Dr. Dre's Aftermath Records  has seen quite a few artists come and go over the years, but one artist  who has remained through it all is South Central's own Anthony Johnson  better known as Slim The Mobster. Although he's been signed to the good  Doctor for a good minute, Slim has kept a pretty low profile in the  rap industry thus far while staying busy recording and doing various  work for Aftermath Records.  The time for a low profile is over  according to Slim, and after serving a three month jail bid, he's out  and ready to make some noise. The young Dre protege' hooked up with  AllHipHop.com to talk about what he's got in store for the world. Fans  may have their doubts considering Aftermath's track record when it comes  to putting artists out, but Slim remains confident as he is the last  of the Mohicans on the label.    
  
AllHipHop.com: Let's talk  about your roots in this rap game.  
Slim The Mobster: I've been  around a few dudes that were doing music. The D.O.C is one of the dudes  that I've been around for a long time. Snoop Dogg is another dude that  I've been around for a long time. I just watched and it caught on. I  didn't really start rapping until a few years ago. I picked it up quickly  just by being able to talk and express myself. All music is really just  expression.   
AllHipHop.com: Weren't you  going to sign with Jay-Z at one point?    
Slim The Mobster: I was messing  with a dude by the name of Big Chill. He had helped Lupe Fiasco previously  with some business. Chill was putting that together but he got incarcerated  so we never got to make that happen.
  
AllHipHop.com: So how did  the Aftermath deal happen? 
Slim The Mobster: I went to  Dr. Dre's studio with a CD one day. I dropped it off and left my number  on a Lottery ticket and he ended up calling me back. Dre said that if  I had the patience, because he had a lot of other work going on, he  would work with me.  
(Video) Slim The Mobster  Feat. Xzibit – Don't Believe You (Produced by Nottz) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ItvL1YuV2bY  
AllHipHop.com: You didn't  have any reservations? A lot of artists have signed to Aftermath and  ended up leaving with their albums never seeing the light of day.    
Slim The Mobster: None whatsoever.  I've been there 4 years. I'm working on my album and getting ready to  release a new mixtape called War Music. The concept behind that  project is that everything has it's good and bad – there is a war  to it – like good versus evil. It's me being good yet evilish at the  same time. I'm not your typical rapper right now. I'm not in to the  skinny jean movement. I'm not against what anybody else is doing, but  I'm more like the N.W.A era. I've been dealing with so many things but  now its time to make my name. I can really rap. It's not a myth and  it's not fake.  
AllHipHop.com: Do you have  any collaborations on War Music? 
Slim The Mobster: I've got  Snoop Dogg. I like that song we did together. Another is a dude named  Sly.  Everybody knows him from the Kush song and he's also on that  song with Eminem and Royce Da 5'9” that's out right now. Mostly the  project is just me. I'll probably put the mixtape out in the next two  weeks.  
AllHipHop.com: It's dropping  that quick? 
Slim The Mobster: It's been  in the making for a minute now. I'm just going through the proper chain  of command. Most artists don't get the chance to put out a mixtape over  here so I've been fighting to make it happen. I've been given some leverage  and room, so I've got to do it. It will be available for download and  it'll give people a chance to see who I am. It's about displaying my  talents. I play instruments - drums and keyboards. It's something that  you are going to see from somebody out here in L.A. because 9 times  out of 10 the people that rap aren't the ones that are making the beats  – and vice versa. I do both.
  
(Video) Slim The Mobster  – I Ain't Gonna Say Nothing (Produced by Jake One) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4ZczzmZmxA  
AllHipHop.com: I had no  idea that you could also make beats and music. Where did you learn this?     
Slim The Mobster: From my uncle  Chocolate (the producer of Vanilla Ice's “Ice Ice Baby” song)  and Dr. Dre. I watched and learned from them. If its in you to do it,  then its in you to do it.   
AllHipHop.com: What's the  biggest thing that you've learned from Dr. Dre so far?  
Slim The Mobster: To keep adding  slashes to your name. Like artist slash producer, actor, director and  so forth. When you keep adding slashes to your name, that's the best  thing for you. He also tells me to do what I feel and not to do anything  that I don't believe in. There have been times where we've been given  beats and I don't really like it – and that's hard to say to him.  But by saying that, you're letting him know that you can't do something  to the best of your ability – and he doesn't want that. He wants the  best. It's always best to be upfront and tell him what it is.  
   
AllHipHop.com: Do you think  the fans are being hard too hard on him in regards to waiting for Detox?  Is he getting fair treatment? 
Slim The Mobster:  No,  I don't think he is. He's given so much in between. You've gotten music  and  albums from Eminem, 50 Cent, The Game, and others. You can't  really complain.  
(Video) Dr. Dre Feat. Slim  The Mobster, Snoop Dogg,  Akon & Sly  – Kush Remix http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLNjrOdqa2M  
AllHipHop.com: Are you on  Detox?  
Slim The Mobster: I'm hoping  so.  
AllHipHop.com: So you haven't  gotten a confirmation on that? 
Slim The Mobster: I have songs  recorded for it but Dre has the top-secret information on that. I'm  just playing it by ear. I believe that you are going to see me on there.  
 
