Drag-On
Is Under Pressure And Ready For The Spotlight
How
would you feel if your first album was the next release from the skyrocketing
Ruff Ryders label? DMX has six platinum plaques and counting; Eve's freshman
effort has icy grey all over it; The Lox are poised to take over the charts;
and, all of a sudden... center-stage is set for you. Well, 20 year-old hip hop
lyricist Drag-On feels the pressure. However, twelve years of paying dues and
hard preparation have him feeling like his platinum opportunity is now.
"It's my time... it's... my... time... I feel pressure, but I've been
working hard at this. I paid my dues, I went on the Survival of the Illest Tour,
the Hard Knock Life Tour, been on X's three albums, the Ruff Ryders Compilation
and now I got my album coming out," declares Drag in a confident and
reassuring voice.
But the outlook
wasn't always so rosy for the next Ruff Ryder to blow. "I grew up in the
hood," Drag-On narrates. "The Bronx. The projects. It was hard. I
slept on rooftops and in trains when I had no place to stay. But all that made
me stronger." Indeed, for most angry teenagers running away to escape their
home, a quick excursion around the crowded streets and dark subways of the Bronx
would give one a sudden change of heart. "A lot of people know what it
feels like to have nothing. But a lot of people don't know what it feels like to
have nothing and nobody. It's a difference. You ain't got shit, and when you
need something, there's nobody there but you. You got no choice but to die or
dig yourself out of it." At this point, young Mel "Drag-On"
Smalls chose to pick himself up by the bootstraps and, as a man of his words,
embark on a professional career in the rap game.
Drag thinks
back to his years as a young buck coming up on the rap scene, reminiscing,
"I've been writing since I was 8 years old... we'd battle to see who could
hold it down in ciphers." A fateful meeting with Yonkers' underground
master DMX led to a more serious commitment to hip hop. "A few years ago my
man bought me into the studio to meet X. Not many people could hold it down
battling with X like I did that day." Shortly after winning the approval of
DMX and the Ruff Ryders, Drag-On was signed to the Ruff Ryders label and began
to create an ambitious body of work. Some of his memorable moments include his
verse on the "Ruff Ryders Anthem" remix, his duet with Cash Money
Records sensation Juvenile on" Down Bottom," and his new joint
"Spit These Bars" which is currently heating up radio stations
everywhere.
These songs
have led to some confusion as to where Drag is from, and the source of his
lyrical influence. "I use different elements in my flow. I mix it. I mix
the South in with New York, the West Coast in with New York. There's always
gonna be New York in there," he reassures; "I write to the track. My
whole accent might be different on one joint. I already got people thinking that
I'm from the Dirty South. I'm just trying to make my own category."
Drag-on's style
can also be attributed to his philosophy on the business of hip-hop: "You
gotta study people's albums and think about the fans. You can't write for niggaz
on the block any more," warns Drag. "You gotta think about your fans.
You gotta write for people in the North, South, East and West. You gotta think
universal and come from all angles."
Drag-On sits on the verge of a major commercial success, but there remain old
cohorts from the hood who might feel as though he has changed. "Some people
on the block have changed, but I haven't changed. They've changed cause they're
looking, they really watch me now.
They're waiting for me
to say something, so they can be like, 'Oh Drag changed!' But I'm just gonna be
me." For the haters, Drag has some choice words: "Niggaz that hate...
deep down... they feel you. You're on their minds. You're impressing them.
You're doing something out of their league. It's good when people are talking
about you. When people ain't talking about you it's a problem." As the
world prepares for the upcoming Ruff Ryders / Cash Money tour, the Feb. 29th
release of Drag-On's new album, Opposite of H2O and a planned Ruff Ryders movie,
Drag looks to the future with unfettered optimism, crowing,"We gonna crush
'em... flame on!!!"
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