Erykah Badu On The Mercy Of J-Dilla: ‘He Let People Get Away With Bitin His Sh-t’

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"Erykah Badu has reflected on her musical relationship with the late J Dilla at the San Diego, CA stop of her “Unfollow Me” tour she’s on with Yasiin Bey.

In a recent Instagram video posted by Detroit rapper Frank Nitt, the legendary Neo Soul singer gave an extended answer when a female fan in a meet and greet asked her how it was like working with the iconic producer. Badu started by saying he “didn’t talk a lot,” and was “very quiet.”

“He communicated through that music mostly,” Erykah Badu said. “And he was very organized. Super organized. All of his Coke cans in his refrigerator were turned the same way and in straight lines. He was an engineer, so it was apparent in every phase of his life.”

She continued: “He was brilliant and he was generous. And he was merciful. Like, he let a lot of people get away with like, biting his shyt. And he was generous because he taught a lot of people how to produce. Great guy, he was just so shy. This is the most important thing, he was sick, but nobody knew. That speaks volumes.”

Check out the video below:



J Dilla is often hailed as being one of the greatest producers in Hip Hop history. He got his start in the early 1990s after Amp Fiddler taught him how to use the MPC. From there, he started making music with his childhood friends T3 and Baatin of Slum Village, and then branched out and started producing for the likes of The Pharcyde, A Tribe Called Quest, and Common, to name a few.

He was also apart of the Soulquarians collective with Erykah Badu in the late 1990s. He produced, “Didn’t Cha Know” in 2000 off of her second album, Mama’s Gun.

Dilla passed in 2006 from complications from lupus.

Meanwhile, Erykah Badu recently broke down the meaning of her “Unfollow Me” tour which has have to do with a phenomenon that has grew across social media over the years.

In an interview with VIBE on June 10, she elaborated on what the name of her co-headlining tour truly means. She said that it “absolutely” has to do with the cancel culture that currently exists within our society.

“It definitely has to do with cancel culture,” Erykah Badu said. “It’s funny. It’s become a Baduizm, pretty much. Whenever someone says something in the comments, they don’t agree, I don’t care, unfollow me, doesn’t matter.”

“I also say unfollow me because I’m lost too,” she continued. “We all on an individual journey, we’re finding our way. So following me wouldn’t really benefit you because you are on your journey. That’s your cup you’re drinking out, this is mine. And I want to encourage people to do that too, and it’s a reminder to myself.”

The tour kicked off on June 11 at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, TX. It will conclude on July 23 at the American Airlines Center in San Antonio, TX. It was announced that both Soulquarian artists would be going on
tour back in April.
 

Art Barr

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Best production I ever heard in my whole life and to this day.

I wish I could say it was some shyt I heard better.
After freshman year and Xmas break. My best friend in college is dj head best friend. Not to mention my other great friend in college was his roommate. Shannon Cason or better known as e's of born unknown. Which was the rap group I heard dilla produce for. Before pharcyde running was even a thing.

To this day. Nobody chopped better. Filtered better. Sequenced better or engineered better either.

To the point I can say safely dilla.
or the original jd was the best hands down producer ever in rap. Plus was easily the best producer I ever heard flip soul and most importantly Michael Jackson samples on another level of audio mastery. That it was no secret they bit him for Janet record.

As no one had that personal touch with the Jackson clan in rap production like dilla.
That when Erykah says he was merciful. It was true.


Hail dilla.



Art Barr
 
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NormanConnors

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Best production I ever heard in my whole life and to this day.

I wish I could say it was some shyt I heard better.
After freshman year and Xmas break. My best friend in college is dj head best friend. Not to mention my other great friend in college was his roommate. Shannon Cason or better known as e's of born unknown. Which was the rap group I heard dilla produce for. Before pharcyde running was even a thing.

To this day. Nobody chopped better. Filtered better. Sequenced better or engineered better either.

To the point I can say safely dilla.
or the original jd was the best hands down producer ever in rap. Plus was easily the best producer I ever heard flip soul and most importantly Michael Jackson samples on another level of audio mastery. That it was no secret they bit him for Janet record.

As no one had that personal touch with the Jackson clan in rap production like dilla.
That when Erykah says he was merciful. It was true.


Hail dilla.



Art Barr

Facts
 

tuckgod

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she's not wrong , but at the same time, Dilla's style is from Qtip haha. so it's kind of strange to be having this discussion when he was heavily influenced by Tip's tribe production.
Tribe’s production didn’t sound nothing like Jay Dee until he started producing for them



:wow: :wow: :wow: :wow: :wow:

Nothing sounded like Jay Dee until Jay Dee touched down
 

Tommy Gibbs

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Tribe’s production didn’t sound nothing like Jay Dee until he started producing for them



:wow: :wow: :wow: :wow: :wow:

Nothing sounded like Jay Dee until Jay Dee touched down

We didn't even know Dilla was doing those beats in 1996 hahaha. He only did 5 tracks on Beats rhymes and life and off the top of your head without googling, you probably couldn't tell us which 5. We saw his name in the credits of Pharcyde a year prior and he produced stakes is high for de la the same year, but no one knew who the fukk he was in 1996. And i assure you no one said, "i like tribe's new albums, but those 5 songs really stuck out more than the others". We got to stop rewriting history. And the track you posted, Tribe been doing tracks like that the previous 3 albums. Pharcyde even said they thought Dilla's beat tape was done by Q Tip under a pseudonym name. So yes, Dilla was heavily influenced by Q Tip
 
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