Episode Transcript
Questlove Supreme is a production of iHeartRadio.
What's Up, Everybody?
Speaker 2This is Sugar Steve from Quest Love Supreme.
We are beginning a new batch of classic episodes to give you, and this one is special to me.
It's a conversation between my only two friends, and I guess you could say my two bosses, Questlove and Jimmy Fallon.
They talk about the art of making mixtapes, their mutual love of duop, and their mutual love of me, Sugar Steve.
This episode first aired what seems like a lifetime ago, back on December fourth, twenty nineteen, and I know you're gonna enjoy it.
Take it away, Questlove and Jimmy Fallon.
Speaker 1Ladies and gentlemen.
Speaker 3We promised you all freaking summer that we'd be back, and I told you I was told to never ever make a promise I can't keep.
Speaker 1Yet.
Speaker 3Still we're back and we're better than ever.
The family's still here, but we're gonna do a little bit different right now.
This is officially the return of Quest Left Supreme.
Shout out to our new family on iHeartRadio.
I will say that right now we are worldwide for the first time.
A lot of you we've heard your cries.
Yes, we are officially worldwide.
We're not just US and Canada anymore.
Another cross for celebration is our guest today, five time Emmy Winner, People's Choice, Webby Writers Guild, Critics Choice and Grammy Award winning, which I try to make a word out of it, but it was.
Speaker 4Just may you how many continents exactly?
We're valid?
Speaker 3Most importantly, our guest today is a comic student.
He is a Saturday Night Live legend, still the coolest late night talk show host, and a New York Times bestselling author.
My bud please welcome back to the return of post lof Supreme James T.
Speaker 4Call me, Jimmy, come me, just call me Jimmy.
Speaker 3Wait, time out.
What the hell's T stand for?
T?
Here's your middle name, right, Tiberius?
Speaker 4No?
Speaker 1I was like, what Captain perk.
Speaker 4T is?
Thomas James Thomas found I.
Speaker 3Never knew that we shared a route Thompson Thomas.
I did not know you were Thomas.
Okay, do you have a middle name?
Speaker 1You ready?
Yeah?
All right?
Speaker 3So it's the pronounced the way that you say it is?
Khalib khalib k h a l i b Amir Khalib.
Speaker 1Khalib Colleb Alib.
Speaker 4Wow.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3My parents were on some next next when when I was born Khalib Khaleb Thompson.
Yes, wow, which made me all the more just wanting to have a question mark for my name all my life.
Speaker 4That's the exactly.
But we went through your names once before, like you've had was it always brother brother quest?
Speaker 1All right?
Speaker 3So when we first when the group first started, I was, oh God.
Speaker 4Yeah, that's we all came from somewhere.
Speaker 3I don't want to mit all right, Okay, so oh man, just say it, dude.
Speaker 1Man, it kills me.
Speaker 4This is like therapy when you.
Speaker 3First first my first name was deaf dough money.
I want to do something that I normally don't.
I never I never do like rapid fire questions on this show.
Like it's always like, you know, the conversation, yeah, like so you were born in Yes, I know you're born.
I'm pretty sure that everyone pretty much knows your backstory.
So this is a question.
I always wanted to start with.
What did you have for breakfast this morning?
Speaker 4I had pancakes.
You have in syrup you cook them more, you know.
I I had a meeting this morning.
Speaker 1What time do you wake up?
Speaker 4Man?
I don't want to wake up, but the kids wake me up.
They It's insane.
Right now, I have a six year old and the four and a half year old, and they get in bed around probably four in the morning.
Usually wait what I know, and I'm just like, dude, I got to sleep.
Speaker 1But my week on me show biz kids.
Speaker 4My wife is like, no, no, They go to sleep at like seven or a night, but in their room.
But then at four in the morning they walk into our bedroom and come into bed with me and my wife and just want to sleep in the bed with us.
And I was like, we got to just tell them no, and they got to go back to the room.
My wife's like, they won't do it forever.
There's no you know, thirty year old kids sleeping with their parents.
It's like eventually they figure it.
She goes, one day we'll be wanting our kids to come in and send it laying.
So anyways, so they come in around four, I try to I toss and turn till about probably seven, and then we wake up around six thirty seven.
Speaker 1When he's not out of school age now she in first grade.
Speaker 4She's in first grade, and she.
Speaker 1Still wants to get up at six in the morning.
Speaker 4Oh yeah, they got up at six in the morning.
They play like they're excited and they love it.
They play for an hour like all their toys, and then we brush our teeth and that we have breakfast.
We usually make them breakfast, but I didn't eat with them because I had to.
But normally what I would do is, you know what I've been doing is the gross apple cider, vinegar, lemon hot water.
Speaker 1I love that now you do, and I'm used to it.
Speaker 4I'm still not used to it.
Speaker 1It's the guys.
Speaker 4It's like honestly painful for me.
Really, the drink vinegar every morning.
It sounds like torture.
Why didn't we do that to each other?
Speaker 3Or do you put a little bit of honey in it?
Yes, and it's still hard.
Speaker 4It's getting better a little bit for me, but I think I was maybe I was putting too much vinegar in mine.
Oh okay, I was just drinking like hot vinegar.
Its pretty gross.
But you do it every day.
Speaker 1I look forward to it.
Speaker 4You do.
Speaker 1Yeah, And I put kian pepper.
Speaker 4Yeah, I do that never now and then I throw that in there.
But I anyways, so that's Normally I would not have breakfast.
I would just have that, but I had a meeting about the show today, so I had to go order something to just be rude.
Speaker 1So your morning routine usually starts at seven?
Speaker 3Yeah, and then because the thing is is that sometimes I'll say, most of the time, unless we're talking about a sketch or some sort of whatever, the format of what we're gonna do later, I never see you.
Speaker 1So I never know what your.
Speaker 3Morning routine is from nine, from eight in the morning till.
Speaker 4Three or two, I go to bed as soon as I can.
I go.
I'm one of those people now I go out to dinner.
If I go out to dinner with Nancy, we got at like, I'm there at five o'clock.
Speaker 1So you like, I can't wait to go to sleep?
Speaker 4I love sleep?
Speaker 1I started I hate.
Speaker 3I mean, I'm afraid that sleep is I feel like me is saying like, oh.
Speaker 1Man, I can't wait to go to bed?
Speaker 4Is life of time?
Well?
Speaker 3No, I just feel like it's me admitting that I'm getting up there like I used to be proud to, like, ah, five days in a row, I've been out.
Speaker 4No, dude, we had remember Grace Jones just came on the show and she goes, I go, uhh.
She goes, what are you doing tonight?
I go, this is it?
I mean, I'm going home.
I'm probably just gonna eat something to go to bed.
She's like, oh man, I go, You're not doing that.
She's like, no, I gotta I got a show tonight.
And then after the show, we're going to uh something, some club.
I go, you still got the clubs?
She's like, yeah, oh yeah, I go.
What time do you get home.
It's like, I don't know, four or five.
She's like, I don't know what's wrong with this generation.
I'll go to bed too early.
I'm like Grace Jones still just stays out the five in the morning.
