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5 Reasons Why You Should Watch “Django Unchained” and 5 Reasons Why You Should Skip “Django Unchained”

It has been a long time since movie goers will be as conflicted over a movie, but that’s the sort of film “Django Unchained” is. The movie, the latest, by Quentin Tarantino, tells the story of Django (Jamie Foxx), a Black man that finds freedom in a most unlikely manner. He eventually becomes a bounty hunter with a most unusual ability to kill. And, kill he does. He’s motivated to ruthlessly murder any and everything that stands between him and his lovely wife, Broomhilda (Kerry Washington) and those are mostly White plantation owners and workers that seek to hold him back. The movie offers compelling acting from Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Samuel L. Jackson, Don Johnson and a lot of co-stars.

With that, Django will continue to generate dialogue between those that that love it or hate it. The opposed notions are representative of the characters in the movie since most of them have no grey matter. With that, AllHipHop presents an effort to offer both sides of “Django Unchained,” the good and the ugly, as told by this writer and the creators of this controversial movie.

5 Reasons Why You Should Watch “Django”

1) In Some Demented Way, Django Is A Heroic Figure.

Quentin Tarantino [director] says: “There are a zillion dramatic exciting heartbreaking triumphant [slavery] stories that can be told. Everyone always says there are no new stories, but there’s a whole bunch of them, American stories. And I wanted to be first one out the gate with it.”

2) Ultimately, “Django Unchained” Is A Triumphant Love Story Between A Strong Black Man And An Unbreakable Black Woman.

Django Unchained Jamie Foxx Kerry Washington

Kerry Washington [Django’s wife Broomhilda] says: “I was very moved by love story because [enslaved] Blacks were not allowed to fall in love and get married. This is a story about a husband and wife when blacks weren’t allowed to be husband and wife. We get to see romantic stories all the time…those crossed loved stories. They’re not from different Italian families like romeo juliet, but Jamie [as Django] had to take down slavery and Candyland for his woman. I feel like this is a movie I had to do for my father. He had no superheroes. Django is a hero.”

3) Django Is An Enslaved Black Man That Immediately Seizes Power Like No Other Enslaved Black Man.

Jamie Foxx in Django Unchained

Kerry Washington says: A lot of times people in past may have felt nervous about playing a slave because there are so many narratives about powerlessness. This is a film about a black man that finds freedom, rescues wife, who’s an agent of his own power. A liberator. A hero. Nothing shameful about the film. It’s exciting, hopeful and inspiring.

Jamie Foxx [Django] says: First off, everything in this film…we never get a chance to see a slave fight back, actually do for himself. there are lots of firsts in this movie…you make comments based on things you see you see for the first time…I knew coming into this that there would be a lot of things said…it was a fantastic ride

4) The Movie Is Funny And Well-acted.

Somehow, despite the subject matter. Quentin Tarantino – the sick genius he is – manages to create humor in “Django Unchained.” The funniest part was a gut-busting Klan gathering gone wrong, but there was many others in the movie. Quentin Tarantino: “In editing, I needed a cheer in end and had to figure out how to balance emotions. I didn’t want to traumatize audience so bad that they cant enjoy the movie.” So, don’t feel badly if the movie is enjoyable. The talent in the movie are without peer.

5) For All Of The Violence And Excess, We Get To See Slavery In Its Most Brutal, Racist And Horrific Form.

Django Unchained Killshot

Leonardo DiCaprio (The villainous Calvin Candy) says: “[Being the villain in “Django Unchained”] sucks, man. Being the biggest villain of the piece. My character represented everything wrong with the South. He’s like a young Prince trying to hold onto all his privileges at all costs. He’s a walking contradiction: raised by Blacks and lived with Blacks but had to see them as non-human. Calvin Candy is a narcissistic, self indulgent racist. He’s one of the most horrible characters I read in my life, but I had to do it. He’s too good of character…I hated him…could not identify with him.”

(Editor’s note: These quotes are from an exclusive press conference in New York City that featured the major characters of “Django Unchained.”)

