Showing posts with label Rollingstone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rollingstone. Show all posts

Danja x Rollingstone Interview, Confirms Three Tracks On 'Man Of The Woods'

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Here is another interview with Danja, this time around, he has been Interviewed by Rollingstone where he talks about how him and Timbaland created ‘Filthy’ and he also confirmed having only 3 tracks on the album which are 'Filthy', 'Say Something'  featuring Chris Stapleton & 'Sauce', check out the Interview below.

Were there a lot of conversations about where you wanted this record to go?
There wasn't much talk, wasn't much game-planning, wasn't a big huddle. By the time I got there, he already had a direction. It was just me falling into what he already had in motion.

In the trailer for the album, he talks a lot about the album reflecting his Tennessee roots. Is that something you noticed in the session?
I did – mostly from him, his energy, how he looked. He wasn't in the studio trying to be dressed up in suits, pretty-boy Justin. He was rugged like how the trailer looks. That was the energy.

*rollingstone.com

Timbaland x Rollingstone.com Article (2017)

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The greatest producer of his generation got hooked on pills and almost lost it all – now he's ready to return to the charts. Talk to any of Timothy "Timbaland" Mosley's friends, and you'll hear the same thing: that just a couple of years ago he was a totally different man. They'll tell you that he had lost his way, becoming depressed, overweight and contemptuous of the severely minimal beats that fueled hits by new artists like Future and Migos. He hadn't had a major success since BeyoncĂ©'s 2013 self-titled LP; his marriage was faltering; and his closest industry friends, the producers Pharrell Williams and Swizz Beatz, were concerned enough that they were checking in to give him pep talks.

"I felt like I wasn't committed, I was riding off ego," says Timbaland, 45, looking back. "It was really about me neglecting my gift. As a producer and a soundmaker, I had to find out what God had in store for me." Today things couldn't be more different for the producer, who is cheerfully chowing down on a bunless burger at a New York restaurant in November. Since the mid-1990s, the starkly futuristic robo-funk soundscapes he crafted for artists like Missy Elliott, Jay-Z and Justin Timberlake have shaped and reshaped modern pop and hip-hop. Now he's on track to have his hottest year in a decade, working with an entire Grammy ceremony's worth of talent on a slew of projects that are just beginning to make their way into the world.

*rollingstone.com