
Joe Scudda is known mostly as the sort-of-country (and white) emcee who shows up unexpectedly on Hall of Justus tracks and delivers unforgettable, often-hilarious guest verses. This time, though, as part of the four-man rapping cartel Reservoir Dogs with fellow Hall of Justus emcees Rapper Big Pooh, Chaundon and Jozeemo, Scudda is finally steering the wheel. We asked Scudda a few questions about the upcoming Reservoir Dogs mixtape and his acting career.
INDEPENDENT WEEKLY: This seems like a very no-holds-barred project where everyone is just getting some very angry shit off their chest. Whatโs the reason for the collaboration? Whoโs idea was this?
JOE SCUDDA: It was Pooh and Big Dhoโs idea. You gotta keep shit in peoplesโ iPods nowadays. You have to pump mad shit out. It took about five days. It was just us straight spittinโ and gotdamn rappin. There was no rhyme or reason to the shit, so we were just running around in the studio. It was a platform for everybody to showcase where theyโre at right now with their bars. Itโs just straight rap. Itโs just us going in and jacking somebodyโs beat. But we didnโt aimlessly rap over joints. We reworked some songs and had a little fun with it. We took the Jamie Foxx song โBlame It (On The Alcohol)โ and talked about girls with no โAss-At-All.โ [Editorโs Note: Really?] We just wilded out and banged out a damn mixtape.
Why not just make this an official album? It seems like the whole mixtape idea is a little played out.
We took a whole bunch of people beats that arenโt ours.
Seems like this idea of a supergroup was put together before with the โSlaughterhouseโ project. Would you call this that, or was it just a matter of four friends making a fun album?
I read a lot of the stuff thatโs on the blogs, and people are always like, โOh great, another supergroupโ or, โThese muhfuckas are trying to do the Slaughterhouse thing.โ For one, it wasnโt like we were all separate dudes that had our own crews and didnโt fuck with each other. This is all H.O.J. [Hall of Justus] shit anyway. We didnโt fabricate a group. Two, it wasnโt thought-out and planned. Everybody can rap. You got Chaundon on there givinโ you the punchlines. You got Pooh steppinโ his game up crazy. He was already nice, but now heโs on another level. Jozeemo is bringing it extra hard. Me, Iโm just talking shit, like Iโm normally doing.
Even though this is a mixtape, this is probably the first project with other emcees that youโre a part of where youโre not just the โguest artist.โ Does this mean that weโre on the way to seeing an actual solo LP from you?
The solo is pretty much finished. We probably just have a couple of more joints to do. It should have already been done. Itโs 90 percent done. I got a record Iโm doing with Statik Selektah.Weโre already halfway done with that.
Is that gonna be an album or a mixtape?
Nah, thatโs gonna be an album. Statikโs doing the beats. Iโm rapping. Pooh is doing a project with Black Milk and . . . Iโm trippin, I almost forgot: Weโre about to drop the Triple Play 2 EP, which is me, Chaundon and Jozeemo. I donโt know if you remember a couple of years ago when we dropped Triple Play and it was The Away Team, Pooh and L.E.G.A.C.Y. Weโre doing Triple Play 2 with me Chaundon and Jozeemo. Each of us have four songs on there. Out of all the songs on Reservoir Dogs, we each put all of our individual singles from Triple Play 2 on Reservoir Dogs.
Four emcees is enough, but did you guys manage to sneak in any guest appearances?
We got one guest: Darien Brockington singing a hook, thatโs it.
Did you assign yourselves characters from the actual movie, Reservoir Dogs. Which โMisterโ are you? You sort of remind of Mr. Blonde just because he seemed to have the most style.
Itโs funny you say that: As far as the visual aspect, we kept it true to the movie, but as far as the music, itโs basically us just doing what they did in the movie. But weโre gonna shoot videos for the mixtape which will be true to the movie. Actually, if weโd planned it out tremendously, we would have done it and probably wrote it as those characters. But we went in to it as a mixtape, banged that out and then weโre like, โWell, now what do we call it?โ
You got your hands dirty in the acting arena with an appearance in The Shield. Do you plan on pursuing acting more in the future?
I got my hands a little dirty. I should have got more dirty than I did. I didnโt really go hard like I should have after The Shield. Iโm gonna dig into that real good after all these albums get put out because that shit was super fun and checks keep comin when you act.
On Reservoir Dogโs first single, โFamily Affair,โ your voice sounds different. Did you do this on purpose? Youโre not pulling an Eminem stunt on us where you put on an unusual accent all of a sudden, are you?
Itโs probably all these gotdamn cigarettes I be smoking. It changed up a little bit, man. When you first start rappinโ, you just rap. But then you get more involved in what youโre doing, and you start mastering your craft, and you fall into what works best for you and what sounds good to you. I rap more like how I talk now. When everybody first heard me, I was fresh out. I hadnโt been rapping but for a couple of yearsthe rapping came out however it came out. But now I rap like how you would hear me talk.


You must be logged in to post a comment.