I go, oh my god, I wouldn't even know what to do.
I would have no clue.
Well, yeah, I'm just I love sleep now, and I hate to admit that I love It's the greatest thing.
That's the one thing you can get me for my birthday, for Christmas or anything I can can get sleep.
Oh, I would love sleep, man, that would be you gotta.
Speaker 1You know.
There's coupon.
Speaker 3One time I thought Tarik was joking, but he had these coupons made for like the interrupted no treek, fix this or Dad, I need help with that?
Speaker 1Like that was his birthday gift, Like.
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, yeah, I did that with my parents when I was a kid.
I made them coupons.
Yeah, I'm like, oh, so they can leave you alone, or so I could leave them alone or help them out, like you use this coupon whenever you want me to go, like I'll you know, wash the car, I'll do whatever.
Speaker 1I'll oh instead of just regularly regularly regula chores.
Speaker 4Yeah, exactly like that.
Speaker 1All right.
Speaker 3So you of course mentioned your your dad's affinity and love for do wop music.
Speaker 4Oh yeah, yeah, I grew up with it, loved it.
What's the first single do you remember purchasing?
Speaker 1Oh Man, non do or just in general?
Verse forty five.
So like his record collection was your record collection?
Speaker 4Oh yeah, yeah, yeah I remember that.
Speaker 3Yeah all right, So what was your favorite of his of his record collection?
Speaker 4Of your dad trying to learn harmony to the song called zoom because like zoom.
Speaker 3Zoom, zoom zoom zoom to zoom zoom, zoom, zoom, zoom, zoom, zoom, zoom zoom zoom.
Speaker 1The same format.
I've never heard this all my life, but I knew.
Speaker 4So I was trying to.
So he would try to teach me and my sister to sing zoom so we could like harmonize and be like, you know, I don't know the Osmonds or whatever sometimes or Donnie Man No, I was Marie, but I was.
It's like, so my sister immediately was like, I'm out.
I don't even I don't get harmony.
I don't like this, I'm out of the out of the group.
But me and my dad were even rebel.
Yeah, Gloria was the rep.
So me and my dad could sing zoom pretty well.
Uh.
And so that was just I would just start learning all these harmonies and then getting in the trick your harmonies and trying to like, I mean, I just loved it.
Speaker 3I just so would he would he go to all those like Dick Fox productions of like at Westbury Music Fear Do Wop, yeah kind of.
Speaker 4Yeah.
I grew up Sagerty is New York, which is upstate by Kingston, Pokeepsie, Woodstock that area.
So there was a place called uh Ulster Performing Arts Center, you pack, and they would have oldie shows there and so I would go to see my first concert concert was weird Al Yankovic.
But my first kind of venture into concert was with the whole family.
We went to a Doop show and I saw, like, oh gosh, you know.
Speaker 1Chances are it was a Dick Fox production.
Speaker 4Yeah, Larry Chance and the Earls were there.
Speaker 3Yeah, I saw Joey D and the Starlight star Lighters all right.
So now many people know that Hendrick used to play in Joey Dean and the star Lighters.
Speaker 1What yeah, Hendricks.
Speaker 3Joey always tells that story, like when when I see him.
Joey D had a son that was in the Starlight.
Speaker 1It was just my age.
Speaker 3And so at one point in nineteen eighty five, my dad had this idea like, Okay, we're gonna get Joey D's son, gary Us Bond's daughter.
Uh but my middle name is middle sister, right right, his.
Speaker 1Two nieces, my sister and I.
Speaker 3It was like a eight It was like an eight eight kid group of all Duop legends, and they wanted to call it UBI the next generation, like.
Speaker 4Re Redo do call it UBI.
Speaker 3I don't know if we were redoing Duop, but it was just a thing like let's put a supergroup.
Speaker 1Together of all like the Legends.
Speaker 3We did one session at the studio that's now that used to be Sony on fifty fourth and eleventh Avenue, So somewhere in their files in nineteen eighty six, there's like a four song oldies doop demo from the Legends of Duop.
I think that was like my first studio session ever.
No way, yeah, was it a cappella?
Speaker 4Was a duop?
Or is it?
Speaker 3No?
Speaker 1We played like I drummed and.
Speaker 4See I could see that working.
But that's because I think I grew up brainwashed that duop was the only music.
Speaker 1I thought, right right.
My parents tricked me as well, because.
Speaker 4Well, my dad was in Vietnam, so he was like he had these real, real tapes of him and his group on the ship singing duop.
So I always thought that Vietnam everyone sang duop songs.
And then I'm watching these movies I watch Apocalypse Now or whatever, and no one's singing any duop, and I'm like, I'm here like the doors, and right, I go, what is this music?
I know for a fact people sang duop until she turns out my dad was just like a nerd to me.
Speaker 3No, we got tricked, man, We got trick because in my first grade class, my first homework assignment was bringing in your favorite forty five.
The next day, everyone came in with contemporary stuff and he gibbs, I just want to be everything Disco Duck Yeah, Rick D's all that stuff.
And I came in with why do.
Speaker 1Fools fall in love?
Why fools?
Speaker 3And my teachers were like, oh, this is from my era, and none of the kids knew my record, and right my teacher explained like, well, a mere like when I was your age, this is what I listened to.
And I'm looking like, how come what this doesn't residentate you?
Speaker 4If you guys this happened to me, but such later in life, I was like, I was actually in high school or college.
Speaker 1People do that now.
Speaker 3I remember at one point U Kamal decided that he was going to make his kids think that Michael Jackson's Off the Wall was a brand new album.
So I know kids that do that now, like just put their kids in the time warp and don't listen.
Speaker 1You know, there's nothing for doing it.
Yeah, did it work for a little bit.
Speaker 3Well, it's weird now because I'll say that of all the roots kids, Kamal's kids are the weirdest.
Speaker 1Yeah, his daughter now, as.
Speaker 3This taping, your your Grateful Dead experience will be over.
But Kamal's oldest daughter is and she I think she just turned twenty.
She's like a total deadhead, like she knows American beauty.
She went to college one year and then they just put her onto like the first four Grateful Dead records because she have all these quotes on her social media.
Speaker 1I'm like, wait a minute, what do you know about Cherry Carcia.
Speaker 4Dude, I think it's changed my life a little bit.
I've never listened to him at all, and I'm really into it.
I dig it, I get it all right, I totally get it.
And then Kamal's son is straight up country what yo?
No, I think your kids.
Speaker 3Your kids are going to be the total opposite of what you are, which explains it because even Kirk's son is into like the hardest trap music of all time.
Really, Like, when certain acts come on the show and kirk Son doesn't show up, I'm like, Yo, you didn't want to see Da Da Da Da Da.
Speaker 4You'd be like, nah, that's too commercial for me.
Speaker 3I'm like, what, like like the underground he if it's if it's it's two mainstream, he won't he won't mess with it.
I just realized I got to teach when he had to dance because we went to this Halloween party and they're like.
Speaker 4First grader dance competition.
Who wants to dance?
And she goes, well, I have to go, dad, it's first dance competition.
I'm like, do you really know how to dance?
