M1 (Dead Prez)

 V
Location:
Brooklyn, New York, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Hip Hop / Rap
Type:
Indie
After migrating from Tallahassee, Florida to Brooklyn,

New York in the early 90s, Dead Prez linked with Lord Jamar of Brand

Nubian, who ultimately helped the group ink a deal with Steve Rifkin’s

burgeoning powerhouse Loud Records. After waiting four long years,

they dropped their critically-acclaimed debut, Lets Get Free, in 2000.

But soon after, Loud Records folded, and it’s stable of artists were

swallowed up by its parent company Sony. "We were more like slaves on

a plantation, and our plantation burned down," says M1, who earned his

revolutionary stripes working in Chi-town with the National People’s

Democratic Uhuru Movement in the mid-90s to free Fred Hampton Jr. "So

we end up on this other plantation and we decided to run."



After Sony fumbled the ball, Dead Prez essentially ran back to where

they felt their message needed to be heard most- the streets. 2003 and

2004 saw them release successive independent mixtapes/albums- Turn off

the Radio Volume 1 and Turn off the Radio Volume 2: Get Free or Die

Trying- both of which sold over 100 thousand units and subsequently

helped the group attain a new major label deal. But it was the more so

the artistic freedom begat by the black market mixtape format, as well

as the types of people who consumed this new music that attracted Dead

Prez.



"We saw mixtapes as a hood phenomenon," M1 explains. "People would buy

mixtapes and bootlegs before they even went to the store. That really

happened on the corner of Fulton Street and Utica Avenue in Brooklyn.

I’d rather be here than in the store, because this is where people are

going to buy it."



With solid industry relationships in tow, mountains of respect from

their hip-hop peers, and the streets clamoring for new music from the

band who was now championing a street gang-influenced red, black, and

green (Revolutionary But Gangsta) bandanna movement, the majors came

knocking again. This time though, Dead Prez was prepared to get over

on the system. "We had the RBG album since Loud," says M1. He claims

that because the album was recorded while Loud was still functional,

Sony technically owned the album, and would make it hard for Dead Prez

to sign elsewhere. "They begged us to come back and put it out over

there. We made it easy on ourselves, with an album that was three

years old and only getting older."



Now relieved to be once again removed from the majors, M1 has

partnered up with famed jazz guitar player and producer Fabrizio

Sotti’s (Cassandra Wilson) Sotti Records and KOCH Records to release

his debut solo LP, Confidential. "We did one or two things and then we

realized we had something in common and that musically our ears are in

tune," he says, claiming that his relationship with Sotti was fostered

on personal grounds and developed slowly over time. "I think he makes

a style of music that is kind of commercial but it allows you to paint

the picture in a very non-threatening way." Bolstered by guest

appearances from Styles P, Q-Tip, K’naan and Cassandra Wilson- as well

as his partner since their days at Florida A&M, Stic Man.



M1’s intentions are clear, as he envisions Confidential as the next

chapter in the book Dead Prez is writing with their career. "There’s

this real underground thing that happened with hip-hop, and I think we

were relegated to that, boxed in and couldn’t leave. I think people

thought it was almost like a sin for us to do music with Jay-Z. We’re

all doing the same thing. He’s just doing it his way and I’m doing it

my way." As to why he’s adopted this new approach to the music

industry, much of it stems from just a general lack of support within

the mainstream music business for the ideas Dead Prez champions. "The

idea of revolution will never be popular until revolutionaries are in

charge. When you have niggas in charge who want to keep down the

revolution, they see me coming. I’m really a target, so it’s

definitely like, don’t play that." With a change in approach, the

revolution may just very well be televised after all. "But you didn’t

hear it from me."



M-1’s solo debut "Confidential" in stores now.



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