Adisa Banjoko: Iâm chillinâ right now with Keithy E from Gang Starr. On some stoop in San Francisco
Guru: Word. They also call me the Guru. Guru stands for Gifted Unlimited Rhymes Universal. I got my homeboys in the house from Fillmore. Jugga D, Big T, Funkenlien is in the house
AB: Whyâd [Gang Starr] leave Wild Pitch Records?
G: We just needed more space to do our stuff. They had me kinda frustrated, as far as creativity. I did not want a mansion and a limo to take me everywhere. But I did want my own space to create more
I wanted to be able to not take the train and have people pointing at me. I did not want to have to go to a nine-to-five job. When we had two videos out, the "Positivity" video and "[Words I] Manifest," I was still working. I was working with foster kids through New York City
AB: I always noticed a heavy Jazz influence in your music, from day one. Is that influence more you or more [DJ] Premier?
G: Both really. [DJ] Premierâs grandfather used to be in a Jazz band. When he was first getting into Rap, he used to tell him, âYo, itâs the same thing. Itâs just another expression of the street.â With me, my godfather was a heavy Jazz buff. He was a Hi-Fi fanatic. He would buy the top of the line, Carver stuff. If I was with my friends and I needed some money or something, Iâd pass by his house. Heâd grab the whole posse and say, âSit down and listen.â Heâd sit us in between two big ass speakers, as tall as the next man. It would sound like you could hear every instrument
AB: So, how did doing Jazz Thing with Spike Lee happen?
G: He saw the "Manifest" video. Then he went and got our LP, No More Mr. Nice Guy and he heard a song on there called "Jazz Music." That was a tribute. He was working on Mo' Betta Blues already. He wanted a song like that, but more in depth. He hooked us up with Branford Marsalis. He is from Louisiana, but he was living in Brooklyn. He tracked us down through our management
What was cool was he was not like, âIâm Branford Marsalis The Jazz artist. You guys are just rappers.â He did not have any attitude. He was not like, âIâm a musician and you are not.â He had already played sax on Public Enemyâs [Fear of a Black Planet] album. He had a 3rd Bass tape
We hipped him to the underground. We talked about how some artists be actinâ funny wit the ego shit. He was like, âThe same thing happens in Jazz. They be fightinâ at the shows.â
AB: I tripped off how in the Jazz Thing that Miles Davis was not mentioned. I heard the reason was that somebody in the Marsalis family did not get along with Miles and that they may have influenced you to leave him out. Is that true? To leave him out is like to leave Rakim out of Hip Hop. So, I had to ask...
G: No. I heard about that bullshit. It was just what happened. I meant to say whatâs up to L.O.N.S. [Leaders of the New School] on [Step Into The Arena]. It wasnât a diss move at all
AB: So who does Gang Starr listen to?
G: I listen to slow jams from the old days. I listen to the new school slow jams to. I chill with my crew in an â86 Cadillacâit isnât no new one. We just chill. Just because I donât rhyme with all the curses and what they call âGangster Rap,â I donât feel I have to talk about it because I been through a lot of it. All that does not impress a real person who has been through it
AB: Who do you listen to in Hip Hop?
G: It started with the old school. A lot of rappers be tryinâ to act like the old school does not matter. I give credit where credit is due. Like the old school movies like Wild Style. They had my man Busy Bee in there rockinâ the mic. He spelled a big B on the bed at his hotel with the dollars he made at the show! I listen to "Double Trouble." Run-DMC, they changed the format. Kool G Rap - the first original gangster style, ever. You talkinâ about Gangster Rap. You over here talking about, âWe did this, we stole this from the next man.â He ainât tryinâ to hear all that! His lyrics, and the way he displays his lyrics show that. He has a lisp like my man [Erick Sermon] in EPMD. It does not matter, look at his styles and the way he flips his lyrics
People often ask me what I think of N.W.A. âsince youâre positive.â If I was "Mr. Positive," Iâd say âLetâs all hold hands.â But I donât rhyme like that. I write about street shit, but in a different way. All I say is that they are another voice. Rap is an expression of Black urban life today. Urban Life. Itâs just an expression
AB: I notice you did not swear on Step in the Arena. Was that a conscious decision?
G: No. I mean, Iâll say a "shit" or a "fuck" if I want to. There was one on "Whoâs Gonna Take the Weight," and one on "Step in the Arena."
AB: Who was that at the beginning of "Whoâs Gonna Take the Weight"?
G: I donât know. He was introducing [Minister Louis] Farrakhan, but Iâm forgetting his name right now. But can I talk about something? Can I talk about religion?
Since I did "Manifest," everybody was asking me if I was Five Percent [Nation of Gods and Earths] like groups like Brand Nubian, Rakim, King Sun, Poor Righteous Teachers. I love what all them brothas are doing. But Iâll put it to you like this: A lot of my boys are [Five Percenters], I know a lot of people that are. But I do not practice that doctrine. I do know one thing. When the brother that started it [Clarence 13 X] went out into the streets and started this kind of stuff in New York, this stuff was mainly in New York. They call Jersey "New Jerusalem," Brooklyn is "Medina," "Mecca" is Harlem, Queens was ummm
AB: Whatâs "Divine Land"?
G: Thatâs the projects where Poor Righteous Teachers are from. But I was up on it. The brotha did that so that the mindstate could change. Tryinâ to have self-esteem. If you feel like you got your knowledge of self together, then give it to the next man
Brothas get divided. âOh, you this kinda Muslim, you that kinda Muslim.â They got more than six types of Muslims! Christians donât want to talk to Muslims. Buddhists are spiritual people too. They may not believe in God the way someone else might see it. But itâs a mystic law that means being a good person and what you do comes back on you! All of that is to say that I support all of that. I support anything that uplifts the humanity and uplifts the black man. Donât trip on what I am or anything like that
Thatâs why Iâm called the Guru. My sisterâs Buddhist, my cousin is Muslim. They got me outta a lot of trouble when I was wildinâ when I was younger. They brought Islam to me. They brought that to me to get me on the right path
Then I studied a bunch of other stuff to. So, thatâs why I call myself the Guru
When I went to Morehouse College in Atlanta, I had one of the most profound religious teachers, Dr. [Lawrence] Carter. He taught us about all the religions of the world, and how weâre separated over silly superficial reasons