And dude, they played like everybody dance now, and she just stood there and kind of like walked back and forth.
Speaker 1It's really stiff.
Speaker 4And the dude next to her was like doing backspins and flips and like moonwalking.
And I was like, oh my gosh, my kid does not know how to dance.
I got to teach her.
Speaker 3How your kids discover YouTube?
Yet No, Yeah, it's like they got it.
I mean YouTube's a slippery slope because you don't want them controlling, like what the search.
Speaker 4I was watching one thing and I just said, hey, maybe no more YouTube because it was no it was like adults moving toys around and doing voices for dolls like that's it, dude, And they were obsessed with this show and it's like it's the any parent out there knows what I'm talking about.
It is the creepiest thing ever.
There's like a hand will hold like a pop patrol doll and be like, hey, what are you doing?
Oh?
And they play with dolls and the kids just watch it like like it's them playing with dolls and it's the It goes on for hours on a loop on YouTube, and kids like it.
I don't know how they found it, but they loved it, and I was like, oh, dude, we gotta take it.
We gotta watch something with the beginning, middle, end, a plot.
Anything.
You can watch anything, but not this.
Speaker 1What's it called?
Speaker 4I have no idea what it's called.
But I almost want to sue these people.
It's like I don't like it.
I don't want it in my house.
Speaker 1Now, you just gotta show a bunch of dance clips on you know.
Speaker 4You really know how to play music for them, because it's just like Alexa or you know, or you know, show them soul training.
Speaker 1I should.
I gotta get put on.
Speaker 3Trust me, a good soul tiraying clip.
They will emulate it.
That's how everyone in America learns how to dance.
Speaker 4That's it.
Speaker 3Yes, that's how they learned.
Hey do you remember the first mixtape you ever made for someone?
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, it's a big deal.
Speaker 1How long did it take you to craft it?
Speaker 4Oh?
I mean plussing play record and pause and having the record startup.
And it wasn't even a great mixtape.
It was just my stuff, which is all weird stuff.
And I would take it because I had this thing when I was a kid that I didn't and this is you could ask my sister.
I wouldn't let anyone copy my music.
Why Because I thought it would affect the record industry.
Wait what because I must have seen someone talk about it on TV or so.
I said, you're gonna ruin the record industry.
If you record a song, if you take my song, you have to buy the record.
You can't just take the song off of by record that eyebought.
That he's gonna ruin the industry.
And my sister was like, you're the worst, You're the weirdest kid.
And so I would have to take my music to the party.
I play my mixtape, then I take the tape home.
I would just I would own my mixtapes.
You wouldn't give it to no one?
No, I would, I would.
I wouldn't give it to anyone, not even my sister.
Speaker 3I'm like, man, yeah, I was the opposite.
I feel I am Spotify.
Like the The the amount of work I don't have to do now in the age of streaming is mind boggling because back when you had to make mixtapes and mix you have.
Speaker 4To listen to the whole song.
Speaker 3I was the guy you had to come to to make whatever, Like I was the king of mixtape making.
Speaker 1But you never made a mixtape for anyone.
Speaker 4Well, I mean I might have done like earlier, because I remember I used to listen to the radio all the time.
That was like I loved it.
Speaker 3I had a boombox and I'm trying to think of the brand the brand name of my boom box.
Speaker 1I forget.
Speaker 4I mean I remember it in my brain looking at it.
Listen to this radio station, have play record and pause just there, just in case.
Speaker 1A song came on the radio.
Speaker 4Ghostbusters was my jam.
I was like Ray Parker Junior, Ghostbusters.
If I hear that, I would run over and like try to record it.
And I was like oh, And then like I remember listening to another like my dad would play radio and I would bring the boom box over to his speaker, so I could record the song from his speaker onto my cassette player so I can tape it that way, like if there was like a special Beatles thing.
I was really into the Beatles at one point, right, So I had those type of mixtapes.
And then I remember listening to Doctor Demento.
Do you know him at all?
Speaker 3That's how weird Out got to start, right, Yeah, Okay, he's just you was the legend of Doctor Demento.
Speaker 4He played novelty songs and novelty records, So any comedy song there was a whole mess, a whole different They don't do it anymore as much, but in the seventies, especially in the eighties, it was all comedy joke songs like that was the birth of weird al But it was like Steve Martin, you know, doing King Tut that was like it charted, that's all duck.
Yeah, that disco duck was a hit.
So, I mean, that's a novelty record, all these like but.
Speaker 1Do you remember he was just played novelty records.
Speaker 4Do you remember the coasters They had that song well jobing and cad like what dun It was called beat Beep And then by the end of the song, it gets faster, so it's like they that that don then that bet beep, bet beep, the hormone beat beep beep, and now I'm going to one hundred and so it was like a song about a race, but the song it was not a real it was it was like a novelty song.
But it was a hit, really and it was Yeah, so all these songs, so he would play all these kind of weird songs like that and very it was very more seventies than anything else.
But I would listen to that Sunday nights and and and just try to record all these funny songs and then see if I can start writing them myself.
Speaker 1See you write them down and perform.
Speaker 4The first song, my first parody song I ever wrote, was awful, but.
Speaker 1It was what's your what's your deft?
Do money?
This is bad?
Speaker 4Do you remember King Kong Bundy was a rapper.
I was a wrestler, so I did I wish it was King Kong Bundy instead of Manic Monday, Like I wish it was King Kong Bun.
Oh that would be a fun or whatever.
And it was like it was awful, And I remember writing it like, and I had my eraser, my papermate eraser mate.
Uh and like rewriting the lyrics, I was like, oh my gosh, I'm writing like I'm gonna be weird al and that's what I and I remember writing it.
It was just I thought it was so clever and fun.
Then I was too embarrassed.
Couldn't play for anybody?
Speaker 1What year weird out?
Did you see?
What period is there to be stupid?
Did dare to be stupid?
Speaker 4Tour?
Speaker 3I had a teal concert tee, no sleeve concert tea.
That's what I That's what I bought.
Speaker 4What was I doing?
I just I wanted to be you know, this is pre Zach Morris.
But I was like I would have that or gosh, my wardrobe.
I was trying to be as fashionable as I could as a kid.
And you know, growing up in Sorrtyes, New York, was this you and going to this concert?
Or Drew was there?
He was?
But he was not, No, he wasn't.
He wasn't my best friend yet.
Okay, but now.
Speaker 3Geri's talking about Gerard Bradford who woods on our show as a producer, and uh, but I we started hanging out more I'd say probably the end of high school when we're getting into the Beastie Boys and started like we had a bad We had a fake rap.
Speaker 4Group that was terrible.
Speaker 1What was the name of the group.
Speaker 4We were called the Minute Man and I don't know why, and we not even knowing there already was a punk band called the minute Man.
We were we just thought and I can't even tell you it's honestly, this is worse than uh deft deaf money.
Speaker 1Dude.
Speaker 4My name was Jim Hat and.
Speaker 1The room is explosive there.
Speaker 4I was like Jim Hat with that B Boys style was going wild.
Dude, it was awful.
I thought, Jim Hat, know, like that makes logical sense.
