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  • 17
    Apr

    Some Good Words w/ Ill-Literacy

    Filed under: im king, interviews by andy cool
    Tags:ill-literacy, im king, interview

    These guys have performed around the world. I got a chance to meet with them and talk to them about their upcoming projects. Ill-Literacy really impressed me with how professional they were with everything. They are working with their own sound and trying to breathe fresh music to our ears. Good luck with the rest of your tour fellas and look for upcoming things with IM KING and Ill-Literacy.

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    Beef Stew:How did the group get it's start?
    
    N.I.C: The three of us were all born in the same hospital with natal teeth
    (full sets of teeth), and our parents met through an infantile dental
    program that was provided for babies like us. It's a condition that occurs
    with one in every 2,000 babies...the hospital is huge, and we were the
    "lucky" ones!  
    
    Dahlak: Yeah we're some special mothafuckers.
    
    Drizzletron: Touche, Dahlak, touche.  Our parents went their separate ways,
    but always stayed kinda connected.  We ended up reconnecting through the
    spoken word scene when we were all in college...must've been the WISDOM
    teeth hah!
    
    Beef Stew:Where do you guys originate from and how has the response been to your
    material?
    
    N.I.C: Dahlak's from Africa.
    
    Dahlak: I AM from Africa, biatch!  But really, I was born in Houston.
    Raised in California my whole life.
    
    Drizzletron: Yeah we're all California raised.  Like those raisins.
    California Raisins.  It's funny, we get booked everywhere BUT California.
    Mostly in the East Coast and Midwest, and the South's been warming up to us.
    Cali never wants to pay us.  It must be the teeth thing.
    
    Dahlak: The response has been sometimes laughter, sometimes enlightenment,
    sometimes it's an Asian dude asking me, "What's the most confusing day for a
    black guy?  Father's Day." *shakes head*
    
    Beef Stew:Has there been any difficulties making your mark as a spoken word group?
    
    Dahlak: No.
    
    N.I.C: Yes.  See, it's like this.  Dahlak likes chicken.  Adriel likes
    komboucha.  I like rom-coms.  If you put that together, it makes for an
    untraditional blend.  And what people expect from "slam poetry" is not
    exactly what we give.  Cuz we do us.  Feel me.    
    
    Drizzletron: I think what Nico is trying to muster up from his
    incomprehensible way of explaining things is that spoken word's already an
    obscure artform to a lot of people, and we approach spoken word from an
    obscure angle.  So our fanbase hasn't always been comprised of the same
    group of people who are normally into spoken word.  We get a lot of
    responses like "I don't normally like spoken word, but I fucks with ya." And
    at the same time, if you were to go to, like, the poetry slam championships
    or something and mention Dahlak's name, chances are they would think that
    you were cussing them out in Vietnamese.
    
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    Beef Stew:What do you love most about your craft?
    
    N.I.C: Talking to people.
    
    Dahlak: I like that people get together to talk.  That in this world of
    technology, people still get together to talk. 
    
    Drizzletron: In the end, that's really what it's about.  Entertaining people
    and captivating them in a way that will make them want to continue the
    discussion even after the show, or after hearing a track.  Worldwide
    dialogue, baby!
    
    Beef Stew:How would you classify your fashion sense, were does it come from?
    
    Drizzletron: I live with a seven year old...and he matches more than I do.
    So wherever he's getting his fashion sense from, I get the leftovers.
    
    Dahlak: I aim to be timeless and universal.  Most of the time, it's time
    sensitive and independent.  
    
    N.I.C: That didn't even make sense.  But I would define my fashion sense as
    generally poor.  It comes from trying to follow Kanye, and being broke.
    
    Beef Stew:Speaking of fashion what is your favorite piece from the IM-KING collection?
    
    Dahlak & N.I.C.: That purple jacket
    
    Drizzletron: I'm diggin my Heist shirt.
    
    l_3dd22d1f60d1719e3d21aad58b67887c
    
    Beef Stew:How was your meet with the IM-KING family?
    
    Drizzletron: Hella fresh!  It's always great to meet people who are
    interested in imagining art in new ways, and y'all definitely do that.  I
    feel like nowadays art is so much about the self-hustle that
    cross-inspiration suffers.  But when people who are open intersect, it's
    magic.
    
    Beef Stew:Where would you like to see your music in the next couple of years?
    
    Dahlak: Honestly, I just wanna get better.  Music to me is about progressing
    as a person...to be more articulate, to be better equipped, to conjure
    emotions by the music I make.  I want people to see my development and my
    growth...for people to appreciate my music, and then look back and say, "he
    was even good back then, and I see how he got where he is now."     
    
