Busta Rhymes 'Didn't Like the Responsibility of Making a Full Song'
Music

The former member of Leaders of the New School was initially scared to launch his solo career after he split from bandmates Charlie Brown, Cut Monitor Milo, and Dinco D.

AceShowbiz - Busta Rhymes didn't plan to be a solo artist. The 51-year-old rap star - who shares six children from various relationships - had become a member of Leaders of the New School alongside Charlie Brown, Cut Monitor Milo, and Dinco D from the late 1980s until the early 1990s when he found himself suddenly out of work when they split and did not initially want to be a solo artist because he was "scared" but ended up getting his foot back in the door by taking weed into the studios.

"I was scared when Leaders of the New School broke up because I ain't never wanted to be a solo MC. I didn't like the responsibility of making a full song. I'm good with getting to the 16 bars, busting everybody's a** and getting up out of there," he said as he was honoured with the BET Lifetime Achievement Award on Sunday, June 25.

"So I got kicked out the group and I was scared, this was 1993 and I didn't put out a solo album until 1996 and I was trying to figure out what I had to do to feed my oldest child. So, the scenario had me hot in the street at the time and I thought I would use that to my advantage."

"I knew all of the receptionists that worked at the studios, and I would call them - 'Who's working in there tonight?' And they would tell me, and I would go to this little weed spot."

"So I would go to this location that I will not disclose and I would get this slow burning cigar called White Owl Cigars and I would call these studios to find out who was in them. I would just pop up because I knew they were gonna be happy to see me anyway."

"So, I'd pull up to the studio and act like I had been working in the studios the night before and had left something. So this was my way of finding out how to feed my son. When they kicked me out, I couldn't do these shows and get the show money no more."

The "Gimme Some More" hitmaker - whose real name is Trevor George Smith Jr. - added that everything that his on-stage persona embodies comes from both his heritage and having the chutzpah to "whip up a 16-bar verse" whilst his weed was being passed around the studio.

"He added, "Everything that Busta Rhymes embodies as far as going to get it and not taking no for an answer comes from being a Caribbean raised in a Jamaican home and the same determination as the group when we wanted to go on."

"We wanted it so bad, we did everything to get on. But with that point being said, when my weed was going round that studio, I would quickly whip up a 16 bar verse before that weed came back to me."

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