I wouldn't have wanted to be Colgate.
I thought that would be a cool rap name.
Speaker 1Colgate.
Speaker 4Yeah, like I thought, people, could you have the logo on the shirt like the toothpaste.
Speaker 1And they still make Colgate?
Yeah half Coldgate still.
I don't you know.
One day, like whenever I land in l a X.
Speaker 3The first time I make is that I go to pharmacy to do the trial size stuff like things I need toth plus toothpags.
Speaker 4And I was just noticing, like brands that only exist there.
Speaker 3Well no, well brands that I thought were out of you know, like Safeguard or.
Speaker 4Like they trail like seventies brands.
Yeah, Cam they still they exist in trial size.
Speaker 1So what other what.
Speaker 3Other concerts did you go to when you were uh weird?
Speaker 4I saw oh gosh, it was that Upax.
So there was that group that's saying expose, come go with me.
Woa you saw XO.
They had a song that was really I loved it.
It wasn't come go with me, but it.
Speaker 1Was a point and overturn.
Speaker 3Yes, then the planet, Uh, you're taking me right, And they had seasons change.
Speaker 4Seasons change.
I love that song.
Speaker 3I was a member of Columbia House to me too, but I was the I would never return the all right.
So for those that don't know what Columbia House and all your kids you missed out.
If you, yeah, this this was our Spotify you you would basically they will offer you.
Speaker 1Twelve cassettes or CDs.
Speaker 4For a penny.
Speaker 3You would tape scotch tape of penny, scotch tape of penny to the to the order form, pick your pick your twelve CDs or cassettes.
You want it, and then for an extra three for an additional three records you had to I forgot what the check was like for you know, for a dollar ninety eight more, you can get three more, see so you can get fifteen all together, or under the lolow price of three bucks.
Speaker 1And then you were part of.
Speaker 3This club in which every month they would send you product and you had, yeah, like two weeks to mail it.
Speaker 4Not even yeah, something like that.
Yeah, either liked it or mail it back.
If you kept it, it was like twenty bucks a record.
Speaker 3Yeah, if you kept it, it was definitely like seventeen ninety nine or something like that.
Speaker 1But if you mailed it back.
Speaker 3And I think between that and the first two years of trying to catch Michael Jackson videos on MTV was how I developed my vocabulary for pop music because I would never mail back Debbie Gibson's Out of the Blue or.
Speaker 4Or Timpany's first record.
I think I got tricked into that one too.
Speaker 3Yeah, I know, you know what, I think she thinks I'm being sarcastic, like I'm cool with her now, but in the beginning, I think in her mind it was like what you're trying to told me what you're saying that.
Yeah, my first I was like, yeah, I had a blue eyed electric youth.
Electric Youth I was the name of her first boar, right.
I was like, no, I really was.
I was a fan of yours and she was just looking like, Okaye's where's the Where's as?
Speaker 4Yeah, exactly right.
She's cool though she didn't believe.
Speaker 3She didn't believe it for the longest, but then I think she realized, like, oh you are.
Speaker 4But every album back then I loved it, even if he had like one hit song on there.
I remember I was trying to I didn't know what music I was going to be into, right, so I tried every type of genre and like, oh, maybe I'm in the metal Is it?
Really?
Yeah?
I was like, dude, maybe I should like Worse with the Devil and like, what am I talking about?
I'm an altar boy.
Speaker 3I think it's I think the weird thing is that I think between twelve and seventeen, you're open to anything, which you know, I can't like now, I really have the patience to like sift through records and see what I'm into, and the way that I used to do back in the day, like I would listen to an entire Miami Salm Machine record, whether I like the song or not too because you didn't want to go up to the cassette and fast forward.
Speaker 1Okay, I don't like this song.
What's what else?
Is it?
Speaker 2Like?
Speaker 4You would just play the whole thing?
Yeah, exactly, Like, yeah, I don't want to.
It's easier to lift the needle to move that back.
But no, I would listen to the whole album.
Then I'd like the B sides.
I would know what song follows what song too, in order.
See.
Speaker 3That explains why sometimes when an artist comes on and then you ask for the deep cut and I'm like, wait a minute, what what about the hit the hit joint?
Speaker 4And you like, nope, I want the Yeah, that's the secret one that you go like, oh, like like if you buy Cyndi Lauper, you just sing she Bop, you know, it's like, that's the that's the secret song off of Right the Girl?
Speaker 1Right Right?
Do you have top five like performances on the show for us?
Speaker 4God, there's so much now we've been done.
We've done so many shows now, it's crazy.
Speaker 1I mean you I have a top five.
Speaker 3I have a top five of me performing and a top five of me watching was.
Speaker 4One of your top five recently, dog Dude, Steve Miller.
Speaker 3I almost sometimes It's it's hard not to because I'm so connected to music and the memories that it brings on.
Because whenever I hear fly like an Eagle, I instantly think about the first month of school, and I'm thinking of like my parents not conning me, like Okay, we're gonna take you to this brown building and you're going to stay in here for the next seven hours and then we're gonna come and get you at three o'clock.
And you know, like I was just never explaining the concept at school.
It's just like, huh wait, I'm playing with them, and so I think during like one of those explanations, it was the radio was just playing like Billy Davis and Marilyn mccoo's you Don't Have to Be a Star, and then like.
Speaker 4You am radio at this point, FM, uh you know what?
Speaker 3So Philly, Philly was really good with FM radio on the weekends, though FM radio turned religious and then you'd have to live and listen to AM radio, so we'd have to switch a Wizard one hundred.
And the thing is is that I lived in a don't touch my stereo household.
Speaker 1So again, a big.
Speaker 3Part of my palette is the fact that I had to listen to what my sister wanted to listen to and what my dad.
I didn't control the car radio nor in my bet you know, the room that my sister and I shared, so like, I just remember.
Speaker 4Like I remember pressing, like being able to press the button to my dad's car that would it would be a plastic, hard plastic button that you would actually switch the station.
You would see the zip to the one side right and I actually tune.
I mean this is pre digital scan and seek for something.
It was actually press the button and you feel like gears moving.
Speaker 1Right to the radio station that you want to.
Speaker 4Yeah, and I was like, oh, I just to hope to hear like the Rolling Stones or something like that.
Speaker 1And yeah, so fly like an Eagle was definitely dide.
Speaker 4You crust that one.
And I was like, dude, I actually had to look over to see what your face was doing, because usually I can't see the drummer.
Speaker 1I was doing.
Speaker 3Every I had two moments in which I kind of had a I might cry moment.
Speaker 4It was awesome, dude.
It was honestly, it just clicked, like because you did the first like.
Speaker 1Yeah, in the space.
Speaker 3I had to beg for those extra because at first they were like three minutes and thirty seconds, you know, and.
Speaker 1I'm like, wait a minute, guys, not for this one.
Speaker 3You don't understand, like the most important part of the song is like the beginning.
Speaker 1We got to do that.
Speaker 3So I did didn't did out.
So it was so oh yeah, I didn't want to end.
And he was having fun.
