Jay Electronica & Stickman Deny Ghostwriting for Nas

Poppa_Dock

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seriously though

NO I DID NOT WRITE A NAS VERSE....

that's all that has to be said

these rappers are fukking legit retarded in the brain
 

Asdfhhklpiyrewss

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To all the dumbasses still having doubts

VIBE: You dismissed all the talk about dead prez ghostwriting for Nas on your Facebook page. Having produced and contributed to the chorus for “Sly Fox,” what did you make of Dream Hampton’s comment that you did ghostwriting for Nas?

Stic Man: I don’t know. At the end of the day, I just feel like the people who are saying different things about the process of how that record was created I’m wondering, where were you at? To be totally honest, me and M1 went to Cali at the request of Nas. And we would be in the studio together working on stuff with nobody else there except Nas, who would come in and leave. I think people are making assumptions because of the content of the record. It’s gone from the collaboration that we did with Nas, which involved producing, idea exchanging and writing hooks, which is one thing, to us being ghostwriters.

As a producer can you talk about how you approached your collaboration with Nas?
To me, ghostwriting, as far as I know, is hiring somebody to write words for you to actually say. That didn’t happen. The way we got hired for Nas’ project wasn’t clear up front. M1 was in L.A. before I came to L.A. and he was like, “Nas wants to bring you out here to work on this project.” I remembered thinking we were just going to do a song together. But I later found out we were there to work in general: production, writing and ideas to help develop some of the songs on the album. So of course I’m thinking, “It’s called the ****** album so that means you want dead prez type songs together, right?” But it was revealed to me that Nas wasn’t looking for that. He didn’t want us to rap. He wanted help with beats and concepts. And that surprised me because I’m thinking, “You want beats??? Of all the people to make beats for, you want us to make beats?” I was like, “Wow.”

So this wasn’t the typical guest spot?
No. To me we were there to make whatever contribution we wanted to make. So I was like, “shyt…I’m playing beats, I’m coming up with some song ideas…I’m going to do whatever.” And this is Nas, so I’m going to give my best and give my all. Me and M started making dead prez songs in some of those sessions because there wasn’t a clear direction of what Nas wanted [laughs]. But later on Nas would come in and say, “I know I want to do something that would get at FOX News.” And he would tell us, “Just play me some shyt…what ya’ll got?” We are talking about way beyond “Sly Fox.” There was a moment he even expressed interest in signing dead prez to his company. My impression was we were forming a team. That’s how Nas presented it. But as far as the rumors, people are off-base. They are all based on assumptions because of the content that we are more [associated] with than what Nas does.

Can you talk about a specific instance of how a Nas/dead prez song came together?
Even some of the songs we gave input on, in terms of hooks and phrases, it was Nas’ vision in terms of knowing what he wanted. He’s the one that came up with the concept for FOX News. I would have said, “fukk FOX News…let’s do a song about something else.” [laughs] But this was a Nas project, so that was the box we were put in terms of how he wanted us to input. He wrote his verses. We just brainstormed about different aspects of FOX News (“Sly Fox”). I work 24/7—so as soon as I knew that, I started writing hooks just to present an idea. Because that’s what a producer does.

Do you think the concept of producing in hip-hop equals—make a beat and give it to a rapper to rap over?
Yeah. But when I produce I compare it to producing a film…that was my role on Untitled. That’s what I took away from the tracks that I worked on. But Nas was the director. It was his vision on everything. My job was simple: can you help make this happen whether it was music or concepts. The only thing is they didn’t want [the standard] dead prez/Nas collaboration. They didn’t want to have me and M on the record with Nas. We were there as producers and collaborators.

So there was no period in time when Nas asked you to write a verse for him?
No. Take “We’re Not Alone.” That was a beat and hook that I already had for dead prez’ Information Age album. But because it was Nas we just felt, “Hey, man…let’s just give our best.” He happened to like “We’re Not Alone” and he wrote verses from his own point of view of what that song was about. My view of “We’re Not Alone” was about our connection to the environment and each other. But Nas’ take on the song was different—he was talking about aliens…he took it there. And that’s why I say I was more of a producer than a director because I would have taken that song to a different place.


