“I'm in the lion's den,” Questlove blurts out before I can ask the first question, with a laugh that confirms he’s being eaten alive online.
Our interview, arranged one month prior, is supposed to be part of a routine promo run for the release of The Roots drummer and bandleader’s new book, Hip-Hop is History. But when our scheduled time to talk rolls around, it happens to fall in the same week that his thoughts on the present state of rap have generated some unintentional press. In a late-night Instagram screed, he’d responded to the Kendrick Lamar vs. Drake battle, and all the hype surrounding it, by declaring, “Hip-hop is truly dead.”
It was either the perfect pitch for a book that chronicles rap’s recorded history through Questlove’s hyper-subjective lens, or a publicity nightmare. Whatever the case, it generated plenty of predictable discourse: “What the Hell is Wrong With Questlove These Days?” read one headline. Hyperbole or not, Questlove’s IG post garnered such a hot response for the same reason that reading his book — or having a conversation with him — is so compelling. In an industry of conformity, he remains a hip-hop iconoclast, and a self-professed “dweeb,” who’s never been afraid to drum to his own beat. “You're probably the only person that's going to get the official word,” he tells me, explaining why this will be his first and only deep dive on what was so triggering about the biggest hip-hop beef of the 21st century. “I'm not trying to do a mea culpa post-tour of explaining myself.”
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