
Wow. It was a fucking honour to interview Black, who I can safely call one of my top 5 producers out there right now. Black Milk discusses his upcoming projects, different methods of making beats, and his favorite soul records.
ML: Hey man, how you doing?
Black Milk: What’s going on, man?
ML: The first single, “Give The Drummer Sum” came out fairly recently. Is that the first time you used live instruments in your beats?
BM: I’ve brought live musicians in for certain tracks but it wasn’t for my actual album. We did some live stuff for a few Slum Village tracks I did. This is the first time I used live instrumentation for my solo project.
ML: Is it something you could see yourself doing more of in the future? It’s an interesting fusion because you did some programmed stuff – I watched the video of you making it and you’ve got all the programmed elements and then you cue in the pre-recorded live stuff and add some live instrumentation on top.
BM: Right, right. It still samples and evolves on that. That particular track, “Give The Drummer Sum”, there’s no samples in there. That’s all me – I chopped up a breakbeat, programmed it on an MPC and brought in a live bass player to play it over, a couple organ stabs and live horn. That was all basically original music. Still sampled, but you know, I flipped it in my own way. But yeah, other tracks on the album that had live instrumentation on it, that’s played over actual samples.
Like the first track, “Long Story Short”, I got Dwele playing the horns on it, I’m playing a Moog, and a live bass player…I got Kid Rock’s bass player playing on it. And piano by my man Ab. You know, all those elements on top of an actual sample that I chopped it up.
That’s how I start off, with a skeleton of a beat, you know, a sample.
ML: What’s your studio set-up right now?
BM: It’s basically the same. I’ve been working with basically the same set-up for the last year, I guess you could say. A lot of vinyl, a lot of old records, an MPC 2000 XL, Pro Tools. You know, the basics. A few synth keyboards, stuff like that. That’s how I start off most of my production, with the MPC, still. I haven’t tried any new programs or nothing like that.
The only new thing I did was work with other producers and musicians.
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