PDA

View Full Version : Mike Barnes ......peep the interview with Scorpio (Mr Ness) Furious 5



DJ Skillz
09-18-2003, 10:22 PM
Interview with Scorpio (Mr Ness) Furious 5. (Lifted weights with him at Jack La Lane in the BX and never knew he talked that much. LOL)


JayQuan : Who was the first person that you heard Emcee , and what year did you start ?



Scorpio : Timmy Tim & Clark Kent...Around ' 77 .



JQ : I know originally it was Cowboy & Flash , then Mel & Creole made the 3 Emcees , were you the fourth Emcee to join ?



SC : Yes...



JQ : How did you meet Flash ?



SC : Actually he came to our junior high school,me & Mel went to the same high school & Flash came with Mean Gene so their crew could battle our crew Breakdancing . Me & Mel used to B Boy together .



JQ : Kurtis Blow told me that at one point him & Kool Kyle were down with Furious , and you were called the Serious 7 , is that accurate ?



SC : Not really , Flash used to Dj at disco parties with Eddie Cheeba & Hollywood , so Kurtis used to go do shows with Flash. We may have done a show as the Serious 7 , but it wasnt an official crew , not at all .



JQ : What were the cultural & musical differences between the Bronx and other buroughs ?



SC : Musically no one was doin it like the Boogie Down ; they were into disco . They would rap over a whole disco record , and the Bronx was official raw Hip Hop . We couldnt do the clubs down town because our music was just too raw .



JQ : What was the atmosphere like at the jams , before rap records came out , was it Peace ?



SC : Nah actually it was the same as whats goin on now . Stick up kids , cats sellin drugs , allthat . It didnt come as much to the Emcees , cus every Emcee had a crew . Everybody knows as far as the Bronx , we had the ruffest crew in the Bronx - the Casanovas . As far as being Peaceful , people definintely came to party , but you might get stuck up in the bathroom and shit like that. We were playin for murderers , stick up kids and all that. Overall if you didnt know what was goin on , you would think that it was just a nice lil party .



JQ : Yeah Mel told me that cats would make you shout them out .



SC : Thats how shout outs started !! Straight up stick up kids ; even though we knew them ,they thought that what we were doin was some soft shit . To let people know that they were in the house , they would grab you by the neck - " yo man say so and so in the house " . Thats how the phrase in the house started . It started from stick up kids comin up to us , Herc etc and sayin say so and so in the house...and you would definintely say it !



JQ : As far as the stage show was there any one particilar person who formatted the routines ?



SC : It depended . Overall we would just practice , on the roof - wherever and throw our ideas together . Sometimes it was one person , sometimes it was a group effort . But we were always a step ahead . When everybody was just rhymin we were chanting , when they were chanting we brought out the beatbox. It was no where by far anybody in the Bronx that could match our talent - no matter who it was - Funky 4 , Fantastic , Cold Crush - if they were honest they would admit that we were way beyond .



JQ : Furious was one of the original groups outside of the Herculords right ?



SC : With the Herculords - Timmy Tim & Coke La Rock they never rhymed ; they just said lil phrases like "yes yall youre now listening to the sounds of Kool Herc and the Herculords" . But we were the first group in the Bronx to do full rhymes to the beat . If we own any patent ,its that rhymin' to the beat .



JQ : On that same level - Cowboy - God bless the dead - I always hear that he was a good crowd motivator . I've heard that it was between him & Starski who coined the phrase Hip Hop.



SC : To my knowledge it was definitely Cowboy . The phrase could have originated with Kool Herc , but Cowboy was the first to do the " Hip Hop hip to the hippety" thing. He used to do the army thing to the Hip Hop . So it was definitely Cowboy. Herc coined B Boy , but Hip Hop to my knowledge was Cowboys .



JQ : Caz told me that this kid was about to go to the army and Cowboy was teasin him like to the marching rhythm....Hip /Hop/ Hip/ Hop .



SC : Yeah thats how he started it...that was it .



JQ : How did you feel about how " We Rap More Mellow" came out ?



