SHAGGY

Shaggin' with Shaggy
By Troy Schmidt
So you are here with the TV Show, Blind Date (as part of a Singles
Party). Have you ever been on a blind date?
No. Im not that risky. I like to see what the hell Im
dealing with.
Whats your idea of a perfect date?
A chick that is extremely funny. Got to have that personality thing
going. Witty. Quick. She cant be boring at all. Got to look
good too! Aint with the ugly chicks. I know ugly chicks needs
lovin, but just not by me. Thats all
Somewhat intelligent.
Normally I like the dumb chicks, because I like to fool them up. Im
with the intelligent chicks these days. Ive gotten a little
older and little wiser.
Are they turned on by your war record?
Yeah, it kind of helps a little bit. Because I sing these Mr. Lover-Lover
songs and hes a roughneck too.
Do you tell them stories like you had Saddam Hussein lined up in
your crosshairs and you were about to take him out?
No, but thats a good one. I should try that next time.
What did you learn in the Gulf War?
The Gulf War was good in terms of shaping my character. The discipline
and all of that. But I dont think it impacted me musically.
Certainly in terms of my attitude, my drive, my determination. I got
all that. Strict discipline.
Was going off to war scary?
It wasnt scary going there. It was such a motivation vibe. Ooo,
yeah, lets kick Saddams ass! It got scary just one
time, when there was bombing. It was far off, but just the fact that
it was incoming
people were diving for cover.
Think you came back from the war better?
Absolutely. It makes you realize how much you take for granted. How
many times do you get up out of your bed and not even make it. I was
like, damn, I dont even have a bed now
How many times have
you had your moms cooking and youre like, "eewww,
I dont want to eat that?" You realize how important it
all is.
Would you agree that reggae at its root is very upbeat?
Depends on the type of reggae. Certainly there is upbeat reggae, then
there is reggae with a more spiritual vibe. Bob Marley, the authentic
reggae beat. It comes from ska, rock steady, reggae, dance hall. I
think I am first and foremost considered a dance hall and reggae artist,
then a pop artist in terms of popular music. My music is more fusion
music. I dont do reggae in its natural form
I have to find
my own style
I may be criticized by reggae purists, but at the
same time I am respected by reggae purists. For my achievements. For
the attention being brought to all Caribbean music.
How is reggae spiritual?
You take a song like War. Until the philosophy which
holds one race superior and another inferior
Until the colour
of a man's skin, is of no more significance than the colour of his
eyes, therell be war. Theres a certain amount of
spirituality to that. Those are very powerful words. They were actually
words written by Emperor Haile Selassie, who is the Emperor of Ethiopia,
which is the core of the Rastafarian religion
The core of reggae
is very spiritual, very revolutionary. Dance hall is more upbeat
Its
party. Thats the era Im from.
Do you think a lot of music these days is too angry, too prejudiced,
too negative?
Im not going to knock it, because basically everyone has a right
to voice their opinion. There is a market for it. These things bring
attention to a lot of things. Things in life we may not want to hear.
For instance, racism is there, but we dont want to hear it at
times. Its alive and well. Prejudice. Its alive and well.
Classism
A lot of these artists, who we look at as negative,
there is a positive side to them as well. It brings attention, it
brings controversy, to a subject that is being ignored. That is what
I appreciate about it. I think music tries to get too philosophical,
artistic, and forgets about the basic aspect of music
to entertain
When
Im on stage, thats like any other high Ive ever
experienced. I want to see smiles when Im up there
I dont
write negative things because I dont have anything to be negative
about. Life has been good to me. For somebody else that has experienced
negativity in their life and they want to write about that, I totally
respect that. Thats what you lived. Thats what you know.
I have experienced good things in life
No matter how bad you
have it, there is always someone worse than you.
How has life changed for you having the #1 album?
Funny, Ive been doing this for 10-12 years, ever since Oh
Carolina, and Ive been consistent with the hitsBoombastic,
That Girl, Luv Me, Luv Me with Janet. But
just four months ago (shakes head), this was on the way out. We put
a first single out and it did not react at all. This album came out
on the first week with barely 17,000 records. It did not look good.
I was doing venues that hold a thousand people and two hundred showed
up. Its amazing how one song can turn it all around for you.
People then start loving the whole album, the embodiment of the work
I
didnt have this huge publicity machine behind me. That makes
it all the more better tasting.
Plus you beat Jennifer Lopez, who has that publicity machine going.
The album, the movie, her husband in the news.
It feels good. And Im a Jennifer fan, because I love that ass.
But at the end of the day, it feels good. A lot of sweat.
If youre named after a Scooby character, what is your favorite
Scooby snack?
I dont think I have a Scooby snack, but you know who I liked
most on Scooby Doo. Scrappy
he was a loud mouth. A ballsy dog
thats
who I see myself as. Biting off things I really cant chew.
Well you cant change your name to Scrappy. It's too late.
Its funny, when the Shaggy name came in, and it was something
I did not enjoy very much as a kid, Shaggy Dog, Shaggy Dog,
then I went to England and learned it meant something else. Now all
of sudden when I meet chicks I tell them, yeah, Im a shagger.
Thats the new reason for my name, thanks to Austin Powers. Got
my mojo, baby!
What teacher had a profound influence on you?
There was an art teacher
she was very influential
I was
very good at painting, pastels. I could have very easily gotten a
scholarship (in art), but I just chose to go into the military. I
think she was disappointed in me. Im sure shes over that
now.
When you have a song you are going to sample, what goes into choosing
the right song?
I have a producer, Sting International, who is mainly the person who
uses samples. I remember with Oh Carolina he had the Peter
Gunn riff and the melody started to come to my head. Boombastic
with Marvin Gaye, he remixed it. I actually chose that sample because
I thought Marvin Gayes Lets Get It On had
a sexiness, it just worked. It told a great story
Like Angel
in the Morning, its an ironic situation with that song.
Who would have thought Angel in the Morning with Steve
Millers The Joker? We did it. It just clicked. Stings
a DJ and from ceiling to floor is all records. He just finds these
things
Its a cool thing to sample. Those songs that are
on those records are not available today. Different instruments. The
way its played. The feel. Some people just cant recapture
that.
If there was a fire in your house, what would you save?
That would be my recording studio. (Laughs) Thats where all
the hits are being pumped out right now
Its funny, It
Wasnt Me goes to #1, and in the credit section of Billboard
it says the type of console you use. Im looking at all these
songs, they use Eve, SSL, Euphonics, all these huge, half a million
dollar boards. And It Wasnt Me
is done on a
Yamaha O2R. Its a $5000 board. Its not the board or the
equipment. Its the engineer!
What are you reading right now?
I couldnt tell you what I was reading. Its kind of a whirlwind
right now. USA Today, mostly.
Our Hard Rock motto is Love All, Serve All. What does
that mean to you?
There is so much to love about life. I feel in life there are no losers.
Even when bad things happen to you, it happened for a reason
To
love all and serve all, there is so much to love about life. And to
serve, your life is not yours. I heard Bob Marley say that his life
is for the people. If his life was for him alone, he didnt want
life. Theres something very powerful in those words.
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