Lil Fame Discusses "Fizzy Womack" Persona, Diversifying The M.O.P. Sound (long read)

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Exclusive: Fresh off of producing "Fizzyology" for Termanology, Lil Fame says that he learned to stay a secret threat from Freddie Foxxx, and producing hits for M.O.P.


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by WILLIAM E. KETCHUM III
posted November 24, 2012 at 9:01AM EST

For years, Lil Fame’s humility kept him away from the limelight. He has always handled much of the production for M.O.P., his duo with fellow Brownsville emcee Billy Danze, whenever legends like DJ Premier and D/R Period weren’t around to lend their own hardnosed backdrops. Still, the songs were credited as “M.O.P.” for production. But when the knock-heavy “Cold As Ice,” the follow up to M.O.P.’s breakthrough single “Ante Up,” came around, Danze and the group’s manager Laze E. Laze had had enough: it was time for Fame to receive some recognition. Fizzy Womack, a slightly changed old nickname from Fame’s youth, was resurrected—and listeners saw his talent, as he produced five of the album’s 19 cuts.

Since then, other East Coast legends such as AZ, Styles P and Cormega have recognized Fame’s penchant for gutter beats, enlisting his talents for their albums. This month, though, his production skills are on full display with Fizzyology, Fame’s new album with DJ Premier understudy Termanology. In an interview with HipHopDX, Lil Fame talks about working with someone other than his longtime partner in rhyme, lessons from his predecessors, and bringing the streets to the studio.

Lil Fame Discusses Fizzyology With Termanology

Lil Fame: It’s like a collaboration album, so I wouldn’t say it’s just me and another artist. We’re not a group or nothin’. … Nowadays, there’s not enough of the kind of music I grew up on, that golden era music, the sh-t our fans like. It’s important to stay consistent and keep putting out a lot of music, so every chance I get I put out music.

DX: What made you decide to work with Termanology?

Lil Fame: Basically, me making music isn’t about reaching out to people and sh-t like that, unless you work in my circle. … There were other artists I could work with, but [Termanology] was right there in the studio. It started out as his album, with me doing the production, and we had so much music, I decided to add a couple of my songs on there. We’d be in the studio, drinking and coming up with a lot of music.

I think Term is a dope emcee, and up and coming emcee. He comes from that lyrical point of view. When we’re making music, it takes me back to when I was younger, Hip Hop was more fun. Before things got so…my life without the problems. A lot of that comes out in my music. But Term is just lyrics and fun, just emceeing. He brings back that energy when Hip Hop was fun, and about lyrics. That’s what I get out the sessions. He brought that out of me, and he brought a good spirit in the studio. It was good to go back to that sound. … I want to rap, and not everything is a sad story. Everybody knows my steez and how I get down, but I just wanted to rap.

DX: You and Billy are about nine albums in, so I’m sure you guys have a formula when you go in the studio, so you already know where each other is at. How is it different working with Term?

Lil Fame: Making M.O.P. music is natural, but this isn’t an M.O.P. album. It’s showcasing Term as an emcee and me as a producer, I just did my one-two on it. Bottom line, whoever I’m in the studio with, I put my all into it. All the effort I can put in it, I try to do that. I don’t just go in the studio and rap peoples’ verses; I want to hear it mixed down, I want to hear the drops you’re doing. I want to be a part of the whole session. It isn’t just with Term; like any other artist I work with, I like to put all my intake.

As far as me and Billy Danze, we just vibe off each other. Our energy comes from each other. We’re not just a group, I knew this nikka my whole life. We grew up from kids together, so that’s just natural.

DX: What do you offer on a record like this, that you don’t get to offer on an M.O.P. album?

Lil Fame: It’s not that I don’t get to offer it. As far as me and Billy, as far as M.O.P., it’s a group. Nothing is one way or one-sided. We both have to agree on some sh-t. Sometimes I have a beat, and Billy says, “Yo, let’s do that sh-t.” In this case, it wasn’t that—Term came to me looking for beats, so I had more beats to offer. I get to show my talent as a producer.

DX: Some people have a specific song or two that converts them into becoming a fan. Do you have a song like that for Termanology, that made you really respect him?

Lil Fame: Like I told you, for me, it’s more about the vibe of the person. We can sit in a session, and drink and hang out. It’s about having social skills. Some mufu-kas are just nerds, and you can’t even sit in a session with them. Their whole vibe is fu-ked up, and that’s no way to make music. Term’s got a good vibe, his people are my people, we’re all good in the studio, we hit the club up, tour together, whatever.

