He was also instrumental <a href=”http://www.beatsukelectronic.com”>cheap dr dre beats</a> in creating some of LL Cool J’s biggest records. After his stint with LL, Bobcat also laid down beats for Ice Cube’s Death Certificate album, which many consider to be his greatest to this day. It didn’t stop there. DJ Bobcat also played a very important role in the <a href=”http://www.beatsdrdrebuy.co.uk”>beats by dre uk</a> early career of Tupac Shakur, serving not only as a mentor and a big brother, but helping to shape the sound of his 2nd album, Strictly For My N.I.G.G.A.Z. AllHipHop.com caught up with the legendary DJ Bobcat, who shared some very interesting lessons about the music industry, working with a top artists and his private musical library.At a young age I was blessed with the opportunity to meet Leon of the family singing group, The Sylvers. My sister Pam took me to their studio and their engineer began to teach me how to EQ sounds and other things. I was learning about songs just sitting around and listening to them. As it relates to me and how “I Need Love” was conceptualized, I would be at Uncle Jamm’s Record Store where Rodger Clayton had keyboards, fooling around on the Casio’s and the DX100. It was originally a song that I wrote called “Friends by Day, Lovers by Night.” I flew out to New York as part of The L.A. Posse to work with a Def Jam artist named Breeze. It was myself, Big Dad, Muffla and DJ Pooh. Breeze was supposed to be the up and coming LL, so Russell Simmons signed him. Just to throw this out there, we were the ones that also developed Nicky D and got her signed to Def Jam.
So we were working with Breeze and doing such a great job, that Russell asked us if we were interested in doing pre-production on LL’s next album. We said yes and started working on records with LL. I developed a friendship with him and started going over to his house every day and we became like cousins. One day we had a discussion about ballads and I told him to take his music to another level by having something with music in it for the female audience to embrace. On his first album he had a song called “I Want You” <a href=”http://www.beatsdrdrebuy.co.uk”>cheap dr dre beats</a> and it was dope but it was more of a B-Boy love song.That was fine but gangstas don’t care about that. Females are the ones that buy and listen to records and I was articulating that to him and he was in agreement.Absolutely, but that’s LL though. He will make you argue your point. He may later on agree with you, but he will make you argue.He never developed in to what he could have ultimately become. Jay-Z is an example of an artist that had a chance to develop and maximize their full potential and Pac and Biggie never had that chance. We were only able to see their greatness in only one stage of their lives. Who knows what they could have turned in to at 40 years of age?
The Interscope/Polydor single has to date spent 4 weeks inside the top three, holding at No 2 on last week’s chart, but has this week opened a 25% sales lead at the top, according to the Official Charts Company.Its success relegates James Arthur’s Impossible single to No 2, but the X Factor winner will be compensated this week with the track set to sell its one-millionth copy. Up to the end of business on Tuesday it was around 10,000 sales short of that target.One track not registering presently in the midweeks is Where Are We Now?, the surprise comeback single from David Bowie and being released by Sony’s Columbia label. This is because of an issue over its sales data between the Official Charts Company and iTunes, which is selling it exclusively (see separate story). It is hoped the matter will be resolved in time for the track to register in the full-week chart on Sunday.Jake Bugg’s self-titled Mercury album rises 4-3 with sales up 4% following his performance on Jonathan Ross’s ITV1 show last Sunday. Def Jam/Mercury’s Rihanna is up 7-4 with Unapologetic, despite weekly sales dropping 25%, while Ed Sheeran’s Asylum/Alantic album + drops 3-5, The Lumineers’ eponymous Decca album progresses 12-6 as Atlantic’s Bruno Mars slips 5-7 with Unorthodox Jukebox and Island’s US rock band Black Veil Brides crop up as a new entry at <a href=”http://www.beatsukelectronic.com”>beats by dre uk</a> 8 with third album Wretched And Divine – The Story Of The Wild Ones.