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Who's Biting J Dilla's Beats?

Hip-hop producer's legend ascends posthumously; estate struggles to maintain control

No art form lionizes its fallen quite like hip-hop. Forget Biggie and 2Pac. Their reputations were sealed the moment the doctors zipped the body bags — though, to be fair, few can argue against their posthumous crowning in the pantheon. More telling is the postmortem red carpet rolled out for Big L and Big Pun, two prodigiously talented artists who released a mere single great album each, dying before they had a chance to ruin their reputations with the inevitable 2005 Houston bounce track. No, in hip-hop, molehills are turned into mountains, with even lesser talents like Dipset flunky Stacks Bundles earning a spate of po-faced eulogies and a prominent “R.I.P. Stack B, Ima keep you alive, kid” shout-out from Lupe Fiasco on last year’s The Cool.

Roger Erickson

(Click to enlarge)

A beatmaker on track to a first-ballot Hall of Fame career

J Dilla is a different case. Unlike the aforementioned names, when the 32-year-old beat-maker/rapper, born James Yancey, passed away at L.A.’s Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in the winter of 2006 (due to a cardiac arrest stemming from complications related to Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, a rare and incurable blood disease), he was neither savior nor supernova. Instead, he was an underground legend in those pre-Internet days, when the term actually meant something. Racking up a string of left-field hits capable of stacking up against any producer of the late ’90s/early ’00s, Dilla quietly dropped bombs working with the Pharcyde (“Runnin’”),” De La Soul (“Stakes is High,” “Itsoweezee”), A Tribe Called Quest (“1nce Again,” “Find a Way”), Erykah Badu (“Didn’t Cha’ Know,”), and Common (“The Light”). Meanwhile, with Janet Jackson, Dilla had his only brush with mainstream success, carving Joni Mitchell’s “Big Yellow Taxi” into the lean proto-chipmunk soul of “Got Til It’s Gone,” his only single to ever reach the Top 40. In what would become a pattern, Dilla never saw full credit, with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis “mistakenly” getting credit in the liner notes. Nonetheless, the track’s sonics directly influenced the next generation of crate-diggers, with Just Blaze, 9th Wonder and a certain college dropout all taking notes.

Like most great producers, Dilla’s mike skills couldn’t match his otherworldly ear, but he still managed to amass a respectable discography as one-third of Slum Village (whose Fantastic, Volume 2 is often regarded as a subterranean classic); a Jaylib collaboration with Madlib; and Welcome 2 Detroit, an uneven solo effort. Cumulatively, it wasn’t as eye-popping as it was a portent, a start to what would inevitably have made for a first-ballot Hall of Fame career, considering Dilla’s notoriously rigorous work ethic.

He died the same week that L.A.-based Stones Throw released Donuts, an impossibly soulful trip of head-nodding, hip-hop instrumentals that served as a gorgeous, plaintive requiem. It was also Dilla’s finest work,earning him the 2007 Plug Independent Music Awards for Artist of the Year and Producer of the Year. Donuts’ greatness and the sentiment engendered by Dilla’s passing helped to kick-start construction of the Church of James Yancey.

In the short span since, Dilla’s stature has increased exponentially, both critically and commercially. His higher-profile collaborators have ceaselessly kept his name alive, with Badu, the Roots and Common dedicating songs and/or entire albums to his memory and constantly praising him in lyrics and interviews. In turn, a new generation of producers and rappers has started taking cues from Dilla’s sound, chief among them two of hip-hop’s brightest stars: Black Milk, a fellow Motown native who got his start working with Slum Village; and Jay Electronica, a Badu-affiliated New Orleans native who has gotten the Internet crazy by kicking fierce rhymes over long-lost Dilla beats. To say nothing of the hordes of MySpace MCs aping Dilla’s style and in the process discovering what Kanye West found out on Finding Forever: how inherently difficult it is to mimic Dilla’s twisted alchemy of tweaked-out soul samples, black mountain drums and twinkling keys.