But Term’s first joint, “Watch How It Goes Down,” when he scratched my voice in from “World’s Famous.” I think he had something out before that and I wasn’t familiar with it. But that joint right there, the way he was going in on that song, I’m like, “Damn, this muh'fu-ka can rhyme.” It kind of reminded me of [Big] Pun or [Kool] G Rap’s flow. I’m a G Rap fan, Pun’s my nikka, and I just miss that essence of lyrics with every line. Every line, they said something. I think he deserves it. There are other people out there, but he’s one of the emcees to look at right now.

DX: A lot of people just associate M.O.P. with having a lot of energy, for songs like “Ante Up.” But this album has songs like “Family Ties” and “Lil Ghetto Boy.”

Lil Fame: Well if you’re familiar with M.O.P., we do songs like “Blood, Sweat And Tears,” and “Dead And Gone.” [Fizzyology] just a round album. You don’t want to be “blaow, blaow, blaow” every fu-king song. One day you’re feeling this way, one day I’m in this mood, and one day I’m in this mood. We’re trying to show people that I’m not one-sided. I’m an artist. I don’t know if I’m your favorite artist, but I’m an artist. I’m an all around the way artist. That’s why you’ve got songs like “Family Ties” and “Little Ghetto Boy,” concept songs.

DX: As an artist, especially on a song on “Family Ties,” how tough was it for you to tap into those memories?

Lil Fame: It depends on the music. Sometimes the music can take you there, and it can be the vibe of the room. “You know, I’ve got something to say.” Sometimes, when I listen back to sh-t like that, I’m like, “Man, I’m not in the mood to hear that sad sh-t right now.” It depends on the vibe of that day.

…Term had the idea [for “Family Ties”], he had the idea and came down and played me his verse. For me, I go in there and match whatever right there. Sometimes I write, and sometimes I put it together like a puzzle, piece by piece. That was the vibe then. Matter of fact, I was doing the session, so that worked out perfect. Whatever song was before that, I was also recording.

Sometimes you have the songs where you’re just popping sh-t, and letting nikkas know how you feel, and it’s easier to do the concept songs after you get all the anger out with your straightforward popping sh-t. I’m always going to pop sh-t on a song. Then you’ve got times where you have more you want to say in a concept story. That was easy for me. That day came down, I was working on some other sh-t, and the vibe was there for me. That was easy for me, so I laid that down quick.

Lil Fame Explains His "Fizzy Womack" Persona

DX: The early M.O.P. albums credited M.O.P. for the production of those songs, not you specifically. What was it like flying under the radar for so long?

Lil Fame: It’s cool, because we’re in this motherfu-ker together, so we’re rocking together. It was Billy and [Laze E. Laze's] idea to start putting “Fizzy Womack” to showcase me more as a producer. But a lot of those songs, sometimes Laze would come in and press and button and add some sh-t. It was the crew. But it was their idea. I never asked for my name to be put out there as just Fizzy Womack until after “Cold As Ice,” and sh-t like that. But that was more the executive part, which was handled by my man Laze.

DX: What made you not want the recognition?

Lil Fame: …It’s not that I didn’t want [recognition], but I don’t know…sometimes people take you for an as-hole - deejay dudes or whatever. Freddie Foxxx gave me motivation. He played piano like a motherfu-ker, but you’d never know that this nikka Freddie Foxxx could play the piano. So when I see cats like that who have that talent, sometimes, you don’t want to be looked at as, “This motherfu-ker thinks he’s a producer.” [Laughs] That sh-t felt like clown sh-t. Until it became cool. It’s cool nowadays, but back in the days, nikkas would laugh. “This nikka thinks he’s a fu-king deejay!” They’d look at you like you were a chump or something. I was stuck in my years. I was still wilding or whatever, and I definitely didn’t want that look.

DX: Did that take getting used to? Does it feel awkward to see your name there?

Lil Fame: Fizzy Wo is the same sh-t as Fame. Around the way, they call me Slap. So nikkas say, “What up Slilz?" "What up Fizzy?” I just threw the “Wo” on it for music sh-t. Nobody calls me Fame unless it’s somebody that knows me from music.

DX: You’ve worked with DJ Premier, Jaz-O, D/R Period. Did they help you learn how to make beats, or were you self-taught?

Lil Fame: I was self-taught from the most part, but I picked up a whole lot from D/R Period, and I was a DJ Premier fan, a Marley Marl fan, a Jaz-O fan. Everybody I had the honor to work with that was right there, there was just a vibe in that muh'fu-ka. I’m a music dude, so everything that has to do with a scratch or a beat, I was looking. Hell yeah I picked up a lot from D/R, Premier, Laze E. Laze, I picked up a lot. And I’m still learning.

DX: What kind of things did you pick up?