5 Reasons Why You Should Skip “Django”

1) The “N-Word” Is Used 114 Times (Or More)!

The biggest mistake I made while watching “Django Unchained” was trying to count the number of times the word n***er was used. I stopped at 64. Sure, some argue it is powerfully contextualized in the movie, but I found it exclusively offensive. Spike Lee agrees. The “Do The Right Thing” genus tweeted, “”American Slavery Was Not A Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western. It Was A Holocaust. My Ancestors Are Slaves. Stolen From Africa. I Will Honor Them.” To me, Tarantino made the word into another character in “Django Unchanged,” a faceless antagonist. In “Django Unchained,” n***er is almost exclusively in a Virulent manner. My friend and activist Tarik Ross said, “QT got his rocks off having his characters saying the N word. He likes to say it to RZA and who knows how many other silly negroes who also get their rocks off saying it back to him.” At the end of the day, it was unnecessary, but true to Quentin Tarantino’s previous use.

2) Tarantino Spin Or Not, Do We Really Need Another Movie About Slavery?

Django Unchained Leonardo DiCaprio

There are so many slave flicks. Clearly, none that are of the Tarantino fare, but better from a historical and educational point of view. If we want a super hero for the current era, I recommend Quentin Tarantino or John Singleton or Spike Lee get The Nat Turner rebellion or the Black Panther comic book green lit into a big budget movie. Now, those are real super heroes – straight outta Africa!

3) Mass Killing Is Way Out Of Style!

A friend of mine, MSNBC analyst Ari Meliber argued – in an excellent piece for the Atlantic – that “Django Unchained” is actually amoral and void of critical thought of similar movies like “Inglorious Bastards,” a holocaust period flick also by Tarantino. He says, “While ‘Django Unchained’ presents a morally stark universe, where people do and say evil things with no remorse, it also luxuriates in the license that such evil provides. We are invited to cheer on the slavish killing of men and women, black and white, because they are implicated in an evil institution.” No spoilers here, but if we are going to argue realism – in the instance of the overuse of n***er – then we have to agree that the “black and white” portrayal of the characters reduces them to overly simplistic characters that really cater to people most base emotions. African Americans cheered at the end of “Django Unchained” at the screening I attended. No bueno.

4) It Gets Boring!

Frankly, “Django Unchained” clocks in at 165 minutes. As we sat in the movie, I began to wonder when it would all end. Parts of the movie dragged on endlessly and perhaps worse – pointlessly. Even amid the periods of action, the gun violence gets routine and generic.

5) Opening date on Christmas. Really? This is not the movie to enhance your holly, jolly holiday.

Django Unchained Samuel L. Jackson



Chuck “Jigsaw” Creekmur is the co-founder of AllHipHop.com and can be found on Twitter at @ChuckCreekmur.

Symbolyc One: Superstar Rappers, Hit Songs and A Grammy Award

Waco, Texas native Symbolyc One is celebrating the close of a successful 2012, a year that saw the producer win an ASCAP Award and a coveted Grammy Award, for his work on Kanye West’s#### album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.

In 2012, Symbolyc One, who competed in national beat competitions hosted by organizations like iStandard, and Sha Money CL’s One Stop Shop Conference, proved his worth after years on the competition scene.

In the past 12 months, Symbolyc One’s productions have appeared on albums by Game, Xzibit, LeCrea, Talib Kweli, 50 Cent and others.

Symbolyc One breaks down the past 12 months for AllHipHop.com in this exclusive interview below:

AllHipHop.com: The year 2012 was a great year for you. You won two ASCAP Awards and a Grammy Award. Tell us about it.

Symbolyc One: 2012 was like incredible. My first Grammy, for Kanye’s My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy album. For the ASCAP Award, I won for Beyoncé’s “Best Thing I Ever Had and that was like the top R&B song on the urban charts for 2011.

AllHipHop.com: The new project just dropped and you have legends. You’ve got 50 Cent, Eminem, then you go on to the Maroon Five and Adam Levine, solo produced by you. How does it feel?