SC : Well it was our first time in the studio and Terry Lewis didnt know about Hip Hop , thats why the music was like that ...it came out wack.



JQ : What was your first reaction and honest opinion when you heard "Rappers Delight" ?



SC : Honestly I was mad as a fu*k , because as far as rap we were the first official rap group. We were selling out the Audobon back then with no records out . There are artists now that can't sell out the Audobon . For them just to come out like that - nobody heard of 'em , they were fake Emcees , they were put together - it was like a smack in our faces . People approached us way back to make records and we didn't , at that point , but after Rappers Delight we stepped up and said we gotta do this. Thats when we did Superrappin the official way . We were the ones to lead the styles & trends , and if we came out first I dont think that record would have made it. We set the pace for what was official and that corny shit woulda never made it . When you heard Superrappin , you heard technique . Five cats passin the mic back and forth without anyone knowing it - that would have been the standard . Rappers Delight made it possible for corny motherfu*kers to come in the game right off the bat . A few years later we hear "Rappin Duke" , that kind of shit would never have come out !



JQ : Did your deal with Enjoy come from Spoonie tellin his Uncle about Furious ?



SC : Nah we didnt even know Spoonie . He may have mentioned us to Bobby , but Bobby came to the Audobon and saw us sell it out with no records out , and that did it .



JQ : Do you feel that Superrappin would have been more succsessful if Enjoy had more push like Sugarhill did ?



SC : Yeah , but for what Superrappin meant at the time it was a hella record . Our vision was only the 5 buroughs anyway , so Superrappin just solidified us . It was just a routine that we used to do off the beatbox , so we didnt have to even think about it. W e did it in one take . Every record by the original Flash & Furious Five took 1 or 2 takes at the most. 5 mics in the studio, everyone there at one time . People wouldnt have a clue listening to the records . Sugarhill Gang would stay in the studio day and night doing like 50 takes. We did Freedom in one take !!



JQ : What was the vibe like at the label with you and other groups - I hear your voices on "Thats The Joint " , " 8th Wonder " and other joints - was it a family vibe at Sugarhill ?



SC : The vibe was competition, no one liked anyone else . We out shined cats doin the back ground on their own records. That was the vibe no matter how it appeared . Nobody liked us , and basically we didnt like them . When I hear people talk about Pac & Biggie they say " I wish it could go back to fun like it was in the old school " - thats the biggest bunch of bullshit ! Really we spoke to no groups - Cold Crush , Fantastic , Funky 4 came from the Bronx ; we never kicked it , everybody had their own camp. The only reason we did start speaking was because Run & them came and that whole era , and we were being faded out so we needed each other .



JQ : How was the experience at Sugarhill coming from Enjoy ?



SC : At first it was good , you got to see the fruits of your labor with the quickness . Freedom was on all the stations 2 weeks after we recorded..it was great for a real short time . Probably till after we did the Message , that was the beggining of the end of our group .



JQ : I will ask you the just like I asked Mel , do you think that if Furious had been in its original line up when Run Dmc dropped "Sucker Mcs" that they wouldnt have been as effective ?



SC : Our original unit would have re adjusted and brought it to 'em ...not anything personal...but thats what we do , like boxers . When they came stripped down we couldnt even put any music out , and they were able to capitalize.



JQ : Do you feel that if Sugarhill had released stuff like "Step Off" ,"Busy Bees Groove" and "Gotta Rock" before ' 85 the label would have lasted longer ?



SC : Definitely...thats the original shit that we come from - just rapping over drum breaks...not all those guitars and horns...even though they were hot records . Like beatin' on a car rhymin, that was the raw shit. Thats where Run and them killed 'em....they went back to the park style.



JQ : Was there any audition for you to be in the Furious 5 ?



SC : Nah Flash didnt have a home base , and the park where he started playin to develop a homebase was where we lived - 23 Park . Thats where we lived..I lived on one block , Mel on another then Creole , Cowboy lived up the block . That was the main park , and where Flash set up . Once Mel , Cre & Cowboy started rhymin' I was their boy. I wasn' t rhymin but I was right there . Once I started writing it was nothing for me to say let me get the mic & rhyme. Mel said we're gonna put you down . At first Cre & Cowboy didnt want me down , Mel said he's gon' be down , talked to Flash & thats it.



