F3 - The Fanatics Tape (1992) & The Stretch Tape (1993)
Posted: Sun Jul 03, 2011 3:01 pm
A recent interview I did with Infinite, a Pittsburgh hip-hop legend.
[Picture: Infinite, Rockin' Rosh]
Words from Infinite:
01. Fanatics of Unique
02. It's Ya Birthday
03. We Only Wanted 8 (Str8 Outta Homewood)
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04. Riff Raff
DOWNLOAD - http://www.divshare.com/download/15213602-80c
My personal experience... Infinite hooked me up with severals discs worth of his music. Overwhelming to say the least. But with this first tape... I was blown away.
I was playing the role of transportation for Elzhi, of Slum Village fame, when he was in Pittsburgh for the Rhyme Cal competition in December '10. I figured, hell, might as well put him on to some Pittsburgh classics (rightfully assuming that he had an appreciation for the '90s hip-hop sound). I put on "We Only Wanted 8" and saw his manager's head bobbing uncontrollably. He was bugging out about how the beat drops at the end of every 2nd bar. Elzhi was feeling it too. I just smirked, and proceeded to nod my head.
This is part one of an on-going interview with Infinite, of F3/Ruff Chemistry. More words and music coming soon, including the history of the Ruff Chemistry label and Infinite's experience working with Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Mel-Man, and more.
-Rory
[Picture: Infinite, Rockin' Rosh]
Words from Infinite:
F3 - The Fanatics Tape '92I started DJing when I was about 12, me and two other kids. One named Rasheed, thatגs Rockinג Rosh, who was making beats and stuff, and then another dude Ed, we called him Icee Ed. We used to do old cabarets at the Colisseum and the American Legion down in East Liberty, and that was our hook, we were so young and playing adult music and we were professional, did weddings and everything.
Since I was 12 Iגve been immersed in music. We got our beat machines from Tuffy Tuf, everything Tuffy hadג¦ we bought it when he got something new. He had a Dr. Rhythm, when he bought the Alesis we grabbed his Dr. Rhythm. When he moved on to a SP-1200, we grabbed his Alesis. And by the time I was able to afford the SP-1200 they had stopped making them, so I paid an ass-load of money to have one built. They sold for like $2500, I think I had to pay $4500 to get one built, but I had it at that time cause we were out in the streets.
Rockinג [Rosh] got a full engineering ride to Penn State, big campus and everything. We took his DJing equipment up there and I made the mistake of giving him the SP and he flunked out. And from there it was music all the time.
Around that time was when we did our first white label tapes. The thing that held us back, well, me primarily, was that I always had one foot in the streets. And I believe that if youגre juggling youגre never gonna be the best at one thing, nah'mean? Youגre only gonna be so good at this and so good at that. So, I never made the decision like, Iגm gonna do this music whole-heartedly. ג¦ Sometimes they couldnגt get me to the studio [even] if they paid me. Other times when I was working a job, and wasnגt in the streets, the job interfered.
I can remember the first tape I soldג¦ It was to a dude thatג¦ You know, a customerג¦ Iגm standing on the block with this gray bag of tapes. His name was Tom, he just passed away, Rest In Peace. He pulls up, Iגm like, Tom I got this music, and these are full songsג¦ the גItגs Ya Birthdayג tape. He said, גman, this better not be no bullshitג¦ here, manג¦ ,ג he was likeג¦ reluctant to pay for it. So itגs the dead winter like, I think it was December of ג92, and after about ten minutes he spins back around the block like גWooo!!,ג and then peeled off. And thatגs when I said, yeah, we might have something.
I feel like we did a lot as far as the city. The entrepreneur thingג¦ most people were chasing deals. We were one of the first, wellג¦ Tuffy kinda did it firstג¦ to come out the trunk with it. But, I believe we were the first to likeג¦ get the whole city behind us. Because, our first white label came out in ג92, at the exact same time that gang banginג hit the city, so it was real territorial. It was hard for cats from Homewood to be on the Hill, or in Garfield. I donגt know how we did it but we crossed all those lines. You could go anywhere in the city and hear people banginג גItגs Ya Birthday.ג
I think part of it was that they didnגt know who we were, cause we didnגt put pictures on the tapes. To this day, even with Multiple Shots, we didnגt have our pictures on there, and that was me, because of the street shit... like, why would I be talking about this shit and put my picture out... nah... just never went out, andג¦ I think I was scared of fame a little bit, and looking back, I shouldגve been more outgoing and more of a self-promoter. Iגd have rather our company made money, or we made money just showing up and do the shows, rather than being all in the [publicגs eye]ג¦ that wasnגt me.
01. Fanatics of Unique
02. It's Ya Birthday
03. We Only Wanted 8 (Str8 Outta Homewood)
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04. Riff Raff
DOWNLOAD - http://www.divshare.com/download/15213602-80c
My personal experience... Infinite hooked me up with severals discs worth of his music. Overwhelming to say the least. But with this first tape... I was blown away.
I was playing the role of transportation for Elzhi, of Slum Village fame, when he was in Pittsburgh for the Rhyme Cal competition in December '10. I figured, hell, might as well put him on to some Pittsburgh classics (rightfully assuming that he had an appreciation for the '90s hip-hop sound). I put on "We Only Wanted 8" and saw his manager's head bobbing uncontrollably. He was bugging out about how the beat drops at the end of every 2nd bar. Elzhi was feeling it too. I just smirked, and proceeded to nod my head.
This is part one of an on-going interview with Infinite, of F3/Ruff Chemistry. More words and music coming soon, including the history of the Ruff Chemistry label and Infinite's experience working with Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Mel-Man, and more.
-Rory