Dope D.R. Period Interview

Mad Good Dro

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
Feb 18, 2013
Messages
10,539
Reputation
6,455
Daps
46,578
Reppin
NULL
dr-hhg.jpg

From crafting certified hip-hop classics for M.O.P, AZ, Cam’ron, Cormega, and others to having his own song get some shine on the hottest TV show Breaking Bad, D/R Period has been dropping the hammer on cats for over 20 years. With a resume as long as Scottie Pippen’s arms, D/R’s placed himself in the upper-upper echelon of producers, in the land of the Primo’s, Pete Rock’s, and Diamond D’s. But don’t tell him that ‘cause really, he doesn’t care. Between managing and mentoring upcoming acts on his Rockboy label, banging out over 15 beats a day, and making sure his beats are the best part of reality TV, D/R doesn’t have an extra second in the day to contemplate his place in the game.

In this exclusive interview, D/R stays up later than usual to not only reminisce on some of his most classic projects and songs, like Smoothe the Hustler’s Once Upon a Time in America to getting Billy Danze of M.O.P behind the mic, but to also talk about his current projects and why his takeover of the game is not complete yet. Don’t miss this candid conversation with one of most respected producers to ever bang out on an MP.




It’s definitely an honor to catch up with you. What have you been working on lately?

I’ve been developing the label Rockboyz as a company. That’s one. I’ve also signed a couple of acts and we’ve been working on getting their music right. We’ve also been working on the publishing side. I’ve been doing a lot of TV placements and a lot of stuff in reality world and stuff on regular TV, stuff at radio, movie trailers, commercials, and all those type different things. I was on Breaking Bad and I’d been working on that project for a year and a half now, doing that. And I’m doing a couple of different things for Love and Hip-Hop and a couple of different places.

The publishing side is what I’ve been concentrating on. Now I got the new D/R Period brand as far as me recreating and reinventing myself as a producer slash artist slash entertainer. I don’t think people got the chance to see that side of me yet. What people got to see was the music side and what I can do creatively and what I can do with artists, how I can make hit records and how I can collaborate with different artists and turn things into multiple levels.

I actually have three main projects. The first project is me being on the Rockboyz as the company and as D/R Period the producer. The second project is as D/R Period the artist. That’s kind of interesting to me because I always knew how to write and rap for years. The songs I’m doing, I see when a lot of artists are coming with and I have my own ideas and concepts. Who’s better to do it than that. And I also got my gospel project that I got going on. Those are three kind of primary projects that I’m focusing on now.

What made you want to sign artists and look at it from a label perspective?

If people know the history of D/R, then they know that I was a production company, always. I came in the game and got my recognition as a producer. I came in the game as an artist but it wasn’t moving like the producer side. It was a hole that needed to be filled so I developed artists and made music with them, and then I became a production company, which was Nexx Level Entertainment. That’s when I stated working with M.O.P and Foxy Brown and all of those different acts then. And then I decided to develop my own project because those projects were affiliated projects. And then I started working with Smoothe the Hustler and I think working with artists and taking them to labels and getting them deals. It was working very good.

My business sense, I didn’t even understand that I was an independent company. I started noticing that I could develop these artists and take them to any record label of my choice. What bothered me for awhile was that anytime I got a new artist, I had to go back to the label and show them why that artist was worthy of a deal and then they would tell me if he was good or not good or whatever the case was, but it just seemed like anytime I came with something new, I had to keep explaining myself. So I thought, why not just develop stuff and put it out? I do all the radio and marking and promotions anyway, the only difference is that I never had the record label title. So now, I decided to say that I might as well stay in that ballpark because that was where I was stronger, working with artists and making new things and putting new things out, taking chances, because some of the companies took chances and some of them didn’t. Some of them felt like they wanted to take risks and some of them didn’t because it wasn’t always successful for them. I didn’t want to be in any of that kind of Fear Factor when it came down to what I do.

So for me to be making platinum and gold records, you shouldn’t have to fear me. You should be more or less taking chances, because what I was told in the game, is once you’re making gold and platinum records, you’re sort of a made man. I felt I was a made man, but what happened wasn’t more my doing but that the company wasn’t ready for some of the concepts I wanted to do. It just made me go harder and make me want to sign artists. I went to Sony Red and got a distribution deal and I can put them out on a worldwide distribution level and do the marketing and promotion myself. I’m already seasoned in that part of the business. I felt like I needed to hear more of the kind of music that I wasn’t hearing.
 

Mad Good Dro

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
Feb 18, 2013
Messages
10,539
Reputation
6,455
Daps
46,578
Reppin
NULL
Do you wish you had done this sooner?

