He is ranked as one of the most influential rappers in history. A political firebrand, a poet, a father and a tongue twisting genius but in a recent interview I was lucky to sit in with A. DeCurtis and learn some things outside of the obvious public and structured pre thought responses given by such a talent. The interview gave Nas a platform to emphasize the authenticity of Life Is Good. He mostly reiterated the “stay true to yourself” mantra as per usual. Nas appeared open and honest, especially when discussing the lack of belonging he feels when visiting both childhood friends in his old Queens neighborhood and industry contacts in Hollywood. The evening felt like a late night television interview. He touched for some time about his relationship with Amy Winehouse, his spiritual thoughts and his feelings about being some what public about his family through music and how it has effected his relationship directly with those involved.
I was surronded by die hard Nas fans, hip hop enthusiast and serious bloggers. Don't get me wrong I enjoy his music, respect his talent enough to buy his music legally but some of the things he touched on I wasn't familiar with ie; his favorite songs he has written: Black Zombies and Star Wars but nonetheless I still felt intrigued because he spoke about these things with passion and great wittiness. It wasn't so much the blatant answers he gave but the story to reaching to those repsonses. He said "I'm notoriously known for choosing bad beats so in turn I don't make many "hits" but thats not what drives me" Its lyrical content. I'm no rap savant but its pretty obvious Nas' first work much like many influential still popular artist have no format or structure in songs. The rhymes go on and on with no real breaks, loops or chorus. I can respect that. The art within the craft is admirable.