Who is Ka? - Complex mag

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http://www.complex.com/music/2013/08/who-is-ka/

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New Rules. Jay Z changed the landscape of the music industry by having Samsung sponsor the release of Magna Carta Holy Grail, changing the way the Recording Industry Association of America certifies album sales.Sponsorships dominatethe game, generating extra revenue and attention for established artists and helping upstarts get their big break.

With sponsorships come a polished, professional style and sound, the antithesis of what hip-hop was when it started out as street corner cyphers and neighborhood block parties. In a sense, it’s awe-inspiring to see Jay Z rub shoulders with Judd Apatow at a fancy art gallery, but for those who loved the spirit of what hip-hop represented in a previous time, it’s a little disconcerting.

Wizened by decades of surviving the rough-and-tumble neighborhood of Brownsville, Ka stands in stark contrast to this current trend. The 40-year-old rapper grew up during hip-hop’s infancy and watched it expand into the multi-million dollar industry it has become today, eagerly waiting for his opportunity to share his craft with the world, unbridled by corporate strings. Somehow, he has emerged out of obscurity with his last two releases, Grief Pedigree and the more recent The Night’s Gambit.

His gravelly, monotone delivery, polysyllabic rhyme style, and gritty sample choices bring listeners of his music back to a time when large swaths of New York City were not safe. The weighty lyrics and vintage sounding beats make each project a piece of fine art, made for slow digestion.

Ka is a one-man machine: he writes the raps, makes the beats, shoots the video, and even mails out the CDs himself. And he manages to accomplish this all while still working a regular job outside of the music. We got on the phone with the Brownsville native to find out Who is Ka?
 

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Reviving His Rap Dream
Ka: "It got to a point where like everybody had stopped doing it, but it was funny because I was still doing it in private. Every time that I quit, like even if I said it out loud, it didn't matter. Rhymes still came to my head. During the time frame when I said I quit, I just wouldn't write them on paper anymore. But it was still coming and still coming. It just so happened that for a long stretch of time I just wouldn't put it on paper. That was my 'quitting:' Not writing it down.

"I had a lady now in my life by this point. She used to catch me every now and then, when I would get a beat or I would hear some music and would just zone out, and she would be like, 'Baby, what are you thinking about'" And you know, I was embarrassed in the beginning to tell her that I rhymed and shyt. I was just like, 'Every black man rhymes.' I didn't want to be that. I didn't even like the fact that I rhymed anymore, because it felt dirty to me. Everybody did it, it wasn't respectable anymore.

"It took me a long time to tell her that I rhymed, but she was real dope about it. She was like, 'You know what, if you really love it then you should just do it.' It was that confidence that I got from her that was just like, 'You know what, I'm not going to hide it anymore. I'm just going to do it and whatever happens from it happens.' I already knew that what I did wasn't going to make it on radio anymore, but it didn't mean that what I did was any less important."
 

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The New Era of Rappers
Ka: "I love it. I'm not regional though. I care about the art more than about the region. The boys in Brooklyn are doing it, the boys in Chicagoare doing it, the boys in LA are doing it... They have so many new movements of young MCs that care about rhyming.

"I root for them. I root for Chance the Rapper. I root for Joey Bada$$. I root for Ab-Soul. I root for Earl Sweatshirt. I want all of those young boys that care, that give a fukk about rhyming, and that love it, to continue to get better and I want them to be more ill than me. I want hip-hop to always thrive. This is the music that I love. I want this shyt to be around forever.

"I'm glad that we had Nas, Jay, Big, Slick Rick and all of them. Right now, while I'm still strong and my mind is still right, I want to be one of those soldiers holding it up until those young dudes come and they grab it from me and hold it up even higher. I root for anybody that loves hip-hop. If you love it, if you respect it, I love it."
 

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Nice .

Still haven't checked out his new one because I've been letting Grief Pedigree marinate for a minute .

Is it just as good ?
 
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