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The Madlib Mystique

An exclusive interview with underground hip-hop's most elusive producer

Madlib is nowhere to be found. Peanut Butter Wolf, the head of his label, Stones Throw, doesn't know where he is. Despite repeated phone calls, Eothen (Egon) Alapatt, the imprint's general manager, hasn't heard back in 48 hours. J. Rocc, one of his best friends, is baffled too. They were supposed to have gone record shopping yesterday, but "shit came up." Currently, Madlib is missing the rare interview appointment, but the unexpected is expected. So long as he turns up around Memorial Day, a few hours before his flight to Copenhagen for a potential collaboration four days from now, no one's about to put out an Amber Alert.

After all, it might not be clear who to look for. There's Otis Jackson Jr., the government name of the Oxnard-born "Beat Konducta," a man so enigmatic and elusive his own brother gave him the alias "Hollow Man." You could check for one of the members of his fictional jazz ensemble, Yesterdays New Quintet: Ahmad Miller, Monk Hughes, Malik Flavors or Joe McDuphrey. Or maybe you'd inquire about Quasimoto, his helium-voiced, psilocybin-propelled alter ego. Of course, Lord Quas couldn't keep clandestine long — he's loud, prone to branding himself "America's Most Blunted," and the only person Madlib claims he doesn't get along with. But they do share one thing — like Quasimoto's debut-album title, they are "the unseen."

Speculating on Madlib's whereabouts is futile. Forget Twitter — he doesn't even use e-mail. The interstellar infinity of his music indicates liberation from the limitations of gravity and time. Granted, he exists as blood and marrow: two children, lives in a real home in Eagle Rock, and the Gregorian Calendar claims that he's 36. However, he is best understood as myth. In a society with a vampiric lust for information, our primitive neuroprocessors still compute in archetypes. Madlib is the man who wears masks, the witch doctor, the star of the medicine show.

It's possible that the absence is due to personal business, or to something wholly pedestrian. But it's unwise to rule out the possibility that he's been abducted and is currently circling the constellations like his jazz analogue Sun Ra, or washing dishes in the same speakeasy where Malcolm X waited tables (if you're to believe his official Stones Throw bio). Most likely, he'll emerge from this fugue with several finished albums, several more finished blunts and without an explanation for his adventures. But no explanation is needed. We're dealing with Madlib and when you're dealing with Madlib, you quickly realize that you're going to have to fill in the blanks.

BLUNTED IN THE (NEW) BOMB SHELTER (THREE MONTHS PRIOR)
The Loop Digga's Hideaway is located on the top floor of what used to be the Highland Park Masonic temple — a neo-Renaissance revival façade with weathered red-brick walls and a faded gray frieze studded with pentagrams and the Masonic square and compass. A Mexican bakery occupies the ground floor and the sweet smell of pan de leche and pastel del queso colors the air as you ascend the dimly lit stairwell leading to the top floor. Midway through, the scent abruptly shifts, blossoming into a danker, pungent aroma, offering a different indulgence.

At the top floor, you discover Madlib, the Loop Digga himself, wearing a black skully hat, baggy blue jeans and a pinball-sized silver ring — surrounded by samplers, CDs, cassette decks, 4- and 8-track recorders, keyboards and drum kits. No computers. Instead there are records stacked so high they seem like obelisks. A collection described by J. Rocc as filled with the most "dirty and dusty LPs imaginable." Not just hip-hop, jazz and soul. Everything from witchcraft records and Detroit techno to obscure German Krautrock. Calling Madlib a crate-digger is like describing Albert Ayler as a saxophone player — barely accurate. Madlib doesn't just collect records, he revolutionizes them. And the thousands of albums crammed into the three-room space aren't some completist fetish, they're functional tools.

Everyone can listen to music, but Madlib's ears detect alternate frequencies. He's a ghost-whisperer summoning analog ancestors — a ferocious Bootsy Collins bass line, a Mario Van Peebles film clip, a half-bar Hugh Masekela horn blast, an extemporaneous Redman ad-lib, a funky-but-forgotten Mantronix drum break. A mad scientist breaking beats down to their molecular level, seamlessly stitching loops and reshaping them into something with preternatural groove.

"He has records from almost every nation," says his frequent collaborator, hard-boiled Detroit rapper Guilty Simpson. "He doesn't just buy them to sample. He wants to understand each song. He doesn't need to know the language to realize musicality."

