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Lil Flip

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About Me

MyGen Profile Generator In Hip-Hop, every year is major, and the year is not over yet. It’s the fourth quarter; 4th and inches, so only the star players are shuffling in the game to tally those critical points necessary to put the nail in the coffin. As Mike Jones, Paul Wall, Slim Thug, Chamillionaire, and Bun B got cozy in Houston’s year, Lil’ Flip etched away at his next album, I Need Mine. While Flip’s name might not excite like the others this year, in 2002, he was reigning supreme. Perhaps some friendly [and not] competition may give Flip to push to regain his throne. In a discussion with AllHipHop.com, Flip reflects on his competition, his unsung friend Z-Ro, and he revisits the T.I. situation, and its implications on his career. Welcome back, Flip!AllHipHop.com: The year 2005 has been a phenomenal year for Hip-Hop, particularly Houston. A lot of people would say your success has been a catalyst for a lot of that with the fame of Mike Jones, Slim Thug, Paul Wall. How do you feel about your role/your mark as far as H-Town is concerned?Lil’ Flip: I was the first to put Screwed & Chopped versions of songs with the album. Some people give you props, some people don’t; I didn’t want to be labeled as the usual artist. The difference between me and the other artists - I don’t’ do my whole album about candy paint, the whole album isn’t just for Houston. The stuff I been doing everybody is doing now, like showing your grill. I been did that. I feel I have other visions. I feel responsible for putting the [DJ] Screw stuff worldwide and doing Screwed & Chopped albums and all that.AllHipHop.com: I Need Mine is about to drop. It seems you have been off the scene for a little while, as far as mainstream. I’ve seen the underground stuff, you in the video with Chamillionaire; however, where you been at?Lil’ Flip: I’ve been busy, working on a movie. I got this liquor deal, the liquor is already in stores, got my watches coming December, I signed eight artists. I got Sqad Up, I know the streets know that, Crime Boss; he used to be with Suave House. The Clover Gees coming next year. Got this group called the Texas Boyz. I got a game plan, about a year ago I was on so many collaborations, I did “Naughty Girl”, “Ridin’ Spinners”, so I feel like if you over-saturate yourself people get tired of you, so I took a break; and I am making beats now.AllHipHop.com: For who?Lil’ Flip: I produced records on Lil’ Keke’s new album, Big Pokey, I did five tracks on my new album. I never stop working, man. But this time around, when I come back this time, I ain’t going to go away, I might not do as many features on other people’s records, but as far as my artists, you going to hear me on most of they singles to make sure they get those spins they need.AllHipHop.com: When you left Sucka Free, you came out with Clover Gees. What’s your vision for Clover Gees?Lil’ Flip: The way I see it, before the Error! rap stuff, we all family. So, one of the artists that’s in the Clover Gees, C-Note, he put me on my first record. My goal is to train everybody and let them know brand your name. You ain’t got to rap forever, I got their minds on getting movies, getting things that’s higher than rap. In a minute, everybody going to see, man. I am going to put them out there right. Ain’t nothing going to be rushed, we got time to listen to the records. If it ain’t right, people going to know. I am fin to have them right.AllHipHop.com: The previous years were real big for you as far as becoming a high-ranked artist. With that, came a lot of credit and a lot of discredit and some of that came from the same people who previously gave you credit. How do you feel about all that animosity that you have accumulated with your fame.Lil’ Flip: For one, I am not a snitch. Just like I am on the phone with you, I don’t know what you did before you got on the phone with me. You dig what I am sayin’? So, just ‘cause somebody tell me, “Hey, this dude ain’t hustlin’,” they don’t know ‘cause they ain’t with you right now, how they going to know what you doing. People be like, “I was hustlin’ and they lying, you can check four years ago I was here and such and such…” That is stupid to me. Now I got information on one of these people who was on this mixtapes trying to discredit me, they smoking other stuff than what regular people smoke, but I didn’t put that out there. I feel like for me to look good, I don’t have to crush nobody. I don’t go out trying to disrespect nobody to try to make me look good. When I came in the game, my OG’s taught me [that] everybody ain’t going to like you. So, if you spend your whole day trying to make everybody like you, you never going to be satisfied. The way I look at that is all the people that got something negative to say about me, you look where they at now. Ain’t sold not one record, they have sold nothing, they have not sold three million ringtones. Ain’t made half a million off their liquor before they dropped. You know what I mean, we on two different levels. [They don’t have any number one singles]. It’s like why would I step down to address it. People can say what they want to say, ‘cause at the end of the day, when it come to putting out hit records, and making good music, and having good videos that get played 60 times and get retired. Every time I drop, a video it gets retired. There is no comparison, man, I don’t let it bother me. The fans stick by me, you got few fans they switch over and all that.AllHipHop.com: Looking at the fans, you briefly addressed how some may switch over. Not to compare, however, so you can feel me. Ja Rule, he made a lot of good hits, good music; however, a fan base can be real fickle. T.I. came at you kind of hard [a whole mixtape aimed at you] and most times, something like that can kill a person’s fan base. How do you feel about that?Lil’ Flip: You must ain’t heard the “Kings of the South” mixtape? This is the crazy part about that, I didn’t go in the studio and give it 110% when I was doing my diss records, I got some more records, but we came to the agreement, that you know…I could have said some s**t worse. Let’s go with facts, he got other people on mixtapes saying such and such, negative s**t that ain’t true or whatever. This is the crazy part about the whole situation, dude said what he had to say, and I did what I had to do on the “Kings of the South.” He tried to charge Z-Ro some money for a verse. Telling him, I like you or whatever, so I am only going to charge you $20,000, so he took some disrespect to that. Anyhow, this is how I look at the situation, before any of these rappers who got beef with me dog; I was platinum in the whole United States before they had one record. When fans look at the printout, I don’t think it’s going to do s**t because everywhere I go it’s nothing but love dog. I’m still a humble cat; I don’t go around disrespecting people no matter how much money I got, you know that just ain’t me. It don’t bother me dog. ..

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