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10/19/10 Sir Jinx Talks 2Pac Busting

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10/19/10 Sir Jinx Talks 2Pac Busting

Postby embm » Oct 19th, '10, 17:13

Sir Jinx Talks 2Pac Busting Guns, "Uncle Suge," And The Lost Kool G. Rap Album

by Paul W Arnold

posted October 19, 2010 at

11:54AM EDT | 0 comments


Exclusive: In part two of DX's

epic convo with the OG track-

master, Jinx details his

experience rioting with 'Pac,

his friendship with Suge, and

The D.O.C.'s documentary.

In part one of Sir Jinx’s

revealing conversation with

HipHopDX the veteran beatmaker

revealed that his 17-year

delayed reunion with Ice Cube

did not come to fruition as it

was originally intended for I

Am The West, (explaining why

the once musical partners no

longer speak to one another).

Dr. Dre’s cousin also revealed

his recent work with the good

doctor for Detox, (work that

included the assistance of

Jay-Z). Additionally, the

onetime Ruthless Records

“scrub” further revealed his

work in the late ‘80s with a

then-teenage Snoop Dogg, as

well as the work he put in a

little over 20 years ago

attempting to get the

Hieroglyphics crew signed to

Ruthless.

Now, in the conclusion to DX’s

discussion with Sir Jinx, the

man born Anthony Wheaton

shares one more story from his

historic past, this time

recalling his hilarious

experience rioting with 2Pac

in Los Angeles during the 1992

rebellion. Jinx also reveals

if he can ever release the

long lost original recordings

he made with fellow rioter

Kool G. Rap. The

producer/emcee additionally

explains why “Suge is my

friend,” why he is

rechristening himself “Tony

Villa,” and finally, what his

involvement is in the upcoming

documentary on the tragically

cut-short career of The D.O.C.



HipHopDX: I want to go back to

your Producer’s Corner feature

for one more bit of

information, something you

said that grabbed my eye.

You’ve got to be the only

person in this industry who’s

ever been quoted as saying,

“Suge is my man…” [Laughs]

Sir Jinx: I don’t know how you

grew up…but everybody got

either a uncle in they family

they don’t like, or a big

cousin, or a big brother – you

don’t like ‘em until the shit

go bad. At all the picnics

they fucking up…cursing people

out, but soon as that dude run

into your car in the

supermarket and five dudes

jump out, you not calling

Auntie Shay Shay, you calling

Suge [Knight].

DX: [Laughs] Uncle Suge.

Sir Jinx: Uncle Suge. And if

you don’t want it done right,

don’t call Suge. So, that’s

the cold thing when people say

that Suge whatever, whatever -

I mean, he did what he did. If

everybody was in his shoes,

then they could say what kind

of person he is. Everybody say

[Suge had something to do

with] the situation with

[2Pac] and all that, but

nobody don’t know. I know

Suge, and [the conspiracy

theory that Suge Knight had

2Pac killed] don’t add up to

me like that. And I ain’t in

it – don’t put [me in it] –

but I see the nigga eye-to-eye

and it’s hard [to see him in

that way]… I been knowing Suge

since he was a limousine

driver. And he never swung

[at] or hit me or jumped me.

[But] then, I never put myself

in that position anyway.

‘Cause I always had my other

shit going [on]. And he was

always happy for me because I

didn’t have to follow behind

[Dr.] Dre… He was like, “You

know I always respected you,

man. You went and did your own

thing, man. Most of these

niggas sideline Dre, kiss Dre

ass…” And I’d be like, “Yeah,

but he’s still my cousin.” I

feel like he can be the king

and I can be the prince. I

don’t want his world. I don’t

want them pressures that he

has to deal with…




DX: One more thing I learned

from your Producer’s Corner

feature is that you produced

Kool G. Rap & DJ Polo’s Live

and Let Die in its entirety

before it was remixed by the

Trackmasters and others [due

to sample clearance issues].

So would you ever consider

reaching out to G. Rap to

release those originals?