Symbolyc One: It feels great. Me and my wife, we’ve been tripping. Every day, we’re looking at how everything is just forming and has catapulted into something just incredible. That song actually came about two years ago, You know to see it now sprouting and blossoming, it’s unbelievable.

AllHipHop.com: You also have pushed through with Kendrick Lamar, Talib Kweli and Curren$y, bridging the gap from the older Hip-Hop with new substance.

Symbolyc One: I’ve been fan in since the beginning of time, of all of them. You know Kendrick being the newcomer of the three, he’s been doing some amazing things in the industry. Overall, he’s not just a talented person he’s a really good dude.

Check out the full feature with Symbolyc One:

Rapper Capital Steez Of Progressive Era Commits Suicide On Christmas Eve

(AllHipHop News) A member of a rising Brooklyn rap group committed suicide early this morning (December 24).

Capital Steez of the rap group Progressive Era aka Pro Era, took his own life at some point early this morning.

The rapper posted a chilling, final tweet just before he committed suicide.

https://twitter.com/CapitalSTEEZ_/status/283074491498770432

Group member Joey Bada$$ took to Twitter, to mourn his fallen friend.

“Giving my respects to Capital Steez & his family,” Joey Bada$$ tweeted. “We should all be thankful for what he has done for the Pro Era family.”

The news comes on the heels of a breakout year for Progressive Era and it’s leader Joey Bada$$, who released several successful videos, including the one below featuring Capital Steez:

EXCLUSIVE: Cappadonna On “Eyrth, Wynd & Fyre” and Getting That Wu-Tang Feel Again

Cappadonna has had an interesting position when it comes to a career in Hip-Hop music. Always an affiliate, and eventually an official member of the Wu-Tang Clan, Cappadonna has had both a more outside and complete inside view of the Clan’s day-to-day relations.

Planning to drop his Eyrth, Wynd & Fyre album this coming February along with announcing the targeted release of his sequel to the 1998 classic, The Pillage, Capppa’s target is mass product in 2013. Like other veteran artists, he is also becoming more reflective in his music, something he says he believes is only inevitable.

“I just see myself basically settling down with it and really finding something that’s comfortable,” he says. “That works, and I really think that I’m on top of my mojo.” AllHipHop.com speaks to the Staten Island legend about his recent work, the happenings going on within the Clan, and more:

AllHipHop.com: Eyrth, Wynd & Fyre is coming near the top of 2013. Last year, you dropped The Pilgrimage. What was the mindset behind this one and what can fans be anticipating?

Cappadonna: I believe this one right here, I leaned back a little on it. I just got more into the message and the music man, and just tried to focus on that a little more – production by J. Glaze. I kind of was just really free in the mind when I did this CD right here – Eyrth, Wynd & Fyre – those are elements right there. That fire’a that truth, and that wind, that’s the substance, and the Earth is the strength that keeps me grounded. So these elements right here exist within my style and life, what I had to go through, so I got that and I got the other double CD with DJ Snips and J-Ronin and of those producers, good looking out for J-Ronin on A&R’ing the project. But yeah, things is right, man.

AllHipHop.com: A lot of veteran artists tell me that they are taking a step back and being more reflective over their music and their music careers. Is that what you’re doing with this one at all?

Cappadonna: Yeah, man. I always look at the kind of work that I was doing, and I definitely, from myself hear a little more maturity in this album and some growing. Even trap-wise, I sound like I’m really trying to put a little more together than usual.

AllHipHop.com: You were featured on Wu-Tang’s “Six Directions of Boxing” off RZA’s Man With The Iron Fists. What was it like recording that track and getting back onto a record with a bunch of Wu members?

Cappadonna: Man, it just felt like we were back to our old tricks again [laughter], so it’s like I definitely want to do more of that, and it was even more fun going to the Jimmy Fallon show and performing the song. It was a beautiful thing, man, and I had a lot of fun doing [it] and even more fun being with the fellas.

