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We’d done records before, but we’d never been totally left alone to do an album. Hank and Chuck and my cousin Eric did like 98% of the ‘Yo! Bumrush The Show’ album – just the experience of trying to understand what it’s like to record in a studio. Everybody was new to doing an album in the studio. It’s easy to do a single, ‘cos you do your single and you out! Now you gotta go back in – the next record, and the next record…If you notice when we got to It Takes A Nation…, the sound was much bigger and much harder, and it wasn’t as thin as Yo! Bumrush The Show because we had an understanding of what it was like to do an album. The concept of albums – each song is different. You’re trying new things, they lettin’ us go. Russell is just like, ‘Yo, make your record. Go ahead!’ Even when we did the stuff with Vanguard Records – ‘Check Out The Radio’ and stuff like that – we went in there on our own but we had some guidance. Even though we were basically left on our own, but there were certain things that were takin’ over by the engineer, because he’s done records before.
So we were the new jacks in the recording studio. We’re learning what a two-inch machine is. We was learning that you have to calibrate the tape machines. Yo! Bumrush The Show album we understood certain things, but we were never was left alone to just, ‘Go ahead!’ It was all trial and error. We did ‘Megablast’ and ‘Timebomb’, then when we got to ‘Takes A Nation…’ – ‘OK, we know what to do now!’ If you notice, Takes A Nation… sounds a whole lot more confident because we knew what to do!
Everybody’s first album…if you go in there without a producer – like the records that are made today, it’s the producer that makes the album and, ‘You young ‘uns get on the track. I know what to do – just put your vocals on and I’ll fix the rest’. Back then, we was doin’ the beats, making the records, learning how to track, understanding what syncing was – with the tapes or the drum machines – or playing it live and keepin’ in time. But as we kept goin’ back in the studio, doin’ more and more and things, until we understood what it was about. Then it became second nature, and then it just came to the point where with Takes a Nation… it was like, ‘We’re gonna do the incredible that no one else is doin’!’ Inserts and interludes, and makin’ it hot like you at a concert! Showing people how big rap was growing, so that’s why we put the live concert on there, so people could really see that this is big everywhere. We selling-out the stadiums – because nobody think we can do stuff like that. Back then, when Flash and ‘em were on the road, they had to go out with Rick James, ‘cos the R&B cats were only ones doin’ the stadiums. Now rap cats are doin’ the stuff!
Then the Fresh Fest tour came along with Whodini and they were showing it on TV, then we put it on records to even enforce it, just like, ‘Yo, these are big!’ We did it at the Brixton [Academy] – the whole show was recorded there – we just took the inserts. And nobody did inserts like that, to be a concert on there. To my knowledge, that album was the first one that did inserts from concert snippets. That set a lot of trends where people started doin’ inserts. Then after we did the Ice Cube album…that was ‘Hollywood’ inserts! We made little sub-movies inside of there! Then after that, everybody tried to do that.