Speaker 4Yeah, and he was having and he was so looking at it because you know, we have these guys on that like they don't play with anyone else but their band, and they're jaded and they're like, oh well look, it's almost feel like they're cheating on their band.
But then when they see how much love and how much work you guys put into that song.
Like Eddie Grant, Oh, I forgot.
He was so nervous.
I know, he was so nervous, like Jimmy I, I I don't I only play with my band.
I I'm these guys are great, but I don't know them, and you know, to play with my song, you know, Electric Avenue, And so he goes, do you remember you brought a harmonica.
Speaker 3Yes, oh did you wait?
When we're sound checking?
Are you watching?
Speaker 4On closer times?
I'm watching, damn it.
Sometimes I am, but sometimes I'd.
Speaker 1Like to be surprised.
Speaker 3But during sound check it was like a ten minute version and we're like looking at each other while.
Speaker 4I was like paying the harmonica do electric avenue?
Like who is to blaming?
Speaker 1I like, dude, stop.
Speaker 4But so I saw him and he goes, yeah, I'm just gonna bring this just in case.
I go, Eddie, you don't need a harmonica.
The roots will got you covered.
Trust me, man, it's gonna me fun.
And he did the song didn't do harmonica, and the crushed was great.
And I went over to say thank you for being on the show and went to shake his hand, and what was in his hand?
Speaker 1Yeah that's the case.
Speaker 4You know what.
Speaker 1It's also like a big part.
Speaker 3I'm always nervous about the legend because one you don't want to ruin, like the thought in your head of like, uh, what's it gonna be or what's it not gonna be?
It it's just that sometimes all right, I all met.
We had one guess that walked away, do you remember, Yeah, Cindy, Yeah, just because I think, okay, in our minds, in their minds, it's like, okay, I'm gonna play with the roots.
So they think like I'll take my song and filter it through and I'll rootify it.
Like that's the one word we hear the most inside the rehearsal room, like you know, don't don't do the normal version like rootsify it.
And I'm like, dude, what you don't get is that us routsifying it is doing it just like your album version.
Speaker 4That is roots fact, because we we want the yeah, I mean, we want the exact sound.
We want Eddie Grant to go out in the streets if he if he yeah, he doesn't want to do that anymore.
He goes, I don't do that.
I haven't done that for twenty five years ago.
Bring it back.
That's the part of the song that we love, those little nuggets, those little there's awesome little eggs, those easter eggs where you're like, oh no, that's the one part you gotta do like right, like on the Dark Side of Town, yeah or something, you didn't do that And he was like, uh, like when we have it, was it crowded house or something came on.
I'm like, all I want to hear is that base like go boo, let's freedom a little bit.
If you don't hit that baseline, and that's just I need that.
It's part of my whole thing of loving that song.
It's like, but we usually hit it like ninety nine percent of the time, right, We convinced the people to like, come on, you gotta do that part, and like, oh, I don't hit that note anymore.
It's like, yeah, but try it, just go because trust me, we'll get your back.
And then they do it in its course.
Speaker 3Well, probably the one humorous moment for us was definitely in the air tonight, where.
Speaker 4That was the only time I saw you being nervous, dude twice in my life.
Speaker 1But I've talked myself into major sabotage.
I was.
Speaker 3I wasn't helping them like I well see, I didn't know about meditation back then.
What I should have been doing was basically deep breathing, get out of your head, just hit these three times the way you've always done it all your life in the basement.
And for some reason, right when Phil Collins is like and I remember, and I was like, don't mess up, don't mess it.
I remember don't worry, all right, don't fuck up, don't fuckus.
Speaker 4How good I ever, I'm looking at Jimmy.
Jimmy's looking left.
I went from behind my desk to the front to look at your face.
I know, love it.
Speaker 1And I'm looking at the band standard for the roots members and.
Speaker 3I always says silence up, oh boy, no using fool me.
Oh dann cameras to me.
He's looking at me the herd.
So the pain still growing sustained, dude.
And I hit that symbol and was just drop a stick or something.
No, my my my ride symbol.
Speaker 4Oh yeah, I fell fell down, dude.
It was the fell I broke in pieces.
Speaker 3I was going to let it slide and just be like I'm going home.
I failed and then shout out to Sugar Steve.
Steve's like, no, man, I can't let this happen.
We're going to fix this.
And I was like, well, we can't go back and tape it like it's over, and he says, I bet you.
They have sound check on tape.
So we basically spent at least an hours editing.
Oh god, you remember that he was here.
He was there to five with the board.
We're the only show that gives that autonomy, like gives that power to guess to come and edit their own thing and mix their own thing.
Yeah, any other show like I've done Letterman w I'm like, okay, so we want reverbal and you know verse two.
Speaker 1And then already and they're like it's already in burbank, can't touch it, right, They're like, nope, it's gone, that's done.
It is what it is.
Speaker 4And we let everyone like go in listen to it and mix it.
But we usually we have the right sound between you know, we we have the best sound.
Speaker 3I feel like we have the best sound mixing and engineering.
Yeah that Al Simon stayed up until right before his segment, which is unheard of.
Speaker 4Right.
We were nervous because we got to deliver the show.
And this is when we were doing twelve thirty five, right, so we had an extra hour.
But it was like I think it was up to like it was actually up to midnight.
Speaker 3Right, it was ripe two commercials before you were actually covering song.
We spent we take that five or six, right, and he engineered it like it was a real song for five hours.
It must be the best engineered song of all time.
Speaker 4I don't even I kind of remember what it was that wasn't the one would stop?
Was it?
Speaker 1We don't even remember.
That's the thing.
It's just now I gotta go back in the archives.
Speaker 4And he really spent the time in that one.
But but then back to the Phil Collins thing because you ended up nailing it on when you see it on TV, because oh man, a pack a lot.
Speaker 1Yeah, that that to me, that that was a moment.
Speaker 4I mean, I love that.
I love Jim James.
I was from Late Night.
I love that.
Speaker 3That's right, he did another life all his presentations whenever Jim James comes on.
Speaker 4I also liked when you guys come when the roots come on and we spend extra time like making a production and it's actually it's almost like a music video.
Speaker 3Or musical musical.
Yeah, my three moments from that.
I don't know why.
Once I realized that we had a lot of I didn't realize the power of how Dave is as a director, Dave Demti and and and directing and doing tricks and all those things.
So I thought, like, I wonder how we could pull off a song that makes us look like we're playing in slow motion, like the Beastie Boys always do, like if it's so what you want.
Video was like the impetus of it, like of them performing and you hearing the song in real time, but it's like them doing it slow motion.
Speaker 1So when Usher was.
Speaker 3On the show, yep, you know, I knew it was going to confuse the audience, like we had to do that Usher song like Chipmunks.
Speaker 4Dude, it was like, and he's dancing really super fast and.
Speaker 3He caught and he caught like he was dancing and really that's the thing I thought, like, do you need to practice this?
Speaker 4Like do you need to figure out your splits and everything?
It looks so weird and so you're almost laughing at.
Speaker 1Him, right, But then when you watch it, it was.
Speaker 4Oh, it's magical, dude.
He's like slow motion doing the perfect dance moves and singing on the you know, on the ring exactly right.