AllHipHop.com: Yeah, I remember actually seeing that [Jimmy Fallon] performance. Speaking of Wu-Tang, what’s the vibe like in the Clan right now?

Cappadonna: I think everybody is really trying to get back into the feel of everybody again. We had to do a little separating, soul-searching, but other than that, there’s still mad differences, man, that’s all. We just got a lot of different minds, and everybody don’t always agree on the same thing.

AllHipHop.com: A lot of people remember you as THE guy on “Ice Cream” off of Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. But I think the first time I heard you was when you killed that verse on “Ice Water”. What is your favorite Cappadonna verse ever?

Cappadonna: “Ice Water” is definitely one of my favorite verses, but I like the verse on “Camay”, I like “Winter Warz,” I like “Triumph”, so it’s probably a collaboration of a bunch of different verses, but the one that everybody loves the most is and caused me to love the most is “Winter Warz”.

AllHipHop.com: Maybe a more open and honest question…where are you at this point in your career both as an artist and as a person in your life?

Cappadonna: I just see myself basically settling down with it and really finding something that’s comfortable, that works, and I really think that I’m on top of my mojo. It could be a little sharper, though, but that’s just as far as the music go. But as far as the business, it could definitely use some sharpening.

AllHipHop.com: What’s next for you in the immediate future?

Cappadonna: Man, it’s that The Pillage 2 project, trying to drop that maybe September, and if that’s too soon, then I’m gonna pick another date, but that was one of my thoughts. We’re trying to do Hip-Hop the best way we know how, and balance it out one more time – Wu-Tang forever. Plus, we working on something and we’re just talking; hopefully, something pans out well in that we can all be successful in completing another album with the benefits of our labor.

Look for Cappadonna’s Eyrth, Wynd & Fyre album in February 2013.

Daily Word: NEVER GIVE UP!!!

Happy Monday, my determined and persistent! And Happy Christmas Eve!

Welcome to the beginning of the best week of your life! The week where you are given a fresh start and an opportunity to do it better than ever! Today’s Daily Word is dedicated to being persistent! There is absolute nothing that can stop you from reaching your dreams if you
don’t give up!

The difference between success and failure is that one wasn’t smart enough to know when it was time to call it quits! No matter what logic said they kept going and adjusting themselves along the way until they reached their desired result. The smarter one who gave up (I’m being facetious) has started something new or is working for someone who is following their dream, which has put their original dream on hiatus until further notice!

No matter how things are looking right now, know and understand that if it’s worth having, then it’s worth fighting for! Don’t be the smart logical person who knows when to give up! Be persistent and crazy and know that IT’S ALWAYS TOO EARLY TO QUIT!! And if ever you get the urge, remember these profound words from Richelle Goodrich which say….“Don’t ever give up. Don’t ever give in. Don’t ever stop trying. Don’t ever sell out. And if you find yourself succumbing to one of the above for a brief moment, pick yourself up, brush yourself off, whisper a prayer, and start where you left off. But never, ever, ever give up.”
-Ash’Cash

“Character consists of what you do on the third and fourth tries.” -James A. Michener

“Success is stumbling from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.” -Winston S. Churchill

“It’s not about what you’re capable of, it’s about what you are willing to endure.” -Orrin Woodward

“There is no such thing as helplessness. It’s just another word for giving up.” -Jefferson Smith

“No matter how much falls on us, we keep plowing ahead. That’s the only way to keep the roads clear.” -Greg Kincaid

“Do it badly; do it slowly; do it fearfully; do it any way you have to, but do it.” -Steve Chandler

“Rain puts a hole in stone because of its constancy, not its force. Just keep knocking on doors until the right one opens.” -H. Joseph Gerber

“As long as there’s breath in You – PERSIST!” -Bernard Kelvin Clive

TO HEAR THE AUDIO VERSION OF THE DAILY WORD – CLICK HERE.

Ash’Cash is a Business Consultant, Motivational Speaker, Financial Expert and the author of Mind Right, Money Right: 10 Laws of Financial Freedom. For more information, please visit his website, www.IamAshCash.com.

