Clipse's "Hell Hath No Fury" Turns 10 Today

Favorite Track off Hell Hath No Fury?


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Deltron

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The year 3030
Mr. Lee Reveals How He Made Clipse Intro To ‘Hell Hath No Fury’ Unforgettable

Ten years ago to the day (Nov 28th), the Clipse’ Hell Hath No Fury album left a lasting impression on my brain stem from the moment I first heard the LP’s gritty intro as a sophomore in high school. Years after Pharrell’s infectious beats made deep impressions on my eardrums, I can’t help but let songs like “Mr. Me Too” and “Keys Open Doors” ride from beginning to end every time they pop up in my extensive music library.

Lee Sanchez, who’s infamously known as Mr. Lee, is the first, slick-talking voice to appear on the world-famous intro “Got It For Cheap.” When the Skateboard P demanded that Clipse put him on the intro, Lee had no idea that he would help make the most memorable intro in hip-hop history.

Born in the Dominican Republic and raised in uptown Manhattan, Lee first got his foot in the door as a club promoter who threw a plethora of parties all around New York City in the early 90s. Lee’s hustle as a promoter flourished when he started to promote exclusive boat parties aboard the ‘Queens of Heart’ on the East Side. He brought legendary MCs to his events — from the late Notorious B.I.G. to the Ruff Ryders and even a young Jay Z.

Eventually, he moved up to the big leagues once he began bringing rappers out to legendary clubs like B.B Kings in Times Square. In 1997, Lee went down to Miami for a vacation and was instantly intrigued by the idea of throwing more grand scale parties while living in South Florida. After migrating to Miami in the late 90s, Lee immediately made himself at home in Dade County and began to put in work to become one of the most prominent promoters in Miami Beach.

Today, Lee enjoys the view of the Port of Miami and Star Island from his lavish apartment in a high-rise condo just blocks away from the American Airlines Arena in Downtown Miami. On the last day of August, I sat next to him as he rolled up a joint and rehashed memories of all the up-scale parties he’s thrown at clubs like Story and LIV. At the time, Lee worked alongside Headliner Market Group’s own Phil The Mayor, who he met through DJ Camilo’s manager.

Before he began running the show at LIV on Sundays and launched his APPT ONLY clothing store in Wynwood, Phil worked closely with Lee to throw epic parties with the biggest names in hip-hop all around Miami Beach. After making Ruff Ryders weekend a smash hit in 1998, both Phil and Lee kept constructing an empire for themselves with more events.

In the early 2000’s, they began working on their Spring Break plans when Phil suggested bringing Clipse down south for one of their events. After Lee made a couple calls, he was able to get Pusha T and No Malice for their first club gig in Miami.

“My first booking in Miami was with Lee,” Pusha said about his first time working with the Dominican-American Washington Heights native. “It was Lee with his thick, fast Dominican accent. My attitude was totally weary of all promoters. By the time I got to Lee, I had hated all promoters forever. But man, needless to say, Lee has been my friend, like one of my good, good friends. Anything important I need, I’d definitely give him a call.”


“He was real nice, humble and real cool. Both of them,” Lee said about their first time meeting. He recalled going to the venue to meet up with Pusha and his then manager Anthony “Geezy” Gonzalez at sound check. Lee was a fan of Clipse’ hit record “Grindin’” off Lord Willin’, so he had a feeling the party would be a complete success. The event went down smoothly as he expected, and that’s when Lee’s bond with the Virginia-based brothers became unbreakable.

During a recent conversation over the phone, No Malice recalled his strong bond with Lee over a decade later. Although he wasn’t in the studio when the intro was made, the other half of the Clipse still remembers how well all three of them connected not just musically but on a personal level. Lee works closely with Pusha, however there are a few bars from No Malice that Lee will remember for the rest of his life.

“No Malice is nasty,” Lee said. “I don’t care what no one says. Even his new shyt. One of my favorite verses is when he spit ‘Big chain around my neck like I’m fresh off the Amistad.’ Then on “Got It For Cheap” he goes, ‘My leg was pulled, the jokes on me, so heartbroken like loving a whore. He might hurt you once but never no more. It’s like trying to fly but they clipped your wings, and that’s exactly why the caged bird sings.’ He killed that!”


Whenever Clipse were in Miami to record, Lee hitched a ride with Pusha to South Beach Studios, which is where they finalized the album. There was one track left to record before they could send it off to the label: the intro — they remember. One night, Pusha put the pressure on Pharrell to deliver the final piece of the LP while Lee was in the room. The next day Pharrell hit him with the beat for “Got It For Cheap” with a special idea in mind.

