Interview
with Cypress
Hill London,
22/3/2000.
Present - B Real, Muggs, Sen Dog
So what inspired you to turn
back to the rock side again on your new album?
B Real-
I think it was a natural progression it wasn't something we decided
to do. We had twenty or thirty hip hop songs already done, we were
ready to turn our album in - we had more time than we needed, so we
put the Spanish album together. We did that in two weeks so then we
started experimenting with the rock hip hop fusion we'd done it years
back in '93 but we never pursued it, we liked the way the first song
came out (which was used for the Mayhem soundtrack for WCW, I like
wrestling it's entertaining, I'd like to write for those guys cos
some of them need better lines and I could do better)....... anyway
so we decided to do a bit more experimentation and it was like a natural
progression, the one direction we hadn't gone in
Do you see your take on it as unique or alongside
bands now like Limp Bizkit?
Muggs- Our music is just straight
hip hop, we've come from a hip hop approach, even with the rock, we
keep it separate because first off we're a hip hop group, don't get
that twisted, but we're also a band that's not scared to experiment,
we set that whole rock rap trend off in '92 with the Judgement Night
thing but it wasn't our time so we had to hold that shit till now,
everyone's caught up and they're all down with that game now
Are you afraid you'll alienate your core
fans with the rock stuff?
Muggs-
No cos you still get the hip hop, it's a choice we didn't mix it,
we kept it separate
B
Real- We felt like
mixing it would put off the hip hop purists, so if they want to hear
the rock stuff they can, or they can just keep that CD as a collectors
piece, it's priced as one CD so it's kind of a bonus
Why do you think there's so much rock rap
crossover at this moment?
Muggs-
Kids are growing up with both musics, both sides are listening to
Dre and Metallica or whatever, so when it's time for them to make
music they have both influences
Are you going to tour with Fear Factory since
they guested on your album?
B
Real- We've done shows
with them before that's how we met them, in Germany. We really clicked
with them and so Muggs asked them in when we were doing our album,
Christian and Dino came in and heard what we were working with and
said - you guys need to do this and that and sorta helped us along,
built up our confidence to do this, so definitely we anticipate some
tours with them
Is the single (Rock/Rap Superstar) a dig
at anyone in particular?
B
Real- No the single
is just about what anyone who's ever had any sort of success goes
through, people come into this business and they think it's gonna
be real easy, but it's hard, you have to make sacrifices, and we just
write about what we're going through at the time, our experiences,
it's almost like an educational piece for the kids before they get
into this game, like a manual
What do you think of mainstream hip hop like
Puff Daddy etc.?
Muggs-
It's all good, to each his own, there's always going to be mainstream
it doesn't bother me, we don't worry about what anyone else is doing,
we've got our own plan and enough things we want to get done. I think
everyone should see it like that, y'know just get on with your own
shit
B
Real- People like variety,
if it's not for you, it's for somebody else - you know
Is there going to be another Soul Assassins
album?
Muggs-
I'm in the middle of doing one right now, with a lot of new and underground
groups, stuff no one's heard yet .....
What did you make of the Jason Nevins Remix?
B
Real- It was what it
was. I hadn't actually heard the track till we went to do the video,
but it was cool
You did a track with Groove rider?
B
Real- I liked the track
personally. I like to challenge myself, to prove what I can do over
different things and I thought that was pretty different, I was happy
with that one
Do you have a problem with having to do clean
versions of your stuff?
B
Real- In the States
they always make us do both, you always have to have a clean version.
Profanity huh? I guess that's a bad habit I'll have to break in the
future...
Muggs-
That's just the way we talk man, we curse a lot so we just fuckin'
put it on the record like that, some stores won't carry the record
otherwise but I mean if someone wants their 11 year old kid to listen
to Cypress Hill but they don't want the bad words, that's cool I see
that........
B
Real- We don't pull
punches, I mean with the marijuana and stuff some parents might not
even want their kids listening to that, but that's how we see it,
that's how we live it
What sort of stuff did you listen to as child?
B
Real- We all listened
to loads of different influences, mainly through our families, my
mother used to listen to a lot of salsa and stuff like the Beatles
so I had that and my brothers and sisters listened to old soul, r'n'b,
other relatives listened to heavy metal. I think Led Zeppelin had
the biggest impact on me and Public Enemy. I guess they were just
the best at the time and those two were my favourite bands
How much do you feel has changed over the
band's 12 years career?
B
Real- Well financially
we're able to take care of our families better and ourselves come
to that, before we were struggling. I think we became more professionally
responsible, this business makes you grow up real fast, we're a bit
wiser, we see what people are capable of, how people change, if you
pay attention and learn from it, I believe it strengthens you but
if you don't it'll be a weakness later
What are your current fave bands?
B
Real- Rage Against
the Machine, Korn, Deftones.... I guess. Sen Dog's new band is gonna
come up soon and kick everyone's ass SX10, when that comes out he'll
be the best one doing that shit
Sen Dog- It's all done, anytime
now it'll be out there
What did you think of the Columbine shooting
media thing?
B
Real- People are always
pointing the finger at something, music isn't going to influence some
kids to kill a bunch of kids. There was obviously something else wrong
with that kid, whatever made him snap wasn't no music, that's just
a way out, so parents can blame someone else because they didn't raise
their kids right. The guys out here (UK) went through it years ago
Ozzy, hell even Judas Priest....
Do you have any regrets about the Ice Cube
killer-song?
Muggs-
Naah that was funny
B
Real- It was great
to see people's reactions cos people thought he had buried us with
the king of the hill song and 7 days later we were resurrected. One
of the DJ's somewhere sent one to his house, where he got to listen
to it at home with his family and then we became super friends again
right after that .......
What does your skull logo mean to you?
We thought it was different from what anyone else was using when we
came out, it became the centrepiece, we liked it so we stuck with
it, it's just a symbol really it doesn't really have any particular
meaning except when you see that on the wall with a date - Cypress
is coming through to wreck your fuckin' town! |