Gee Roberson Leaves Geffen With LEP Bogus Boys, Hitboy, Launches New Label

(AllHipHop News) Music entrepreneur Gee Roberson has announced the formation of his own, new record label called Blueprint Group.

Roberson, who is currently the Chairman of Geffen Records, will transition out of the role, to run his own company.

In addition to being a full-service record label, Blueprint Group offers managerial and artistic development.

Roberson will put his time running Geffen Records to good use.

“I’m very happy about the knowledge and experience I gained at Geffen that will be very useful going forward in the future,” Roberson said. “Now it’s time to go back to my roots, that entrepreneurial spirit, wrap my arms around my own label and fold it into Interscope Geffen A&M. Based on the relationship I already have with Jimmy [Iovine] and everyone at the label, this is a very natural move that’s filled with synergies.”

Blueprint Group already has signed new acts on the roster, including rapper/producer Hitboy and critically acclaimed Chicago rappers LEP Bogus Boys.

The artists should benefit from Roberson’s deep rolodex, thanks to the success of his two previous companies, Rock Tha World, which managed Kanye West and Hip-Hop Since 1978, which merged with Cortez Bryant’s Bryant Management.

That company, now called Blueprint Group, counts Drake, Lil Wayne, T.I. and Nicki Minaj as artists on the roster.

Roberson and will Cortez Bryant remain co-CEOs of Blueprint Group, while Interscope Geffen A&M will handle the marketing and distribution of the label.

“Gee has an extraordinary entrepreneurial instinct and that spirit has always been an important part of our company,” said Interscope head Jimmy Iovine. “John [Janick, Interscope COO] and I are thrilled at the opportunity to partner with Gee on his latest venture.”

Breath Taking: Black Thought Gives The Run Down On His New Film “Yelling To The Sky”

The multi-talented artist Black Thought recently sat down with AllHipHop.com to discuss his role in the new movie, Yelling To The Sky, starring Zoe Kravitz. This particular interview was an AllHipHop.com first, as we are certain it’s the only time a rapper has ever done an entire interview with us while running on a treadmill! Artists, take note – that’s how you work on breath control for your music!

The always impressive Black Thought talked about the filming of Yelling To The Sky, his secret girlfriend since the ’80s, the upcoming Grammy Awards, and some exclusive details about his other recent projects. Check out AllHipHop.com’s breathtaking chat with Black Thought:

AllHipHop.com: Thanks so much for taking a moment to speak to AllHipHop.com about Yelling To The Sky. Can you give us a little background on the movie?

Black Thought: Yelling To The Sky is a semi-autobiographical coming of age story that takes place in modern-day Queens. New York. It’s loosely based on the life of the writer, producer, and director Victoria Mahoney, who comes from a biracial, Irish and African American family. The character that is based on Victoria is played by Zoe Kravitz. Gabourey Sidibe is also in the film, who you know from Precious. She plays Zoe’s arch nemesis in high school. It starts off with Gabourey as a bully, and then they reach a level playing field, and then the tables kind of turn when Zoe Kravitz kind of becomes the bully or the toughie.

Yelling to the Sky clip 3 from MPI Media Group on Vimeo.

I play a character named Roland, who is like a neighborhood elder statesman/street pharmaceutical salesman. [laughs] There’s very much of a Robin Hood quality to my character. I’m selling what I sell, but I’m also taking care of very many people in the neighborhood. I’m paying for funerals and helping people with their tuition, giving gifts, and that sort of thing. You know, I’m like the black Robin Hood!

AllHipHop.com: [laughs] Wow, OK, so was it really interesting to work with Lenny Kravitz and Lisa Bonet’s daughter?

Zoe Kravitz_Tariq TrotterBlack Thought: I mean, it was wonderful. I already had a relationship with Zoe because she was in a band that my manager was working with and that my writing partner was working with for a while; the band was called Elevator Fight, and so she was rockin’ out with us at jam sessions and hanging around in the studio with us in Philly for a couple years before I even knew anything about this movie. And, of course, I already know Lenny from touring together and recording together, and I’ve met Lisa Bonet a couple of times. I mean, I’ve always been a fan, and I’ve kinda always felt like Lisa Bonet has been a girlfriend of mine since I was a young dude! [laughter] In my mind, you know, a young dude watching “The Cosby Show” and “A Different World” and yeah.