Yeah, it was insane.
That was That was a cool moment.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3The second time, Tyler, Tyler, they created to See You Again with Caliuchis and he created this it was almost like a it's surreal musical, but it's it's to me.
That was like a moment, dude, get we have to talk about Prince.
Speaker 4There's there's too so many, there's so many.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3For me, the best part of the Craziest Memory is definitely the Ping Pong with.
Speaker 4The Pong story, but it even goes on before that.
Do you remember bring me on stage at the garden, Oh, Madison Square Garden.
So Chris Rock comes on and he goes, he goes bah blah blah blah.
He goes, well, of course, Prince is my favorite concert.
I've never seen him.
Go you've never seen Prince like you, you love music and you've never seen Prince in concert?
What are you talking about?
How could you even say that you're a fan of?
What do you?
I can't talk to you until you see Prince?
Speaker 1All right?
Speaker 4And so I go, all right, I gotta go see Prince and you're like, dude, I can't believe you.
I haven't seen him.
So anyways, I go to the Garden to see Prince and he is unbelievable.
He really is.
I remember Madonna was at the concert in the audience watching Prince stoneface, just going like, wow, I got up my game.
He's just so magical.
And she's great too, Yeah, he was, so he's crushing it.
And Prince's manager or whoever this was, came up to me.
Yeah, hi, I'm a princess manager.
I don't even think it was Caro was someone to say, like, Prince would really love you to get on stage at the end of the concert and dance with him, like he gets a bunch of celebrity friends and to go on stage and dancing at the end.
I go, that's not really my thing.
I'm not really a big dancer, but thank you.
So I'll just watch the concert.
Next song, someone else comes out like, hy, how you doing.
I'm working for a princess A different person.
Yeah, different person.
I go, Prince would really love for you.
I go, yeah, I don't think so.
I mean I was not really my thing, and I don't even think he really wants me to dance with him anyways, So that happens to me maybe two more times during the whole concert.
End of the concert.
I'm like, I see you, because I didn't see if the whole concert.
I go, what's up, dude, And you go, I'm gonna get on stage at the end of the concert.
I go, oh, if you're getting up there, I'll go up with you.
Then, so they all right, so you get up, I get up, you go behind a dry set.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 4And as I get up and you get behind drus set, Prince leaves.
He's keep his he's on a keyboard, and he goes and sinks into the state side of the STA and I could see him down there, almost getting in his limousine right there, and I'm like, and I'm looking around.
There's no one else on stage dancing, but me right, it's just me dancing and you're playing.
I go, oh, Mike, that's exactly why don't say yes to this stuff.
So I think it kind of started there, and then when Prince came on the show, it was always fun.
So Prince came on the show and is, uh, probably is Kiran his manager, Yeah, says hey, Prince would really like to play ping pong on the show.
So we go, okay, we don't really play ping pong.
We played beer pong, but if he wants to play ping pong, it's fine.
Then he calls back and he goes, you know what, Prince does not want to play beer pong on the show.
He doesn't want to play ping pong.
We go, okay, whatever, he just come on play music.
As long as he has fun.
Speaker 1We're good.
Speaker 4He calls back.
He goes, Prince does want to play ping pong.
We rethought about it.
Okay, we'll have it ready to go just in case.
Calls back.
He goes, he doesn't.
He wants to play ping pong, but he doesn't want to play it on camera.
He wants to do it, and I go, what's your obsession?
He goes, he just thinks, Jimmy, be fun to play ping pong with.
I go, whatever, We'll have it ready to go if he wants to play backstage whatever.
Man.
So he comes on the show, never brings up ping pong, doesn't even mention it all right, just comes on and plays.
He's great and he and he leaves and it was a great show and it was awesome.
I go, that was interesting.
So I tell the story on the show about the whole ping pong thing, and I go, by the way, the Prince, if you're watching, I would probably kick your ass in ping pong or something like that, all right, just joking around.
So then I think that week I'm at the dinner.
Speaker 3Right, and so this is the rare night.
No, this is when Winnie Oh, Whennie was being born.
So I get a call.
It was around that time.
I just remember like it was any moment, you know what I mean.
And I get a call at ten pm.
Now I think I was sick this night, because this is one of the rare times I was in bed at like ten third on a school night or whatever, and they're like, Prince wants to play Jimmy now at Susan Sarandon's ping pong spot.
Yes, Spin Spin, And I was just like, oh, man, you know he's about to have a kid.
Speaker 1Da da da dah, So yeah, I'll let him know.
Speaker 3And then like a minute later they're like, well, he's uh, you know, he's down to do it right now if you know available, And I was like, oh, maybe I didn't get the message.
I was like, no, no, no, Jimmy's about to have a kid, so yeah, it might you know, it might be busy or whatever.
And then a minute later he says, Okay, well just name the time and place and you know he'll be there.
And I'm like, oh, they're just not listening or not taking a note for an answer.
Speaker 1Yeah, So I was like I'm not going to answer this.
Speaker 3I went to bed for like twenty minutes and over my eyes and I was like, let me at least tell Jimmy.
So then I texted you.
I said, hey, uh, Prince wants to play you in ping pong.
So I had no idea this whole exchange that you just went through.
I said, for some strange reason, he wants to play in ping pong at susan s random spot.
And I told him that you're tied up with baby stuff.
So anyway, just passing the message along.
Speaker 4Cool.
Speaker 1I had no idea that you were going to answer that message.
Speaker 4Yeah, because I was out.
I was out to dinner that night.
Okay, I wasn't because it wasn't yet that it was close to it.
Speaker 1It was close to it.
Speaker 4I knew any moment that it was.
Any moment I had to be on the ready for Winny to be born.
But I was like out to dinner that night.
I'm like what And then I got a text from his manager or something, So you gave him.
Speaker 1Did it happen that night or the next night?
It happened soon.
Speaker 4I think it happened that night because I got a text from their manager right and saying like, hey, this princess manager, princess at spin he wants to play you in ping pong right now.
So I go, it's the weirdest thing.
I go.
So I told the first time having dinner with him, Like, all right, I gotta go.
Man, Prince wants to play me in ping pong and I'm gonna meet him at the Spin at Susan Random's Club.
So I leave, I I, you know, get in a cab and I go down the Spin and I go out.
I go into the door and go down the steps and there's a girl working there and I go, hi, I'm I'm here to see uh and she goes friends.
I go, yeah, She goes, he's right behind the curtain.
He's in the private room over there.
I go, all right, So I go and there's a good We have a velvet room.
There's a velvet rope and a curtain, and I go past the rope and I open the curtain and he's Prince is standing there and a crushed blue velvet suit, wearing the high heeled right shoes, and he's holding a ping pong old paddle and he looked at me.
He goes, you ready to do?
And I go, oh my gosh, I go, I guess so sure?
He goes wanna warm up?
I go, uh, yeah, I warm up a little bit, like in my head, I don't even play ping pong, right, you know what he's talking about.
So we start warming up a little bit.
If he had two ends in the room, he goes, everybody leave, everyone go go, so it's just me and Prince.
Right, so everyone had to leave the room.
