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While hip-hop has always revolved around passing fads, it’s nice to know some things always stay the same. Since first signing with Atlantic Records in 1992, Skillz has sustained a solid reputation as an MC who can stay relevant no matter what the current trend may be. “I’m trying to show that there’s still regular guys making music,” says the Virginia rapper. “I don’t talk about all of the things that most cats talk about. I’m not a thug, I’m not a gangster. You don’t have to have a hidden agenda to make good music.”


Skillz has spent nearly half of his life making music. Growing up in Richmond, VA he knew he wanted to be involved in hip-hop in some capacity, but didn’t know where he fit in. “I tried all the elements of hip-hop,” he says. “I DJed before I was rapping and I tried graffiti, but I sucked at all of them except for MCing.” After rapping for just one year, he was offered a record deal with Atlantic after placing second in the NYC’s New Music Seminar’s MC Battle in1993.


Aside from dropping two critically lauded full-length albums, ‘92’s From Where??? (Atlantic) and ’02’s I Ain’t Mad No More (released internationally on Rawkus Records), Skillz has collaborated with Timbaland and penned a bevy of hard hitting singles—including 2005’s candid “Confessions of a Ghostwriter” and five consecutive “Year-End Wrap-Up,” tracks where the talented wordsmith summarizes each passing year’s events into a witty collection of verses. His coveted “Wrap-Up” joints take the internet by storm every year for the simple fact that Skillz will say what most MCs won’t.


“I’m a type of person that when you hear me you’re gonna want to know what is he gonna say next,” he says. “I’m the ‘Wrap-Up’ guy so when you hear my records you’re not just listening to the beat.”


In order to make sure his music hits the wide audience is deserves, Skillz has spent the past couple of years waxing poetic live alongside Jazzy Jeff and The Roots, an experience that is reflected on his new KOCH distributed album, Million Dollar Backpack. “When people hear ‘backpack’ they automatically think underground music,” says Skillz. “But with this album I went in a different direction. I’ve been experimenting with a lot of live music. A lot of my beats were made using live instrumentation.”


With production partners like Jazzy Jeff, Questlove, Karma Productions (Musiq, Freeway, Raheem Devaughn), Khari Ferrari and Dice Raw (The Roots), Jake One (G-Unit), Bink (Jay Z) and Kwame, Skillz created a slew of fresh sounds to rap over. As far as his vocal direction, the famed MC who is known for his measured rhyme consistency is as lyrically sharp as ever. “I’m not trying to reinvent the wheel or anything of that nature,” he says. “I know what I’m good at and I’m gonna stick to my guns instead of trying to be something that I’m not. I really tried to get that point across on this album.”


As in the past, Million Dollar Backpack finds Skillz rapping mostly about the reality in which he lives, a refreshing change from all of the thug posturing that runs rampant in hip-hop today. On “Preaching to the Choir” Skillz spins a superb narrative that details the ups and downs of relationships. He then flips the script on “Where I Been” to explain the wild ride that has been his career and gotten him to the honorable position he now holds as one of hip-hop’s most respected lyricists. The album features guest appearances by Common, Kweli, Freeway and The Roots.


The first single off of Million Dollar Backpack, is “So Far So Good” feat. Common. The track finds Skillz reflecting on how far he has come and what he has to do to keep pushing ahead. On “Crazy World,” he ponders on the many injustices we all face every day. Touching on the hysteria he feels has been creeping into the hood for some time now, Skillz spits: “There’s kids on my block with pockets full of rocks/They used to think that school was cool but that came to a stop/The madness setting in, I know a veteran, shit he fought for his country and can’t afford his medicine.” The video for “Crazy World” can be seen online and was featured on MTV2’s “Sucker Free” in late winter.


With an album chock full of substance, style and of course skill, Million Dollar Backpack promises to fill the creative void that’s plaguing hip-hop. “Originality is missing in music,” says Skillz. “You don’t have to be a gimmick, just be yourself. I’m not mad at the state of music or what ain’t happening, I’m just making my music and anyone who wants to listen to it I’m greatly appreciative.”
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www.myspace.com/skillz

Media Tracker

Skillz - Sick  1 year ago
TrajicK - My Passion  1 year ago
the evolution of Murs  1 year ago
GRADUATION  1 year ago
Rising Down  1 year ago
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Blog Posts

blog post Get Skillz MusicSkins!
Category: news
Posted: Aug 14, 2008 at 3:56 PM
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blog post Performance & In Store Signing @ The Bassment, 8pm (Chicago)
Category: news
Posted: Aug 12, 2008 at 9:54 PM
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Performance & In Store Signing @ The Bassment, 8pm
1415 N. Ashland (@ North Ave)
Chicago, IL
(773)278-2277
blog post Skillz and Talib Show July 31, 2008
Category: news
Posted: Jul 31, 2008 at 4:04 PM
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blog post Skillz E-Card!
Category: news
Posted: Jul 29, 2008 at 4:34 PM






blog post Skillz interview on Radio One’s The Urban Daily
Category: news
Posted: Jul 21, 2008 at 7:54 PM
Here’s the link: http://www.theurbandaily.com/music/article/skillz-bags-up-fake-rappers

