u s bankruptcy court central district of californiaAllHipHop.com's J.R. Writer
Interview: "Rising Son"
This interview in no way affiliated or conducted by J.R. Writer Online.
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chemical services labIf you take a look at most Rap outfits, it seems every crew
has their own young gun. That one cat that spits relentlessly trying to prove one thing
and one thing only : "I'm nice." Enter JR Writer. Buzzing on the mixtape scene
for almost two years now, he hit big with "Stop-N-Go" off the Diplomatic
Immunity II compilation. His ability to rhyme every word in the accompanying four bars
with such a rapid delivery on the track silenced many haters. At twenty years of age, the
pressure is now on him to defy the one dimensional mixtape punchline rapper stigmatism.
With a new mixtape on the shelves, Writer's Block 2 and
a couple of features on the upcoming More Than Just Music compilation, we catch up
with the Dominican phenom. We talk coming up in the game, battling Jae Millz, and we find
out what's good with his resemblance to Cam's flow. Part two of Dipset week; AllHipHop.com
keeps it all the way funky!
AllHipHop.com: How long have you been rapping?
J.R. Writer: Since I was eleven years old.
AllHipHop.com: What were you listening to that truly inspired you?
J.R. Writer: I listened to Pac, BIG, Big L, Big Pun. I listened to
everybody. Everybody that was hot. But Pac was a big influence on me.
AllHipHop.com: How so?
J.R. Writer: Cause he just had that powerful music. I used to sit back and just listen. A lot of people
didnt understand his flow, because his s**t was so futuristic, man. Thats why
you see people still playing his s**t now.
AllHipHop.com: How did you get down with the Diplomats?
J.R. Writer: Basically Jim, Cam, Juelz - we all grew up in Harlem. I look at it
like, we were all destined to be a family, be a group, be a label, whatever you want to
call it. We call it a movement. I was running around Harlem or whatever, doing what I had
to do. Getting on public access, on DVDs, battles, cyphers. Whatever was going on,
if it had anything to do with Rap, I was in it. My man Bonny introduced me to Louch from
the Taliban. I went up there to 145th to spit for him, and he was feeling me. He told me
to come through, you know what Im saying? After he told me to come through, I was on
145th rain, sleet, snow just out there going hard. Battling n***as, doing DVDs. You
might of seen the battles, probably on the Internet, but you know I was out there hard.
One day Cam had popped up, it was right around the time Cam just got signed to
Roc-A-Fella. He just finished shooting the pictures for the cover of the first Diplomats
mixtape. I remember they all had the minks on. Cam pulled up with Juelz in an all-black
[GMC] Denali. Louch called me over to spit for him. There was a lot of people around, so
he couldnt really politick with me. He was like, Yo, you hot. But right now, I
aint situated. This is before Juelz or anybody got signed. But he was like,
When I get situated, Ima hit Louch and we can get up. So basically four
weeks after that situation, he end up calling Louch. I get downtown, I got on Juelz
album. After that, it was just love.
AllHipHop.com: When you first joined the Dips did you feel intimated
or nervous?
J.R. Writer: Not at all, cause everyone there was nice. I f**ked with
everyone. They respected me. It was all love. As soon as I got there, Juelz showed love,
he threw me on his first album [Squalie], took me places, brought me to radio.
It was love. No intimidation, we are all nice.
AllHipHop.com: Your verses are very punchline heavy. How do you go
about writing your material?
J.R. Writer: I dont really sit down and think of a bunch of metaphors. Nah,
I just flow with it. Metaphors just happen to pop up, and I put them in there. This s**t
is easy for me, man. My album is retarded. Like this mixtape s**t is what I do, thats
not even hard. I can put out mixtapes for years, man. My album is totally different from
my mixtapes, man.
AllHipHop.com: How so?