“They introduced me to Pharrell,” Lee said in between hits of his joint. “Right away we had the chemistry with him. Just by me being in the studio I guess my accent, you know what I mean, the way I speak, just the way I am. Then Pharrell called and said, ‘We need Lee in the studio to get on and do it. Let him talk his talk. Let him do his thing.’”


When Pusha shouted Lee’s name, his first thought was ‘damn what did I do?’ But once Pusha asked for the date and time, Lee was informed that Pharrell wanted him to get on the intro. When he went into the booth to record, Lee was still trying to get over his initial shock. He was nervous, but not because it was his first time in the booth. A few years prior, Lee talked his shyt on Lord Tariq’s song called “Corazon.” Still, Pusha guided him through and instructed him on what to say. Eventually, Lee uttered the first phrase he could think of: “Ayyyeee.”

“’Ayeeee’ is something my father always says like “Ayy Papa,” Lee explained. “I got that from my father in honor of him, then DR. Pharrell came in and all I could think about was ‘he likes it.’ I was so excited like ‘Goddamn Pharrell likes it?!’ This is crazy! This is like a dream come true. I was just happy to be on his album. Just for the fact that he liked it.”

Pharrell and his engineer at the time touched up Lee’s words to make them the memorable intro it is today. However, once Jive Records heard it and realized that the intro itself could be a hit, they encouraged Pharrell’s decision to make it longer and wanted Lee to contribute more. Lee flew out to New York City to complete the record with Pusha and guaranteed that it was a hit.

“I was like get the f*ck outta here. Did I just make a hit with Pharrell?!” Lee said in response to his thoughts immediately after he heard the record. Lee’s favorite tracks off the album are “Chinese New Year” and “Momma I’m So Sorry,” but nothing compares to his contribution to “Got It For Cheap.”

Last year, Lee reprised his role as the Latin city slicker on the intro to Pusha T’s project Darkest Before Dawn, in which he tries to convince Pusha to leave the rap BS behind and return to the dope game. Lee was a lot more comfortable recording the new intro while he was with Pusha recording at Timbaland’s studio in Virginia. However there’s still something about their first collaboration that sticks with him to this day.

“Both tracks are different but they’re both hot,” said Lee. “But I think I liked recording “Got It For Cheap” better. I don’t like the song more than the new one, but just the way the whole track [“Got It For Cheap”] is laid out. That beat is knocking!”

According to Pusha, the LP still feels as valuable as when they first dropped in 2006. “It’s definitely the realest hip-hop album of all time,” Pusha said.

Exactly 10 years after Clipse’s second studio made its debut, Mr. Lee has taken a backseat to promoting clubs unless there’s a special occasion. His budding Star Rock clothing line is the focus of his hustle now. Lee also assists N.O.R.E and DJ EFN to book talent for their “Drink Champs” podcast and handles booking for The LOX, DMX, and Pusha T. If there’s one thing that he gained from working with Clipse, it was the honor of working with the Virginia based duo and the Grammy award-winning producer before they all parted ways.

“These guys are all geniuses when it comes to music. I’m proud of them. To me, they didn’t break up. They’re brothers. The way they are, they’re more than brothers. Those two guys get along. Pusha respects Malice as his older brother. Malice respects him as the younger brother. They both respect each other’s music. I love the fact that Malice became ‘No Malice’ and wanted to dedicate his life to God. They both respect that decision. The only thing I didn’t like was no more Clipse music.”


Hell Hath No Fury still ignites memories from my past that I still cherish to this day. As I sit back and listen as both Virginia brothers trade rhymes back and forth, I instantly go back in time to the peak of my teenage years when I drove around in my black, ’96 Honda civic coupe while “Ride Around Shining” booms from my two 10″ speakers. Once “Keys Open Doors” dropped, there was no need to touch the dial as I let the album play until Bilal’s final hook on “Nightmares.” That’s when Mr. Lee’s loud and raspy, Dominican accent roared through the speakers to the album started over again.

The Clipse released their darkest, yet most revered studio album Hell Hath No Fury exactly one decade ago. Although he wasn’t much of an artist then, Mr. Lee’s guest spot alongside Pusha T and No Malice allowed him to expand his career way beyond the art of promoting. While he may be busy working behind the scenes of the most rending hip-hop podcast on the Internet, he hasn’t given up his passion for music. He continues to offer his clientele the lavish lifestyle of top notch parties and luxurious car rentals, and plans to top his memorable adlibs by cutting more records with several veterans MC’s and make history once again.
 