    Drizzletron: If by a few years, you mean a few centuries, I'm tryna have my
    music in the same songbook that "London Bridge is Falling Down" is in.  It's
    gonna be like, "Mary Had a Little Lamb," "London Bridge is Falling Down" and
    "Gentleman's Kool Aid".  I want to make music that captures the moment, and
    defines our culture.
    
    N.I.C: Yea.  Ditto to both.  I'd also say, if everything went my way, Miley
    Cyrus' iPod.    
    
    Beef Stew:Who have you not worked with that you would like to?
    
    Drizzletron: Outkast.  Bjork.  Feist.  Ebony Bones.  People who reimagine
    genres, and redefine music...who create sound.  
    
    Dahlak:  Stevie Wonder, Kanye West, Jay-Z...the list goes on.  What I want
    more tho, is them to wanna work with me.  
    
    N.I.C:  Yes.  While we're dreaming, man, hella folks.  Esthero.  Kurupt.
    Outkast and Jay-Z again.  Evanescence.  The list does go on.  and on. 
    
    l_bb568e1c7b2713711f6f5c7c46816c88 
    
    Beef Stew:I've been to one of your shows and it's completely mind blowing where does
    the energy come from?
    
    N.I.C: Redbull...sometimes Jameson.  
    
    Drizzletron: We're not really creating energy...People see us at shows
    right, and sometimes they're reminded of their childhood.  Like you know how
    kids can run around for hours and shit and not get tired...so it's less of
    us getting energy and more of us not allowing the wackness of adult life to
    take away the shit we were born with...that natural electricity feel it.  
    
    Dahlak:  You gotta understand.  We do the same set over and over again...at
    least for the particular tour we're on at the time.  In order to make it new
    to the audience every time, it's gotta be new to us, it's gotta be fresh to
    us.  So we gotta inject it with that energy.  I think that's where the
    energy comes from, attempting to make it new to us every time.  We also
    drink Redbull.  
    
    Beef Stew:What most do you want people to know about iLL-Literacy?
    
    Dahlak:  That there's a complex underlying theory that guides our work.
    It's a philosophy that we have built (and are continuing to build) through
    years of discourse and relentless questioning.   I believe it will become
    more and more evident as we progress as a group and as individual artists. 
    
    N.I.C.:  Two things.  One, it's not for show.   And two, we like reading and
    drinking.  Sometimes doing both at the same time.  And when making music,
    there ain't nothing wrong with that.
     
    Beef Stew:What can we expect from iLL-Literacy in the future?
    
    N.I.C.:  Lego heads...it'll all make sense soon.
    
    Dahlak:  A good show.  A great message.  Beautiful music.  And hopefully
    more fans.
    
    Drizzletron:  A brand new way of thinking about entertainment.  Our goal is
    to make you see like you have never seen, hear like you have never heard,
    and funk like you have never funked.
    
    If you can see this, then you might need a Flash Player upgrade or you need to install Flash Player if it's missing. Get Flash Player from Adobe.
    Download Link: Dahlak ft. N.I.C. - Never Know
    6 Responses to “Some Good Words w/ Ill-Literacy”
    1. Nirav Sheth, on April 17th, 2009 at 9:38 pm Said:

      Dahlak likes alot of chicken. Last 2 times I hung out with him, he had a styrofoam container filled with chicken. And he ate pieces throughout the day. I think he even eats chicken for breakfast …

      Much love iLL-Lit! Cool interview here.

    2. Dahlak | Official Site, on April 18th, 2009 at 1:31 am Said:

      [...] we should have taken this IM KING interview a little more serious. We don’t sound like assholes, do [...]

    3. Tamika, on April 20th, 2009 at 11:43 am Said:

      Good to see these guys shining, I heard of them through Paloma!

    4. dove16, on April 24th, 2009 at 4:41 pm Said:

      awww… my boys are getting all grown up! Entertaining interview, love it :)

    5. Parath, on April 30th, 2009 at 12:53 pm Said:

      ill-lit does interviews like none other…

      by the way guys, “never know” is on my top 25 most played on my ipod. track is FIRE [tryna see it performed live tho...]

    6. Jaylin Imram, on January 31st, 2010 at 3:21 pm Said:

      Great article. There’s a lot of good information here, though I did want to let you know something - I am running Mac OS X with the current beta of Firefox, and the layout of your blog is kind of flaky for me. I can read the articles, but the navigation doesn’t function so well.

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