Silkski
Silkski | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Jerome Evans Jr. |
Also known as | Silkski, Tha Don of All Donz, Silk Corleone, Tha D.O.D., Tha Drunken Tiger, Silkski Shawborn, Don Donnie |
Origin | Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, New York, Los Angeles, California, United States |
Genres | Hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, record producer, actor |
Years active | 1988–present |
Labels | Protect-Ya-Neck Records, Wu Tang Management, Da Gutta Ent, Street Scholar, Bungalo Records, Universal Music Group, Quality Records, Warlock Records, Capitol Records, Geffen Records, Priority Records, Def Jam Recordings, Milan Records, PolyGram, Columbia Records, Death Row Records, Dangerous Records, DSX Records, EMI Records |
Jerome Albert Evans Jr., well known as Silkski is an American rapper, song writer, and music producer who is widely known from his affiliation with Ol' Dirty Bastard and the Wu-Tang Clan, whose affiliates are well known as the Wu-Tang Killa Beez. Silkski is a PYN, Wu-Tang Management, Da Gutta Ent., Bungalo, Street Scholar, Universal Music Group artist and was a member of Brooklyn Zu before ODB’s untimely passing.
Biography
Silkski aka Tha Don of All Donz, Silk Corleone, Tha D.O.D., Tha Drunken Tiger, Silkski Shawborn was bred from the streets of Brooklyn New York, Staten Island, Queens, Harlem, and Midtown Manhattan; and on the west coast, Los Angeles California. He was put on by god-brother ODB, a member and co-founder of the Wu-Tang Clan and Brooklyn Zu; and became a Wu-Tang affiliate in 1995 while touring the world, writing, rapping and producing with Ol' Dirty Bastard. Silkski was later signed to Protect Ya Neck Records / Wu-Tang Management under John 'Mook' Gibbons.
He appeared on various stages, media events, radio, film and television with the likes of ODB, RZA, Ghostface Killah, Method Man, Raekwon, Gza, Cappadonna, 12 O'Clock, Brooklyn Zu, Prodigal Sunn, 60 Second Assassin (emcee), Killah Priest, Zu Ninjaz, King Tee, J-Ro, and Tash from Tha Alkaholiks, Flava Flav, Ice-T and Rhyme Syndicate, DJ Tomekk, DJ Pooh, Digital Underground, Skee-Lo, Eddie Griffin, Reynaldo Rey and a variety of others. Silkski has also made appearances on numerous Wu-Tang related mix- tapes, albums and DVDs including: DJ Scarface Presents “The Congregation “Hosted by Cappadonna; “Wu”, The Story of The Wu-Tang Clan; Wu-Tang Clan, Disciples of the 36 Chambers Chapter 2; V3 Wu-Underground; Rock the Bells; Wu Brick presents Wu World Order Vol. 2; and Future Chamber Ent presents D.L.A.H (of Hellkeydoe) “DEJA WU” Hellkeydoe Part 2.
Silkski also featured on albums, done out of the United States, such as “Neplatna Identita" Hodne Tvari / Many Faces;[1] 10th Anniversary (CD Collector); and Russia Vs USA “Spy Games” Wu Edition, Compiled By WTCF.[2]
While appearing in an abundant amount of Wu-related events, Silkski made appearances on Vh1 “Inside out, ODB on Parole”; “The Disciples Of The 36 Chambers” (DVD) concert from ODB’s last major Wutang concert July, 17, 04’ before ODB's untimely passing; “Rock the Bells”[3] movie documentary of the same concert now on DVD; The Wu-Tang Story, and documentary Dirty, One Word Can Change The World; and BET’s “Access Granted” with Ghostface and RZA from Ghostface featuring Missy Elliott “Tush” video.