Deltron

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The year 3030
Clipse Talk About 'Hell Hath No Fury' on Its 10th Anniversary

The brothers from Virginia sit down for a chat about the dark period that was their sophomore album.

Pusha T, real name Terrence Thornton, knows exactly where Hell Hath No Fury ranks in his mind. “We had the album of the year,” Pusha says. “It was a landslide. It was too vivid. The realest hip-hop album ever made.”

Coming off the success of their debut studio album Lord Willin’ in 2002, Pusha and his brother Malice (real name Gene Thornton Jr., who changed his name to No Malice in 2012) got tangled up in the politics of the music industry. Arista Records, which released their debut album, dissolved into Jive, and the label prioritized other music acts over them, eventually forcing the duo to request a release from their contract. A lawsuit was filed by the brothers that was eventually settled in 2006. In November of that year, after several mixtape projects in between, Hell Hath No Fury was finally released through the group’s own label Re-Up Records, along with Jive.

Lord Willin’ established a signature sound for the Clipse. As a whole, it was an unapologetic celebration of drugs and their native Virginia, but it was their partnership with The Neptunes (Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo) that yielded them an all-time hit in "Grindin'," which Pusha affectionately calls a groundbreaking classic lunch-room table track. “We always intended to win by being left of center,” Pusha says. “When we played ‘Grindin'’ for the label heads, they thought we were idiots.” At the time, while artists like Nelly and Ludacris dominated the charts with catchy, sing-song-y hooks, Lord Willin’ was austere, vivid, gristled. The album would make it easy for history to shine a positive light on Clipse as one of the best rap duos to ever do it.

Four years removed from their debut, Hell Hath No Fury pivoted the duo into a much darker space. With The Neptunes once again executive producing the album, their stripped-down production approach on the 48-minute, 12-track record, set the tone for an angrier but also a more introspective look at reconciling the pros and cons of pushing.

“The funny thing about this struggle is that some people have the impression that the lifestyle wasn’t all that was cracked up to be. I tell them, no, it’s everything you imagined it to be.”

When Pusha raps “no serum can cure, all the pain I’ve endured, from crack to rap to back to sellin’ it pure” on the intro of the album, it sets the tone for an airing of grievances throughout the early tracks. The label situation and hiatus in between albums put the duo in a very different headspace. “Angst, anger and ego fueled that album,” Pusha says. “We were egomaniacs. We felt wronged by the music industry.” On “Mr. Me Too,” the group addresses all the imitators who tried to steal the Clipse’s shine during their time away, from rapping to fashion. “Oh man, now y’all are talking about drugs?” Pusha says, laughing. “Like wait a minute. I remember I was being told man you talk too much dope in your record and now everyone’s BAPE from head to toe.”

Despite all the angst, the album does allow for room to celebrate the fame and fortunes that the success of the music afforded them, highlighted by “Wamp Wamp (What It Do),” (“Mirror mirror, who’s the fairest? Tricked a buck fifty on that horse and carriage”) “Ride Around Shinin’,” (“Welcome to the world of Rollies, VS diamonds and that 50,000 dollar show piece”) and “Dirty Money” (“Love you in Escada, Jimmy Choo, Prada, Snow White your life, how’s that for starters?). Tracks like “Hello New World” and “Chinese New Year” represent the quintessential Clipse experience—a banging Neptunes beat, fire verses from Pusha and Malice—but it’s the album’s closer, “Nightmares,” that illuminates the range of emotions that was swallowing them up at the time. The most paranoid track on the album, “Nightmares” deals with themes of fear, guilt, and regret. “They comin’ for me, they runnin’ up, I’m on the balcony, seeing through the eyes of Tony,” Malice rapped. “They say we homies, but I see hatred, do not they know brotherly love is sacred?”

“There were things that touched my soul in such a way, even though I was enjoying the spoils, even though I truly enjoyed the spoils, there were things that didn’t sit right with my soul,” says No Malice, who published a book titled Wretched, Pitiful, Poor, Blind & Naked in 2011, which detailed his personal journey towards converting to Christianity. (Hence the "No.") When No Malice thinks back to 2006, the emotions he felt in trying to untangle his guilt about the lifestyle he was leading bleeds out. “This isn’t on some holy redemption. This is really affecting me personally where no one else would know. Like this doesn’t feel right. Something isn’t right. I couldn’t find fulfillment in the comfort that I wanted.

