LevelUp
Posting on THECOLI & MIND MY BUSINESS..
Detroit’s Black Milk is a rap superhero. Even the alliteration in his legal name, Curtis Cross, sounds like a comic book vigilante’s alter-ego. In his nine years as a solo artist, Black Milk has blossomed from a post-Dilla hometown beat hero into part of a select class of hip-hop artists moving forward while embracing the foundational elements of the genre. From the beats to the raps to the mixes, Black is a self-contained behemoth.
If There’s A Hell Below… is his sixth solo album and a good reason for me to get its author on the jack for an interview. Along with plugging the amazing new album (you can stream it here), Black also opens up about no longer feeling like a new artist, his long term vision and just how he feels when every damn review and write-up feels the need to mention James Yancey. – Sweeney Kovar
You’re not the new cat anymore.
Nah, I’m not. I was just telling somebody too, it’s kind of weird that some of these younger cats look up to me. It’s weird hearing someone say ‘dog I was listening to Tronic in high school.’ Damn, you went to high school in 2008?
How does it feel to be past that realm of ‘new artist’?
It feels good to reach a place in your career, in your life, in your artistry where you have this certain level of, I don’t even want to use the word confidence, more of a certain level of ease. You find yourself and what you want to be and who you really are as an artist and as a person in general. That’s the good thing about reac
ching this point.
In the beginning you’re trying to find yourself. You really haven’t lived alot of life yet. You’re in your late teens or early 20’s kind of going with the flow of everything, which is still great too because there’s a level of rawness there. That’s always dope. At this point I like being able to feel like I’ve carved a lane and I know what I want and I know my place in the game. I have a clear vision of what I want out of this shyt.
So the newest effort is the new album, If There’s A Hell Below. That’s obviously a Curtis Mayfield reference but after hearing the album it’s also a nod to the content of the album and the perspectives we hear.
The title is of course a Curtis reference, the way he says it on the record is ‘if there’s a hell below we’re all gonna go.’ I took the title and wanted it to mean something slightly different. For a lot of people if you take that phrase, ‘if there’s a hell below,’ a lot of people feel that this is already it. We’re already living it, we don’t have to wait for the afterlife.
I’m talking about the typical inner-city lifestyle and how you can reach a point where you kind of find the joy, a certain level of happiness within that hell. That’s kind of what that meant. I wasn’t trying to get too deep but it just kind of went there.
Did the concept come before the music?
I was already working on the music before I had the title. I knew I wanted to have this album be somewhat of a continuation of No Poison, No Paradise but at the same time I didn’t want to make it as conceptual as that album. I definitely had some of the records before I decided on the title.
I wanted to ask you about some of the features. You started off very in-house with the features. Slowly but surely since Tronic you’ve started reaching out a little further out. The two features that stood out to me most were Bun B and Pete Rock. How did those come about?
I wanted to throw people off a little bit. I knew Bun was going to be one of the ones that would get people interested. That joint came out dope. He’s also a living legend in hip-hop, that was awesome to say I was able to record a piece of music with him.
Pete Rock was just, man I’m a fan of Pete Rock! After Dilla’s it’s Pete. After Pete it’s Primo. Those are my top three. It was cool to be able to work with him. Him and I have been going back and forth, communicating over the past two or three years. Towards the end of the album that was one of the last records I recorded. It kinda just hit me like, ‘damn I should get Pete and see if he wants to spit on one of these tracks.’
Most people when they think of Pete they think of beats. Why did you choose to get him to rap?
I don’t know man. Maybe because most people think of him for beats. I made the beat and at first I wasn’t even making a beat for the album, I was just making a track. It was dope so I thought I might use it. I start writing some words to it and at the time when I made it Pete and I were already sending little video clips of beats in the studio to each other. Not necessarily of him making a beat, he’ll send a clip of him in the studio with a beat playing. It just clicked, like ‘damn I should have Pete fukkin’ rap on this shyt.’ He was down.