Silkski is no stranger to making gold and platinum recordings. In 1995 Silkski performed and produced the song “Techno Boy” for the movie score and soundtrack of the film Copycat, which stars Sigourney Weaver, Holly Hunter, Dermot Mulroney, and Harry Connick, Jr..[4] The film grossed $32,051,917 in the United States, and £2,023,443 in the UK.[5] In 1996 Silkski produced the song "Pimp'n Ain't EZ" for the movie and soundtrack of the 1996 animated feature film Beavis and Butt-head Do America, starring Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, Cloris Leachman, Robert Stack, Greg Kinnear, Richard Linklater, David Letterman, and Tony Darling; which grossed $20.11 million in its opening weekend,[6] and grossed a over $127,118,386 in North America box office sales. This soundtrack also feature songs from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Ozzy Osbourne, LL Cool J, No Doubt, Engelbert Humperdinck, and the late Isaac Hayes. Silkski also produced songs that went over platinum on the Bloods & Crips "Bangin' on Wax” albums,[7][8][9] as well as an album for Ice-T that went gold.[10]
Early Years
During his adolescence and preteen years, Silkski was known as the kid with the sleepy eyes. People around him would call him sleepy because his eyes use to droop down or appear as if he was high or falling asleep. But at the age of 12 he decided that he wanted a nickname that sounded cool or slick. He chose the name Silk because older people use to say that he was smooth as Silk; because he had the wavy hair, smooth talk, and swagger with the way he dressed. Although he liked the name Slick, he decided to go with Silk because it was cool, sounded slick, and at the time was original. During the early stages of hip-hop; b-boys, emcees, d-jays and graffiti artist were giving themselves nicknames with a common tag at the end; which was a letter of the alphabet or something that gave that individual a swagger that represented a form of expression, a character, or alto ego of themselves. At that time, growing up, he would frequently wear ski jackets, ski hats, beanies, and ski goggles, because of the cold weather in New York; which in turn contributed to his persona and ultimately became apart of his name. He put the two words together “Silk and Ski”, and that is what formed the name Silkski.
“The son of a singer and a music rep, Silkski says he has music in his blood. When your father is a R&B and doo wop singer and your mother is in music promotions, you naturally grow up with a feel for the industry," said Silkski; but even though Silkski’s family is so well connected in the music world, it is not what got him his start; just the opposite, really. “She (Silkski’s mom) tried to keep me in the nice area”, said Silkski, “but I went the other way.””[11] Silkski enjoyed the grimey life and cringed away from the luxuries his mother provided. He adopted all of the elements of hip hop in its early stages (b-boy, d-jaying, graffiti tagging, and emceeing), rebelling against his parents' R&B, disco, and Doo Wop music.
Silkski would rebel against most of everything his mother would say, cut school and sneak into the movies in Time Square on 42nd street or Broadway; jump on back of moving commercial trucks to get a tow home; hop the train; and would often Hang ten on the subways that went over 100 miles an hour between stops. On the A train express that went non-stop from 59th Street in mid-town Manhattan to 125th Street and Broadway in Harlem; he would hang off the back of the train on the last car for a thrill ride, holding on to nothing but the door knob with his feet barely touching the platform. With his stunts and rebelliousness, it led to one of the most defining moments in Silkski’s life; his mother turned him over to the state. “I felt like no one cared,” said Silkski. But the group home he was put in was in some ways a blessing; it showed him that there were people who cared about his well being and wanted him to succeed. When his mother came back for him, he refused to go home. His next months consisted of jumping between the streets of New York and the group home (Mount Lorreto) “Mission of the Immaculate Virgin” in Staten Island. Eventually, Silkski left the group home and moved in with his cousin who lived in the roughest area of Jamaica Queens. While in Jamaica Queens, Silkski along with others contributed to the negativity of Queens inner city streets. Although he lived in a grimey area, he stood out with his extreme tagging graffiti techniques and style of dancing, which led him to be nicknamed "Kid Boogie". After moving from his cousin's apartment, Silkski landed on the streets again.
“I told this shelter that I was a "teen" alcoholic so I could get a place to stay,” said Silkski.[11] After several months in the shelter, Silkski moved in with a friend in Harlem and took his dancing to the next level. In Harlem he connected with famed breaker, Larry Love of the Zulu Nation, and changed his dance name, from "Kid Boogie" to "Gangsta Boogie". (This was the time when Grand Master Flash and the Furious Five were presumed the hottest thing in hip hop.) Silkski was right there breaking and tagging with some of the biggest names in the hip hop world. “Even though I was a baby compared to Grand Master Flash, I was still there from the start,” said Silkski. “I knew everybody from the gutter to the top”.[11] Larry Parker (Larry Love), known for the song "Larry's Dance Theme, by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five connected Silkski with the owner of one of the biggest hip hop club in New York at the time, Harlem World; “It was great,” he said, “I was breakin’ on the dance floor all the time, even when the club was closed.”[11] One day while he was practicing his breaking, Kurtis Blow came in to set up for a show later that night. “I was like, ‘Kurtis, check me out,’ and I would just electric boogie,” said Silkski.[11] That night he was on stage dancing for Kurtis Blow. From time to time, Silkski would move to live with his grandparents in Los Angeles, California, going from New York to Los Angeles, back and forth, bringing and taking new hip hop trends with him. In Los Angeles, his good friend and cousin, Dougie D, reunited Silkski with Kurtis Blow, which led Kurtis to take Silkski on a forty city European tour with him. After the tour Silkski continued to work with Kurtis Blow for a number of years. He danced as a member of his crew, was a dee jay at major events, and worked behind the scenes as Kurtis Blow’s producer.