J.R. Writer: The big difference is, that its not all some street s**t, and
just airing n***as out, and metaphors. Its songs about me, about my life. Just
concepts, I got crazy flows on there. I got a song called Slow Down Son, You Killing
Them. I sample Puffs Voice, and like every eight bars, he like, Slow
down, you killing them. But in between that, the flow is just crazy. Everybody I let
hear it, went crazy when they heard it. My album is powerful. Its not just a bunch
of songs put on there. If you dont like it, youre hating, thats how I
feel. Im a fan of my own s**t man. Sometimes I sit back and think like, Damn
how do I do this s**t? I go back to my crib and blast my own s**t. My s**t like
takes you back to the essence of Hip-Hop, 95, 96. Like when n***as had them albums
you could listen to the first track to the end of it, and really like the whole s**t. My
s**t is like a movie.
AllHipHop.com: A lot of heads say that your flow bares a very strong
resemblance to Cam's. How do you react to that association?
J.R. Writer: Ive heard that a lot. I feel like when youre
coming up, when youre nice people always got something say about you. Like this
n***a is too fat, hes to skinny, hes mad tall, hes mad short, hes
ugly, he nice but he sound like this person. They always got something to say. But people
get past that. Look at Shyne. I feel like when you nice, everybody always got something to
say about you. But Im going to make them love it. If they dont love it, they
hating.
AllHipHop.com: Have you ever ghostwritten for other members of the
Diplomats? Have any of them done so for you?
J.R. Writer: Nah. We all nice, man. When we all get into the studio, we
make miracles happen. We all nice, man.
AllHipHop.com: It was rumored that Warner Brothers was hollering at
you for deal. Especially with Jim over at Warner Brothers now, why the Koch independent
route?
J.R. Writer: Basically, Cam is my CEO, and also hes my dude. Hes been
in the game for a long time. I sat down with Cam, and asked what would be the better look.
Cam told me Koch. He gave me my own creative space though.
AllHipHop.com: I heard you battled Jae Millz. When and how did that
go down?
J.R. Writer: Yeah, I battled him twice. It was crazy. A lot of people, in Harlem
know what Im saying. I battled him the first time, that actually was my first
battle. I was 16 years old. A lot people said I got the first one, but a lot of people
said he got the battle too. I feel like he had that battle. That was my first battle; I
aint know what was coming to me. But the second battle, if you ask Millz, shout out
to my man Millz, I went over to his block and I did my damn thing. Word, and thats
why I feel like everybody thats coming up to got to do to get your name. You got to
get your street credibility before you can even hit mainstream.
AllHipHop.com: What's your response to people that consider The Dips
fake Bloods?
J.R. Writer: Damn, I dont even know. That dont really mean nothing.
What does that have to do with our music? Like we not running around like just, Blood
this, and Blood up. We is what we is, and we move how we move.
AllHipHop.com: What happened between you and Un Kasa? It seemed
y'all were taking shots at each other on some mixtape songs last year.
J.R. Writer: Yeah yeah, that was something little inside s**t. Some little stupid
s**t we were going through. We squashed that, we been squashed that. Thats my n***a.
AllHipHop.com: With Latinos at a disadvantage in the Hip-Hop because
of their ethnicity, do you think youre in a worse position because youre
Dominican?
J.R. Writer: Nah, I dont feel its a bigger disadvantage, but as far as
Im going to have to prove myself, Im doing that now. I dont know nobody
in my age bracket thats fucking me. 20 to 25, under 20, I dont know nobody
thats f**king with me, dog. I just got to sit back and wait for my time, which is
soon.
AllHipHop.com: Coming from that background, will you be
experimenting with Reggeaton in the near future?
J.R. Writer: Um, nah not really. Maybe later later on. I did a song and with me,
Juelz and my man Leaky Loco, [OK]. But you know, I dont really want to
go that route and confuse my fans.
AllHipHop.com: Where do you see yourself in ten years, since you
just turned 20?
J.R. Writer: I feel like Ill be considered on of the greats. Sitting on my
own record label, sitting on some big change, with at least five or six albums.
AllHipHop.com: How long you want to rap?
J.R. Writer: I dont know, I can go. You see Jay and Eminem, and they are
over 30. I got a decade to go, I could keep going. Im not going nowhere.