AllHipHop.com: What about  the album that you are working on? Do you have a name for it yet?  
Slim The Mobster: It's called  The Movie. A lot of the things that have happened in my career,  it feels like it's been scripted. From everything including being signed,  it seems like something right out of a movie. Those things are rare  and they sound like something that I wrote down. Sometimes it doesn't  feel real. This is my movie.  
AllHipHop.com: Aside from  the War Music mixtape, Detox and  The Movie album, what else have you got going on?   
Slim The Mobster: I'm trying  to figure out this film situation right now. I've got a great script  that I'm trying to run with. And of course there is my label “Gang  Module.” I've already got artists that I work close with like  Black Friday from Compton and my little cousin Controversy from Pomona.  Look out for that War Music mixtape. If you like real West Coast  music, then stay tuned.  
Source - http://allhiphop.com/stories/features/archive/2011/06/22/22805601.aspx?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter 
thanks to 'A'.
ReplyDeleteAftermath please take your time on the album at this point. Just do your best to make it an authentic hip hop album and we as fans will be happy. Take however long you need.
ReplyDeleteyo uzee holla at me cuz
ReplyDeleteshame on dre really he signs people and let them roast this will defenetly be slims faith i mean 4 fucking years waiting , come on
ReplyDeleteI think the same thing will to happen Slim as it did for Bishop Lamont. I believe Dre is now concentrating on new artists like Kendrick Lamar and Jay Rock. They are much better also! They are the west coast future!
ReplyDeleteuZEE I NEED A DOCTOR WAS DOUBLE PLATINUM IN DIGITAL SALES TODAY U NEED TO POST THIS. IT IS DR.DRE BEST SELLING SINGLES EVER. DRE USUALLY SELL ALBUMS NOT SINGLES EVEN THOUGH THOSE SINGLES ARE CLASSICS
ReplyDeletedouble platinum means a lot of money for alex da kid who produced the song ,dre produced what?
ReplyDeleteso was the song "friday" by rebecca black and a bunch of songs from glee...
ReplyDeleteINAD was #1 on iTunes for a day and even any half-awake idiot can figure any track with Dr. Dre and Eminem's name on it would automatically be popular whether it sucked or not. And even if you want to somehow argue that makes the song "good", you can't even give Dre credit for it - he didn't make it! Elton John's "Candle in the Wind" is the best-selling single of all time too, does it make it the greatest fucking song ever conceived and made? No. Sales have nothing to do with taste, only popularity, and it's safe to say most popular shit sucks because most people have bad taste in music. Prove me wrong.
ReplyDeleteAs far as Slim goes, what's so special about this guy? This story he keeps telling everyone about dropping off a CD with a phone number at Dre's studio and getting discovered by chance is astronomical bullshit. What Slim leaves out of the story is that he's had connections to Dre through Freeway Ricky Ross (the big time '80's LA crack dealer, not the rapper) - HIS UNCLE - since he was a kid. Besides, Slim was a well-known Crip within circles in Compton and this guy was never any aspiring rapper. He even admits it. He probably just decided he can rap because he already has the image and gang cred and that's the biggest reason Dre is wasting time with this guy who has yet to actually prove himself beyond hype. I'm sure he can rap being mentored by Dre like Game was but it takes more nature than nurture to really be special. He's been Dre's loyal buttboy for a few years helping him craft Detox after Bishop split but I'm kind of amused he used to talk about Detox like a total insider, and lately he talks about it like he's out of the loop (lol). Wouldn't be surprised if Dre was done using up this guy like he used up everyone else he signs with all these promises left to languish in Aftermath purgatory until they realize Dre doesn't keep promises and discover they're contractually not allowed to release anything until the second coming of Christ or the shape-shifting lizard people descend from the Draco constellation on their mothership.
War Music in two weeks? My ass. I'll give Slim a chance any day of the week, he could be the real thing and that would be dope, but he needs to stop talking about his rapping and just put it out so we can judge.
That is a rant of epic proportions.
ReplyDeleteHello,
ReplyDeleteThe guy talking about INAD going double plat really made me laugh. I will tell you one thing my friend, between Europe and the USA there must be at least 1 billion consumers. You at to this the millions men and women all over the world who know Dr.Dre or Eminem, you will find out that a single going double plat on Itunes(selling music at a worldwide scale) really MEANS NOTHING this days.
Don't make that mistake, don't appreciate music because it's popular, appreciate it for what it makes you feel...
Peace