Diary of a Madman by Jordan Brad "Scarface
Author:Jordan, Brad "Scarface
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: 2015-04-21T00:00:00+00:00
CHAPTER 21
THE DIARY
I never actually kept a diary. Crazy, right? I put out all of these songs about it, and even an album, but I never actually kept one for myself. The closest that I ever came to keeping one was my rhyme book. I wrote songs about what I saw and what I felt and just put everything that happened into my music. Thatâs where I wrote my life.
Till Death Do Us Part and The World Is Yours both went gold, but as much as I liked The World Is Yours (and as much as I didnât fuck with Till Death Do Us Part), neither one had the same impact as We Canât Be Stopped or Mr. Scarface Is Back. There was room to grow. It was 1994, and I was ready to get to work.
All I knew when we started recording The Diary was that I wanted to combine the hardness and the roughness of Mr. Scarface Is Back with the production that weâd figured out on The World Is Yours. That was it. We never went into an album with a plan. There was never a moment where we sat down and said, This album is going to be this, this, and this, and itâs going to fuck motherfuckersâ heads up for real! It was never like that with us. We just knew I was cold, N.O. Joe and Mike Dean and my uncle Eddie were cold, and all of the musicians that we brought in to work with us were bad motherfuckers. Iâd get fucked up and record and see what came of it and then take that and see what we could do with it.
I had just bought my first house. I was twenty-three and it was over in a neighborhood called Woodlands. Real estate was still pretty inexpensive and I got a 3,500-square-foot house for around $200,000. This was before Woodlands took off. I ended up selling it a few years later for $400,000 and I hadnât done shit to it but put a studio in it. Considering how much money I was able to make on that deal, I donât know why I didnât just go into real estate back then. The white folks that bought it off of me didnât know shit about making music so it wasnât like they were buying it for the studio and I still made some good bread.
Once I had the studio up and running, we started doing a lot of preproduction work there, and then weâd move over to Digital Services to record with John Moran. Johnâs worked with everyone from the Rolling Stones and the Talking Heads to ZZ Top, Willie Nelson, and INXSâyou name it. Weâd worked with him a lot on the early Rap-A-Lot stuff and heâs a fucking genius when it comes to mixing and mastering. He can get the most incredible sounds out of records, and I knew with him in our corner, the shit we were working on was going to be super tight.
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