Skillz Bags Up Fake Rappers
By Jerry Barrow July 21, 09:08 AM


In 2006 Skillz was nominated "Most Likely To Embarrass Your Favorite Rapper." Ok, that isn't true but the Virginia MC should have been. Since the 1990's the rapper formerly known as Mad Skillz has been bending metaphors to his will leaving charred microphones and egos in his wake. His first CD, From Where???, put him on the hip-hop map but it was his hi-jacking of Aaliyah's "Are You That Somebody" that made his voice a radio staple. After putting the art of ghostwriting on full blast his follow-up on Rawkus, I Ain't Mad Anymore, confirmed that he could make great songs for himself, not just other people. Download "Imagine" for proof.

After touring with The Roots and dropping his collectible yearly "Rap-Ups" Skillz is releasing his third CD, The Million Dollar Backpack on Koch Records. His anger management skills are sharp but we still found a few things that make Skillz mad.


UD: Your first single, "Don't Act Like You Don't Know" sounds a bit like Freeway's "What We Do." Was that on purpose or just a coincidence?
S: On purpose! I wasn't dumb enough to make a record that sounded like Freeway's record and not get Freeway. I knew when I made that record...Trust me, I tried to rap on that record by myself and I was like, "Nah, this ain't gon' work." And you know what was going to happen if I rapped on that record by myself and put it out? Mad people would have been like, "He should have hollered at Free for this. Shit is Freeway's lane." It's kinda like both sides of the fence because if I didn't put Free on it, people would have been like, "Man, you should have called Free. You heard that joint where Freeway is rapping over your joint for his new mixtape? He bodied it!" So I got Free! I'm like, this is his lane, this is what he does. And it worked.
UD: Who did the beat for yours?
S: This cat named Orthodox from Philly. It was all Philly connected and I do a lot of recording in Philly. And my management's from Philly so I'm always in Philly. If I ain't at the Roots studio, I'm somewhere running around at Home Cookin' Studios, Larry Gold... I'm always running through Philly.
UD: You gotta be careful in Philly these days, cops is wylin'.
S: Oh yeah, man. I keep the Virginia tags on my car and act like I'm just visiting. "I'm lost, officer. How do I get back to 95?"
UD: Now, being from VA, you could have hopped on the Dirty South bandwagon but you didn't. What stopped you from going all the way out and getting the snap beats?
S: [laughs] I mean, Virginia is a melting pot. We right in the middle of the east coast so you get a lot of different music, you get a lot of people who come here from down south to go to school. Cats from up top come to Virginia State, Norwich State, so it's a different kind of music but I was never really...I was already heavily east coast influenced. I grew up on Big Daddy Kane, Rakim. I grew up on the cornerstone of what hip hop was and what it would always be. I grew up on the music that influenced them. Imagine a kid growing up on snap music and that's his music. He ain't gon have no future. Because that music is a fad. So I reach back into what I know is the cornerstone of hip-hop. Because that's never gon' fade. That's just what I like to do, that's the kind of music I like to make.


