Is there any music that you wish the fans could hear?
There’s plenty of it. When we was working on “Guidelines,” he was always excited about all these other songs. He had this Madlib album, called Maclib. I opened for Madlib in Chicago last summer, at Pitchfork. So I’m opening for Madlib, and about 15, 20 minutes left in my set, Madlib pulls up. Pete Rock walks up as well. So I’m trying to focus and DJ, and Madlib gets on and 15 minutes into his set he just randomly plays a Mac Miller joint. And I turn to him, I’m like, “There’s more of these, right?” He’s said, “Oh, yeah, there’s a whole album. Maclib.” What! What! He just kept moving on with his DJ set. If Madlib decides to bless the world with that project, he should.
Last edited by Employee on Tue Oct 08, 2019 2:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Never was a Mac fan. But Ohno and Kankick are my homies. I was with Ohno this past weekend. He say's there's enough for an LP and an EP for whatever that's worth.
I totally misread this whole Mac thing. I never realized just how many reputable people really liked him or wanted to work with him. Here I thought he was kinda gimmicky at first and just extremely uninteresting most of the time.
Philaflava wrote:I totally misread this whole Mac thing. I never realized just how many reputable people really liked him or wanted to work with him. Here I thought he was kinda gimmicky at first and just extremely uninteresting most of the time.
What I heard from him was pretty cringeworthy. A cynic might speculate that those reputable artists that worked with him saw the possibility that he had more of a chance of blowing up than a typical rapper at his level.
Philaflava wrote:I totally misread this whole Mac thing. I never realized just how many reputable people really liked him or wanted to work with him. Here I thought he was kinda gimmicky at first and just extremely uninteresting most of the time.
What I heard from him was pretty cringeworthy. A cynic might speculate that those reputable artists that worked with him saw the possibility that he had more of a chance of blowing up than a typical rapper at his level.