On another note, a funny note, years ago when we won our first Grammy Award in 1999, an 11- or 12-year-old Zoe Kravitz was seated right behind us in the theater. I actually used to see her all the time just rollin’ around with her dad, and it’s weird that now she’s an adult and she’s like the little homie. [laughs]

AllHipHop.com: What was it about this role that spoke to you and just made you feel like you had to work on this project?

Black Thought: What spoke to me about the role was just the fact that it was different from any other character that I’ve played so far. I’ve been in a few indie films, maybe eight or nine, but often the character that I’m cast as isn’t that far from removed from who I am in real life. They take like some element of my personality – it might not be like every dimension, but it will be some part of me that is like this person that I’m portraying. It’ll be something about this guy; he’s into music or this guy is from Philly, or he grew up as a Muslim or something that had to do with my real life.

And it’s not that I’ve never done anything illegal in the neighborhood, or that I’ve never held any drugs or anything like that, but I’m not from New York. I just felt like I’m a totally different sort of person in real life from than this character Ro was, so it made me want to rise to the challenge. I don’t know, it was like a no brainer to do this film after I met Victoria and I went to the table read, and I clicked with some of the other cast members, like Antonique Smith. With all parties involved, it was just like a no brainer for me to kind of do.

AllHipHop.com: Nice! And speaking of nice, and going back a moment in regards to the Grammys, there’s another Grammy nod for you guys [for Undun as Best Rap Album]. How are you mentally preparing or getting your mind around being up for another statue situation?

The Roots_Undun_coverBlack Thought: Oh, I mean, it’s cool. When we get a Grammy nomination as The Roots, it’s not even as much preparation that takes place for the awards as for the night before the awards where, almost every year that we’ve been nominated, we do a jam session on the night before the Grammys that people come through. And a lot of the nominees come through and other like-minded individuals that we’ve worked with in the industry, and we just rock out all night for like five or six hours. I don’t know if we’re definitely planning on doing it this year, but since The Roots got the Grammy nod and Jimmy Fallon’s Comedy Album got another nomination, I think we’re definitely going to do that event, so that’s what the preparation goes in to.

AllHipHop.com: Well, we wish you and the other members of The Roots the very best of luck on all of that! We know you’re a super busy man, so we’re going to let you get out of here, but before we do, is there anything else you’d like to let the fans know to be on the look out for?

Black Thought: I have another couple of films in the pipeline, one that’s actually on On Demand out there called On The Inside, where I’m playing a corrections officer at an institution for the criminally insane, directed by DW Brown, who wrote and directed it. Also, check out the trailer for a movie I did last year called Must Be The Music, and it was shot in Philly and this is one of those roles where the guy is very much like me in real life, where this guy is a musician and he has issues with his label, and there are a whole host of characters that everyone is familiar with that are gonna be in the movie. Check out On The Inside. That’s it!

Be sure to check out Black Thought and the rest of the cast of Yelling To The Sky, which can be found on Amazon and other online retailers. Watch the trailer for Must Be The Music below:

EXCLUSIVE: Run-DMC’s Christmas In Hollis: 25 Years, $109 Million Later

Almost 25 years ago, Hip-Hop pioneer Darryl “DMC” McDaniels and group members Joseph “Rev Run” Simmons and Jason “Jam Master Jay” Mizell were faced with a dilemma.

The trio, which made up pioneering Hip-Hop supergroup Run-DMC, were asked to record a novelty record for a charity album being produced titled “A Very Special Christmas.”

After much contemplation, Run-DMC decided to record the single “Christmas in Hollis” and much to their surprise, the song became one of the most successful tracks in their lucrative catalog.