It was just me and Prince and nobody else.
And he goes, all right, you ready, I go, let's start.
So he hits the first he's like, hits it over and it goes and it just it was a good shot and I didn't hit it back.
He goes, one's it and I go, oh, you're can talk smack or right, and this is gonna happen twenty one points, says dude, this man, let's go, Prince.
So I go.
So we start playing and you know, hitting back and forth.
It was he's crushing me.
So I think now it's like twenty to ten or something like that.
He's killing me.
And he goes, uh, game point.
I go, let's let's go, man, and he hits the shot and it's like and it's like beautiful, perfect shot and the PAINSTI on spin and spit flames coming off it and it hits the hits that corner of the table that's just impossible to hit the you know what I'm talking, like the perfect shot, and went flying behind me and I go, ah, you won, you on and I go and I'm looking in the background, find the ball.
Speaker 3I take up the ball.
Speaker 4I turned around and he's gone, and he's not there.
And I don't know him that well, so I thought maybe he was hiding or something.
So I'm like, Prince Prime, Prince prince some like looking under the pink punk table, like there's security footage.
I look like crazy.
I was like, is he hiding behind a curtain?
I don't know him, but I don't know the type of sense of humor.
He's funny, but I was like, but then I look and kind of rope is kind of moving almost.
Speaker 1Like Batman in the door swiveling.
Yeah yeah, yeah the window.
I go to the girl.
Speaker 4I go, did he She goes, yeah, he left.
I go, okay.
So then I went up and up the stairs on the street.
Speaker 3So me being notoriost lye late for everything, I got back from a DJ gig and got your text that about to play prints right now.
Speaker 1I was like, I'm on my way over.
Speaker 3So I drive to Manhattan to spin get out the car, and I forget who from the show was outside smoking a cigarette.
But I run and I was like, am I too late?
Am I too late?
And she's like, wait, you just miss him?
That that was him?
And I looked, uh in the street and in the STUV he was there and pulling off to a red light.
I was like, hey on wait and I run and straight up great poopone style.
I'm like knocking on the door and the window rose down slowly and I was like, wait, it's over, It's over.
Speaker 1What happened?
Speaker 3And seriously he's a ask you boy, and then this thing, the window goes slowly up, just like the great Poupon conversial just takes off and takes off.
The only thing I noticed that he had the paddle with him.
Yeah, and it was a gold paddle.
And later did I learned that he is that obsessed with it.
We did a show with him in Carousel.
Uh we will, I'll rephrase that we were supposed to do a show with him.
We did it.
We showed up with him.
There's the weirdest lineup ever.
Dinah Ross, Toto, Los Lobos dude Dinah Ross who booked this God Dinah Ross, Los Lobos, Toto Journey, Prince, the Roots, Carousel, and he was supposed to do a three hour set then the Roots, right yeah, nah, friends, don't play that.
Princes wound up doing a five hour set and we like definantly like we still don't, you know, trying to like, yeah, we still want to perform, and we did like one and a half.
We just stopped this only all right, y'all want to see Okay, We'll just.
Speaker 4Do this until just to the hit go.
Speaker 3Yeah, it's like at this point in the middle, No, the place holds like eight thousand people.
Speaker 1I swear to god, it was like thirty five people.
Speaker 4Yeah, they all split one's Princes left like we.
Speaker 1Just got like yeah to see Okay.
Speaker 4But what's the one that the DJ night with Prince?
Remember that one?
That one?
Speaker 3Yeah it was he he That's the best story ever heard.
Speaker 1I love that.
Speaker 3I was Okay, So I was on I was on a blind date and I wanted to appear cool, to be cool, and so I asked this, you know, like, uh, I got tickets to Prince, you want to see it?
And I had ten tickets and me, not thinking I invited.
I said, oh, I got ten tickets, so I invited ten of my friends.
I never counted myself as one of the ten.
So when we get there, it was like, here's your ticket, here's your ticket, here's your ticket, here's your ticket.
And I was like nine, oh fuck so and this is beyond sold out.
So they're in and I had the number of his assistant and so I'm like, hey, I'm on a date and I forgot to buy myself a ticket.
Decided to explain the whole thing, and she's like, yo, man, like no one can get in, like you know everyone else.
Sharpton was trying to come down.
Spike Lee was trying to say.
Speaker 1Please, anything ready or trouble.
Speaker 3So he just happened to be in his own custom golf cart in Philly, doing like forty miles an hour in a golf cart, like not doing donuts, but like like that sort of thing.
And I was just like, oh, just tell him straight up.
I said, look, I made a mistake that d DA, I had ten friends.
I forgot to include myself in the ten.
Can I sit somewhere please?
And he was just like all right, cool, you can sit on the stage under the stage.
So the way that that stage is designed like his name, Like it's a thirteen foot tall stage, and so I'm literally sitting under the arrow that is his name.
Meanwhile, my dates like sitting with my friends in the audience, but I'm sitting like under the stage.
And mid show, his assistant comes by and says, Prince wants you to throw him a party.
And I was like, I have no resource like right now.
He said yeah tonight, and I was like, well, well I would have to.
Yeah, you can use our phones.
But I'm like I'm going to miss the concert.
And now it's like, oh, I'm working for Prince now, so I'm like leaving my concert going into you gotta throw them a party, right, So I called my friends who I normally do parties with in Philly.
I was like, look, Prince, hang on a second, he wants what pool table.
Okay, hey, Prince wants to do a party tonight.
So in like four hours, can you find me a spot?
They said, we on the spot.
I said, okay, now he wants a pool table.
They're like, well, this is a five story walk up.
Speaker 4Can't please?
Speaker 1Can we please just make this happen?
Please?
Speaker 4Please.
Speaker 3So they had to find a detachable pool table to carry up five flights of stairs.
So then I rush home, get my records ready, get there.
You know, Prince is like elate party.
So this party's not starting to like one pint thirty and it's ten of us and we're inside, and basically he wants to control the door.
And you know, there's a whole group of people waiting outside, but they're inside.
There's only like seventy people.
Club should hold about three hundred anyway, So I'm playing like a bunch of like Faylile, you know, West African funk music, and I'm thinking, like, okay, I'm gonna educate Prince on falaile.
Speaker 1He likes James Brown, he likes George.
Speaker 3Clinton, and play the original you know, West African guy to funk and he'll be into it.
And Prince wasn't into it.
He was just like what else he got.
I was like, okay, I played another failure song?
Speaker 1What else you got?
I was like, damn, He's like, play some of your music.
Speaker 3And I was like, I never played the roots in the club, Like I'm just scared to do that because it's instant club.
So I'm failing, and I'm twenty five minutes in and his assistant walks up and says, here, play this, and she gives me a DVD and it's Finding Nemo.
Speaker 1And I was like, yeah, the.
Speaker 4Movie, not the soundtrack, the actual movie.
Speaker 3And I was like, wait, what do I don't there's not a DVD player here.
Speaker 1She's oh.
Speaker 3She comes back, gives me a portable DVD player.
I was like, well, I say, it's a nightclub, they don't have it.
His engineer gives me, like the chords.
I said, yeah, but there's no projection.
