Meyhem Lauren

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.

Gas One

Moderator
May 24, 2006
39,741
12,147
113
44
Downtown, Pittsburg. Southeast Dago.
#41
what i like about mayhem lauren is hes undisputedly New York City Lyricism.

bronson and him make a great duo. they should look at dropping a serious album (i know they dropped an album before, but another one now that bronson is semi-famous)

but the kids that made bronson semi famous prolly will never like mayhem lauren, i think its the types that only like a white rapper because hes white, sad to say. same types that are riff raff fan boys for all the wrong reasons.
 
Last edited:
Jul 26, 2014
13,166
6,530
113
#52



On working with Buckwild for their collaborative album Silk Pyramids:

You know, at this point in the game, I would say we’re friends. That’s my man right there. We started with a musical relationship. I tell him what beats I like and he’ll tell me his thoughts on it. 90% of the time, there really wasn’t much conversation, to be honest. It was just good money, like, ‘Wow, this beat is hot.’ He usually liked what I wrote. Once in awhile he might tell me to rewrite something. Nah, he never told me that. Once in a while he might tell me to spit it over or to spit it in a lower tone. But there wasn’t really any things that we wanted to change. I wouldn’t tell him to change the drums. It was smooth. Smooth sailing.

On creating imagery in his rhymes:

I have images and I try to turn them into rhymes, not the other way around. Like on the “Q.U. Cartilage” beat, like, I heard that beat and I saw Queens. It just reminded me of classic Queens records that I would listen to and had that sound to it and then it just made me think about driving through Queens or walking around. That’s why I went that direction with that song.

On how his album with DJ Muggs came about:

When Action was doing the Rare Chandeliers project with Alchemist, I was out there working with him. I was out there working with Al and Action and Muggs came through one day. He just came through randomly. There was a bunch of us in the crib. I know the Future kid was there. Earl Sweatshirt was there. There was a bunch of people. I think Schoolboy Q was in and out. I don’t even know. Al’s crib is like rap camp. Everybody was in and out but there was a lot of people in the building that day and they were working with Al all day. By the time Muggs pulled out some beats, we were all tired. Ac passed out. A bunch of people left. It was a long day. I stayed up and did three joints with Muggs. I didn’t know what they would be for but I just did them. Action woke up in the morning and he jumped on two of them. I didn’t know what those songs were gonna be used for. I just did ‘em and didn’t think twice. About a month later, Muggs hit me online like, ‘Yo, those songs you did are pretty dope. Let’s do a whole project together.’ That’s how it happened.

On the Rocksteady Anniversary:

Smoothe and Trigger killed it. ‘Mega killed it. M.O.P definitely killed it. I’m a huge M.O.P fan. Watching them perform, I’ve been watching them and driving around listening to them for over 12 years. It was definitely a plus. I’ve been to a lot of Rocksteady reunions and this was one of the best ones. Slick Rick killed it. It was good. It was a dope show.