Redmanâthe âfunkadelic devilââhas naughty in his natureRedman has tissue sticking out of his right nostril. Actually, itâs not a tissue, itâs a twisted-up paper napkin. On his head is a worn-in cap reading Red Man, with the logo for a popular chewing tobacco.
Iâve seen him rock the tissue before, like when we were at sound check for the party that The Source put on with the Hit Squad during the Seminar. Him and K-Solo slap boxed while a few dozen onlookers watched and pretended not to be watching. Redman had a yellow pick in his afro. Nobody said shit about the tissue, and it hung there like the hardest ghetto accessory ever.
âWhatâs up with that tissue?â I ask after I hand Redman the napkin in question off my desk at The Source on day.
âMy nose is fucked up, mu is real fucked up,â he says. âI had a allergy since I was two. So I just stuck a tissue up my nose for the longestânot no video imagine or no shit like that. Thatâs some real shit.â
And real shitânot pretty shitâis what Redman is all about. This latest installment in the Hit Squad saga of dopeness ainât no spinoff. At age 22, Reggie Noble steps up to bat with the best an MC can offer: a rugged rhyme flow, a sense of humor, split-personality skills, and an immovable presence. On his new LP Whut. . . Thee. . . Album?, Redman weaves poetic tales rich in detail and metaphor, full of surprise twists. Heâs a super ghetto dweller who favors afros, blunts and â70s funk. Heâs the âfunkadelic devilâ and the âoriginal P-Funk.â Produced by Erick Sermon and Redman, the tracks flow like peach Snapple with the flavor of the classic funkateers.
âIâm a big fan of George Clinton, Johnny Guitar Watson, Parliament, Stanley Clark, James Brownâall that shit I listen to daily,â Redman tells me when we meet for the first time at Columbia Records. âI donât just use it as a sample, I listen to it daily for my personal reasons. The funkadelic devilâIâm just bringinâ funk from hell. The funkenstein funk from hell!â
The hip-hop masses first got a taste of Redman when he ârocked ruff rhymesâ in a cameo appearance on EPMDâs third album, sending a shout to his hometown Newark, New Jersey. Newark is a troubled urban center that erodes in the shadow of New York Cityâitâs the least educated city in the conutry and the third most dangerous, according to the FBI. These volatile streets were Reggie Nobleâs stomping ground until fate and timing elevated him into the inner circle of one of hip-hopâs most prosperous crews.
âI hooked up back in like â89,â Redman remembers. âI started working on my shit after I met [Erick and Parrish] at this club called Sensations in Newark. And I was DJâing at the time and yo, I got down after I kicked a verse. I wasnât even goinâ in there talkinâ about me, I was goinâ in there talkinâ about this kid who I DJâed for. I was like, âyo, can I kick something too.â I only had one rhyme to my name, kicked that one on stage and got paid and shit. Then later on, moved out to Long Island. âCause I got kicked out of Jersey âcause I was doing a lot of dumb shit.â
âKicked out by the authorities?â I ask.
âKicked out by eh-yee-bodyâauthorities, parents, eh-yee-body. They wasnât tryinâ to see me, I was in too much shit.â
Reggie and Erick struck up a friendship, and soon Reggie moved into Erickâs crib on Long Island, where he ended up staying for over two years. It was there along sleepy tree-lined streets that the foundation for Redmanâs LP was laid downâfirst with one turntable, a tape deck, and some good ideas, and later with more sophisticated sampling and sequencing equipment.
âIt was me and Reggie, downstairs in my basement,â Erick recalls with his trademark lisp. âHe was just so dope. He can rhyme off of anything. I used to sit there and just tell him to rap to me. Reggie is funkadelic. I think heâs like one of them guys that used to hang out with George Clinton and them. Heâs not a battle rapper, heâs a funky rapper.â
Russell Simmons, CEO of Def Jam, has known a lot of rappers in his day, but he too is taken by Redman. âHe has more of a presence than probably any artist Iâm aware of,â Russell said. âDid you see the season premiere of âIn Living Colorâ? He ripped the frame out n***as asses on that shit!â
This past summer, Redman, Erick and other members of the Hit Squad went out with The Sourceâs âHip-Hop Heatwaveâ van tourâfollowing out 4,000 watt bass machine with their own squad-mobile through fifteen cities. Redman remembers the experience fondly: âKevin [the van coordinator] and them got mad props. It was a good experience for everybody. . . I think I was high for like seven weeks.â J-Mill, a staffer who was part of The Source van squad, got to know Redman on the road. âFrom listening to his album I expected him to be super hardcore, to not be as much of a joker. But he puts a combination together and comes off like nobody youâve ever met. Heâs got a real funny attitude, but at the same time it seems like you donât want to fuck with him, because you donât know what could happen. Heâs real crazy, heâs real spontaneous. You donât know what heâs gonna do.â
That unpredictability comes through on the LP, with Redman displaying the lobotomy style: rapping against himself, like on âRedman Meets Reggie Noble.â That and his storytelling skills is why Iâve heard some people compare him to one of rapâs all-time greatest MCs, Slick Rick (check âA Childrenâs Storyâ and âThe Moment I Fearedâ). I ask Redman about the double identity stuff.
âThatâs some ill shit. To show how creative and versatile I can be. I can be Reggie noble, I can be Redman.â
âWhatâs the difference?â
âOneâs chill and oneâs not.â
âWhich oneâs chill?â
âReggie Nobleâs chill.â
Yes, chill and down with the Phillies, as he makes abundantly clear on the album (as in âHow To Roll A Bluntâ). Does Redman see any conflict in endorsing marijuana use? âEverybody smoke weed, man. Itâs not really no big fuckinâ deal. . . More people die from cigarettes than weed. More people die from drinkinâ and a whole bunch of other shit.â Redmanâs eyes light up and he laughs. âCigarettes and surgeon generalâI ainât never seen no surgeon general on the side of my dime bag! Fuck the surgeon generalâhis ass probably puff! He get up there high as hell and go, âyo check it outâ.â
âSo is that the shit for â93: afros, blunts and funk?â
âAfro symbolizes the funk,â Redman explains, âMuthaf*!?ckas donât know that. You see B-Realâs afroâhis afro is huge, thatâs the funk. B-Real is a funky motherfucker.â
âI know girls out there like the muth*!?kas with the bald heads and the crew cuts and the fades,â he continues as he flips through the latest issue of The Source. âFor all them girls, fuck yâall because you know wy? I be havinâ more hair than some of them girls out there. They donât know afro is the strength, afro is the shitâthatâs back in the days shit. I ainât tryinâ to look good on TV any fuckinâ way.â