There's a projection screen.
Speaker 1So suddenly.
Speaker 3I put this thing on, but I'm still DJing, so I figured like he just wants the visual of like the just.
Speaker 1Playing in the background.
Speaker 3Yeah, And then they come over and they're like no, no, no, can you turn the volume up.
I was like, wait, we're in a nightclub in Philadelphia.
Speaker 4He wants to watch Finding Nemo.
Speaker 3And he said, yeah, just you know, just kill the music and put the thing up.
And I was like, oh, no, you ain't set me up.
So I got the opening DJ guy I said, look, in about five seconds, do the transfer and put up the So suddenly we go from like this this funk music talking about protesting the government in Nigeria to suddenly, like Ellen Degenero's voice.
Speaker 4He just wants to watch Finding Nemo.
Speaker 3Yeah, And it was like it didn't affect nobody and his crew like this happens all the time every day, and I'm just sitting there dejected, like.
Speaker 4No one has this story, No one has this story that is the greatest.
Speaker 3I just sat there like, yo, dude, like you're playing Finding Nemo in the club like popping bottles in a and you remember the club back in like in two thousand and four, like it was sex back then.
Nah, he wanted.
We were watching Pixar in the Duck Club?
Speaker 4Are you Duck Club?
Speaker 1Are you?
Speaker 4Did you read the Beautiful Ones yet?
Speaker 1Yes?
Speaker 3I read it and it's ah, man, it makes me so sad, like he he wrote that.
Normally, when people write books, you do it with a collaborator.
Like with me, it was like going back to school, like chapter for chapter.
Like my guy was say like, okay, write about the first time he brought a record, and then I write something and he goes and okay, it's run on sentence d whatever, or traditionally you just do a twenty hour interview with someone and then they write.
Speaker 1The words in your voice.
Speaker 3But he wrote that book and he only wrote thirty pages, but it revealed so much about at least up until the age of four, which you know could have been but he took a lot of photos, like so there's a lot of unanswered questions about his childhood.
Maya, Rudolph is really going to love this book because there's I guess if Instagram were out back then Prince would have been on Instagram instead, Like he just kept photo books of all the albums he made, like the process of making it, like My Breakfast, My Engineer, Sleep on the couch again.
So there's a there's a picture where he Prince is driving down Sunset and there's a big giant ad of Minnie Riperton's new album Stay in Love, like on Sunset Boulevard and Prince is waiting at a red light and Flash takes the photo.
It's a perfect shot, like this would have been his iPhone back in nineteen seventy seven.
Speaker 1And the caption was like this woman.
Speaker 3Could cause a car crash And I was like, oh man, my Rudolph is really really going to love that.
Speaker 4Yeah, does he ever know that she loves him that much?
Oh definitely, I think, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3Because he he talks about UH even though he only covers the first four year of his life, he often jumps to modern references, So there's a There is a mention of him watching uh the Darling Nikki performance.
Really that is also in my top that and Stevie Wonder.
I'm trying to figure out what else Jorn Darling.
Speaker 4You remember that my Stevie Wonder story with you guys?
Remember I opened for you guys in Atlantic City.
Speaker 1I hate you for this, man.
Speaker 4I open for the roots in Atlantic City.
And we get there and someone forgot James's keyboard.
James, Yes, we forgot James Boyce's keyboard, so how do you forget an instrument too?
Speaker 1We were new.
Speaker 4He forgot his kid.
So we get there and James like, I do my set.
I came back and I go, James, what are you doing?
He's like, they forgot my keyboard.
I'm just gonna watch.
I go.
Oh.
He's like, you want to get a tequila?
I go sure, So we get a drink and then somebody comes back and go, hey, do you guys want to meet Stevie Wonder.
I go, he's here.
He's also playing a different room venue.
I go, oh, let's go.
So we run over to see Stevie you leave the Roots and then run see Sevie, go and see Stevie Wonder and I go, uh, what do you uh?
It was only like maybe it was a meet and greet with like ten people.
He does this every time, and it's ten people.
Speaker 3And I go, uh, he's Stevie's Jimmy Fallon and James like, I'm from the Roots, blah blah blah and I'm the biggest, biggest fan.
Speaker 4I start going through all his bits and I start going like Ebony and hie, and then he starts harmonizing with me, yeah and you.
Speaker 1Dude.
Speaker 4So then James starts going playing the song on on Stevie's other piano.
Right, So then Stevie James playing piano and I'm harmonizing with Stevie Wonder.
We sing perfect harmony.
Ebany and Ivory did jumping up and down like what is just happening?
Like all right, love you buddy, I tact you.
Later we split.
We were backstage, We throw down a couple more drinks.
We watch you guys, your last you finished the set, You're like, uh, it was pretty good.
What'd you guys do?
Stee, I can't wait to tell you what we did.
Speaker 1Man, you bastards.
Speaker 4Dude.
Speaker 3We can go on forever with these stories, but both of us have day jobs.
We got to report to WET.
I know we're just going to finish this conversation on way backward.
I really want to thank you for helping us, and well, first of all, for everything you've done for me personally.
No, seriously, dog like that was I always joke that, not even joke, because everyone asked like, well, how did you guys manage to do the show?
And I always tell them that we were prepared in the nicest way possible to say no, because we didn't want to burn a bridge and be like, Okay, when we have a new album, ount we can come on said show, I said, But then you disarmed us in literally ten minutes, which no human being has ever done.
I mean, we've had the finest of women, the finest of models, the biggest of act I think there was a point where we were supposed to go fishing with George Clooney at one point, Like that's a typical backstage thing, like George Cluon's like, all right, we're going fishing tomorrow whatever, and like we're so standd offish as a group.
And literally in ten minutes you had us doing a human pyramid that it is enough human pyramid at UCLA, and only because Tarik was on the bottom row.
Who you know, his clothes are so expensive.
It's like Treek is actually getting his Japanese denim dirty.
And I looked at Rich like we're not getting rid of this guy anytime soon.
Al He's like, nope, you.
Speaker 1Do it right there.
Speaker 3I couldn't figure out what you did to disarm the roots in ten minutes flat.
And I was like, oh, this this is the next stage of my life right here, I'm watching it.
But yes, I want to thank you for that, and also thank you we're helping us with our new uh are about to say jump off like it's it's two thousand and eight, our new jump off on iHeart Radio.
Speaker 1Thank you very much.
Speaker 4Thank you by the way for changing the whole game.
And honestly, it wasn't for you, we wouldn't be that wouldn't be where I am.
Speaker 3So here's do another twenty five years of magic.
Let's do it yes, yo on behalf of the team Supreme.
Who's tied up in the room next door?
Boss Bill unpaid Bill font Tigelo Layah.
Speaker 1I love you, Layah anyway.
Speaker 3I heart, Yes, we I heart and Sugar Steve, Yes, I forgot about No, you can't forget about it him though, No, I did that purpose Steves.
Anyway, this is gest love.
We'll see you on the next go round.
Speaker 1Quest Love Supreme.
Quest Love Supreme is a production of iHeartRadio.
Speaker 3For more podcasts from iHeart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
