LL Cool J Promises Game Changer Record Following Dr. Dre Collaboration

    James Todd Smith a.k.a. LL Cool J has made a career of winning at being unpredictable.

    In 1995, when he was enjoying one of his many career peaks, he successfully launched a career on television, which would go on to boost his status in Hollywood from cameo maker to leading star. And as of 2009, he has starred on CBS red-hot series NCIS: Los Angeles, which hasn’t exactly given him all the time in the world to continue to make music.

    At the turn of last weekend however, that unpredictability reared its lovely head as the two-time Grammy winner and five-time Grammy host made a splash on Facebook when he stopped by Dr. Dre’s Beats 1 Pharmacy show and blessed the booth with his presence. Its 4.5 million views as of press time speak volumes for how much the people still love the man who ladies still love, especially when he’s delving into the aggressive compartment of his rapping repertoire.

    HipHopDX caught up with LL as he was putting in work during yet another studio session to get the scoop on his recent Dr. Dre session, a reinvigorated verse he says only took fifteen minutes to write.

    “Basically my man DJ Pooh had called me up and said Dre was trying to link, you know, just have me come by the [Beats 1] show and say what up, etcetera, etcetera,” LL tells HipHopDX during a phone call from the lab. “I just went to hang out and maybe talk and vibe and next thing you know, one thing led to another and we’re talking Hip Hop and Dre says “Maybe you do a drop or something,” and I’m like, ‘A drop? Fuck that!’ and then The Good Doctor went and got his laptop and the rest is history,” he recalled with a hearty laugh.

    “I just love this culture and I love Hip Hop. It’s just engrained in my DNA,” he admits. “I’m addicted to it and there’s no way out for me. It doesn’t matter what I do or where I go or what money I make or celebrity—none of that. Nothing ever compares to being in that booth and being on that mic.”

    Thirteen albums worth of relevancy is an unprecedented number in Hip Hop culture and while LL admits his last project in 2013’s Authentic wasn’t his best work (or best representation of the culture), he gets excited when asked about the itch to return to pure emceeing and let kids who maybe only know him from TV know his history.

    “I got an itch so crazy right now, I need to find a hydrocortisone connect,” he continued, with his mind obviously still in punchline mode from the studio session. What I’m going to do is make something for [the fans].” “Like a special record that’s really going to be for Hip Hop. I get into experimental mode and I get in my creative scientist mode and I like to do different things. Every now and then, I like to do weird shit. I’m going to give them something special, you’ll see. And what it’s gonna do is, it’s going to change the game because a lot of people are getting away with 25-point games right now and they need someone to drop 50 on ’em. This shit is crazy to me!”

    Few pundits will argue that the bar or standard in this day and age has been restructured to allow more variation in rap get a shot at mainstream acceptance but is Mr. Smith aiming to create a new renaissance for lyricists? He actually doesn’t feel that is necessary.

    “It’s really just about putting music out,” he says of the notion of “reinventing the wheel,” a feat he’s actually accomplished in his career.

    “I don’t have ‘bring back’ anything. I’m just going to do what I do,” he continued. “But I know the Hip Hop culture needs me because their is a void there and people think that just because somebody makes a song that has a female appeal they think that’s ‘LL Cool J’ and when you don’t have the real LL to compare it to, it’s easy to make those comparisons. So I realize that the game needs me. I’m clear [as to what] it needs from me. It doesn’t need me to come in and play games and experiment. It needs me to come in and kick their ass. So I’m gonna do that.”

    Delaying the G.O.A.T. 2 was strictly LL’s doing but now he has the people’s ear, don’t be surprised if it arrives in the immediate future. He’s pretty good at this unpredictable thing.

    25 thoughts on “LL Cool J Promises Game Changer Record Following Dr. Dre Collaboration

    1. even tho Ive liked the snippet with dre i feel that LL needs to practice more to get back into his old condition

    2. LL is way past his prime. I like him and think he comes off as a really nice guy, but he’s living off the glory of a couple strong albums with a long list of mediocre stuff to round it out.

    3. The beat was just cool and his bars was nice but can careless about this collabo. Both these cats sold out for POP rap along time ago. The sheep will buy the album and it will win a Grammy. SMFH

    4. reading some of the bogus comments just lets me know how lost some of you clowns are..why dont you call that bullshit you listen to something else besides hiphop!!

    5. There is only one mc left with enough star appeal, skill and youth appeal to bring hip hop back. His name is not Ll cool j. His name is nasir jones!

    6. You people are funny lol!! You so used to jump from whoever’s hot .until you have forgotten what real hip-hop is!!! Hip-hop aint basketball that has an age limit on it!! If you dope you dope!! Which LL has proven in many different way than 1. So real hip-hop fans is waiting for this to happen!! You other needs to just keep listenin to this garbage

    7. By there way you want some real hip-hop. Sample my new explosive album Available on ITunes, Amazon, Google Play Music Store.Spotify And other sites. YouTube my latest video”SWEAT” by me Da Gift. And Vimeo for my hit single/video”SMILE” ft Shar

    8. What I just heard sounds better than 90% of the garbage that passes as hip-hop..now wait, better than 99.9% of that garbage that passes as hip-hop.

    9. Nice to hear……I would rather listen to llcool j than some of the lame stuff I’m hearing lately. Some rappers now are scared to do something different. They are not real so they follow everyone else.

    10. LL you’re a legend but stop rapping. You 50 years old and dress yourself on tv as a teenager. Grow up! WE dont need your loverap balleds. Kids nowdays listen to fraud rappers like: 50 cent who lies all the time, rick ross, and gay rappers with skinny jeans like kanye west, jayz tyga, lil young, big young, lil wack etc.

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