JQ : I thought that your position in the group was like the cool nigga - with the braids , the name belt with freak on it ....it seemed like you brought style to the group .



SC : That was the chamber .Thats what made it so hard when people singled Mel out . They don't know how the chemistry evolved , or what we were like together , cus we were all so different . Not tootin' my horn but ; I was definitely the one who brought all the style to the group . The style , the wild shit...like I was on the level of like the Prince or Rick James of rap.



JQ : You were originally Mr. Ness....was that short for finesse ?



SC : Nah , it was Elliot Ness . I changed it right after Superrappin cause I took on a whole new persona and Mr Ness didnt fit anymore. I was gettin' so many girls at one point I was just a stinger so I called myself Scorpio.



JQ : The song Scorpio from the Message Lp was about you right ?



SC : Yeah no doubt ....Mel did the vocorder. My thing was always show no shame with everything . I heard Rick James say it on a song and I just went with that . It became my slogan .



JQ : Is Furious part of the class action lawsuit against Sugarhill Records ?



SC : Oh yeah....no doubt . Everybody is involved from the label , but we were the ones touring Germany , London & Paris. Funky 4 never went to Germany ...maybe on some Wild Style shit , but not as far as your music being in demand in those places and forcing you to go . Treach 3 ; even though they were a great group ; their music never took them to those places . We toured the world - it wouldnt have been a major lawsuit without our group. The other groups dont have enough in their catalog . Its like how many did you sell 50,000 ?



JQ : Wheels Of Steel was incredible , and it gave cats like me who are outside of NYC our first ever taste of scratching. I know it was 2nd nature to you being around it , but it blew our minds. Did you have any idea that you were making such an impact around the country & the world?



SC : Nah not really to us it was an alright record , but nothin great because we've seen Flash do better stuff in the parks - its like ok its comin out on record no big deal. We couldn't visualise the impact until we started touring . 30,000 - 40,000 people losing their minds . People just look at it like we were the first rap group , but everything we did was revolutionary . Whats normal today was not then . So for us to go on stage with Cameo , Rick James etc - people saw just turntables and mics for the first time , they were like wheres your band !!! They couldn't grasp it . We went through a lot to make whats normal today a reality .



JQ : What do you think of so called Hip Hops short memory span and the treatment of the original school ?



SC : I love the culture of Hip Hop , but the people are the the most bullshit people. The new school got so much shame about old school . Any other thing from basketball , football ,boxing people before always have a position . In basketball Magic Johnson or whoever will be on the sidelines , announcing or something . Hip Hop is the only thing where its like what you did doesn't mean a thing...thats the saddest thing about Hip Hop . Its a shame thing , like because we got jerked they dont wanna deal with us.



JQ : It's funny Bonnie Raitt...the white blues chic went and started an organization that gets royalties for cats like BB King , Howlin Wolf etc. Do you think a Jay - Z or someone who knows the history could do somethin' similar ?



SC : They could do that shit...once a year throw a fundraiser , for the cats that came before them , we want to still do music , but they label it as that old school stuff...they washed up , so they could do somethin' if they feel that our time has gone . Im not sayin that they owe us but they really seem to have forgotten who started this shit . Even other old school cats I talk to want to change their name and come back out . Im not changing my name ; im not gonna sneak back in . They do a big rock & roll song and get the original artist to do it with them . They take our shit and don't put us in the video or nothin' . Duran Duran redid While Lines and put us in the video ,what do these rappers think ; we gonna make them look bad in the video? If I speak on it im a hater . Thats how they channel all of their justifications by callin you a player hater 'cus you dont have what they have . Thats why I rarely do interviews because if you speak on it they say you' re bitter .



JQ : Was the split just over royalties , or the Message only havin Mel on it ?