Sir Jinx: Um…they still got

sample infringements in [the

tracks]. Because see…we

finished that album, [but]

they [didn’t release it until]

a year later [in 1992]. The

Trackmasters…when they went

back in and took the samples

out, [after] I gave them the

masters…I don’t know. They

released a whole different

[album] than I gave Cold

Chillin’ [Records]… I gave

Cold Chillin’ something else,

and they went back in and

remixed a lot of them songs.

[But] with [Kool] G. Rap,

that’s my nig right there. I

would love to work with G. Rap

[again], but he gotta wanna do

it.

DX: Speaking of G. Rap, when I

spoke with him back in ’08 for

his DX feature he recounted

for me the story of you, he

and Tupac “…riding around,

poppin’ they burner off out

the window” during the ’92

L.A. riots. [Laughs] Just to

keep it a hunnid though, was

‘Pac really riding around,

shooting out the car window?

Sir Jinx: Put it like this, we

saw a dude in a security guard

outfit and ‘Pac pointed the

gun at him and laughed. That’s

the intensity of the street

[on] that day. It was a dude

standing at the bus [stop] –

‘Cause we driving down

Wilshire [Boulevard], I’m

driving my car [and] he

letting it loose through the

sunroof: boom, boom. I mean,

it’s shells in my car. I

actually took ‘Pac to my

neighborhood over there off of

Western [Avenue] & 106th

[Street] and that’s where he

got more bullets from – ‘cause

he emptied his gun in my car.

[Laughs] And for some reason

it wasn’t wrong. [Laughs] …

That was the day I was

supposed to work with 2Pac.

That was the only day, because

after that he got into some

shit and then we never went

back into the studio… The day

before [the Rodney King trial

verdict came down] he was

working with some other guys

in the same studio. [And] so

the next day he was off from

them, and I was off from

working on G. Rap’s shit.

[But] that’s why G. Rap was

there [in the studio too]. You

know how you work with artists

[and they’ll] be like, “Let me

take a day off [from

recording] to write.” So he

took a day off, and that day

on [for me in the studio] was

supposed to be [me working]

with 2Pac, but as soon as we

[started] going through the

beats my homeboys come through

the door with like five hats

on they head like the Mad

Hatter, with arms full of

liquor, talking about “L.A. is

on fire.” And I’m like, “What

are you talking about?” I

don’t know nothing. We in the

studio…[but] I don’t watch

T.V. in the studio. So I

turned the T.V. on, [and]

L.A.’s on fire. We said,

“Okay, we’re gonna come back

tomorrow.” [Laughs] So we went

down to L.A. to see what the

fuck was going on. And then

while we was going down there,

while we riding down Wilshire,

boom, boom, boom, boom, he

dumping out the sunroof. So

then we go all the way down,

we hit L.A., we hit Crenshaw,

we in the middle of Crenshaw.

I parked my car in the middle

of the street, because

everybody has just parked

sideways like the world coming

to an end. We go into Tempo

Records – Tempo Records is on

fire! In the back, we get in,

[and] Tupac [starts] signing

autographs…signing his

records. I’m like, “C’mon!

Let’s go! Let’s go!” …[Then]

it’s like…some muthafuckin’ A

-Team shit, we jump back in

the car, [and then] we go to

the bottoms. We go some place

that I ain’t never been –

‘cause I grew up on like the

Crip side, so I ain’t have no

reason to be over there.

[Laughs] And they would spot

me out by just being from

where I lived. So we go over

there, the swap meet is up to

your shin in water because the

sprinkler system came on,

because some part of the

building is on fire. So we

slushing through the water,

getting stuff, doing stuff –

this nigga [‘Pac is] outside

taking pictures. [So finally]

we jump in the car and then

that was our day of [rioting].

That was my nigga. ‘Pac was my

friend…just like Suge is my

friend. [Laughs] I know some

of the craftiest people on the

planet, but…it’s better to

have ‘em on your team than

against you… [Some people

don’t understand] what it

takes to do business with

people like Suge. And some

people didn’t like 2Pac

[either]. But at the end of

the day, when something go

wrong, who you gon’ call?



DX: I appreciate this walk

down memory lane, it’s been

enjoyable, [Laughs], but I

need to go ahead and wrap

things up. But before I let

you go, I wanna get a rundown

of any new projects you got in

the works?