Every year since it’s release in 1987, “Christmas in Hollis” has been heard on the radio, in movies and especially in television commercials.

AllHipHop.com examines how group member DMC came up with his verse for one of the most popular Christmas songs in American history.

“Christmas in Hollis” is much more than a novelty record. The song has also helped raise $109 million for the Special Olympics, since its release on “A Very Special Christmas,” in 1987.

AllHipHop.com: So “Christmas in Hollis” becomes a huge hit every year around this time. How did you come up with your verse?

DMC: Well for me, it was all personal. First of all, we never thought in 1 million years that Hip-Hop could have a classic record like Nat King Cole, Bing Crosby or Perry Cuomo. So 25 years ago they approached us, like “they want y’all to do a Christmas album with Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi and Eric Clapton.” There were two things: “What the hell you’re trying to ruin us?” Then we were like “yo could this work?” So when I was approached to do my Christmas lyrics, it was literally for me, like Christmas was like when I was a kid. My mother, she was cooking the collard greens, chicken, stuffing, macaroni and cheese, the biscuits, the ham, the sweet potatoes. So when I set down to write my rhyme, I didn’t have to make up a story or fantasy. That’s exactly how it was in my house in Hollis.

AllHipHop.com: Where were you at when you created your verse for Christmas in Hollis?

DMC: That’s so cool you asked me that. I was sitting in my house in my room in Hollis when I wrote my rhyme. You know this was a couple of years after disco was dead. Even those couple of years in, Hip-Hop as a recording industry was still relatively new. Even up to that point everywhere me Run and Jay would go, the question was “is Hip-Hop a fad?” You know you had your powerful songs like “The Message,” “Planet Rock” you know Kurtis Blow even did “Christmas Rapping.” But at that time, Hip-Hop was controversial. It was just becoming commercial, and we damn sure didn’t want to be corny!

AllHipHop.com: What finally sealed the deal for you guys to record the song?

DMC: Once Bill Adler (legendary publicist) finally came up with the idea to use that track. Bill Adler was like “you’re going to do this record for “A Very Special Christmas,” with Bruce Springsteen and all these other people. What do you think about this beat?” He played it for us and the beat was funky. So Jam Master Jay took the beat, arranged it and put it together. Me and Run did our verses, but we still weren’t convinced. But at the end of the first session, we heard the mix and we were like “this s**t is dope.”

Run-DMC
Run-DMC

AllHipHop.com: Speaking of Jay, do you have any memories of him during this time, since the 10th anniversary of his death recently went by? (Jam Master Jay was killed in his Queens, studio in October 2002 by unknown gunmen)

DMC: You look at a show like “CSI” when the people are in the lab, when Jay was at work, he was like a pioneering mad scientist. Jay is the reason why the song came out dope. DJ’s always make the best producers. If somebody else would’ve called and said they wanted me and Run to put down a Christmas record, I don’t think we would’ve done it and I don’t think we would’ve had a classic. We would’ve had a jingle for that Christmas and it would’ve been over.

AllHipHop.com: It’s definitely a classic, I mean after 25 years, it pops up everywhere all the time. I just heard it in a new commercial for a Honda minivan.


DMC:
It’s everywhere right now. I can’t even go to the mall during the holidays cause everybody in the mall screams the lyrics at me. Every person in the mall, you know what comes out of their mouth. They start singing the lyrics to “Christmas in Hollis.”

AllHipHop.com: The song really has become as recognized as some of the more popular Christmas songs throughout history.

DMC: Right, it’s right up there with (breaks into singing) “Chestnuts Roasting on an open fire….” which is unbelievable for a Hip-Hop song.

AllHipHop.com: I know you’re out there on the road promoting is “A Very Special Christmas,” which came out 25 years ago. What’s it like being a part of the 25th anniversary of such an influential album, that has donated so much to charity?

DMC: It’s like being in the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame all over again. Look at who I was on that album with. Whitney Houston, Bono, B.B. King. And all the proceeds go to the special Olympics and I just found out today, it’s the most successful benefit recording series ever.