SUPASTITION: A Different Caliber

25 year old Supastition got the rap bug at the tender age of 9, when he first heard Dougie Fresh’s "The Show." After stints on such labels as Lo Key Records (owned by Kurtis Blow) and Mends Recordings, Supa has shared microphone duties with such rap acts as Pumpkinhead, Bad Seed, Jean Grae, Yaggfu Front, […]

25 year old Supastition got the rap bug at the

tender age of 9, when he first heard Dougie Fresh’s "The Show." After

stints on such labels as Lo Key Records (owned by Kurtis Blow) and Mends Recordings,

Supa has shared microphone duties with such rap acts as Pumpkinhead, Bad Seed,

Jean Grae, Yaggfu Front, Apathy, and Danja Mowf.

Now signed to indie label, Freshchest, Supastition

hopes to break from the underground and make a dent on the national scene.The

rapper is preparing to release his album, 7 Years of Bad Luck which will

chronicle his trials and tribulations as an MC.

AllHipHop.com: What’s up with your album

7 Years of Bad Luck?

SUPA: It’s doing good. It could be doing

a lot better. The label kind of stuck the album out there with out doing a 12”

first. By the time DJ’s got the 12” they were like when is the album

dropping and I tell them the album has been out since August. We will probably

do a second single soon along with some remixes.

AHH: What do you think about Underground artist

getting commercial airplay? I know at this point it is nonexistent almost. But

do you think its possible?

SUPA: Actually I support that cause a lot of

commercial radio stations here play my music in there mixshows and its like

a lot of college radio shows don’t really support this type of underground

music that I make. The play the more abstract than anything. So now it’s

like commercial radio is our only outlet. It’s like we are being pushed

out of the underground.

AHH: Yeah, the abstract is definitely dominating

college radio.

Supa: There is a place for it, but I don’t

think that should be underground hip-hop. A lot of the emcee’s I have heard,

they lack a lot of the fundamentals like rhyming on beat and just being creative.

Then the production most of the time has no soul to it.

AHH: Are any of those cats making any money being

abstract?

Supa: A few are because they have a fan base.

The Def Jux cats I think they picked up where Rawkus Records left off. Rawkus

left a sour taste in a lot of Underground cats mouths because they wanted to

do something bigger, so they kind of left a void there until Def Jux came in

and took this “ Backpacker crowd”. A lot of them make their money

mainly off of touring.

AHH: Tell me about the first single "The

Waiting Period?"

Supa: I had my first recording contract when

I was 16 and then I had another recording contract back when I was 19. I’m 26

now and I just got the Freshcrest deal maybe a year ago. Before that I was signed

with Rasco from Cali Agents label. The song basically describes what every artist

goes through. Everybody that is a DJ, MC or producer can feel that song because

we’ve all been over looked; we have always watched people with less talent

make it. I basically just documented everything that I went through.

AHH: What do you think the future of Underground

music is? Where do you see it being around 2005? Far as making money as an Underground

artist where do you think it will go?

Supa: I think the abstract music will kind of

fade away because for one it doesn’t have standards. Anybody can do it;

you don’t have to be a certain level of emcee to do it.

AHH: Tell me about the one cut one your album

featuring the sample from “The Queens of Comedy?"

Supa: I have one daughter with my baby’s

mother which was my first kid, here first kid. That is my only kid. After that

she had 5 or 6 children after that by maybe 3 or 4 different guys. Once I think

someone was talking to her about me and was like “oh he’s nothing,

he’s a bad example, bla, bla, bla”. Up to that point I was always

quite about it because I said I was always going to give her that respect. The

situation went down where one of here kids died at 4 years old and the Dept.

of Social Services came in because all the kids had lived with her at the time

and took all the kids away. So my mother and me had to fight to get my daughter

back because they were treating it like I

don’t exist. She went to trial and ended up getting off on probation. So

that song basically let people know the whole situation and how it went down.

It was saying basically don’t call somebody out for being a bad father

when I’m the only father that is there for any of your kids. Everybody with

a baby Mama must feel that song.

AHH: What do you think about vinyl? Will it be

around for all the Hip Hop , Reggae and House DJ’s or this CD thing will

take over?

Supa: I think vinyl will be here forever man.

I noticed a lot of other DJ’s are getting the CDJ’s (A Cd turntable

made by Pioneer) but they are getting it as an extra. But I don’t think

it will replace it ever.