Sir Jinx: Well right now I got

a couple of things that’s

coming out. I done changed my

[performing] name… So I got

some music that I got coming

out [under that name]. And the

name is Tony Villa. And that’s

just like my alter-ego… I got

a bunch of cats that I work

with, and now I’m just gon’

come out with some good music

[featuring them]. Now you got

the Internet, [so] I don’t

have to slave myself to a

record company… So a lot of

the music that I’m working on

with the Tony Villa project is

just basically using the [new

technology of] the time. Like,

I would use the [technology of

the] time in ’89 [and] use the

SP1200 or…the Oberheim to make

my world come alive. Now I got

Reason…Pro Tools. So it’s just

a breath of fresh air. It’s

just like my album [back in

the mid-‘90s], Chastisement,

when I put that record out

[with features from] Gerald

Levert and Isaac Hayes, I

didn’t make music to compete

with people. I make music to

listen to [and enjoy]. So I

got the new project, the Tony

Villa project… [The] album

[is] called RSVP. That’s gonna

be coming out [soon]. It got a

lot of cats on it. It got

Kurupt on it, Jayo Felony, it

got Ya Boy on it, it got

Medusa on it, it got…King Tee

is on it, Domino’s on it… I’m

trying to take that little

hand that I got, that [Dr.]

Dre gave me, and put together

some good hot shit with the

artists that might not get no

deal. But you still wanna hear

Rodney O, you still wanna hear

what’s going on with Paperboy,

you still wanna hear what’s

going on with these other

emcees – Candyman – that’s

still hot. These dudes is

lyricists but maybe the time

has changed. But if they get

up to date with what’s going

on, then they gon’ be on some

records.

DX: [And] you’re gonna be

rappin’ on this…?

Sir Jinx: Yes, [as] a

performer, Tony Villa. And I

been holding it back so long

because the west coast will

make you feel stagnated

[creatively], until you go out

to Atlanta, until you got out

to Detroit, until you go out

to places and see what [the]

west coast did for the [whole]

United States. Then that’s

when I [started] figuring out,

“Okay, well then there is

another world for Sir Jinx.”

…Just reinventing yourself is

another idea in Hip Hop that

you get to do. Now if you

wanna ride that [old west]

wave of “What’s happenin’

homie?” then that’s good [for

you], but I like to deal with

the new shit… When the

technology caught up [to where

it is now], then I was able to

be able to produce myself as

well as do music closer to the

concept that I believe… The

song that I gave to [Ice]

Cube, [“Life In California”],

was a song that was on my

album [originally]. I just

took my vocals off and gave

him the instrumental… So I

shot him the [beat] with the

hook, and with Jayo Felony

[already] on it. And that’s

how he got the song. [But]

what he did to it after that,

that was on him. So that’s why

I [explained that] I never

talked to him – it was just

through the engineer or

through Brother Ron.




DX: We all have our personal

relationships that aren’t

where we want ‘em to be, [but]

it’s just kinda disappointing

to hear that you guys aren’t

like [back] in one room

[working] together.

Sir Jinx: I don’t even know

how to put it. I guess with…

the new people that he have

[working with him], he might

get a better vibe, a more

comfortable vibe. But we

actually scheduled time for us

to be in one room together,

and he didn’t make it. But I

don’t want it to [sound] bad.

It’s just how life goes… You

know [the Atlanta Falcons] got

rid of Mike Vick, [but] I’m

sure they feel it now.

[Conversation goes off the

record before resuming] That’s

with me and [The] D.O.C. I

been dealing with D.O.C., and

D.O.C.’s recreating that day –

that day when he came to

California [from Texas].

DX: He’s recreating – Like,

he’s making a movie or

something?

Sir Jinx: He’s making a

documentary on him. So he’s

getting all the cats together

[that were around him in the

late ‘80s]. And I’m the only

person – See let me tell you

something, if Cube never left

[Ruthless Records], I probably

woulda been D.O.C.’s deejay.

Because if you look at the

old, funny N.W.A. tapes with

them making fun of Cube, I’m

actually the deejay. We all in

it. It wasn’t meant to be a

disrespect. It was [just] that

everybody had a video camera

and they was making tapes

about each other. 

Purchase Music by Sir Jinx



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