The only constant is that he's constantly working. Some days, he'll make a single beat, others he'll fill up an entire CD-R. In 2010, there are plans to release 16 albums, but that's a conservative estimate. There are 12 volumes of Madlib's Medicine Show: half original music, half mixtapes (Brazilian Tropicalia, African-psych reggae, prog-rock, jazz, soul). Additionally, he has produced entire albums for Guilty Simpson and Strong Arm Steady, plus two jazz records — one under the guise Young Jazz Rebels, the other as the Last Electro-Acoustic Space Jazz and Percussion Ensemble.

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  • KinG 09/16/2010 6:40:00 PM

    You do a interview like this an put some shine on it, because hes still indie, outside the beats I think the most commendable thing is dude is intelligent enough to parlay his stuff into a money and a working career...Period. You got artist on majors that never drop an don't tour. So for he an Stones Throw driven an ambitious enough to make that happen...Salute.

  • nick 09/12/2010 11:25:00 PM

    Even if 95% of his music is filler, he's not making it for you, he's making it because he loves it. You don't have to dig everything he makes because he doesn't care.

  • buy r4i 07/25/2010 7:32:00 AM

    good posting

  • vega the wize-1 07/10/2010 9:17:00 PM

    poster below I think you are sick in your head seek help

  • truth hurts 07/10/2010 5:20:00 AM

    Madlib should thank thank lupus the way Jay Z should thank whoever shot Biggie. You know how much better off ears would be if the fates were reversed?

  • fknchino 07/09/2010 6:35:00 AM

    peace madlib, keep making good music homie!!

  • Hayne 07/07/2010 9:02:00 PM

    yet another madlib love-in? yawn. get over him. he hasn't made a good beat in about 15 years. is the la rap scene really that stale that you're still all jocking madlib?

  • Dj-BlackJack 07/02/2010 4:37:00 AM

    "At a time when Eminem is writing 12-step odes to sobriety, Madlib is one of the few who truly does not give a fuck"... You said it man... I've been a Madlib fan for a couple of years and just like that Dilla t-shirt... MADLIB CHANGED MY LIFE!

  • Shake 06/30/2010 3:05:00 PM

    I'm a huge Madlib fan but compared to the writer i don't ride his dick hard enough. Why are you trying so hard to make him sound supernatural? I feel sorry for you that u didn't get to do an in depth interview and had to write this abstract vision of him from your own mind.

  • Duncan 06/30/2010 9:06:00 AM

    what a superbly written article. Your writing is terrific and you captured the way I feel about madlib perfectly. well done!

  • Chops 06/29/2010 10:41:00 AM

    U.....NEED......SPACE..JAZZ......ALL.....YEAR...LONG..........WINTER....SPRING.....SUMMER........FALL

  • Jered 06/29/2010 9:06:00 AM

    what was the whole masonic thing

  • Eat_Eateator 06/28/2010 6:37:00 PM

    Wooooooooo. Yeah. Stop ignoring TX Madlib/Stones Throw.

  • Josef 06/28/2010 12:53:00 AM

    Well - he did eventually make it to Copenhagen. J. Rocc did a great set and got the crow worked up but Madlib didn't seem to put a lot of effort into following up on it. Maybe the preceding days described here had something to do with it.. Anyway, I love his work and hope he will be back in Copenhagen some day to set things straight.

  • ant 06/27/2010 10:52:00 PM

    thanks for the article. madlib is without a doubt the most interesting entity in the 'hip-hop' scene. i wish more people kept their presence to a minimum like he does

  • Dg510 06/27/2010 9:48:00 AM

    oh yeaa and BTW, if i were the interviewer i woulda smoked with him, its free weed

  • Dg510 06/27/2010 9:47:00 AM

    I SECOND EVERYTHING VEGA SAID ON 06/26/2010 2:53:04 PM

  • Jim 06/27/2010 7:35:00 AM

    This was an awful piece of writing. "Granted, he exists as blood and marrow: two children, lives in a real home in Eagle Rock, and the Gregorian Calendar claims that he's 36?" "In a society with a vampiric lust for information, our primitive neuroprocessors still compute in archetypes." Jesus.