"Nothing was fabricated... You can fact check everything, and we come up clean."

“I can even say as recent as a month ago, listening to Hell Hath No Fury, there are things that are still being revealed about the mindset and the place I was at the time. I can even see how it has led me to where I am today. I’m speaking for me personally, I didn’t set out for it to be regretful, but I was dealing with regrets, I was dealing with remorse. As far as the celebrating, I think we always found something to be thankful for and knew that things could be worse. There was a lot of pain in dealing with that album.”

No Malice remembers going to bed most nights and waking up in a sweat; it was a pernicious anxiety, he says, that he still can't explain. “The funny thing about this struggle is that some people have the impression that the lifestyle wasn’t all that was cracked up to be,” he says. “I tell them, no, it’s everything you imagined it to be.” But the spoils of being young, rich, and famous could not outweigh the emotional toll that the group was going through. Pusha admits it was a difficult period for his brother and himself while they were recording the album. “It wasn’t fun,” Pusha says.

If “Nightmares” was a moment of personal realization for Malice, Pusha sees the track as a perfect example of what set the Clipse apart from the competition. Anyone can just go on a record and talk about drugs, Pusha says, but who was really pushing the boundaries and exploring the consequences, the other side of things. “If you mimicked Clipse at a surface level, you would only glorify the street culture because you didn’t really live it,” Pusha says. He credits Pharrell for always pushing the group to dive deeper with their feelings on records. “There was a conscious element to our music. We always honed in on the artistic level of rap and hip-hop as a whole. It wasn’t just, oh we out here selling drugs. That’s bland rap.”

What the Clipse represented and what made Hell Hath No Fury a modern day classic was its naked honesty. “It was real,” No Malice says. “We talked about exactly how we lived. Nothing was fabricated. Of course you can embellish things like 100 foot yachts, but you got a realism that was rare. You can fact check everything, and we come up clean.”

“I meant every fukking word on that album,” Pusha says. “I really fukking did.” Here he launches into one of his verses on Hell Hath No Fury in which he raps “fukk the coppers, the mind of a kilo shopper, seeing my life through the windshields of choppers. I ain’t spent one rap dollar in three years, holla.”

“I probably could have given you an album with straight facts, the shyt probably didn’t even need to rhyme, and it would have been the most shocking shyt you’ve ever heard,” Pusha says. “It still would have been entertaining, but the fact the actual artform was never, ever, ever, lost, the art of the cleverness, the art of the rap, it was not lost for one moment on that album.”

Hell Hath No Fury was also the unofficial end of the Clipse partnership. The duo released their final studio album Til The Casket Drops in 2009, but the record was a departure from their previous sound, with additional contributions from The Hitmen and DJ Khalil. After the release, the brothers went off into their own solo ventures. Pusha signed to GOOD Music in 2010, cemented his status in the mainstream with a memorable cameo on Kanye West’s “Runaway,” and has continued to release solo projects. No Malice published his aforementioned book and released his solo album Hear Ye Him in 2013.

For Pusha, making music without his brother is still a huge adjustment. “This is not where I envisioned myself not where I wanted it to go,” Pusha says. “I came into this game with my brother and my best friend and that’s it, and now, I’m making music with good friends, but not the people I came in with. I’m not with my brother. Every aspect of what I love about this has been yanked away in some way shape or form…. I don’t have the fun of like really making music with like my best friends who live up the street from me.”

"I came into this game with my brother and my best friend and that’s it, and now, I’m making music with good friends, but not the people I came in with. I’m not with my brother."

In particular, Pusha recognizes the chemistry he had on records with his brother. “I could give you all the colors,” Pusha says. “People like me because of the double and triple entendres. I articulate differently. And if I stumbled across a bar that made you think deeper, well that was a treat.” In turn, his brother would provide the introspection that brought a perfect balance to the group’s music. Says No Malice: “I ain’t all just pretty and shiny.”

The question then, is whether Pusha and No Malice, seven years removed from their last album together, are willing to make another Clipse record today. “Beyond a shadow of a doubt, I know we can do it,” No Malice says. When I tell Pusha several weeks later, he agrees, adding it would be up to his brother. “It would be an amazing album,” Pusha says. “We could totally conquer the world.”
 

boskey

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I don't think an album has ever grown on me more than this one. I was the biggest Clipse fan on earth at the time. Loved Lord Willin, We Got it 4 Cheap 1, We Got it 4 Cheap 2. Then I heard this joint I was :patrice:...dissappointed at first.

