Funkmaster Flex Interview Author: Adam Bernard
Funkmaster Flex has worked his way up to being, arguably, the most well
known DJ and radio personality of his generation. From his radio show on New
York's Hot97, to his car customization business, to his TV shows, Funk Flex
has his hand in just about everything that interests him. With Flex's new
television show, Funk Flex Full Throttle, having debuted on MTV this month,
RapReviews caught up with him to learn more about the show, his thoughts on
the current state of radio and payola, and where his last album advance went
(hint - it didn't go to making an album). Funk Flex also revealed his very
interesting prediction for hip-hop's three hottest rising stars, which
artist disappointed him greatly during their first interview, and why he's
following Justin Bieber on Twitter.
Adam Bernard: I know you have a lot of things going on, but I saw something
on your Twitter page that I think needs to be addressed immediately. You
follow Justin Bieber... What the hell?
Funkmaster Flex: Definitely. He sells a lot of records, so I'd like to know
what he's doing. Did you notice all of the people I'm following? It's a
different mix. I'm into a lot of things. I like to learn. I think it's kinda
easy to just follow a lot of things that are in your genre.
AB: When Bieber gets his driver's license will you have him on your new MTV2
show, Funk Flex Full Throttle?
FF: He's not of age? {*laughs*} Then I probably will. Did you ever see the
footage of him freestyling on Tim Westwood's show? It's funny. I think
that's when I started following him.
AB: How is Funk Flex Full Throttle going to be different from all the other
car customization shows that have been on the air?
FF: The difference for me is it has a little bit more of the reality of what
I do during the day. I've never really put that on camera. It's everything
that I do before the radio.
AB: Did you really trick out a Ford Fiesta for the show?
FF: I will, but I haven't done it yet.
AB: What are you planning on doing to it? Anything really crazy?
FF: I think our image of tricking out, I think a lot of people think Pimp My
Ride, and over the top, but for me, when you think customization and what I
like to do, think performance upgrade, suspension upgrade, body kit upgrade,
paint upgrade, sound system upgrade. It's important to talk about the
trends of where kids are right now, then you can understand my
customization. People want to feel more luxury in a smaller car that doesn't
cost as much to put gas in and doesn't cost as much to customize. Kids are
really leaning towards performance, hot colors, and in-car entertainment.
I'm definitely not thinkin of making it hokey.
AB: Old man question - when you trick out a car, how much does it affect the
insurance rates?
FF: Usually your insurance rate goes someplace high from the gate. Having a
red car costs more, eight cylinders costs more, more horsepower costs more,
if you have a top of the line car, those cars get stolen more, so they cost
more, but customization is really for the individual. If you put $20,000
worth of upgrades into your car your car is not worth $20,000 more. A
customization is really for comfort.
AB: Speaking of comfort, you've been comfortable at Hot97 for quite a while
now. Since you've been in such a position for so long, I'm wondering if you
could address the payola isue. How much does payola still affect commercial radio?
FF: I think things do exist; I think people do plane tickets, I think people
do gifts, I think people do that kind of stuff. How I started in the
business, I used to carry records for a lot of popular DJs and the one thing
that I saw was people taking money. That's why it was so important for me to
not just have other businesses, but in the beginning I was very keen on
becoming a big nightclub DJ because I knew that if I could make the
nightclub money, and go to the clubs and play, then I would never need
outside assistance. The way I talk crazy on the radio, and how sometimes I'm
a dick on the radio, I always knew I could be that personality if I didn't
take money. I always knew I could speak my opinion and say what I want to
say at all times. When you take money you can't be as opinionated as I am.
That's me talking about me, though. In 2010 I think it (payola) still
exists. I think people still do it. I think they're a little more secretive
because (former New York governor Eliot) Spitzer cracked down on radio a lot
more, so I don't think people do it as much, or as openly, but I think it exists.
AB: It's amazing he had the time to do that with everything else he was,
ahem, doing.
FF: It was an issue, and this is something about the internet that's so key
- it's payola free. You put music out and people can discover it. If enough
people discover it, then it becomes interesting. You can't pay people to
discover it.
AB: Unless you buy your own album so many times it ranks on the iTunes chart.
FF: At the end of the day that's like Soundscan scamming. I think where
radio is now, and people will probably get upset that I'm saying it, but
radio does not break records anymore. You know what radio does? It develops
careers and artists because the internet can't do that.
AB: So the internet will only get an artist so far?
FF: Drake can have ten records on the internet, but radio's what makes him a
star, radio is what puts him in a place where he can be seen to perform.
Radio is what plays all his records and tells you when his album's coming
out. BET and MTV is where you can see him and hear what he wants to talk
about. Even though we've lost control of the music, it's why certain radio
stations survive. My show has a young lady by the name of Miss Info who
gives news, and not just hip-hop news. The radio today cannot be solely
about the music, it has to be an information center. That's what the
internet is, it's not solely about the music, it's an information center and
(hip-hop websites) cater to a lifestyle. Hip-hop is sneakers, clothes, cars,
video games, watches, phones, gadgets. They might as well just call it
whatever's young. Hip-hop's whatever's young and cool.