UD: You had one line, "Y'all beefing but y'all got the same cheese in your eggs." It made me think about Ja Rule and DMX taking shots at each other but they were both on Def Jam.
S: It was definitely a situation where rappers were using the beef card to get noticed, to keep their names in the barbershops and in the magazines. I been to award shows, and you're sitting right there and he sitting over there, and y'all acting like y'all not even here. It's so high school.
UD: To that point, do you feel you've picked a couple fights yourself, particularly with Eminem? Kinda goading him a little bit?
S: Maybe one time. But you gotta understand, any time I throw your name out there in a verse, in a disrespectful way, I feel like I have a reason. I never just pick on somebody. Not to discredit Em- he might be the greatest white rapper of all time. The dude is nice, you can't take that away from him. But he dissed a person that's very close to me. And I didn't like it. And that person did not say anything, because to even answer Em would be beneath him, to the public eye. He said something about someone very close to me and I didn't appreciate it.
UD: When he dissed Jermaine Dupri?
S: Nah. Jermaine Dupri and I ain't friends at all. He said something about Will.
UD: Will Smith?
S: Right. And I didn't appreciate it. Especially after he had been to Jazzy Jeff's studio, recorded a song with Jazzy Jeff and Will. You know, who the fuck is going to meet the Fresh Prince and be cocky? We all wanted to be the Fresh Prince. What nigga wouldn't want the career the Fresh Prince has had? What nigga wouldn't use that as inspiration?
When he said, "Will Smith don't have to curse in his raps to sell records but I do/so fuck him and fuck you too," I was like, nah, B. Not after you was just down there in the studio! I ain't appreciate that.
UD: What's funny is that Bow Wow had said some stuff in interviews saying Will Smith was corny. But I just read a story in the AP about how Bow Wow wants to be the next Will Smith, how he wants to focus on acting now.
S: You know what makes this so sad and so disheartening? I remember everything these dumb fucking rappers say. Like if you go in my garage, dog, you'll see every Vibe, every Source, every Blaze, every magazine, all the ones that not in print anymore, the Rap Pages... And I be going back and reading some of the shit these fools said. And it comes back to what you're saying now. And I understand that we grow, and we all mature, but rappers have said some dumb shit back in the day, real talk! I think they be forgetting their shit. I was reading something, I can't remember who it was, but he was like, "Dog, if I don't at least sell 5 million records, then the game is rigged." I'm like, please! Who the fuck is selling 5 million records now? And this is in '91! And motherfuckas are like, "I don't write my rhymes, I just go in, I don't even write shit down." And I'm listening to your record like, I can tell you don't write shit down.
UD: They'd come up with more songs like "Imagine."
S: Right. That song changed my life, I'm sorry, that might have been the greatest story telling in my career. Because I took you to a place and you believed it. I used to do that song at shows, talking about my brother and my brother died and I actually had to kill my brother. And there would be motherfuckers at the club, like...there was one nigga like, "Fam! I'm listening to that shit and the whole time you got me. I'm sitting here like, fam, how could this nigga do this and then confess to it? This nigga just confessed to a murder at a hip hop show!" I was like, "Dog, I made that whole shit up, I was lying!" He was like, "You a bad motherfucker, B." If niggas took all these video chicks out of they video and really had the woman in their life in the video, their baby mom or they wife, they would have totally different fucking videos. Ain't going to be no Rita G, ya mean? No Gloria Velez, put your baby mom in the video!
UD: You wouldn't be splashing champagne on your baby mom.
S: Exactly! And we going to be looking at you like, goddamn, you married her?
Niggas is living a fa硤e, it's time for niggas to be honest. Fuck being honest with the people, be honest with yourself.
UD: Lastly, what exactly do you keep in a Million Dollar Backpack?
Skillz: That's a good question. All my inspiration, everything that makes me the MC I am, everything that I feel I have to have to get inspired. Mostly it's just my words, my ideas, my thoughts. That's why I named the album that, because you can't really put a price on what that means to me. It's kind of a double-play on words, like, you can't judge a book by its cover. 'Cause everything I could have obtained or got in this rap game, it started with a idea that came out of that backpack.


For more Skillz be sure to check www.allhiphop.com

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Profile Comments

Sep 27th, 12:20am
I was in Ivories in 91 and use to see you and the twins there. Catch you at tallent show's in Richmond because I went to Virginia Union University. I must admit I use to think everyone from Richmond was corny but, you have held yourself down not only as a person but, as a man. My opinion changed of Richmond when I heard you speak and rap with. Nuff Respect forever and as a New York dude you were better than Boogie Monster's your non rivals.
Mar 2nd, 4:35am
Hey. I've been checking out everything that you've done and continue to do and you do great work. I'm impressed and can tell that you grind it out until you feel as if you've put out the best. I'm disappointed about the "no call" to the airport this morning. (lol) Maybe you'll figure out who this is.
Jan 5th, 8:28pm
yo skillz, you one cold motherfcker, one of the most consistent mc's in hip hop, im a big fan over here. just when i thought real hip hop was fucked you drop this shit, i appreciate it, and i know hip hop appreciates it. stay up and god bless.
Nov 22nd, 1:22am
I've been looking for so long to find "Hip Hop" online. It was on the Confessions of a Ghostwriter album, and it had the greatest lyrics.
Sep 28th, 1:17am
Thank for reppin' Richmond, VA for a minute....especially NORTHSIDE....the south is cool (wuzup Lonnie B.) but katz are alway hating on the North....tell ur brother wuzup...lol i know ur holding VA down....but you're the truth and original KING OF 804 RICHMOND !!!!
Sep 10th, 12:26am
I appreciate the connect.

PEACE & LIGHT
Aug 5th, 6:07pm
There's always a reason to scream...

www.cate-evens.de
Aug 4th, 11:31am





what up skillz
so far so good f/ Common
my favorite track
peace