Later in California, Silkski joined Ice-T’s rap group Rhyme Syndicate. He started as a rapper producing his own music, but his beats were considered so good that many artists and record labels wanted him to produce their tracks. He produced songs for the Bloods and Crips’ albums, produced songs for Geffen Records, Def Jam Recordings, PolyGram, Milan Records and was signed to Death Row Records under Char Jones as a producer. While at Death Row Records, at Can-Am Studios in Tarzana, California, he worked with the likes of Tupac Shakur, Snoop Dogg, The Lady of Rage, Kurupt and Daz Dillinger from Tha Dogg Pound, and many others until Tupac Shakur’s untimely passing.
External links
- Wu World Radio
- Wu-World.com
- Silkski Da ill Killa Bee Show
- Rap News
- Silkski, ODB, and Buddha Monk at YouTube (Adobe Flash video)
- Silkski with Kurtis Blow in Hallo Berlin performing Back by Popular Demand, 1988 at YouTube (Adobe Flash video)
- Silkski on Howard Stern in '03 just before ODB was released at YouTube (Adobe Flash video)
- Rapsoulution Magazine Issue 24
Discography
Film
- Rock the Bells[3] (2006) Denis Hennelly, Casey Suchan
- Disciples Of The 36 Chambers (2004) Wu-Tang Clan
- “Gold Diggin' For Love of Money” A Documentary Film[12] (2009) Brass Ring Enterprises
Television
- Howard Stern Show (2003) Howard Stern
- Upside Down TV (2003) Johnny Neurotic and Bridget "the Midget" Powerz
- The Roof T.V. (2003) (Telemundo)
- Access Granted "Tush" video Ghostface and Missy Elliott (2004) BET
- Inside out, ODB on Parole (2004) VH1
Music
Mixtape / Album | Song | Year |
---|---|---|
Co-Defendants - Criminal Season -Exclusive- | Part Of The Zoo [13] | 2012 |
VA Wu-Brick Presents Wu-World Order Vol. 2 | The Hajj [14] | 2011 |
Ice-T's The Final Destination Vol 1 "The Cure" | Tha Cure | 2011 |
Russia vs USA - Spy Games compiled by WTCF | Goodbye Weapons [2] | 2011 |
Co-Defendants - Killa Season | Intro of Silkski [15] | 2010 |
Dj Scarface - The Congregation (Hosted By Cappadonna) | Sista Love (What Happened) [16] | 2009 |
Neplatna Identita - Many Faces | Reloaded; Fake MCS [17] | 2009 |
Shawneci – Killa Angelz | Fist of The Drunken Tiger [18] | 2009 |
Wu-Fam - Myspace Exclusives Vol. 7 | Silkski In Paris [19] | 2008 |
Dj Swarm - Wu-Underground Vol. 3 | No Money [20] | 2006 |
Albums & Singles
Title | Credit | Label | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Alcoholism[21]Single Painkillas (Silkski & Tash) ft. Papa Chief
Single |
artist | Da Gutta Ent. | 2013 |
Sista Love (What Happened)[22][23] ft. Cappadonna
Single |
artist / producer | Bungalo Records, Universal Music Group | 2008 |
Zu-Chronicles, Vol. 2 - Like Father, Like Sonn "Watchin Me" | producer / artist | Duck-Lo Records / Chambermusik | 2005 |
24/8 Tha EP (Strickly For Tha Underground) | producer / artist | Protect-Ya-Neck Records, Wutang Management, DaGutta Entertainment | 2003 |
Tha Don Of All Donz[24]
Single |
producer / artist | Protect-Ya-Neck Records, Wutang Management, DaGutta Entertainment | 2003 |
No Money
Single [24] |
producer / artist | Protect-Ya-Neck Records, Wutang Management, DaGutta Entertainment | 2003 |
Bloods - Bang'n On Wax: The Best Of The Damu's | producer | Quality Records / Warlock Records / Capitol Records | 1997 |
Beavis and Butt-head Do America "Pimpin Aint EZ" | producer[25] | Geffen Records, Paramount Pictures | 1996 |
Madd Head - Tripp2nite (remix) | producer | Geffen Records | 1996 |
Ice T "VI – Return of the Real" | producer[26] | Priority Records | 1996 |
LL Cool J - Ain't Nobody / Madd Head - Pimp'n Ain't Ez Single | producer | Def Jam Recordings | 1996 |
Copycat[4] Soundtrack (Techno Boy)[24] | performer / writer | Milan Records | 1995 |
Raiders of the Lost Art[27] "G-Party" (Kurtis Blow) | Bass, Keyboards, Vocals: Background, Chant[27] | PolyGram, DCC Compact Classics/Sony Music Special Products, Columbia Records | 1994 |