SC : Once the Message came out somethin was just ripped from us . It had Duke Bootee on it , who wasn't even in our group. That took a whole lot from us . Then Sylvia came in and pampered up to Mel - she killed us with the divide & conquer . When enough was enough he wouldn't walk.



JQ : Is it true that initially everybody left , then you & Cowboy came back after Whitelines ?



SC : When I first left I went to Russell Simmons he was just starting Def Jam. LL and me were the first two artists signed to Def Jam. I got a contract from Lyor & Russell they wanted me to bethe same , just to tone it down as far as my style of dressing . I agreed on certain things , as soon as I had a contract Sugarhill sent a letter to Russell sayin that im officially with them and I can't sign anything . I didn't come back because of Whitelines . I never wanted to step foot back on Sugarhill , but they werent gonna let me live . I was prepared to give up everything ,my friendship with Mel , all of it and move on .



JQ : What was up with the names on the records after the split - Grandmaster & Melle Mel , Grandmaster Melle Mel...etc



SC : Sugarhill was trying to manipulate the public . They were hoping the public wouldn't see that Flash wasn't there anymore. Our group was the most confusing group , we had 3 extra members after the split that nobody knew and looked like faggots . None of them rapped or did anything, we were just keeping the punk rock image . People are still confused .



JQ : Was your Punk Rock image from touring with groups like the Clash ?



SC : Nah just from playing with Cameo and those groups , they had wild suits on. It just started from stopping at a truckstop and buying one spike . It went from that to full blown .In that era Bambaataa was dressing the same . You couldn't do shows and wear jeans and sneakers . It was entertainment , the Commodores & everybody was dressing like that . People in the Bronx might not have understood , but they werent out there touring the world .



JQ : Was there any animosity from other crews after Furious blew up nationwide ?



SC: No , the Bronx Emcees looked at us kinda like heroes . Actually thats how Cold Crush got their reputation ' cus we left the Bronx . Thats how they really came up.



JQ : Van Silk told me that y'all had a crew called Furious Lovers with Kevie Kev from Fantastic.



SC : Yeah....at one point Creole was messin around with drugs a lot & Kev was in the group to replace him . When Creole came back we couldnt be 5 no more so listening to Kev , and feeling ourselves we called ourselves Furious Lovers .



JQ : Was Rahiem the main one singing on the R&B flavored joints?



SC : Yeah" She's Fresh" and some more stuff , but all the background on " It's Nasty" , " It's A Shame" no one else came in the studio , its all us on every Furious 5 song . No one told us what notes to sing ...we were out there.



JQ : What was your favorite Furious release from the Sugarhill label ?



SC : Freedom . That was us in our rawest , purest form . They left us alone to do what we did .



JQ : When Freedom goes off Cowboy is going accapella , I never wanted that record to end . Did he go on a lot longer than what we heard?



SC : He went on for awhile , they had to fade it out. It was unrehearsed , he just killed it .



JQ : On the Sugarhill Records version of " Flash To The Beat " how come its just credited to

Flash ?



SC : The way Sugarhill worked , if you didnt kiss they ass they would leave your name off the records . After all that stuff we wrote a lot of it only Mel was gettin publishing . Thats why when it was time to stand strong , thats where he was gettin his bread & butter from . At that point he was spoiled , they gave him an American Express card & different things .



JQ : What Emcees are you feeling right now ?



SC : The best 2 rappers to me were Biggie & Tupac . I like Outkast , Ludacris, Jay Z , KRS One & Doug E Fresh is dope he dont even need a record. To me Tupac was the best ever , I dont think there will ever be one to touch him .



JQ : How did the "Air Jordan" song come about ?



SC : I was just a Jordan fan to death , and on a whim I was like im gonna do a song about him. I took it to Aurthur Baker , it coulda been a great record . My thing was tryin to hook up wit Mike myself , but Aurthur & them at the time didnt know how to make that happen . The cat that used to make our clothes knew Michael . When Chicago played the Knicks , we waited and waited and the cat he ran up to wasn't Mike & we missed him . Same thing with " Black Shades" & " Gangster Boogie " I knew the guy who owned Sutra records , and I went to him , told him that I had an idea for a record and we did it . I was good at doing stuff like that - hustlin' .