No. It’s perfect timing. If I was a record label earlier in my career, I probably wouldn’t be around. Or maybe I would, who knows? I’d probably be one of those guys that started off like Jermaine Dupri or a Puffy, where you start off a certain way and then you end up being an executive of a company and you deal more or less on the executive side. If I had dealt with it on that side, I’d probably just be an executive and I probably wouldn’t be as involved with the music as I am now. And with the market being where it’s at now, it’s perfect for me. I can really, really get a lot done. And plus, during this time, it’s a whole different type of attitude towards the music. People are more open-minded towards creativity. Back then you had to have a certain style to be recognized. Now you have to learn more how to brand it, but people are more open-minded. I think it’s better now. Doing it then taught me how to be a better businessman and gave me time to learn about publishing and other things I wouldn’t have time to learn. It gave me a better outlook of doing music and why I do music, and I know the most valuable part about being in the music business.

What do you listen for when you’re checking out new artists, especially considering all the legendary music you’ve helped create?

One of the things is that I always want to hear an artist’s reason for why they’re artists. A lot of them don’t even know why. Some of them just do it because they like music,m and that’s good and that’s a start, but if you don’t have a genuine passion for what you’re doing, I don’t think I’m the guy for you. Whether I’m making a hit record or not, my goal is to make music and that’s what I love doing. 95% of the time, I’m not making it to have a number one hit. It’s more the fact that I love music. I love being creative.

If I’m with an artist that loves being creative, than 95% of the time we’re going to have hit records and the chemistry is going to be there. I look for passion, charisma, character, and a certain attitude. I don’t believe every artist should have a specific attitude, but they shouldn’t be unmanageable. A lot of times artists get caught in their own wave because their own attitude be so crazy that they don’t even understand they’re hard to deal with. I always look for somebody who’s a little more humble and who appreciates when help is being offered to them and that really wants to win. Those are the things I look for that let me know we can work as a unit.

Is more of your energy going to your groups like The Rockboyz versus securing album and TV placements?

It’s a balance. It’s a balance. When you get placements, that helps and then you put out a couple of records. I don’t spend a lot of time chasing anyone because nine out of ten people find me and tell me they’re working on a new project and want me to come on and give them some beats. I started in the music business where your respect level has to be there first. We’re in the game now where the people who remember those rules and principles reach out. That’s why you have a lot of of the older G’s I consider in the game, the ones that’s on top winning, because they all respect the rules of the game.

It’s the younger ones that still have to understand that there’s rules to this game. Not major rules, but certain things that you do and certain things that you don’t do. And if you don’t respect something, to keep that to yourself. A lot of times, that’s helpful as a person too. It’s not a big all-day process for me because I know what records I want to put out. I know if I make a track and I know that it’ll be perfect for Rick Ross and Meek Mill, I’ll send it over to them and they’ll use it. You never know what they’ll might use it for. It might go for their new project or for their mixtape. Artists now don’t have one format for how they put music out but they have multiple ways for how to showcase their stuff. That being said, I don’t spend too much time doing the chasing, but I put a lot of time into trying to develop good music.

If the interest is coming from the Maybach camp or AZ or M.O.P, then we’ll work. But if I’m not doing that, then I’m on the Rockboy side and my artists are becoming so seasoned. Their song making is very impressive. I’m excited about hta because of the music that they’re creating and the passion they’re putting into their music. When they hit, I think these guys are going to be around for a very long time.

Do artists ever ask for another “Ante Up” or “Broken Language,” where artists want you to recreate what you’ve already done?

I get a little bit of both. I get the artists who respect what they love about me and they want that, and then I get the artists who want to know what else I got. I get a little bit of both. It goes both ways on that end. I got artists that just want that raw, underground, hardcore D/R Period sound and then they want to know what else I’m cooking up, and that surprises them. It goes both ways. I don’t get a lot of keeping me in a box because I wasn’t one of those producers that stuck with one sound always.

A lot of people know about what I did with Smoothe and M.O.P but they don’t know what I did with Cam’ron, Jada, Busta, Sting, or all these other people that I done worked with on bigger projects than the hip-hop stuff. But at the same time, when they find out that I’m not just a producer who sits on the MP all day but that I play instruments and that I’m a talented guy who creates, and I write. I’m not saying they want my writing, but my hooks, concepts, and ideas, they know they gotta use that! But I think when an artist uses his full potential, he knows he’s going to be around for a long time.

Jay-Z is a lot like that. He’s a great example of that. He goes to producers that can give him the motivation, concepts, and ideas to allow him to continue writing the right stuff. You have some artists who just want to get the music and go in the corner and do what they do with it and they end up writing the same records over and over and over because they’re feeling the same way and they’re not trying to go anywhere else. Not to get off the subject, but it’s a balance thing. Some people have the vibe about D/R for the hardcore stuff and some people want to know what D/R is up to new and lately.
 

zoo

★★★★★
Joined
Jun 3, 2012
Messages
744
Reputation
140
Daps
1,137
Dude has produced some dope tracks, but...

D/R’s placed himself in the upper-upper echelon of producers, in the land of the Primo’s, Pete Rock’s, and Diamond D’s.

:usure:
 
Top