But as successful as the deification has been, the budding Dilla empire has foundered, thanks to astronomical health bills, which forced Dilla to go into hock with the government and die with high six-figure IRS debt and few tangible assets — save for a few hard drives of beats and a publishing deal with Universal Music. Ironically, as Dilla’s stock is at an all-time high, the executors of his estate have been bedeviled by a one-two punch: scrambling to pay his tab while fighting rampant Internet piracy of his material, both aimed at the ultimate goal of providing an inheritance for his two young daughters. “It’s frustrating,” says Arthur Erk, the estate’s executor and Dilla’s former business manager. “People have been cropping up left and right, trying to make money off Dilla’s name and likeness. There was something called the Dilla Foundation, which doesn’t even exist legally, yet it was trying to host charity events, claiming authorization from the estate. If there weren’t young children involved, we’d give up. No one needs this type of aggravation.”

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  • Bayan 12/02/2008 2:25:00 PM

    Go read Ms. Yancey aka Mama Dukes interview The complaints of Dilla's estate executioners are pathetic, when they themselves obstruct the registration and activities of the Foundation which is Dilla's mother project, depriving her of using her own son's name for activities in his memory They insist on ripping the man off even after his passing Sh..t, "it cheapens the value of his brand" this is what they're concerned with, profiting from the mans legacy for his real supporters nothing cheapens the value of his so called "brand", cause they don't think in terms of money value to his legacy unlike these people There's legacy, not no brand An attempt to use Dilla's family financial needs as a smear for their activities is immoral, it's pure demagogy Let Dilla's music live don't suffocate it

  • Alex Rogers, Jr. 08/10/2008 11:31:00 PM

    Excellent Article!!!!

  • lilkunta 08/01/2008 1:20:00 AM

    I didnt know he had daughters. In addition 2 the billboard ad, y rnt Common, Slum Village, Badu,busta rhymes, & the rest spreading the word 2 ppl(like on okayplayer) that they shouldnt pirate his music? Also, have badu,common,slum village, busta rhymes, & teh rest donated and $ to Momma Yancey? If they each give 10,00 that is a start.

  • Jacqueal Jackson 07/01/2008 9:24:00 PM

    This article was enlightening to say the least. I cannot fathom the effect these bootleg projects have had on the estate. I hope the estate ends up on the successful end of this fight. That way I can get the albums the way they were intended to be put out. Peace.

  • Lessons in Jazz Ladie M 06/26/2008 8:13:00 PM

    Great article! It's a shame that much or any of Dilla's work will go un-noticed nor will his estate be financially rewarded. Bootlegging has always been apart of the underground culture, but there is a serious lack of education that needs to happen within underground and mainstream music environments. When someone as brilliant as Dilla can't eat..neither will any of the other aspiring producers. Lessons in Jazz bridges the gap between jazz and hip hop through sampling and Dilla was the epitome of that and the music of his lives on in that tradition. Check Lessonsinjazz.com for more info as we will be honoring him at our annual Jazz in the Hip Hop generation symposium in October 2008 in Hampton, VA. RIP ~ Dilla!

  • Heir 06/25/2008 6:58:00 PM

    To me ...they need to do a movie of his life!!! Do you know how many large to small artist that could put they 2 cents down on it??? If if it's indie or major ...a lot of people would cop it/check it out. Furthermore they need to put his music out somehow some way because if ya dont it's going to get out anyway and for free. The true dilla fans are going to spend whateva to support (me included) but if I gotta jump through hoops n wait years ...especially for some dilla joints...I cant wait n Im finna look to the net... Plus Organize a "dilla legacy tour"...Put Common on it ...SV...Badu...Roots....etc....and make it pop...30+ cities with the majority of revenue going to help pay the debt... Get errrrrrrrrrrrr Done dang it... Hopefully they will get it together and find a way to really due his legacy justice! Much luv to Ma Dukes...Hold ya head high! R.I.P to the G.O.A.T Soul Heir Of Check & Balance

  • Amos 06/25/2008 6:46:00 PM

    great article

  • Swag Diesel 06/24/2008 8:10:00 AM

    Why is no one screaming foul at the government?! Ahhh... I was under the impression that Stack Bundles was a close friend of Lupe's hence him honoring him on his LP.