  • vega the wize-1 06/27/2010 2:53:00 AM

    1st of all I don't think everything he's ever released is dope. angles without edges was quite average and the Stevie album was pretty bad. but that's only my opinion just like you thinking 95% of his 16 albums are "filler" despite the fact only 50% have been released so far. but hey if Mablib is supernatural why can't he have one supernatural fan. my opinion is that all he's released has been interesting and enjoyable for me and he should keep releasing whatever the fuck he wants. I'm a happy fan. you're a disappointed one. It's life. be content with your 5% and get over it. like the man said there's always other stuff to listen to anyway

  • struttin 06/27/2010 2:35:00 AM

    i am a big lib fan, and i only said the 95% about him trying to release 16 albums in a year. i dont care who you are, if you are releasing 16 albums in ONE YEAR a majority of that is filler and thats the truth. im just sick of everyone thinking he and dilla are the best things to ever happen to hiphop, and anyone who disagrees is ostracized as a hater. i fully agree that lib has pushed the boundaries of producing/digging, but get real, "The interstellar infinity of his music indicates liberation from the limitations of gravity and time"?? thats the gayest shit i ever heard. dudes like you vega are who im talking about who stick up for lib and call out anyone who ever says anything negative, like hes never released anything bad. so how about you get a fucking clue and hit me with your email so i can send you my pamphlet on how to be cool

  • Jake 06/27/2010 2:24:00 AM

    I respect Madlib a lot, but really... David Icke?

  • vega the wize-1 06/27/2010 1:13:00 AM

    Everybody loves Madlib sure then why is it whenever someone tries to describe that love for his work and his credo there's always some "fan" who's bitching the writer sounds like he wants to have his babies ? he barely saw the guy. only twisted minds could interpret something like that out of the article. the whole statement is that the guy is unique and his ability to do what he does seems out of this world. struttin you're a huge fan yet you said 95% of his output is filler. get a fucking clue already or write your own pamphlet so you and Anna can agree on how cool you both are. /over

  • struttin 06/27/2010 12:40:00 AM

    thank you, anna. i'm a huge lib fan but this writer sounds like he wants to have his children or at least rub him off a few times. he's got some solid ass material, but good lord get off dude's jock

  • Anna 06/26/2010 8:51:00 PM

    There's a bit too much jocking by the writer here. Everyone loves Madlib, of course, but let's just settle down. He's not a god. "The interstellar infinity of his music indicates liberation from the limitations of gravity and time" is a phrase that should only be used when speaking of Stevie Wonder.

  • Ayepea 06/26/2010 2:50:00 AM

    Good Read. Thank you

  • joints 06/26/2010 1:28:00 AM

    no doubt my favorite musician of my generation. nobody does it like madlib and no one ever will. He is truly one of a kind and an inspiration to everyone. MUSIC WEED PEACE

  • Mel 06/25/2010 6:49:00 AM

    Madlib is the shit. I just read that he is scoring the music for the upcoming documentary on "A Tribe Called Quest" that Michael Rapaport is Directing.The Beat Konducta is finally breaking into films

  • Chris 06/25/2010 6:05:00 AM

    Madlib is a true legend. He lives a life so complex yet so simple music, literature, and weed are three things that I could live happily ever after with on a deserted island. Well written article. Thanks for this.

  • vega the wize-1 06/25/2010 4:02:00 AM

    struttin (another soulstrut grumpy old man ?) still sippin' on that good ol' haterade huh. stay mad. we smiling

  • Ur_Muva 06/25/2010 3:48:00 AM

    The author of the article said something like he has no father to his style but I think RZA definitely has some influence to his stlye

  • Morpheus 06/25/2010 3:41:00 AM

    Nice interview and an incredibly talented man. Brings out the worst in his rivals and wannabes, because they knock him, when he would only praise them. What is very, very clear is how much Otis loves and respects music. Thanks for a look behind the curtain.

  • struttin 06/25/2010 2:45:00 AM

    writer is all over libs dick, he's an okay producer. most his music is straight jacked (hence loopdigga). granted he has skills for diggin for records, most times he loops some random shit up and calls it finished. 16 albums in one year? GTFOH...95% filler

  • Malik 06/25/2010 12:35:00 AM

    Always an interesting fellow. I hope he goes to Japan like Jay Dee did. Would love to see what he creates.

  • ndu02 06/24/2010 9:32:00 PM

    Thanks for getting us a glimpse into the elusive one.

 

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