In the end, what has this whole Nas “ghostwriting” talk taught you?
People don’t understand what [traditional] producing is. I’m kind of still like, “Wow.” I’m trying to understand what’s the big deal and where it’s coming from. It’s weird. I’m like, “Hmmm…what’s going on here?”

Dead Prez
 

Drew Wonder

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seriously though

NO I DID NOT WRITE A NAS VERSE....

that's all that has to be said

lol exactly, they gave statements that a politician or lawyer would've used and in the process only sparked further debate

but the fact is, both Nas stans and Nas haters had their minds made up before anything was said, all Jay Elec and sticman did was make it easier for them to spin shyt with their vague "this appears to answer the question but really doesn't" statements

the truth is, unless we were in the studio at the time NONE of us will know for sure. this aint gonna hurt Nas' legacy in the long run, like most internet controversies it'll be forgotten in a few months and then brought up every now and then on hip hop message boards whenever an Internet troll feels like riling a Nas stan up

but i just find it funny how some people here are speaking so confidently on this topic as if they actually know for sure wtf went down. at this point its strictly "he said, she said" shyt. people here will front as if their basing their opinion on the so-called validity of the people speaking on it when really it just boils down to their stannery or hatred of Nas
 

John Hull

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I admit, I had a question about Nasir writing skills before this 'controversy' but now that shyt has semi-played out I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. :skip:

One thing is for certain. If the people in the studio with Nas at that point dispute the rumors then you would have to be a special kind of fukkboi to side with a groupie over the nikkas who made the music.

Plus she already got ethered on Facebook /thread

hampton-stic-man-conversation_00.jpg
 

Takerstani

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I didn't think it impossible because some people who have been known to ghostwrite for others, have had people write for them but I still thought it was b.s. Now I'm as sure, because of the wording. Nas should clear it up.
 

iPod Raheem 2.0

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To all the dumbasses still having doubts



Dead Prez

If I had an extra rep, I would rep you right now. This is a dope post. Gives fans more insight into what that creative process and collaboration looked like.

Let's be clear, though, this statement is so much clearer and detailed than what was said earlier. That sticman FB post and Jay Elec tweet raised more questions than it provided answers.

You can count me among those who are gaining a different appreciation for what producing can entail and what these kind of collaborations involve.
 

WOLF2007

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Hiphop only genre that has no respect for its legends. If this was true why didnt she expose this back then.. trying to fukk with dudes money.
 

H.S.

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Hilarious to see fans turn on Nas after two decades in the game. Over tweet and an uninformed blog.
 

E-MAC

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What's there to talk about really, all this has done is just prove that most people are gullible idiots who will believe anything they read. Not to mention that the sheer lack or reading comprehension is amazing, even when people make blantant statements refuting the rumors people still want to act like there is doubt. That is simply mind blowing to me, you have to truly be on something to not understand a simple denial or you're just a hater.
 

iPod Raheem 2.0

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Oh, y'all don't want to talk about this shyt anymore? lol

I want to hear from Jay Elec now. Not because I need to hear from him to disprove the ghostwriting allegations. That shyt is in the bushes. I actually never felt one way or the other, but was definitely intrigued by what this reveals about the creative process in rap music and what this could mean, if true, for Nas's legacy. I'd just like to hear about the process for making Queens Get the Money (my favorite record on the album), and what discussions they had for Jay Elec producing the whole album. shyt is interesting to me. :youngsabo:
 

prophecypro

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Its a non story.
He probably got helped with some concepts and that'as the "writing" part, but in terms of his lyrics it was probably Nas with some direction.

Look at it like this, since No ID claims Nas wrote all his stuff himself for Life is Good and the features he's been on the last 12 months, we can say he's at his best writing on his own.
 
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