  • Fabio 06/23/2008 11:43:00 PM

    I understand you're trying to put things in perspective for Dilla, his business and his family, but don't say his rhymes weren't as good as his beats. One more thing: Dilla worked with jazz cats, Macy Gray, Raphael Saadiq... It's alright to call him a producer, Mr. Weiss. When you chop samples and create drum patterns and melodies like he did, you're a producer. A beatmaker doesn't know music enough to create, you know, music. I met him in Brasil a few months before he passed. He was passionate about the music and the culture. Dude asked to listen to some brazilian music on the way to town, he said he wanted to listen to some local music instead of the FM crap the driver was listening to. There's a lot of people using his art wrongfully, even independent labels operate like majors nowadays. Both parties did him wrong, some of his friends as well. Shame on them. Thanks for the article, but please let people know he was a very skilled MC (Kanye is comparing Soulja Boy to Nas. Stop the madness!) and a producer, not a beatmaker.

  • anonymouse 06/23/2008 6:02:00 AM

    stonesthrow are the main thieves, i heard this personally from one of their artist mouth,stonesthrow is in a fight for the dilla estate..and have no intention to help dillas debt, i heard thats what keeps that label alive. how some white boys get that much control over a black mans estate. brothas betta work it out.

  • AaronMatthews 06/23/2008 1:33:00 AM

    Great piece, Jeff. Jeff Jank of Stones Throw actually emailed me telling me that the Dilla Foundation was a fraud. I endorsed supporting Dilla's family through "the Foundation" in a post celebrating Jay's life on the anniversary of his death. He had to set me straight. I actually had no idea he produced "Itsoweezee".

  • verge 06/22/2008 10:52:00 PM

    Fkn sad. But I wish the estate would work more dillagently on officially releasing everything they have from him. We had to wait like 2 years for Jay Love Japan. Officially release it all, u cant stop piracy so release shit before they do, Ya big dummies!

  • Hannibal 06/22/2008 5:12:00 AM

    Good thing Pete Rosenberg set it off back in April. www.rosenbergradio.com/2008/04/09/dillas-estate-responds/

  • Joey 06/21/2008 2:04:00 AM

    Glad to see light shed over the issue and very dissapointed with the climate. My solution: put on a major festival, get sponsor $$ to cover the costs, hand the ticket sales & merch to the family and call it a day. That's a hot million + right there, not to mention the talent is going to be down no matter what. Best way to get over this is stop chasing intangible music and move on to the events before every promoter out there does a tribute for a hundred bucks in the pocket.

  • JP 06/20/2008 4:30:00 PM

    Its amazing how many things are done in regards to Dilla, and yet nothing gets done. How are these people getting a hold of his beats? I know people like Pete Rock have a lot of unreleased Dilla beats, but one wouldnt think that PR would do something as low as release it for free, or without his mother's consent right? So who is the one distributing Dilla beats for free? That "Dillagence" album was nice, it had a couple beats that should have been left untouched, but why was it free? I understand the idea of making it free for the true Dilla fans but the family needs as much income as they can get! Mrs Yancey is working to pay the hospital bills as we speak. So SOMEONE has to be the mastermind behind it all...its just a matter of figuring it out.. On a positive note, I like the article. I love seeing Dilla on in a major article or news site. I like that someone recognized the struggle he's been through in regards to him recieving credit and how he is STILl in some way going through legal trouble with his music. In any event, Dilla was/is the best. My favorite producer, and your favorite producer's favorite producer.

  • ndmusikman 06/20/2008 6:41:00 AM

    this is grosse neglagints in jurnalism did u even speak to ms yancey or any of the family the simple fact is the estate in this artical is not the family its the laweyer so try and get both sides of the story before publishing something

  • Joel Cuevas 06/19/2008 7:59:00 PM

    Article was on-point, nice to see a story about Dilla in the L.A. Times. Great job!

  • hh 06/19/2008 7:04:00 PM

    not sure why you felt the need to diss stack bundles on the way to your argument

  • CONCEIT 06/19/2008 4:45:00 PM

    Nice article but the Stack Bundles "flunky" comment was not needed. Not the biggest Stack Bundles fan but the man is dead show some fucking respect.

 

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