By Jose Outtellect Guzman III
You know the story well… The Black kid grows up in the projects surrounded by welfare, poverty, crime, drugs, racism, and hopelessness, yet becomes a successful MC. But, how many of you are familiar with the same story affiliated with other races and cultures growing up in the same environment?
How about a fatherless, poor, white, Jewish kid from Flatbush, Brooklyn? Ill Bill was never the person to validate himself through the consumption of Hip-Hop. He was born Hip-Hop and has suffered exactly as that stereotypical Black kid.
Although life appeared like a volume of
Kill Bill, William Braunstein aka Ill Bill fought off those common demons of the urban community. He was raised by his grandmother and supported by his strung out Uncle with a huge heart. Ill Bill originally gained his notoriety as part of the now disbanded NYC underground group Non Phixion. He went on to launch Uncle Howie Records and released his debut solo album
What’s Wrong With Bill? In 2004.
Since then he is now a soldier of La Coka Nostra [with Everlast, DJ Lethal, Danny Boy, Slaine, Big Left] and on September 16 released what he feels is his first real solo album, the politically charged
The Hour of Reprisal. Check Bill’s take on a myriad of topics including LSD, Brooklyn, Judaism and his song "White N****r."
AllHipHop.com: It is obvious from your music you are unplugged from the matrix. How did you become unplugged?
Ill Bill: It's a combination of my crazy family and their influence on me along with me being a skeptical person. I question everything on some Larry David s**t. I also did a bunch of LSD when I was 15.
AllHipHop.com: When did you realize that something is wrong with the world?
Ill Bill: I don't think the world is f**ked up. People are f**ked up and they’re f**king up the world. I've known that since I was a kid.
“Nursery rhymes are safe so it's taken over. The money people, the corporate people, they choose to invest in the safer bet.”
AllHipHop.com: You come from an era of prophetic MCs, NYC had awareness on smash in 94-96 but something happened. How did Hip-Hop go from talking about Illuminati to doing simplistic nursery rhymes?
Ill Bill: Whenever any art form enters the mainstream it's going to get watered down. When the money people get involved it turns into a business. From a strictly business point of view, the best business is the one with the least risk. Nursery rhymes are safe so it's taken over. The money people, the corporate people, they choose to invest in the safer bet. But the people in the street aren't all stupid. Not everybody wants shallow music. Good music is out there. People just need to be willing to look for it. I’ve always been that way. It's part of the reason I started making music. So I could hear what I want to hear.
Ill Bill "Society is Brainwashed" Video