Lil Fame: I can’t say off-hand. They know how to make that sh-t knock. I ain’t the best mixer in the world, but I know how to make my sh-t sound right. I know what I want, I’ve got the ear for that. My man Laze taught me how to work the [Akai] MPC, and D/R and Premier showed me little tricks. I add all that sh-t to my sh-t. Do you make beats?

DX: Nah, I wish I did though. [Laughs]

Lil Fame: Man, making beats is just fun for me. When I’ve got to rhyme, before I go to the session, I’m thinking of sh-t to say. I’ve got to get in that zone, that sh-t’s like work. When you’re not in the mood to rhyme, that sh-t is fu-king work. That sh-t is brain work, mental work, especially if you’re not in the mood. Like, “God damn, I don’t feel like doing this.” But you don’t want to waste no money either. So once I lay down that first line, I’ve got to finish the whole verse.

But making beats? That’s sh-t is like playing Nintendo or some sh-t. It’s like playing video games for me.

DX: Is it that much easier?

Lil Fame: It’s funner [sic]. It’s not work for me. Writing and putting songs together, that sh-t is work when you’re not in the mood. When you’re in the mood, that sh-t will come naturally. You’ll know, that sh-t will tell you, “Go do a song.” You sit down and jot it down, and you’re like, “I’m good.” That sh-t came from no work, but after seven of those, you’re like, “I don’t feel like doing that sh-t today.”

But making beats, I can do that sh-t anytime. I’m always in the mood for that. as long as I’m not upset or angry, I’m good.

Lil Fame Discusses M.O.P. Being More Than A Hardcore Hip Hop Group
DX: Longer, and perhaps better, than any other Rap group out there, between your production work and what M.O.P. makes, you seem to have a great talent of bringing the street to the studio. You can tell when an artist is just trying to make a street song, compared to you guys. It sounds like you literally make your songs in the street. How do you guys do that?

Lil Fame: I’m from Brownsville, Brooklyn. I get tired of telling fu-king war stories and sh-t, but we come from sh-t. I don’t want to repeat the same thing, but that sh-t’s from my blood. It’s just natural, we do that with no effort. It’s not like we go in, like, “We’ve got to do this fu-king street sh-t!” That sh-t is ignorant. It just comes out aggressive. Not every song is (makes signature M.O.P. raucus sounds). That’s not every song, you have your song where you just want to chill on this one. But to the average listener, we’re aggressive. That’s what we’re known for, and I ain’t mad at it. It comes from all the frustration coming up in that motherfu-king Brownsville.

DX: If you could produce someone else’s album, who would you pick?

Lil Fame: sh-t, you’ve got me right now, my nikka. I don’t know. I could tell you a lot of artists I like. I’m a G. Rap baby forever. I wouldn’t say I’d want to produce for G. Rap, because that’s a slap in the face, it’s kind of disrespectful. Just a dope-ass nikka. I don’t want to say none of my peers, or none of the nikkas who raised me in this sh-t, with the music I grew up on. I don’t want to be like that. I can’t say. Most of my favorite artists are the artists before me.

DX: Why do you think that would be disrespectful?

Lil Fame: If I was asked to, it would be an honor. But as far as saying, “I’d like to produce an album,” who the fu-k am I? It ain’t that serious. Like, “Slow down, lil nikka. You’re doing all right, but slow down.”

DX: It’s interesting that you say that, because a lot of people would probably see you the same way. Termanology may see you the same way.

Lil Fame: Yeah, that’s love though. That’s how it’s supposed to be. The ones before you. They used to call me Kool G. Slap in high school, that’s how much I kept his tape on rewind. I don’t forget none of that sh-t.

Koch Records put out a Rakim [The Archive: Live, Lost & Found] album, and they gave me the vocals to remix it. The song was called “I’m Back.” It was an honor to do that, but it wasn’t like, “I did a beat for Rakim!” Maybe personally, to myself, I’m like, “Oh sh-t, I did a joint for that nikka!” But I got a good response from it, and I’d like to do more like that.
 

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Fizzy Womac-nificent

I love how he sounds in this interview. You can tell that he takes pride in his work. MOP, last duo standing
 

Big Mel

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It's cool to hear Fame holds onto virtues I myself have. i believe he's only a few years my senior. I totally relate to that reverence he has for the actual legends and how humbled he is in their presence. i also relate relate to his keeping his dirty little beat making secret on the low for worries of being clowned. i wish i could make you all know that feeling too.
 

Big Mel

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He said making beats is fun, like playing Nintendo but writing rhymes is draining....and he's AMAZING at writing bars.


I been said Fame was the Thelonius Monk of rap, though. This man exudes it. Salute.
 
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