Lainie: And a hidden track on that, M.V.P. album, I saw another Boriqua Anthem on there, what is that?
Clivilles: Its a fault, I didnt get to finish that one actually, that one I did in Miami and I didnt get to finish the record, its kind of incomplete on the record but
Lainie: I saw that on the tracklisting and I think I had a heart attack.
Clivilles: It was like a hip-hop Boriqua Anthem, I just wanted to put the horns in, we had a good idea to blend it and we would follow through Rock Ya Body, and we were just playing with it. I wish I would have finished it but, its kind of like eighty percent finished. We were thinking of something, you know, just to take it to the next level and I think theres something there, because hip-hop hasnt really gone into that kind of full-throttle edgy land sound. You know, they try, you know, they try, you hear it but
Lainie: Now theres a big influence with Indian rhythms.
Clivilles: Yes.
Lainie: The cymbal line especially, I think he has a song, Indian Food, that just came out.
Clivilles: I heard it.
Lainie: And a lot of them are playing around with the Middle Eastern thing, do you think that
?
Clivilles: Oh, well, theyve been playing around with the Middle Eastern thing for like three years already, thats why I didnt want to touch that. I did the Latin tribal with the Caribbean reggae was the blend, thats why Rock Your Body because it was more, its harder, like the tribal stuff is a little harder than the Indian stuff. And I want to make it a little more uptempo. I want a little dance, you know.
Lainie: Do you think its easier for a rap or hip-hop to, you know, use softer themes when theyre talking about softer themes so use Latin and tribal because people can move their bodies to it, where as like, maybe in like Eminem they go straight for the rock and roll edge now, when hes talking about beating his wife. But when talking about a more hardcore subject there seems to be a metal edge or a rock edge to hip-hop.
Clivilles: Yes.
Lainie: Now it just seems that you wont have as many choices as we did when it was 1986 all the way up, you know, through the beginning of the 90s. Well, how do you think were going to get back to being a more global music, you know
?
Clivilles: That depends on the producers and the performers, and that depends on the dedication that people want to do. I mean, the industry didnt destroy dance music, the producers and the creators did, the people that support it. I mean, if you dont write songs and you dont take, you dont push the envelope and youd have a lot of DJs and DJ / producers that are very comfortable, were making a living, and dont want to take that extra step. The only way thats going to happen is if people, if somebody takes it really serious.
Lainie: Do you think a lot of people have substituted song writing for remixing and
?
Clivilles: Absolutely, I mean most DJs dont write- they haven't taken the time out to write. They say they write, they take the credit like they write, but they really dont write. I mean, I know a lot of DJ/producers and I know that they dont write, and I know they dont do what they say they do, and Im probably going to get in trouble for saying that but Im not going to say, Im going to keep it right there. But that it pretty much what destroyed the dance music scene
Lainie: Well, they get the another pop artist like a Britney Spears and Madonna get, gets to be exposed to the dance market and, you know, there are several remixes of a song, you know, they dont know what DJ or what, you know, remixer would get the credit, but it will always be Madonna or a Britney that gets the credit for being a popular club song. So when you see it in the chart, its not that so-and-so sold it, its that, that name of the pop artist.
Clivilles: Yes, but you need to make just as much quality music. The same way Britney takes her craft seriously, theres got to be a few people out there that take dance music seriously to break it. I mean, to tell you the truth, Rock Ya Bodys a dance song, you know, it might be a midtempo dance song but it is a dance song. I mean you could play that instrumental in any club, speed it up or whatever and people are going to dance to it.