I took a break, came back like a month later. And something just clicked :ahhh:. Classic record....
 

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As perfectly sharp the brothers were, we need to give Pharrell his credit for crafting his first hip hop classic...by himself mostly too (remember, chad was seldom doing hip hop records at that time)

"Hello New World" has grown to be a favorite of mine after some years

"THE JUDGE IS SAYIN LIFE LIKE IT AINT SOMEONE'S LIFE!" :damn:
 

Deltron

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The year 3030
Today in Hip-Hop: Clipse Drop 'Hell Hath No Fury' Album - XXL

2006: Clipse finally release their sophomore major label album Hell Hath No Fury via Re-Up/Star Trak/Jive Records. The album suffered numerous delays and was eventually leaked prior to the LP’s release.

Born in the Bronx but raised in Virginia, Pusha T and Malice had been caught up in label turmoil during the making of the album, as Arista, where they were signed, was being folded into Jive after the release of their 2002 debut album Lord Willin’. Most of Star Trak went to Interscope after the merger, but Clipse remained locked up at Jive, where their follow-up, much like their proper, unreleased debut album Exclusive Audio Footage, went shelved for years until the label finally dropped the LP in 2006. Push apologizes for the delay on lead single “Mr. Me Too”—”these are the days of our lives, and I’m sorry to the fans but the crackers weren’t playing fair at Jive.”

Growing increasingly frustrated with Jive’s sluggishness, they sued the label and requested release from their contract. They didn’t get it, but while litigation was going on they released the Got It for Cheap Vol. 1 mixtape in 2004 and a sequel the following year, helping to keep fans from forgetting them while “lighting the fire to Jive’s ass, lighting the fire to Pharrell’s ass,” as Malice put it.

The duo waited so long to put out Hell Hath No Fury, they actually scrapped the original version of the album because it didn’t reflect their outlook by the time it was ready to be released. “They’re still hot songs,” Malice said of the shelved version at the album, claiming they were “happier” when they were first making it. “But then, with all the drama and everybody hearing what’s going on, it wouldn’t be a true album to put out, to represent us.” So they went back in with a darker sound, pushing the Neptunes to give them harder production.

The result was a colder, bleaker and much less radio-friendly album than Lord Willin’. That LP spawned an unconventional hit in “Grindin” and a more predictable one in “Ma, I Don’t Love Her.” (Both of those appeared in the Billboard Hot 100, but “When the Last Time” is actually the highest-charting Clipse song, peaking at No. 19.) HHNF didn’t see one song chart, despite “Mr. Me Too” and “Wamp Wamp (What It Do)” both getting radio spins.

“There’s a whole bunch of aggression and frustration on this album; it’s extremely emotional,” said Malice in an ’06 interview. “Just pouring out our hearts and soul on these verses because the politics was getting in the way of everything and if you’re not careful you can get caught up and not really be creative, which is what [“We Got It for Cheap” mixtapes] Volume 1 and Volume 2 was about.”

Though the album is one of the most striking rap releases of the last decade (we gave it an XXL review at the time), it didn’t quite have the same impact as Lord Willin’, eventually becoming more of a cult classic than a widely accepted one. The LP sold 78,000 copies first week, a figure the label likely found disappointing versus the 122,000 units Lord Willin sold first week. Physical distribution of the album eventually halted, and the group never quite found themselves again; it took another three years to get out their third album Til the Casket Drops, the final project they would release as a group.

But the stark, unrelenting mood of Hell Hath No Fury still cuts through today. The tension of moral guilt, the depressing reality of necessity, the shame, the paranoia. Clipse and the Neptunes challenged themselves to make a masterpiece that now stands firm like an iceberg in the wake of the last ten years.
 

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It's a nice album, but I feel like this isn't their classic. Lord Willin' felt like the classic that this album is made out to be. I mean, "Grindin" had cafeteria tables everywhere going off and sent producers back to the drawing board. Nothing on Hell Hath No Fury did that. Then you had Malice and Pusha making coke rhymes sound poetic. I mean is there anything on Hell Hath No Fury as repentent, yet powerful as Maclice's verse on "I'm Not You". Then there's "the same place I'm making figures at, that is the same land they used to hang nikkas at".
 
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