It’s always cool to have people do something that’s not necessarily the main thing people know them for. Even when I worked with Primo onTronic, I could have possibly even bought a beat from him but I preferred to have him play his cuts over one of my beats.
If There’s A Hell Below… is his sixth solo album and a good reason for me to get its author on the jack for an interview. Along with plugging the amazing new album (you can stream it here), Black also opens up about no longer feeling like a new artist, his long term vision and just how he feels when every damn review and write-up feels the need to mention James Yancey. – Sweeney Kovar
You’re not the new cat anymore.
Nah, I’m not. I was just telling somebody too, it’s kind of weird that some of these younger cats look up to me. It’s weird hearing someone say ‘dog I was listening to Tronic in high school.’ Damn, you went to high school in 2008?
How does it feel to be past that realm of ‘new artist’?
It feels good to reach a place in your career, in your life, in your artistry where you have this certain level of, I don’t even want to use the word confidence, more of a certain level of ease. You find yourself and what you want to be and who you really are as an artist and as a person in general. That’s the good thing about reac
ching this point.
In the beginning you’re trying to find yourself. You really haven’t lived alot of life yet. You’re in your late teens or early 20’s kind of going with the flow of everything, which is still great too because there’s a level of rawness there. That’s always dope. At this point I like being able to feel like I’ve carved a lane and I know what I want and I know my place in the game. I have a clear vision of what I want out of this shyt.
So the newest effort is the new album, If There’s A Hell Below. That’s obviously a Curtis Mayfield reference but after hearing the album it’s also a nod to the content of the album and the perspectives we hear.
The title is of course a Curtis reference, the way he says it on the record is ‘if there’s a hell below we’re all gonna go.’ I took the title and wanted it to mean something slightly different. For a lot of people if you take that phrase, ‘if there’s a hell below,’ a lot of people feel that this is already it. We’re already living it, we don’t have to wait for the afterlife.
I’m talking about the typical inner-city lifestyle and how you can reach a point where you kind of find the joy, a certain level of happiness within that hell. That’s kind of what that meant. I wasn’t trying to get too deep but it just kind of went there.
Did the concept come before the music?
I was already working on the music before I had the title. I knew I wanted to have this album be somewhat of a continuation of No Poison, No Paradise but at the same time I didn’t want to make it as conceptual as that album. I definitely had some of the records before I decided on the title.
I wanted to ask you about some of the features. You started off very in-house with the features. Slowly but surely since Tronic you’ve started reaching out a little further out. The two features that stood out to me most were Bun B and Pete Rock. How did those come about?
I wanted to throw people off a little bit. I knew Bun was going to be one of the ones that would get people interested. That joint came out dope. He’s also a living legend in hip-hop, that was awesome to say I was able to record a piece of music with him.
Pete Rock was just, man I’m a fan of Pete Rock! After Dilla’s it’s Pete. After Pete it’s Primo. Those are my top three. It was cool to be able to work with him. Him and I have been going back and forth, communicating over the past two or three years. Towards the end of the album that was one of the last records I recorded. It kinda just hit me like, ‘damn I should get Pete and see if he wants to spit on one of these tracks.’
Most people when they think of Pete they think of beats. Why did you choose to get him to rap?
I don’t know man. Maybe because most people think of him for beats. I made the beat and at first I wasn’t even making a beat for the album, I was just making a track. It was dope so I thought I might use it. I start writing some words to it and at the time when I made it Pete and I were already sending little video clips of beats in the studio to each other. Not necessarily of him making a beat, he’ll send a clip of him in the studio with a beat playing. It just clicked, like ‘damn I should have Pete fukkin’ rap on this shyt.’ He was down.
It’s always cool to have people do something that’s not necessarily the main thing people know them for. Even when I worked with Primo onTronic, I could have possibly even bought a beat from him but I preferred to have him play his cuts over one of my beats.
manager now, and other stuff he can’t do physically. For the most part, when something comes along I pass it to Hex to let him handle it. That’s what it is. He’s still in his right mind so he’s still crazy as hell.

stranger things have happened

