responsibility, this is what he does. Kansas City's finest pumps the brakes to give the details on creating
Killer, selling a million copies, the M.J. swag on the album cover and the whispers of retirement swirling around.
AllHipHop.com: Why did you decide to mock Michael Jackson's
Thriller album cover for Killer?
Tech N9ne: The imagery behind
Killer man, what I was trying to say is that when you think of Michael Jackson, not his personal life per-se because I ain't with that [laughs], but when you think of Thriller you think of 50 million sold, 100 million worldwide. That's the highest selling pop album. So what I was trying to say is [with]
Killer, this would be my highest selling rap album. All
Killer, no filler, I just had to pay homage to a veteran in the game, Michael Jackson.

AllHipHop.com: You been in the game for a while now and this is your first double disc album, was it a marketing strategy or did you have a lot of music you wanted your fans to hear?
Tech N9ne: I don't write meaningless s**t, so it's like if I got 32 tracks that means I been doing a lot of living, I have a lot to talk about. What happened was I had 19 beats slated for this album, when I got through writing [to] those 19, Travis O'Guin, my partner, just kept feeding me beats. I said, “Ok, keep feeding me beats.” After I did 25 I'm like, “Ok, is it too late to do a double album?” He said, “Nope,” so I kept going man. He kept feeding me beats that were hardcore, what can I do, so a double album came in a month’s time, [it’s] crazy.
AllHipHop.com: Who were some of the producers that you worked with on the album?
Tech N9ne: When I first set out to do this album, the guy that gave me the first beat helped me set the stage for the rest of the album. Nobody knows him but he's brand new , he from Iowa and his name is Young Fyre. He gave me "Wheaties," the track with Shawnna. When I heard that I said that's the caliber of beat that I need for this album, so that it can kick the album off for real. The second beat I heard was from a cat name Wysh Master, he did stuff for Nelly, Chingy, he is part of that big St. Louis movement. He gave me "Pillow Talk" with Scarface, those two cats kept sending me tracks so I can get that sound. My boy Seven out of Wichita, Kansas, he's been with us for years.
These are all new producers in y’all eyes; these beats are heat so this is wonderful. This cat by the name of Aaron B gave me "Too Much" it sounds like something out of
300. We do a lot of our stuff over the Internet like people just send us beats and if they happen to be wonderful, we'll use them. This brand new cat by the name of Matic Lee out of Atlanta, he did "One Good Time" on the second disc and he did "Sh*t is Real" for me. He came through a cat named David Sanders, who did "Beat You Up." Robert Rebeck came through; just wonderful producers coming together to make heat.