February 8, 2008
Preview: J-Dilla Changed My Life @ Cargo

Born James Yancey, and also known as Jay Dee, Dilla was the "producer's producer": feted by the likes of Kanye and Pharrell, he was one of the most influential artists in rap history. Cutting his teeth in the mid-Nineties on The Pharcyde's Labcabincalifornia, it was in 2000 that Dilla established his signature sound on Slum Village's debut, Fantastic Vol. 2. The album's forgettable raps were seasoned by a string of stellar beats: roughly-chopped soul samples, fuzzy snare-cracks and wheezy, unquantized drum loops creating a sensual, melodic album quite distinct from anything else around.
Dilla went on to produce for a number of rap and RnB artists. Tracks for Erykah Badu, De La Soul, D'Angelo, Busta Rhymes, Common, A Tribe Called Quest, and Janet Jackson saw him achieve mainstream success, yet arguably his finest work remained underground: Welcome To Detroit and Ruff Draft are legendary records among hip-hop heads, and the flawed but fascinating Champion Sound saw Dilla and Madlib rap over eachothers' beats.
By mid-decade, Dilla was diagnosed with the rare blood disease, lupus, though his passion for music remained undimmed - he toured Europe in November 2005, performing in a wheelchair. However, the battle was not to be won, and in February '06 he passed away, days after his 33rd birthday and barely a week after arguably his finest, most important album was released. Donuts, an incredible collection of some thirty-odd beat snippets, mostly clocking in at under 2 minutes, stands as both a legacy of his ingenuity with an MPC and a poignant hint to the direction his music was set to take had he lived.
J-Dilla Changed My Life, Cargo, EC2A 3AY, Sunday 10th Feb 2008. Free entry, though voluntary contribution of £5 suggested - all proceeds going to the J Dilla Foundation.
Picture from Robyn Gallagher's Flickrstream