AB: That being said, you noted that DJs don't break records like they used
to. With that in mind, is there any way for an artist who is supremely
talented, but has no budget for a radio promoter, to get commercial radio airplay?
FF: Oh yeah. I play records all the time. Drake was just hot... not hot, but
he was just clever and persistent. You have to be clever and persistent. And
you know what, your music doesn't always have to be super clever, but your
energy has to be clever and you have to have drive. Originally I got into
the automotive business because I planned on it to replace the music
business. I always have an attitude of hey, one day this is all I want to
do. What I love is, and I don't want this to sound cocky, but I hold that
radio crown and I hold that customization crown at the same time. I'm sure
you do a lot of interviews. How many DJs and rappers do you talk to that are
just trying to figure out where the next buck is coming from?
AB: A lot.
FF: And I don't knock that, man, but do you think Hot97 pays me a lot of
money? Radio doesn't pay nothing. It pays decent money. That's not why I'm
on the radio. I love being on the radio. Nothing beats the feeling when you
meet somebody, or you know somebody, that tells you about an artist you
haven't heard yet and you go to find the song to make your opinion on it and
if you love it you start playing it, and then you watch it to see if it
becomes something. It makes your day not humdrum. A lot of people who've
done as many years in radio as I have, they get a sour face when they hear a
new artist, but I love new artists because they bring new energy and breath
to the game
AB: In all your years at Hot97 you've had A LOT of artists come through for
interviews. Is there anyone you'll NEVER allow in your studio again?
FF: You want me to keep it one hundred, man? You know what, I'ma tell you
something, and please, it's important you print this right. There isn't
anyone I wouldn't allow in my studio, but I didn't enjoy my first interview
with Yung Joc. I felt that he was more interested in convincing me how
popular he was going to become than how much he loved the business, and I
was disappointed to see an artist that early in his career almost not
enjoying himself. I thought about that about two weeks ago. I saw him in the
airport, he was super pleasant, I talked to him, but I remembered that first
interview. It wasn't good for me emotionally.
AB: On "2000 B.C." Canibus said "watch Flex drop a bomb on it / about ten
times on it." I want to know, have you ever dropped the bomb on a Canibus
song ten times?
FF: I haven't, but I'm a Canibus fan. It's so hard though, man, because I'm
an LL groupie. When I was 16 I remember buying his records from the store,
and to meet him, to see him come in the Tunnel at the booth while I was
playin, it was unreal.
AB: I did an in-person interview with him a handful of years ago and when he
walks into the room it's like - it's fuckin LL Cool J.
FF: {*laughs*} It's bananas to see that guy. There's something about him. I
loved Canibus, too. I loved his style and the way he cracked that mic.
Canibus knows I love him. I was so torn in that battle, that was so hard for
me. You know who looks up to him a lot, J. Cole. J. Cole told me that's his
favorite rapper.
AB: Wow, that's pretty interesting. It's good to hear an up and coming
rapper is looking up to someone who isn't totally mainstream. Switching
gears a bit. A while back you had your own shoe with Lugz. Do you have any
new kicks on the way?
FF: No, I haven't been with Lugz in a long time. I did a couple underground
joints and that was basically it. I think that was a great time for me and I
loved doing it, but I think that time's up, man. It's like the albums. I
don't make the albums anymore. You know, I may judge people on what they're
not excited about when they're doing things, so I have to be honest about
myself. I was never excited to do those albums. They were always a marketing
tool for me. The Volumes, they were always a marketing tool in terms of
videos and promoting my name nationally. I had my last one, I did like 900K
or platinum, and I had to be honest with myself that it was time to stop. It
wasn't what I wanted to do and I was getting a little more unhappy as I was
going along.
AB: If you're not enjoying yourself then what's the point?
FF: I got a story I've never told anyone. I took my advance and my recording
budget for my last album to start my automotive business. I never recorded
the album. I took that money and I bought a warehouse, I bought equipment, I
got some employees and an office, and invested in myself and I never looked
back. I owe that label that album to this day.
AB: Maybe you can give em a ride in one of your cars.
FF: Hopefully.
AB: Finally, give everyone one artist to watch out for this year.
FF: Drake and J. Cole and I think Nicki Minaj. I can't give you one because
I don't think there's one, I think it's those three. The last Drake album
was just a mixtape, Nicki hasn't dropped an album yet, and J. Cole hasn't
dropped an album yet, and those three are, I think, highly anticipated...
and I don't think they're all gonna do well.
AB: Wait, what?
FF: I don't think there's room for all of them to do well.
You can find Funkmaster Flex online at FunkFlex.tv.
Originally posted: May 18, 2010
source: RapReviews.com
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