Bloods & Crips "Bangin' on Wax, Vol. 2: The Saga Continues" (Slob 187) | producer[28] | Quality Records / Warlock Records / Capitol Records | 1994 |
NiNi X - She's Dangerous (Take That Mutha F-Cka) | producer[29] | Dangerous Records | 1994 |
No Holds Barred (Tweedy Bird Loc album)(Outta Here) | artist | Quality Records / Warlock Records / Capitol Records | 1994 |
Ronnie Ron* - Gangsta Boom - Sample Your Ass Off | producer | Dangerous Records, Pump Records, Warlock Records | 1993 |
Bloods & Crips "Bangin' on Wax" (C-Sick , K's Up) | producer[24][30] | Quality Records / Warlock Records / Capitol Records | 1993 |
Silkski Shawborn Featuring Project "X" - Depression "99" / Ya! On A Mission | producer / artist | DSX Records | 1989 |
References
- ^ http://wu-tangfam.blogspot.com/2011/04/neplatna-identita-hodne-tvari-many.html
- ^ a b http://wtcf.bandcamp.com/album/spy-games-wuedition
- ^ a b http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0800181/
- ^ a b "Copycat by Christopher Young @ ARTISTdirect.com - Credits of Copycat". Artistdirect.com. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112722/business
- ^ https://www.allmusic.com/album/r241210
- ^ "Bangin on Wax by Bloods Crips @ ARTISTdirect.com - Credits of Bangin on Wax". Artistdirect.com. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ "A Catalog of performance objectives, criterion-referenced measures and performance guides for combination welding - song, music - Copyright Info". Faqs.org. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ "(I don't) speak the language & 1,920 other titles. (Part 002 of 010), I like your way - song, music - Copyright Info". Faqs.org. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ Billboard.com (1996-06-22). "VI: Return of the Real - Ice-T". Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ a b c d e Scene Magazine (November, 2003) Arts & Entertainment for The Northern Front Range; Volume 14; Issue 8; (970) 490-1009; 1124 N Overland Trl, Fort Collins, CO 80521; www.scenemagazine.info
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3006221/
- ^ http://kriminalcity.blogspot.com/2012/01/co-defendants-criminal-season-mixtape.html
- ^ http://acienthiphop.blogspot.com/2011/02/vawu-brickpresents-wu-worldordervol2.html
- ^ http://www.amazon.com/Killa-Season/dp/B003P75L2M
- ^ http://www.datpiff.com/DJ-Scarface-The-Congregation-Hosted-By-Cappadonna-mixtape.51333.html
- ^ http://www.wu-international.com/misc_albums/Wulike/NeplatnaIdentita_Manyfaces.htm
- ^ http://wu-international.com/misc_albums/Wulike/Shawneci_KillaAngelz.htm
- ^ http://kriminalcity.blogspot.com/2011/02/wu-fam-myspace-exclusives-volume-7-2008.html
- ^ http://wutangkillabeezontheswarm.blogspot.com/2011/06/wu-underground-trilogy.html
- ^ https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/alcoholism-feat.-popa-chief/id598329854
- ^ http://www.emi.com/page/emi/ArtistSearchResults/0,,12641,00.html?searchInput=Silkski&exactMatch=true&x=22&y=6
- ^ http://www.ascap.com/ace/search.cfm?requesttimeout=300&mode=results&searchstr=496908193&search_in=i&search_type=exact&search_det=t,s,w,p,b,v&results_pp=25&start=1
- ^ a b c d http://www.ascap.com/ace/search.cfm?requesttimeout=300&mode=results&searchstr=1521829&search_in=c&search_type=exact&search_det=t,s,w,p,b,v&results_pp=25&start=1
- ^ "Beavis and Butt Head Do America @ ARTISTdirect.com - Credits of Beavis and Butt-Head Do America". Artistdirect.com. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ https://www.allmusic.com/album/r236260/credits
- ^ a b https://www.allmusic.com/album/r84532/credits
- ^ "Bangin' on Wax, Vol. 2: The Saga Continues". Billboard.com. 1994. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
- ^ https://www.allmusic.com/album/r271538/credits
- ^ "Bloods - Bangin On Wax CD Album". Cduniverse.com. 1993-03-02. Retrieved 2011-01-15.