The Blast Blog interview with The  Group
The  Giant Blast:  What made the two of you decide to come  together? 
Olatunji  Mason:  First and foremost, it’s the love and appreciate that we have  for each other’s talent from day one since we link up in March of 2007 outside  of Central Piedmont Community. Once Ston-city heard my material and I heard his  lyricism, our chemistry became so tight, we decided to work together.  This was  a couple of years after the original members of Blaq Planet and I departed,  which left me solo. Then I decided to reform the group with only Ston-city and  myself.  So far it’s been a great turn out because we’ve recorded several  travels together continuously over the years.
Ston-city:   Olatunji has a very distinct sound.  His sound is hiphop but you cannot miss the  African spices he adds to his sound and he is african. I was looking for a  producer who could fuse my heritage with his sound so when i had Ola it was a  wrap.
The  Giant Blast:  How would you describe your  sound? 
Olatunji  Mason:  Our sound is a of hip hop with a touch of afro-beat reggae, and  soul.  It has a Universal appeal.
Ston-city:   Afrikan Magik.
The  Giant Blast:  What  plans do you all have for 2012? 
Olatunji  Mason:  We plan to release the Blaq Planet mixtape and full length  album, which we plan to feature as many guest appearances as we can.  We also  plan to shoot some video footage, do local performances and take it nationwide  and overseas, tapping in the African and European market.  
Ston-city:   We plan on putting out good music that people can listen  to and understand that we have a story to tell.  This first LP we are putting  out this year is kind of an introduction to the world as to who exactly we are  and what we do.  Its going to be titled "Olatunji and Ston-city are the Blaq  Planet". 
The  Giant Blast:  Who are some of the artists that influenced  you all to make music? 
Olatunji  Mason:  Common, KRS One, Ken Starr, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, Akon, Kanann,  Jazzy Jeff, various Sierra Leonean and Ugandan artist.
The  Blast Blog Interview with Olatunji Mason
The  Giant Blast:  How would you describe yourself as a  beatmaker? 
Olatunji  Mason:  My style is a unique combination of hip hop and world  music, creating a feel good atmosphere.  I usually incorporate elements of  African and Reggae in my production.  The inspiration came from hearing them  being played in the household coming up, dancing to them at various African  functions, and hearing them in club venues.  Many producers may have sampled  international genres yet I have not heard any that flipped the kind the find  which is Highlife, Congolese, and Palmwine melodies.  Those ideas make me  standout as a producer.
The  Giant Blast:  Who are some of your favorite  beatmakers? 
Olatunji  Mason:  J-Dilla, Pete Rock, Kev Brown, Praise, Slakah The Beatchild,  Damu The Fudgemunk, Nicolay, DJ Spinner, Lord Finesse, Diamond D, Showbiz,  Buckwild, Large Professor, 9th Wonder, Nottz, Premier, Marco Polo,  Ayatollah, Hi-Tech, Prince Paul, Marly Marl, Howie Tee, and Teddy  Riley.
The Giant Blast:  What do you use  to make your beats? 
Olatunji  Mason:  I use the MPC 2000xl, The Roland BR1180 Digital 10 track record, the Zoom  Rhythm drum and base machine, and CDM-3610 Professional/CD/  MP3 DJ Workstation  turntables.
The  Giant Blast:  Who all have you worked with?   
Olatunji  Mason:  I’ve worked with my cousin Simeone Browne (Philly based  singer), Messenger (Philly based dancehall DJ), Angel(Philly based singer), Kao  Denero (Atlanta based Sierra Leonean mc), Ghetto Fello (DMV based Sierra Leonean  mc), Silent Solidiers ( DMV based mc’s) M.O.A aka Minista of  Agriculture (Philly based Ghanaian mc), Masta Boobah (DMV based Ivorian mc),  Zimbabwe Legit (DMV/NY based Zimbabwean mc’s), D.Moose (formally of Blaq  Planet), Al (formally of Blaq Planet), Ston-city Kazingah (of Blaq Planet) Shabb  Ranks, Krumb Snatcher, Supa Laj (Brooklyn based Sierra Leonean mc), Will Power (  DMV based Sierra Leonean Producer) and Qwin D Sojourner (Philly based Sierra  Leonean songstress).
The  Giant Blast:  Who would you like to work with in the  future?  
Olatunji  Mason:  I would like to work with artist like Les Nubians, Akon, Summer  Angel, Sade, Neneh Cherry, Youssou N’Dour, Christopher Williams, Mos Def,  Special ED, Q-Tip, CL Smooth, Grap Luva, A.G, Sadat X, Lord Tariq, Talib Kweli,  Jean Grae, Wale, Channell Ketchmore, K’Naan, Pharoah Monch, Erkyah Badu, Jill  Scott, Bilal, Black Thought, Krs One, Donald Mason (my uncle in Spain), Harley  Brez (my uncle’s studio engineer in Spain), Wan Lov (from Ghana), Peter  Rosenburg aka DJ PMD (from New York’s Hot 97), Kev Brown, Oddessie, Cy Young,  Kaimbr, Roddy Rod, Ken Starr, Little Brother, MC Lyte, Johnny Famous, Doc Ice,  Big Daddy Kane, Snoop Dog, Outkast, Daddy Saj, Emmerson, Hard Life, K-Man, DEX3,  Vicki Fornah, Fulani, Sambu Sewah, Jay Arr, Shadow Boxxer, Jaybo, Manzu and  C-Bolt, Zeboy ( from London), Bunny Mack (my cousin), 2face Adibia, Pupa Banja,  Cecile, Tanya Stephens, Screechy Dan, Alison Hines, Edley Shine (from Born  Jamericans, Sanchez, Beenie Man, Morgan Heritage, Gyptian and Queen  Ifrica.
The  Giant Blast:  How can artists get in touch with you for beats?   
Olatunji  Mason:  They could get reach me on fbook and twitter if they type  Olatunji Mason. They could reach me by email: olatunjimason@gmail.com, and on my  cell on my cell at : 704-941-9058.
       The Blast Blog Interview with  Ston-city
The Giant Blast:  How would you  describe yourself as an artist?
Ston-city:  I'm an artist who wont put out  music that does not make sense.  I have a whole continent to represent.  I  understand that people love to dance and have fun in the clubs but if my  Africans are not having fun then I am not rapping.  Being African means I've got  a lot to talk about besides the pop culture that we live in.  So as an artist I  would describe myself as an African emcee with a vision to shine a light on the  brighter side of the dark continent.
The Giant Blast:  What inspired  you to rhyme?
Ston-city:  My environment I must say.   Listening to hiphop growing up in Africa I realized  that a lot of the issues  around me could be dealt with in less than four minutes on a track. The poverty,  the corruption, the disease, the wars. Hiphop was the platform for  that.
The Giant Blast:  Who all have  you worked with so far?
Ston-city:  I've worked with many underground  African emcees.  I am actually a member of another African group called Sons of  Symphony consisting of me and a Ugandan emcee called Mperio.
The Giant Blast:  Who would you  like to collaborate in the  future?
Ston-city:  Any nice emcee with a strong  message for the human race.
The Giant Blast:  What type of  concepts and topics are you speaking about on this forthcoming  project?
Ston-city:  A&E. Africa and  emceeing.
The Giant Blast:  Do you have  anymore plans to do any solo projects and songs for  2012?
Ston-city:  Me on an Ola track is the Blaq  Planet and vice versa, but if a producer I respect approaches me with a track  that I am feeling then why not.  I am also trying to get Ola to produce for a  couple of Ugandan emcees so his sound can go global.  We are quite an unselfish  bunch who understand that its bigger than music.
 



 
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