JQ : What sparked the reunion Lp On The Stength ?



SC : Me & Mel was walkin down Morris ave in the Bronx , Flash drove by ,we hadn' t talked in awhile , he had his group and the people at Elektra were pushing for him to get the original group back together . He called Elektra and said we were ready and we did it . It wasnt out of love for Flash or Mel , they just wanted the original group back . I thought " Gold" was hot and I liked " Leave Here" . They didnt promote it because after it was done a lot of money was missin'.We went to Elektra to settle it and after that they didnt promote it at all . On one hand it's good to be a part of our group , but on the other GMF& F5 is some of the stupidest motherfu*kers'cus they the only people that hold grudges for 10 or 15 years. Really thats the only reason that we're not out there now . Flash & Mel can't seem to work together ...each wants the group to be theirs . We are legends but only together . GMF&F5 was a movement , but since Flash has the name Flash ; everybody says" you were the one making those records"...so he gets Source awards and everything and he aint even a rapper ! If niggas could check their egos we could get some of this money out here . Look at the Rolling Stones & Aerosmith they can break up , and come back and get this money - we are the Rolling Stones of Hip Hop . You can't blame the new school or even Sylvia . Sylvia aint been in our lives in 17 years !!!! The most dissapointin' thing in my career is what Mel & Flash put our group through , its unspeakable !!! I didn't have the power to stop it , neither did Creole or Rahiem .



JQ : Are you saying that the original beef is that Flash left & Mel stayed ?



SC : Yes , and Mel used the name Grandmaster . Sylvia had the rights to it .



JQ : After the group split how was your relationship with Sylvia & Sugarhill ?



SC : I was just a nigga in the lobby . If they had business to talk they would call Mel in the office , I never got anything . It got to the point I didn't feel comfortable rhyming around them . I was just around them cus I was cool with Mel.



JQ : Thanks for your time...Its an honor...One

Tee Cee 13
09-18-2003, 11:24 PM
Nice interview, good post.....

Mocambo
09-19-2003, 09:58 AM
Informative. Thanks

Mike Barnes
09-19-2003, 10:34 AM
Say Skillz, Good lookin as always on the articles money, Mr Ness is right on time when he mentions Stickup kids being on the hawk back in the day, Shootouts and stick up kids went hand and hand at alot of spots all over New York in the 70's, Like Brooklyn Amory, La Chelet in Queens, The Constellation,Hotel Diplomat(Legendary Manhattan spots), Stardust Ballroom in the Bronx,etc, The Casanovas's were Buckwild with theirs back then, Taking cats off for their jewels(Your Money/Coat or whatever you had of value, Cats/Young ladies had alot of fun times back then, Even though the danger of getting stepped to was always around.
Later
Mike Barnes

Tee Cee 13
09-19-2003, 11:06 AM
Yo skillz you be putting some really nice stuff on DHP keep up the nice work Yo.... graemlins/thumbsup.gif

kev
09-19-2003, 11:45 AM
Thanks for posting that up, Skillz.

sammyrock
09-20-2003, 11:12 AM
Yes indeed Dj Skiilz ,excellent interview.. hail.gif smile.gif

Rob.J
09-20-2003, 11:46 AM
Excellent.

Real good reading.....actually throws a lot of the peaceful conceptions ( oh we found hip hop and breaking/mc'ing and all of the bad shit ended ) out of the window...which was force fed to us in the UK.

cheers

rob

muel
09-20-2003, 03:12 PM
Thank Skills,
Always dig your posts smile.gif

Fletch
09-22-2003, 04:29 AM
Yes, there used to be shootouts and beefs with crews during the early days. Plenty of shootouts at the jams. I've seen them and ran myself.

Shout out to Scorpio for putting that in perspective (the old school wasn't always "fun". It was rough). However, I don't think that the shootouts/beefs/crews was to the extent it is now. It was rough, but today is a whole different animal. Peace.